THE ] [BRARY THE UNIVERSITY OF CAL :FORNIA LOSANGE ES THE SACRED CLASSICS DEFENDED and ILLUSTRATED: O R, An E S S A Y Humbly offcr'd towards proving the Purity, Propriety, and true Eloquence Of the WRITERS of the NEW TESTAMENT In TWO PARTS. In the FIRST of which Thole Dr< INL WRITERS arc vindicated jgainit the Charge of barbarous LANGUAGE, falfe GREEK, and SOLECISMS. In the S E e o N D i s {hewn, That all the Excellencies of STYLE, and fublime Beauties of LA N G u A G E and genuine E LO QJJ E N c E do abound in the Sacred WRITERS of the NEW TESTAMENT. WITH In Account of their STYLE and CHARACTER, and a Repre fentation of their Superiority, in feveral Inftances, to the beft CLASSICS of GREECE and ROME. To which are fubjom'd proper INDEXES. By A. BLACKBALL, M. A. ~ LONDON: Printed \>yJ.Bettenhaix, For C. R i v i N G T o N , at the Bible and Crtnvn in Sr. Paul's Churchyard, and W. CANTRELL Bookfeller in Derby. M,DCC, XXV. The S A C R E D CLASSICS Defended and Illuftrated : O R, An ESSAY in Two Parts towards proving the Purity, Propriety, and true Eloquence of the Writers of the NEW TESTAMENT. In which thofe Divine Writers are vindicated againft the Charge of barbarous Language , falte Greek, and Solecifms. LONDON: Printed in the Year M^DCQXXV. THE PREFACE. N refpect to the fubject it felf which I treat of, lean- not pretend to prefent my reader with a difcourfe en- tirely new: but if the copioufnefs and choice of my materials, with the manner and method of my managing and difpofmg of them be confiderM, it may appear that there is fomething new in this EfFay. I have read the beft and moft au- thentic Greek writers, with a view of comparing them with the divine wri- ters of the new Teftament ; by w r hich I have been enabled to prove the pu- rity 8 i ,v PREFACE. rity and elegance of numerous paf- fages ? which for feveral ages have by eminent fcholars been condemned for folecifms. Many learned and good men, whofe fentiments may not entirely agree with mine in the Firft Part, will, I believe, allow me to be right in the Second; and in general ac- knowledge the fublime eloquence and noble beauties of the infpirM writers; only charge me, which I humbly ac- knowledge, with a very imperfedt re- prefentation of them. I have done my poor endeavours; and have per- haps, by opening the way, done fer- vice to the publick, by giving the hint to fome greater and more able genius, who is qualify \1 to do more juftice to this glorious Jubjeft. With modeft fcholars and Chriftians the honefty of my intention and the diligence of my labours will pkad for favour- PREFACE. favourable abatements. If any fetch worthy perfon lhall think it proper to correcStanyot my miftakes in public, it will not be by way of haughtinefs and infult, but charitable advertifement and inftru&ion ; and tho' I may have oppofers I ihall have no enemies; nor lhall I exprefs any refentment, but return my grateful acknowledgments. Thro' my whole EfTay, I hope none can charge me with ill manners, or want of fidelity in my quotations and reprefentation of things. Thofe doc- trines of heavenly charity and eternal truth condemn all fpigbt, envy, and ill manners, and the effects of fuch vile qualities, fcurrilous language and railing, anddifdain ; and are infinitely above all equivocation and forry ileights of worldly cunning; and what fome foften with the term of pious, but, in plain terms, are im- pious frauds, On PR E FA C K On the other hand, if any of thofe unhappy wits, who undervalue and de- fpife the language of the facred writers, becaufe they don't underftand it, or hate and are afraid of the doctrines it expreffes, lhall attack me in a hoftile manner, as I lhall be fo far from apo- logizing for my felf, that I fhall own and glory in fome parts of their charge: fo if any thing lhall be thought material, and to have the ap- pearance of a rational objection, I fliall endeavour to vindicate my labours upon the facred and moft admirable writers of the new Teftament, which unworthy, tho' well-meant labours I humbly fubmit to the judgment, and recommend to the acceptance and pa- tronage of the pious and intelligent reader. A. BLACK WALL. THE SACRED CLASSICS Defended and Illuftrated. PART i. CHAP. I. By 'way of Introduction, wherein an account is giv- en of the Hebraifrns of the new Teftament; fe*ve- ral mijtakes of antient and modern critics and grammarians upon this head are difwverd ^ the peculiarities of the facred writers, and the f re- tended barlarifms or foreign words and phrafes are defended) Toy Jhewing that the fame liberties are taken ly the loefl and mojl accurate Greek authors. I k are (b far from denying that there are Helraifms in the new Teftament,, that we efteem it a great advantage and beauty to that facred book that it abounds with them. The old Teftament is the rich treafury of all the fublimity of thought, moving tendernefs of B palTion, ^ "The SACRED CLASSICS paflion, and vigorous ftrcngch of expreiTion, which are to be found in all the language by which mortals declare their minds. The Hebrew is an original and eflential Ian- c^ guage; that borrows of none, but lends to all. Some of the fharpefr, pagan writers, inveterate enemies to the religion and learning of both .Jews and Chriftians, have allowed the Hebrew tongue to have a noble emphafis, and a clofe and beautiful brevity 3 . The metaphors in that admirable book are appofite and lively ; they il- Juftrate the truths exprefled by them, and raife the admiration of the reader. The names of men, animals, &c. are very fignificant. One word is often a good description, and gives you a fatisfactory account of the chief and diftinguifh- mg property or quality of the thing or perfbn nam'd. It would be no difficult matter for a man of ^diligence and good tafte, competently skill'd in the Hebrew and claffical learning, to prove that the Hebrew Bible has every beauty and excellence that can be found in all the Greek and Roman au- a lamblichus apud Flac. Illyric. de ftylo SS. I.iterarum, Traft. f. p. 45*2.. Prasftantia novi Teftamcnti non minuitur, i\ dicamusl illud Hebraifmis (catere, Leufden, Philol. Heb, . Spicikg. PhiloL c, 40 p. 45 5. chors 3 Defended and llluflr cited. 3 thors , and a great many more and ftronger than any in all the molt admir'd daffies. Was ever hiftory related with fiich neat plain - nefs, fuch natural eloquence, and fuch a choice variety of circumftances, equally probable and moving, as the hiftory of the antediluvian Patri- archs 5 of Abraham and his defendants; and particularly ofjofefh and his brethren? Theocri- tus and Virgil come nothing: near to thofe lively o O ' defcriptions, thofe proper and fwect companions, that native delicacy of turn, and undiiTembled fervency of paffion, which reign in Solomon s divine paftoral. The prevailing pailion in fiich poems is defcribed above the imitation of art, and the reach and genius of all other authors b . The \Vife Man's Proverbs and Ecclefiaftes contain a {elect variety of precepts of good and happy life, derived from their true principles, by a flrong genius and very elevated capacity, improv'd by a thorow knowledge of mankind, and a long courfe of experience. They have fuch a foperiority in their fenfe and agreeable manner of expreffion, that any critic would wonderfully hazard his re- putation, who Ihou'd, with Julian the Apoftate, prcfume to bring them into any comparifon with b _Dr. Fiddes's Theologia Pra&ica, B i the 4 The SACRED CLASSICS the dry precepts of Theognh, or the affected turns and fprucenefs of the morals of Ifocrates. The laws and commandments of the molt high God are deliver'd in grave and awful terms > and if compar'd either with the Attic or Roman Laws,, it will immediately appear, that the firlt as much excel the laft in force and (bftnefs of expreffion, as they do in the wifdom of their confKtution, and their fare tendency to pro- mote the fmcere piety and happmefs of man- kind. The longs of Mofes and Deborah, and the Pfalms, that moil precious treafury of devotion and heavenly poetry, raife the foul to the highelt heavens j and are infinitely more marvelous and transporting than the noblelt and moil happy flights of Pindar and Horace. There is nothing in all the tragedians, not in Euripides himfelf, io maiterly in his mourning ftrokes, that is equally moving and tender with the Lamentations of the Prophet Jeremy. Oh ! that my head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears 3 that I might weep day and night C J all ye that fafs bj, behold and fee, if there be any for row like mine d . The com- plainant is fb very miferable, that he has no friend or comforter left to open his grief toj he is r - Jcr. ix. i, a Lamen. i, n, forc'd Defended and Illuflrated. j forc'd to implore the pity of ftrangers and pafTen- 2;ers j and then his diitrefs is fo great and vifible, that he needs no words to raifc compaffion : he only deilres them to look upon his diftreffed Hate., and then judge whether any forrow cou'd be equal to his. 'Tis a piece of fuperlative beauty, and in one thought comprifes all the elo- quence of mourning. " Did we ever find, fays the eloquent Dr. South, (C {brrow flowing forth tJbv q in "the Septuagint and the newTefta- ment writers is a vigorous repetition after theffr- ireiv dialed: ; but 'tis at the (ame time pure Greek. Lucian has it, and 'tis quoted by Pfochenius: but his adverfary fets afide Lucian 's authority ; and lays he mixes many poetical phraies in his ftyle, and insinuates this may be one. Or elfe he rather fuppofes, that that (coffing buffoon ufes it here by way of contempt and ridicule of the facred phrafe. Tho' I think there is no ground for thefe fuppofitions, let 'em pa(s. We prove the expreffion claffical by authority fupe- rior., and fuch as muft entirely filence all cavils. Xsyovrsg, and sty tsyw in Herodotus*, toiiilhucidiJes*, and PUV av airsXbov $%STO in Plato *, are the fame repetitions expreis'd in the fame manner. But sg &XMJV ctLxifiz and fieydSel' (jLeydteg* are repetitions more harfh and licentious than any I have obierved in the divine writers. UgofyyTV)$ is inftanced by Gataker, as ridicul'd by Lucian, as 9 Ads vii. 34. Exod. iii. 7. Gat de ftyl. N. T. pS. r Her. Gr. 9. fop. 1. pen. 3. 219. 1. 44. f f. 197. 1. ii. 1 Plat. Phied. p. 164. 1. 30, 31. in Divin. Dial. Cant. v Her. Gale 3. p. zof. Her Gr. i. ip. 1. n. ? if' Defended and llluftrated. ij if it was not a claffical word ; and he fays not a word to vindicate it w : but Herodotus often ufes it, and fure the authority of fuch a noble writer is enough to liipport it x . 'AP.P.2 for si y.Y] is objected againft, and thought not to be pure and claffical j but Hero- dotus puts it beyond all exception 7 . The chil- dren or ions of Ifrael for Israelites y and ions of men for men will not be allow'd by this writer to be an idiotifhi of the Greek language, nor juftify'd by Homer s fbns of the Greeks j becaufe, fays my author, Homer is a poet, and the poetical language will not eftablifh any idiom. And he farther fays that no Greek author ufes fbns of men for men. But Herodotus, whom moft of the critics aliow to be a tolerable good Greek author, fpeaks commonly in this manner, the fbns or children of the Lydians, &thiofians y lonians ftand barely for Lydians, ^Ethiopians, and lonians *. The learned man feems to reje6t cc~o awbsv 'su$ XZTU* in St. Mark as a form very rarely, if ever^ us'd by the approv'd Claflics : but expreffions ex- w Gat. p. 80. x "E-nruTa tTErsi^cjTEUV TV ttrpo^/iTCts 1 TO atriov T aragfioyT^- /.ax Her. Gr. fzl npufai in Herodotus k . Gro- titis, Pifeator, and Caflalio tell us, that the ufe of a participle for a fubftantive is a Helraijm, with- out taking any notice that 'tis common in the belt Greek and Roman authors. 'O weifsitjuv in St. Matthew is the Tempter j (b rV Xsyovrccg and rwy teyovTw are ffo Orators in Vemofthenes, and TI> TUgstvyevovTuv are iT/gj and Governors in Ifocrates 1 . A reverend commentator on u4ffj vii. 2 . with a grave air informs his reader,, that 'tis cuftomary with the Hebrews to add the word man, when it imports no more than the word to which it is annex'd. But the nicety of the obfervation had been fpoil'd, if he had added,, and 'tis cuftomary likewife in the Greek writers of the beft age and merit. 'AV^WTTW fixer i>.eT in St. Matthew is as good Greek as paur&Sjl' eivfyl in Homer j ctrfoy. cax- in Tbucidides, avtysg ai%z?xl in Demofthenes 3 $ Xcn. Cyr. Exp. z. i. n. p. 81. h Plat, de Leg. ic. p. 2.10. Csmb. ' J( chin. adv. Ctef. 41. I. 13, 14. add. k Gr. p. 180. I. 16. 171. 1. 39. Her. Gr. i. 21. 1. 59. 1 St. Mat. iv. 5. Herod. Gr. 3. 172,. 1. 39. Dem. i Olyn, 4. 1. ult. adv. Mid. 41 1. 1. 38. Defended and Illuftrated. r p *OT? in Herodotus and Xenofkon} Tully has ta0 Gladiator". Mixfu fcj iA.eydt.to in /4&r xxvi. 12,. is a H.a<; . No form of ex preffion has been cavil I'd at more by the defamers of the ftyle of the new Teflament than the ufe of the particle ev j and particularly put before the inftrument with which any thing is done. 3 Ev but only chearful drinking within the bounds of tempe- rance. It fignifies the fame in the Grecian Claf- fics. Herodotus of the Perjians fays, that when they have drank chearfully and freely, then they debate about the mofl ferious and important affairs. The word is ^S^VO-KO^SVO^ whicn often i expreffes the debauchery and crime of drunkennefs, but muft here be limited to an allowable indul- gence*. The fame judicious fcholar is miftakeir when he charges St. Luke with want of purity in chap. iv. 3 . of the AHs. He will not allow r/?- Yiri z . The Emperor Julian ridicules eteqpoffvw, as us'd by our >' FacefTimt illi, qui ftylum noviTeftamenti non fatis Grx- cum cfTe (eti;im qui fibi aliifque maxime vigilnrc videbantur) fomniabant. Pufor. Grrec. Grarn. Sac. p. '* I/acian. Solecift. p. 7-5*8 . n. i. 5 divine SACRED CLASSICS divine authors for alms and fruits of charity to the poor 5 when Callimacbus, a very elegant and po- lite author of his own religion, ufes it for mercy and goodnefs. And is it either an unufual or faint trope to put a noble caufe for its genuine erfed 3 ? The Greek fophifts often contradict themfelves in their own remarks and critical obfervations. Eipe- cially Lucian^ one of the moft learned and fharp of 'em, tranfgreffes his own rules j ferioufly ufes thoie expreilions which he condemns and feoffs at in better authors, and runs into that abfurdity in one place, which he expofes in another. He affirms that (rvfyi'vopxi rivl, to be compar'd to any one, is barbarous, which wou'd fall upon St. Paul b ; but the drolling critic ferioufly ufes it in his Pa - rajlte . He fatyrically reflects on puy and r^ oq y us'd by authors far fuperior to him both in the advantage of a better age, and fir more elevated genius. Mwy is often us'd by Plato and Arifto- fhanes d . ^H^' og is almoft in every page in the divine Plato. I fliall only refer to one place, be- caufe I propofe to prove every thing that I ad- a Callim. Del. not. Spanhemii. b 2. Cor. x. ii. c Luc. Soleciti. 743. n. z. - Plat, de Log. 10. p. 104. 1. z. Camb. Seleft.Di.il. vance Defended and HhiftrateeL ij vance e . The fame faroaftical writer advances a nice diilinc"tion between vpflfy ?&& and vfigify sig TIV that is, is juil lea vino- this ruinous body, and going into the ftate of immor- tality^. Oecumemus brings a raik and weak charge r.- gainft St. John for the inaccuracy of liis. Greek ^ and fup.por.ts it with a reafon becoming fuch 2 criticifm j becaufe it adds ftrength to iircnqrh, and amplification to, amplification ; that is, ^be- h Plut. 1164. i ThuciJ. 3. 207. 1. i f , 2 . ; . k Sr. Luke xvi. 9. Gen. xxv. 8. 1 Xcn. Cyrop. 8, c. 7. p. 334. . antepenult. eauli Defended and llluftrated. 17 ciufe (jLetfyrefw is a more expreffive and vehe- ment word than fteifyvz, and more ftrongly repre- {cnts to the reader the intenfenefs of the Apof tie's -zeal and Chriltian charity" 1 . The propriety of the word is juftiry'd by the ufage of the beft au- thors. ThucidiJes forms xxHiursfos from xoc}.>.iu\- y as St. John does ^st^ors^og from \j.slfyv el'ds T. ' EiTS XS&JjUTSQV. BIS $iXXtOTW TXTtiV $OX& . When Homer has a mind to brand the moft profligate and worthless of mortals with the deep- eft mark of ignominy, and the utmolt feverity of contempt,, he uies this form, 'Ov yxg syu crso ^y.l '/S^OTS^J figoToy St. Paul very happily exprefles his tranfcen* dent humility and penitent forrow, for his mil- taken zeal and rage againft the name and goipel or the blefled Jefus, by forming a noble compa- rative from a Superlative ; spot TW faaworefu 7rdv~ TUV Tw'y //w!', excellently render'd in our Eriglijh translation,, to me 'who am lefs than the kajl of all faints. Grotius on the place names fbme words compounded much after the fame manner 5 but m St. John Ep. 5. . 4, n Thucid. 4. i8o.l.ult. Hom.'lx /3. 148. E 2. it iS The SACRED CLASSICS it feems to me a beauty not to be paralled in the Ckffics. Such a comprehensive word in Plato or fhucidides wou'd have been pointed out,, and ad- mir'd by interpreters and fcholiaits - y as the pro- priety and fublimity of this is juftly admir'd and eloquently celebrated by St. Chryfoftom. I fliall only here beg leave to put in two or three observations which were omitted in their proper place, and then go on to another matter. Grotius, on Rom. v. . %3Lfiv r^rr^ ev fj e&jw- JULSV, remarks, tliat the preterperfect tenie is put for the prefent after the Hebrew. He might have {aid and after the Greek manner too. Demofthenes has fVjjxs wA c.u~uy y he now Jlands Jtlewt ? . And Homer : Lucian, Suidas, Pollux, and others* affirm^ that 'tis falfe Greek to join a future tenfe of a verb to the particles rjy., cyj. But the ufage of Homer, Plato, fkucidides and Xenophon at once overthrows the groundleis fancies and arbitrary determinations P Demoft. adv. Mid. 3^8. 1, 44, 1 Horn. MX 7'. v. 131. of &e fended and Ilktftrated. 29 of a thoufand fophifts and compilers of lexi- cons \ g aeutest V ty trs Kgcc'Sfxo'i vuv ol sTriTtffeioi s . Quo- tations from the other noble authors abovemen- tioned the Reader may find in Gravius upon Lu- cian s Solecijl \ To conclude this, after Gr&vius has taken a great deal of pains in producing and examining the clashing and contradictory opinions and deter- minations of the critics,, he makes this juft re- mark; that no rule or determination of theirs is fb firmly eftablifli d but that in fome cafe it fiiils and admits exceptions v . 5 . There are, it is confefs d, feveral words* and expreffions in the new Teftament not to be found in any claflic author of Greece: becaufe Chriftianity_, tho' it agreed in the main with the r Lucian. Sophift. p. 75-8. n. i. f Horn. 'IX. X'. v. 141. 'IX u. 307. s Phu. Pho:d. in Divin.Dial. Scicft. Cantab, p. 76. 1. 7. 8. 1 P ; 7fP-. v Grsev. in Luc. Solecift. n. z. p. 75*9. Here I add an ob- fervation made by Dr. IVkitby, that Suiclas undPbavorinus fay c^s^a) is only to excoriat?, and cT'a^a) to beat) whereas cNoco is to beat at finite in N.T. St. John xviii. 2.3. and Arilloph, Vefp. eAlg^fl 3> The SACRED CLASSICS pure J-eewJh religion, yet in many refpeds ic was a new institution, much different from and iuperior to all former inflitutions and religions. Therefore "'twas neceflary to frame new terms in the Greek to reach the propriety and force of th~ Hebrew-, and cxprefs the mo ft auguft myfleries and refm'cl motels of Chriftianity, lb far exalted above the morals of Paganism; its notions of 'God, and its religious rites. New names muft be given to new things, as 'Tully apologizes for his own pra6tice w . That contaminate Orator and Philofopher, tho' as careful of the purity of his language as any man, freely makes u(e of Greek words and phrafes to adorn his noble body f Latin Philofophy. The words judicioufly chofen, however before unufual, muft needs be proper and fatisfactory, that fully exprefi fuch ad- mirable fenfc. And who can blame the language, c * & that is capable to under/land the philofophy t Plato, the admir'd moralift and divine of the pa- gan world, in his Theology, ules metaphorical ex- preilions, harlher than any in the new Teftament, - w Tul. de Nat. Deor. I. 17. p. 41. Ed. Davis. All wri- rers of great genius have m;ide fome new words which have been applauded and received into general life. And fhall the n:w Teilament writers, fo well qualify 'd, be deny'd that pri- vilege, when necefTity requir'd ic, and the words and phrafes found fo wtll, and are To agreeable to the analogy of gram- mar? J r . ILr, /Iri, Poet. i\ 46, &c. i and Defended and llluftrated. 3 * and yet not fb expreffive and appofite to his purpofe. The molting of the feathers of the foul, and railing upward the eye of the mind that was deep plung'd into the dirt and mire of barbarifm, found- as harili and are as difbfteful as any one can pre- tend that mortifying the members of the body, and crucifying the flefh with its luffs and affections do in the Chriitian inftitution- x '. Indeed there never was any religion, but one branch of it was ablti- nence from bodily indulgences, and a refilling to> gratify the lower and meaner appetites of our na- ture, on account of decency and purer pleafure - y . of contemplation and a freer addrefs to God, the fountain of all happinefs, m a6b> of devotion. Plato is juftly prais'd for the found account he gives of this refin'd and improving doctrine y , But the cleared and moll fatisfaclory account of it- will by a diligent and fober enquirer be found in die Cbriftian philofophy, To crucify the flefh carries greater force and' propriety, than all. the heft things faid, upon that iiibje6l in the pagan theology. 'Tis a very en- gaging allufion and. accommodation to our Lord's: exquiute pains and ignominious fufferings on the: x Plat, dc Rep. 7. p. 132,. Ed. MafTcy. y PUt. Phaedo. p. 8p, 90. Selc<9f. Diyin. Dial. in fcriptis. 3 1 'The S A c R E D CLASSICS cro/s for oar fake; and repreleiits to us the ini- menfe obligations he has laid upon us to be hum- ble and thankful, to be pure and cautious of all thoughts which may tend to withdraw our alle- giance from our Saviour., to defile our nature which he took upon him-, and unqualify us for the falvation he has purchaled ; and enjoying the full effects of his moil precious pad ions. The remembrance of our Saviour's agonies., and the (pilling his molt meritorious and preci- ous blood for us men and for our (alvation, makes every Chriftian's penitent iorrow for his fins bleed afreili; powerfully touches all the (prints of human nature j works up all its tendernefs, its hopes and fears j and, in a word, is an argu- ment and motive to every duty of Chriftianity, which none but monfters of men and (bns of perdition can refill. 6. In common morals and matters of con- vert and hiitorical relation, the (acred writers ufe the (ame words and exprefiions with Herodotus, Thttcidides, Xenofhon, dec. and have a proper and agreeable method, a beautiful plainne(s and gracefulnefi of (lyle, which equal the mod cele- brated authors in that language. So that the ground and main fubftance of the language, the words and phrafeology in general are the (ame in the Defended and llluflrated, * ^ the facred and foreign Claffics. But then there are feveral words and phrafes (befides thofe which are new for the reafons abovementioned) which are not at all, or not in the fame fenfe in the old Claffics of Greece. Befides that in thefe feeming irregularities in the new Teflament there is no violation of fyntax and the general analogy of language; we are to confider, that there is not DO 7 one good author extant, but has peculiar ways with him and difficulties, which diftinguifh him from all others of the fame denomination. 'ThePativmity of Livy (which moft probably relates to his ftyle) and the obfblete coiiftriidtions of the Attic dialect, renew'd by Thucidides, don't prejudice the reputation of thofe noble,, and very entertaining and improving authors in the opi- nion of capable readers , nor hinder the authors from being great mailers of noble fenfe and lan- guage. Some peculiar forms and idioms in fuch au- thors do not diminifh their character, but encrcafe the plcaiure of the reader, and gratify his curio- fity they don't extinguifli, but rather enliven the beauty and graces of his ftyle. Ks$z/.zio* to woumdin the head", d&upol.oy^ pzi, to give thanks* , i&w 'Iw^'yv/jv, they tfteemd 1 St. Marc, xii 4, Sr Luke ii, 3? F fohli 3 4 7fo SACRED CLASSICS John b , yvwft'<5w c , an ox f bo putt , to begin a difcourfe \ TtysvpaTi and vo'i oppos'd, sxvijfyzTe hxxiug for sic dizsucrj'/qv e are, as far as I have obferved, peculiar to the iacred writers. And there are a great many more peculiarities which I have collected; but they are (b obvious to gentlemen converfant in thefe ftudies, that it is unneceflary tare to pro- duce 'em. I beg my reader's leave humbly to propofe one conjedlure by putting down dyaXXidopcti as a pe- culiarity in St. John, fignifying to dejire luith and was glad, that is, be was glad to fee my day, andfaw it, and fo was glad. Let the defpifers of the ilyle of the iacred writers delight in (uch elegancies i but in this figmhcation it runs eaiy and clean, he earneftly wijb'd or deprd to fee my day, and faw it, and rejoycd. The Perjlan, Syriac and Ara- bic verfions all give it this fenfe ; and the particle b St. Mat. xiv. f . ' Philip, i. 12.. d Sr. Marc. x. 24. & p.tflltn in SS. Lireris. ' i Cor. xv. 34. f St. John's Gofpel. viii. f<5. I cannot find that fo rejoice ever (ignified to defire earnefttj in old //?/.'/v j 'tis pliin it does noc in our prefent way of expreffion. Defended and Illuflrated. 3 y I'M in the original {eems to require it g . The word iignifies to re Joyce both in the Claflics and Greek translators of the Bible ; and in the latter it fignifies to give thanks or joyfully to praife h : here only to defire earneflly, which is a very natural metonimy, whereby antecedents and confequents are put for each other 5 more natural than the ufing aoTratffu to fignify to contend or eamejlly ftriSTSgoG y a foreigner naturalizd', - ' /re' i '- r -r - ~ TtPWAOLioLsjentto. to lole , STtMsuwrsc for s\%x}.wrc+ 5 I ^ ^? j accupng*) VTTQ T$V ^3> /{#T#x2eW#, lyfew ^ ta#- ^fe iytf.r burnt. A great number of peculiarities befide thefe might be produced out of the Greek writers if there was any neceffity. Thefe may {uffice to excufe the facred authors on this head, who don't more difagree from the Claffics in their deviations from the common and more ufu- al forms of {peaking, than any one of the au- thentic Claffics does from the reft. For inftance, examine Herodotus with this view and you will find fb many words and turns of expreffion peculiar to himfelf, that upon this confideration you may as well call his language a new fpecies of Greek, and a language different from Xenophon, Plato and fhutidides, as call the facred language of the new Teftament Hebraizing or Helleniftical Greek, or give it any other hard name, which the arbitrary critics ftiall pleafe to impofe. We plainly fee by comparing the peculiarities and Ids ufual ways of expreffion in the facred and fo- reign Claffics, that thefe latter have taken larger c Xen.Cyr.Exp. 2. 2. 3. p. Sf. 1. f. f Her. Gr. p. f 22. i. 36. f Thuc. 4. 2-4p. 1. antepenult, ' Thucid. i. 78. 1. 4. Her. Gr. i, ip. 1. if, liberties, Defended and lllufl rated. 57 liberties, and have made nearer approaches tofole- ciim and violation of grammar than the former. 'Ey TV y.Yj y.s'/.s rojyri dfcvysTUTSgot ecroy~%i, lecaufe they will not praffife and exercife themfehes, they will be the more unskilful, i~i(pfw o*yzg rm, to gratify and oblige any one*. C A/ c= ruy I3#*x2&y yj:/2i'x zol vw 7rto$ r/jffi fix?} yeyoyrM, the Barcean 'women will neither tajle the flejh of hogs or cows 7 . T&wry ^ y.u7.}M Ty Y'^I^I Ktefco? iy-i, -f rather endine to this opinion L . Kctl $ya ttpzvzy OVTLV & ozxgvosvT a~o~ s-gsQsffSat, they fay there was no man that return 'J without tears*. 'AAAc TiSv we ST*OV r/jv dyfyfay TYJS STrtfyfJLiqg Mo TCMTZ slsyss j did you affirm otherwife, than that thefe t r ojo> courage and knowledge, were different*? . 7. 'Tis further objedted againft the new" Teftament writers, that their language is rough, by adopting barbarous and foreign words and ff ^ *~^ expremons. There are not many of this fort, but are equally to be defended with the old Greek writers, who have many foreign words as well as the facred dailies. In the times when the mod eminent Greek writers flounlhed^ the * Thuc. i, 8 1. > Her. Gr. 4. zSi.l. if. 2 Herod. Gr. 7. p. 45- 3. 1. i. a Xen. Cyrop. 4. if. p. 46, b Plato, " r Per/tan j 8 The SACRED CLASSICS Perfian empire was of vail extent, and had a mighty influence upon all Greece., and therefore by their wars, commerce, and travels many of their words became familiar in the Grecian lan- guage. So, in the time of our blefTed Saviour's O O n , Apoftles and Evangelifts, the writers of thefe m- eftimable volumes we humbly endeavour to vindicate, the Roman empire had extended its conquefts over the greateit part of the world where Greek was fpoken ; and therefore there are feveral reaifbns why they fhould take into then- writings fome of the Roman words and phraies. Thofe terms put into Greek characters were very well underftood by the perfons to whom they were addrefTedj and upon feveral confiderations might be more pleafmg and emphatical than the original words of the language. Shall it be allow'd to Xenophon, Herodotus and Thucidides freely to ufe Perfian, Egyptian, and other oriental words j and can it be an unpardon- able fault for St. Matthew, St. Mark, St. Paul, St. Luke, upon occafion to ufe Roman f or do qs found ftronger or are purer Greek than The infpired writers of the new Teftament having all the dialects of the old Greek language agree- Defended and Illuftrated. agreeably intermixt, the main fubftance of the (acred book being inconteftably the feme, both in words and phrafes, with thofe of the pureft Claflics, and their peculiarities in the fignification of fbme words and turn of ibme phrafes as allow- able as the fame liberties taken by them, it may with modefty and reafbn be affirmed that the vigorous Hebraifms found in the Greek Teffca- ment (their conftruftion being perfectly agree- able to good grammar) give great advantage to the divine writings , enrich the tongue with the treafures of a new and noble dialect, and give ad- ditional variety and beauty to the heavenly book. Becaule there are many Hebrew or Syriac forms of fpeech in the new Teftament, in expreffing the rites and ceremonies of the Je.Xo TJ TO yvvaTcv 3 Jt, TO ay^^^v ij T erw^et'.? '" 54 The SACRED CLASSICS dia")(vyo{Jivog 3 take heed left you he furpris'd or caught thro your modefty*. There is an appearance of impropriety in nu- merous places in the facred book, which is clear'd by fupplying a word understood, and juftify'd by incontelted examples of the nobleft authors. 'Af%STo$ ydf jfwiv - and then xsTrofsv- ju*W follows, which muft agree with yy.xg un- c!erftood r . notfyfysite j TO ten AcatetoufMvfourt d.a- That leeming want of confequence in St. Luke ', and if it JhM hear fruit hut if not 3 cut it do^n y is an Attic elegance : r t v JJLM 'fvu- f3 : fj q Ktiw if that attempt happily fucceed - hut if not y they Jhould command the Mityleneans to deliver their fiips, and demolijh their walls v . sv Isai underftood will fill up the fenfe in both thefe, and all fuch cafe. Sometimes in a long period in the facred writers there is a want of confequence, becaufe the laft member,, which was to anfwer the precedent, and compleat the fenfe, is fupprefs'dj but it is immediately fupply'd by - q Plat. Gorgias. 489. i. Ariftoph. Ran. 1018. The- moph. 2.74. 1 i Pet. iv. 3. f Her. Gr. p. f 30. 1. i. 1 St. Luke xiii. 9- v Thucid. 3. 149. 1. 12.. 3 JX a', i^f, a+~\ r / .1,1 / Defended and Illuftrated. 55 any man who is a capable reader of any good author. So in St. Peter, if God fpared not the old world, nor the cities of Sodom and Gomorra> nor the angels 'which fell from their allegiance, and high Jlations in glory. Then he paries on to another thing, without filling up the ienfe. 'Tis very obvious and eafy from the defign and argument of the Apoftle to fupply what is wanting : Neither will a juft God fpare thefe moji Jysig b . Mcvov is often underftood in the writers of the new Teftament : 6w sy.s $e%erou 9 aXXa TM d^o- A#, makes that paflage in St. Paul to Timo- thy feem a little harfh and abrupt : ^ to wangle and quarrel about words, which is to no profit) lout to the fubver ting of the hearers k . But we find the fame omiflion in authors of the greateil purity-, and good critics call it a beauty of the Attic dialed;: ff9#i dvrw, ovx a%iw, Men feem to miflake about the power of this God Pluto, and to fear him, which is not ft and reafonalle\ Sometimes there fecms to be a defecl: and ble- miih in a difcourfe, becaufe one verb or adjedtive is applied to two nouns., when the (enfe of it only fuits with one ; (o that either another word muil be underftood, or the fingle verb or adjec- tive be taken in a double or two contrary fenfes : T?te 'juixg STroTio-a KJ o-j ( 3frO';/;t m . The verb cannot with equal propriety be apply 'd to both the words thatfecm to be govern'dof it: {bme add ;J^xa,aiid the Arabic andSyriac verfions fupply it : / have not nourifid ot fed you with meat. Homer has luw &%- soowzg. That want of a word in k 2. Tim. i. 14. 1 Plat. Cracylus. 405. 1. 13. m i Cor. iii. i. I St. Paul TJje SACRED CLASSICS St. Paul to St Timothy ieems as harlh as any in-- ftance of figurative orammar in the new Tefta- / ment: XXV.^/T^V y^aV, &7rg%scr&xi forbidding or commanding not to marry > [command- ing] to ah/fain from meats n . The negative word is put down in the former, and the affirmative underllood in the latter part of the fentence. The fame Ellifjis is often met with in the greateft Claflics. So in Tully, when the word deny was exprefs'd in the former claufe, fay or affirm muft be underftood in the latter of his fentence . No man aff lauds a p erf on for ff caking fo that the hear- ers may underjtand what he fays j but defpifes him who cannot do it. Every man muft be underftood before deffifes in the laft Claufe p . . 4. Pleonafmus, or ufing more words than are ftriclly n . ceflary to make up the grammatical fenfe^ is frequent in the {acred writers., and in all the antient and valuable writers of Greece and T1 i Tim. iv. 5. De Orat re. P Qui fir, Mccxnas, u: nemo quarn fibi for tern Scu ratio dcdent, feu fors objeceric, ilh'i Contcntus viv.u 5 iuudct divcrfa fequentes. V/liere nemo cannot be the nominative to laudct, but cm- nishomo mull bs underftood, Reafon mull fupply and nil up this deficiency and departure from plain vulgar grammar, [for. Sat. I.I. i, 2, ?. i Rome, Defended and Illuftrated. 59 Rome. The Pleonafm, as us'd by thefe noble au- thors, is fb far from obfcuring or flattening the o o difcourfe, that it makes the fcnfc intelligible and clear, and heightens the emphafis of the exprcflion : it imprefles ideas deep in the mind , and is of pe- culiar ufe to raife the value and majcily of great and lofty fubjeds The repetition of the fame fenfe varied by different words is not only accord- ing to the cuftom of the Hebrew, which ha:; o great variety and noble beauties 5 but nature in many inftances directs and requires repetitions > and they are frequent in all languages. boxeu is elegantly fleonajlical in St. Patil l - y which is peculiarly worth notice, becaufe upon it depends the emendation of an obfcure and faulty rendring of that paflage of the Apoftle in our EnglifJo : ij any man feems to be contentious : it fhould be either, if any man is difpoid to be contentious, or, agreeable to the life of the phrafe in the beft claffic authors, if any man is contenti- ous: So Xenofbon on efoxsi xzrfixoz Ctt.oq xuro^ y lecauje be was their father s friend". 'Ev Tzig TJ- ' ~. ' rv ' ' o. f {* ' K t.. ? ^ xel'y in Ariftophanes is rendered, they did injuries'* .'J Crho, in exprefling his hearty concern for his clear friend Socrates, and eagerly preflmtr him to make his efcape out of prifon, and Ihun ap- proaching death,, runs into a repetition very na- tural and moving : /ill things muft be done this wight but if ruje delay any longer, it r &ill be zmpcffible, and not feafible, therefore by all means be perfuaded by me, and take no other resolution c . If OMCOO[JLSZ,ftiv JG c-rXei'wv lartppa. Xen. Cyrop. 7. xix. /?., Defended and Illuflrated. xix. 4. and preferring T:se^ begins a verfe in St. Luke, and towards the middle TZTCV is repeated, and then the Evangelift finifhes his period". So inXenophona ledlion begins with 0^* &>; i- T0" y thai after five lines, without compleatmg the fenfe, and with the interpofition of other matters, and a very long parenthefis, that polite writer re- peats GJM L] with a change of: MIQI z~zc?y//j'.>gi>cy in the beginning, into TC> xo?y.cy TZ ~z~-;v in the latter part of the period '. n Acts vii. ^f. Xen. Cyrop. r. ;. i. p. ID . Grxc. O.con. Vid, Pl^t. Thcag. p. 12,8. 1. ^, ct. When Defended and lilufl rated. 6$ When St. Paul and any of the other facred writers have a period any way interrupted or per- plex'd after this manner, fad outcries are made of the unpolitenefs of the ftyle, the breach of gram- mar, of inconfequence and barbariim. In the claflic writers fuch liberty is excus'd and vindi- cated, when all the favourable allowances fhou'd be made for the ftyle of the new Teftament that can be made, for reafbns which cannot equally be pleaded for the others. No language can fup- ply words and expreffions equivalent to the vehe- mence and impetuoufhefs of the facred writers fpirit, to the heavenly fublimity of the notions, to the auguft myfteries, and moft blefled and important morals contain'd in thofe divine com- pofitions. Sometimes one thing is exprefled as if it was two , for the hope and the refurreffion of the dead, that is, for the hope of the refurrettion of the dead, and in the region and fhadow of death, are in- fiances of this form of fpeech in the new Tefta- ment p . 'Tis ufual in the Hebrew and Greek tranflators of the old Teftament q : P A6b xxiii. 6. St. Mat. iv. 16. i. 14. K And 66 The SACRED CLASSICS And not uncommon in the noble daffies f&J- sro y^ Trfcs&'jutsTo, he facrificd and was very zea- lous, that is, be very zealoufly facriftc 'd r . Two relatives are often in Hebrew us'd for one 1 ": the Septuagint often uie the fame repeti- tion-, and fb do the Evangelifts and Apoftles of our Lord : . But this manner of expreflion is not a mere Helraifm, but is us'd by the nioft ap- prov'd and pure authors o Greece , noTSfov o v E*u$ xtebx y eriy fw v , em&v t u,el #;/r. 'Avrog is often fuperfluous and put down when the principal noun makes a compleat fenfe without it : The pronoun cs is redundant in Herodotus in a manner that appears more licentious than any thing; of this nature in the new Teftament *. o r Herod. Gr. p. fH- ^ 3- Herod. Gr. 8. 493. Ari- ftoph. Pax. v. 138. f Pfal. i. 4. 1 Exod. iv. 17. St. Mar. vii. if. i Pet. ii. 2.4. in which two places aVnfr and aura are left out.the tranfcribers vainly fancying 'em to be falie Greek > and Dr. Mill pronounces i'c Hebraizing Greek. v Plat. Conviv. npi. Francofurt. w Xen. Cyr. p. if. 1. ult. Gr. Oxon. Two pronouns are redundant in Herod. Gr. p. 148. j3sXo,usvev TCV TO nr\r,&@' HtX&av ulv x T/ ff sya) Kcotov y; aurof, o T;OV ia:o'y r/s 1 as arcoyo'v&jy TO, >i' crs fl TOOV Gtiwuv denes any vcrfion to come any thing near ; and commands our wonder. Thucid. 7. p. 468' > Ephef. in. 10, ii, K r The 6 8 The SACRED CLASSICS The {acred writers often ufe repetitions for rcaions fupcrior to any that can be given for the ale of them in foreign authors. The word was with God } and was in the beginning with God y is a repetition that divines judge was intended by theApoftle to confute the impudence ofCerinthus, who aflerted that the Demiurgus or Creator was eitrang'd or feparated from God. cc Nothing, {ays an excellent divine and champion of Chriitianity, (C can be more di- " redly level'd agamft that doctrine than this <%?.&, %J ffrjSTcew may feem a little unufual and irregular, but we have the fame in Homer : oijjuuyij TS ^ eu%&)}.ij TTS- }.eravfyv 'OAP.-jWwv rt ^ ots.vuMw c , where there is no room to objedl that the inverfion of the natural order was occasioned by the necemty of the verfe, becauie either way that is equally (e- cur'd. The natural pofition of the fifth verfe of St. Paul's epiftle to Philemon fhould have been thus: Hearing of thy love to aU faints, and the faith which thou hajl in our Lord Jefus Chrijf. Our tranilators improperly retain'd the tranipo- fition^ which will not be endured in Englijh, but fuch conftrudion is allowable in Greek) and us'd by the nobleft authors. That oDemofthenef is entangled much after the fame manner, and cannot be tranflated into Engtijh, preferving the order of the words. 'Ch >j.ev sflol xxrz'&ucw 01 Sometimes the words are not tranfpos'd or en- tangled, but an epithet is transfer'd by a meto- a Her. Gr. i. 4f. 1. 4. Thucid. 7. 417. 1. antepenult.' c St. Mat. xii. ZL. Horn. 'IX. o v . 4fo. Aio 'Tir TO ct'jro a ) uctpTttV80'iv QTI TSTO &^pa Iv raTr Ariitot. Meini". iixercit. tac. p. 2,1$, nymy 'The SACRED CLASSICS nymy from the moil proper word to one that appears lefi (b j but is dependent upon it, and related in fenfe. So in St. Luke TTfotrunov d-jrz Yp TTCSSVOUMOV li$ 'lefws&'jjfa for nofwopgviSy which is paralleled by that in Herodotus, CUTS onluv SXTSXTZI agtfioy $sy for agYjfav*. The Lat'mes fbmetimes take the fame liberties, efpecially the poets : Ufuspurfura- vum Jidere clarior 5 . Met&y y.^cg rz (3u t u,$ for /Sw//cV [JLi'&jo$ jJLYjXsog makes the fentence ftrong and compadj and gives an agreeable change to the conftructioiT, but is inferior to that vigorous inverfion TrcVwy G-7rv?i$uy 7f>jfjfUfjLstrot xtMorpxTuv, for Tto(rstG (r-i;*iz ntJJfSiG yJ.xcry.zTuy, which en- larges and ennobles the expreffion h . There is a beautiful paffage in Plato, which refembles this in the infpired writer, and is turn'd after the Hebrew manner, whereby fubftantives are put for adjec- tives, xyTratffrluv sy The learned Grotius conjectures that ev&$ is tranfpos'din St. Matthew* 9 civs fit) evbvg for i>bv$ Yj, as foon as he had gone up> and juftifies the f St. Luke ix. f^. 8 Hor. Ode 3. i. v. 42. h Hcrodot. St. Mark viii. 10. ' Plat, de Leg. i. p. <5zf. Ed. Ser. 6c Hen, Sreph, k St. Mat. iii. 1 6, phraic Defended and llluflr cited. 73 phrafe by authorities out of ALfehylus and Avi- Jlotle: to which I add a parallel inftance out of a very pure author : STrsity e fysSq ra^a, as foon as ever be was elected 1 . So upon this fuppofiti- on our tranflation fhould run; After Jefus 'was baptized, as foon as he came up out of the water : the heavens were opened, &c. To (ay our Savi- our immediately came out of the water after he was baptiz'd, feems to be a low circumftance of (mall importance or ufe: but take it the other way, and it very clearly and gratefully introduces the account of the following glorious appearance, and awful atteftation from heaven of our Savi- our's intimate relation and dearnefs to the Lord of eternity. St. Paul makes a noble repetition and interrup- tion in his ftyle, out of a generous eagernefi and impatience to exprefs his fervent charity and gra- titude to good One/if horusy for bravely (landing up for the crofs of Chrift, and him(el cur Lord's glorious prifoner and champion 5 when other timorous profeflbrs meanly deierted him in the time of his diftrefs and danger. The Apoftle begins with a prayer for the good man's family : The Lord grant mercy to the houfe of Onciiphorus^for he often refrejhed me> and was 1 Xcn. Cyrop. i. f . 6. p. 30. lin. pag. 10. L not 74 The SACRED CLASSICS fiot afhamd of my chain : lout being in Rome very carefully fought me y and found me out. Then the facred writer flops his period, and fufpends his fentence., to repeat his acknowledgments and prayer with renew'd fervour and gratitude : (The Lord grant that he may find mercy from the Lord in that day] and in how many inftances he mini- Jlred to me in Ephefas you very well know m . Read over the choiceft authors of Greece and Rome, and; among their many parenthefes and tranipofitions of ftyle, you will fcarce ever find one brought in a manner fb pathetic and lively ; nor for a reafon fb fubftantial and unexception- able. C. There is often great appearance of irregu- larity in the exchange of nouns and verbs, words and their accidents one for another,, which may ftartle and confound people of a low tafte and genius 5 but yield an agreeable variety and enter- tainment to judicious and capable readers of the nobleft authors. By this various changing and forting of the words which compofe language, there arife infinite numbers of new and pleafing ideas j the ftores and riches of fpeech are multi- ply 'd 5 you fee things in all their poflures and m 2 Tim. i. 1(5, 17, 18. i rela- Defended and lllufirated. relations, in all their variety of drefs and co- louring. The principal noun is put for the pronoun which ufes to (land for it to vary the expreffion, and prevent the too frequent repetition of it. When the Lord knew that the Pharifees heard that Jefus made and baftixd more difciples than John . The noble orator of Athens {peaks in the fame manner of himfelf: No loody here makes any men- tion of DemoftheneSj no one charges me 'with any crime. Plato, in one of his dialogues, intro- duces Euthyfhro thus {peaking of himfelf: Euthy- phro ivoud not excel vulgar mortals, if I did not ferfeftly under fland all thefe things ? . A fubftantive is often us'd by the {acred writers of the new Teftament for an adjective, which the {chcolmen call putting the abitract. for the concrete ; and it is a compad and vigorous way of expreflioir, originally Hebrew : ecrovrau ya* exzbxi yjusfxi &>.i'4/* % but it is far from being a barba- riim or repugnancy to pure Greek : voy.u psy yz* TCLXVTZ and t'Jb'xt/ pugix sivzi rzvra, thefe John iv. i. p Dem. de Cor. fo. 1. 7, per Foulks & Friend Sop. i ip. 1. p. Plat. Euthyph. f 1. i. 'EysrsKXtro 6 K^oTcro? Iwctgurav ra y^f'gi^) TfciTsJiiTcu tiitr: Osp^ai K^oTuO 3 . HeroU. Gr. i. :<).\. ult. Herod. Gr. 7- p-43i. 1. 51, 4 St. Mark xiii. ip. L z 7 6 The SACRED CLASSICS things fe em d to he folly*. The putting one fenfe for another fometimes may (bund harih to over- nice ears j but 'tis common in the beft authors, fa- cred and foreign. 57? fee corruption and tafle death in our divine writers will not by capable judges be condemn'd as improper and unclailical, who read and approve thofe liberties in the nobleft Claf- fics : fc)#ra/, $#.c, wV x^Acy o$si 3 fee, my friend, how fragrant it fmelh r l 'EwatfovTee <7ify*iw, in He- rodotus, is feeling of weapons, being vulnerable, tho' the original fignification of the word is to hear'. Kw(p #&A/c d . The divine writers vary the comparative, and .by addition of another word give it ftrength and vehemence : tyo oy ,^r=- goi 'JTrff wg Quros in St. Luke, which is agreeable ro the ufage of the Septuagint^ xgsi'trtrov TO s'/.sog & '*>* fyM.$*. And the moil accurate authors among the Greeks and Romans have parallel forms of expreflion : birw v/ Tjexmq TT^O steubsafys fy z,?- ~z$-oTs0w f : Virgil has - fcelere ante alios immanior omnes g . To exprefs any thing fuperlatively excellent or great, the Hebrews lay, 'tis great or excellent to or before God: Which noble manner of fpeech the new Tefbment writers imitate. St. Luke has xfiioc TU &f h , vfzvioy y 'cacv, frodigioufly - y TL Ssuv $%$%}.[*%, a rare and exquifite piece. ^70- TI'$ TO peys&oS) of a wonderful po-uu- b Xen. Mem.Soc. i. ^. 46. p. 2.7. Wells c St. Mac. xi. ii. xviii. i. Anac. OJ. 46. v. TJT. Barnes. d Plat. Gorg. 472,. 1. 4. before the end. e Su. Luke xvi. 8. Pial. Ixii. 4. Gnibe Gcp. in our tranf- lation, 65. 4. f Herod. Gr. i. 15. 1. 43. n Acts vn. 10. Jonah iii. 3. er Defended and llluftraied. 79 er and face, in the claflic authors feem to bear ibme refemblance to this Hebrew beauty '. The Evangelifts and Apo fries after the Greek tranflators promiicuoufly ufe nouns of number j they put one for the firfl j ^ tro^druv for ?rf orn? k . which is called a Hebrew phrafe, but 'tis claflical, and good Greek too : xyijg psyxSve T for Trevrs G~&XU.UV *. 7#i^d/ has fexta cervice feratur It appears by this,, that the famous Jewijb hi- ftorian JofephushzA not read, or not minded, thofe paflages in Herodatus and leveral others, which might be produced out of other Greek authors j, when he affirmed that this manner of expreffion was a pure Hebrew Idiom, and formally promifed to give peculiar reafbns for it n . One great occafion of rallily cenfuring and im- properly tranflacing the new Teftament has been not taking notice that a verbal adjective or par- ticiple is us'd for any part of fpcech or fpecies of word in language, and more particularly and fre- cj uen tly for a verb: K^rr^ 5-yw 5;/w> for si'%py 1 Ariiloph. Ran. 795. Theoc. Id, r. Plat. Gorg. K f. Civitas magnet Deo. Jonrc iii. 2, i. c. pcrquam maxima Hinc ScGri^ci, Aax.icAa.'/jtova c^uty, & iimiliu iniinita: 8c Ln- tini dicunt, Homo divind fide; divina me rite; divino ingenio prsditus, Buxtorf the Hebrew Grammar, p. $61. * St. Mat. xxviii. i. J Her.Gr. z. iz6.& i. 19. 1. p, ""Juvenal Sit, i. v. <5f, " Antiquities T, i. or $0 The SACRED CLASSICS or ty %w 9 , for eiu,l is oft underftood, more rarely put down. Txro yx$ s^s yiworxoyrsh for this you know*: oinveg egyx d-sfe^dy^ci surl\ "Tis much us'd in Hebrew \ butPifcator and others call it a Helraifniy always meaning exclusively, i. e. that the form of expreilion is not pure and proper in the Greek tongue. But 'tis a very grofs error tho' delivered down by a very long tradi- tion : TLeifsio'QfJLGu * dyu Slxfyutefftruv IY^ eiftyqy y I will endeavour to keep the peace r . Our tranflatorsj for want of obferving this, have, according to their verfion, (everal times made unavoidable fblecifins in the (acred original : I befeech you, brethren, that ye walk worthy of the evocation hy which you are calld, 6cc. forbearing one another f . By which conftrution xve^o^svoi muft necefla- rily agree with vuzc, which would break thro' all rule, and be an irreconcilable fblecifm. But all is right if we put a flop at the end of the fir ft verie j or rather, to make it more cafy and natu- ral, after TrgxoTqToe, with hngfuffering forbear one another in love-, and tranflatc <7-z^ii^T?c, earnefl- ly endeavour, which conftr action is juftify'd by the frequent ufe of the beft authors of Greece. Philip, iii. 4. P Ephcf. v. f. 1 Her. Gv. 2. pi. 1. 4. r Dem. de Cor. fo. 1 6. f Ephef. iv. i, z, 5. And Defended and llluftrated. g i And the obfervation of Grotius on this place, that St. "Paul regards the fenfe more than the o bare words, and their grammatical conftr action in many paflages might have been as well apply 'd to Homer, Herodotus, or Thucidides. O ur tranfla- tion fuppofes a barbarifin in Colofftans iii. i6\ But turn it thus, Let the 'word of Chrift dwell in you richly in all wifJom: Teach and admomjh one another, &c. and every thing is clear and regular. Many other places might be named, but I pro- pofe to confider the chief of them in the Dif fertation I have under hand upon the wrong di- viilon of chapters and verfesin the new Teftament, and the faulty tranflation of thofe ineftimable writers, which either tend to pervert the (enie., or tarnifh the beauty of the admirable originals : Which, with another Diflertation upon the Sep- tuagint, and the advantages of ftudying it in or- der to have a better notion of the fenfe, and taftc of the beauties of the Greek Teftament, will make up the third and laft Part of this Work : Which I hope to publifh a little time after thefe two Parts- have (een the world j and, if that can be expect- ed, have been receiv'd with favour. From what has been (aid it may appear that the learned and admirable Dr. Hammond is miflaken, when upon his review of his annotations upon Gal. ii. he de- clares, that the two places abovemention'd arc M not 8i 'The SACRED CLASSICS not reconcileable with Syntaxis: "Af/sTo for %ufxv 9 the Argives marctid s . That is as bold a conftru&ion in St. John as any to be found in the new Teftament. 'Ovfcle ^ SToXf&z TV sfyrdazi aurov, siSojss c . It may be (blv'd by r Tecy or sl'fyfftzv, and is exactly parallel'd by that pat fage in Thucidides v . ^vgaxxcrioig ri, %ufiftsi%Qig x%]z- Trbrfas xx oX(y/) eysvsro ouvrs$ which cannot be accounted for or fblv'd any way but by allow- ing ofuvres in the Greek claflical language to be tantamount to sV^wv, or % cannot be fo eafily refblv'd, as the foremen tion'd inftances, for a very obvious reafbn; and carry more appearance of difficulty and fblecifin than s Thucid. f. 331. I. if, 16. r St. John xxi. 12. vThucid. 7. 4^7. 1. 12, 14. w Thucid. 1.66. 16, 17. "Plat. Ref. 8. p. ffi. ed. Ser. & Steph. 1. 34, 35-, 36. y Ifoc. Plat. 175*. 1. 10. near beginning ofOrat. any Defended and Illuftrated. 83 any pafla^e in the whole new Teftament. And if thefe phrafes be allow 'd, the authority of theie three eloquent and flouriiliing authors ofoldGreece muft for ever filcnce all objections upon this head againft the (acred Claffics; if not, then there is no ftandard of pure Greek at all j and all language, and every author is alike. Caftalio makes a very cold and aukward com- plement to the divine writer of the Revelation j and firfl imagines him to be guilty of a fblecifm, and then formally makes an apology for him. In his note on AfocaL i. 4. he thus accofls his reader : As to the folecifm (fuch as prefently fol- lows otTtc 'iqffS X^r/j x4?%* to agree with [jirjTf!, or ccjTfi yyigct before fy underftooa, makes no manner of difference in the fenfe, or ftrucliure, or found of the words, or variation in the old manufcripts written without accents , or diftine- tion of verfes, in capitals. But if we take it the laft way, as found in fbme very good books, it is pure and clear, and parallel'd by the noble hi- dorian , Bxtfivoi ci T? auryj and xat.cv ir t ucc, fo near in St. Paul, cannot be efteem'd more an inaccuracy, than vsxg MTW ytv~ .oi7r% .rjo The SACRED CLASSICS There is an appearance of violation of gram- mar in St. Luke, sysvsTo J fisrz T8$ t.oyx 'Tis not impoffible to produce an inftance out of a noble Claffic, of a verb fingular put to a noun plural, not of the neuter gender : Ms>.iyz- gvsg vpvoi fcsguv ccfxatl Aoyuv TBM.STXI, m . There is a conflrudUon exa6Hy the fame in Herodotus: Izi $ (tsrajrv TYIS TS Tco&aiys TT&IOG J rS vyx I*K\& ezhoi*. This way of expreffion in St. Luke may be (bl v'd by underftanding %foyo$ j which is fre- quently fuppreft in the nobleft Claflics. 'AAA' dTTU TTOMZl YjVLSeOtt Qt,Q) - SViXXTS (TUV TO'i'g &SCT$) as oisifYiiJLa may be, in the paflage of Herodotus? quoted. In that paflage of St. Luke, Kal w 'lu Tgiig xsSz/.y.M* . is us'd for both parents bySt.P^/ q ; (b , mEtiripides, is put for Admetus and his Queen". And, what is much bolder, Antigone) in Sof hocks, fpeaks of herfelf in the plural number and ! St. Luke ix. z8. Pind.ir. Ol. n. v. f. Hcroc'. Gr. i. 10. I. i^, 14. Xcn. C'yr, Exp:d. 3. 2. frequently us'd, and always for a Throng reafon ^t. Jerom is high- ly offended at St. Paul for palling from vufy ol wvevfJialixol xalx/K^sls to trxovuv c-;xviw t uij ^ ffv 7tsi~ $oi.cY,q z * Te that are fpiritual reftore a brother over- taken in a faulty conpdering thy felf, lefl thou alfo be tempted. And gathers from this place, that St. Paul, when he {aid that he was rude or unskil- ful in ipeecli, cou'd mean it in no other fenfe, than that he was a foleciit ,, and ignorant of the Greek language. But that this paflage is pure Greek may be gather'd from what we have already laid $ and fliall prefentlybe prov'd by parallel chan- ges and tranfiaons in the moil vigorous and elo- quent authors of Greece. In the mean time we may confider what Erafmus and other critics have (aid upon this paflage : That this change m the na- ture of the thing is here more judicious, more pref- fingy And pertinent to St. Paul V purpofe. Had he iliid, considering your fehes } lefl ye alfo he tempted y it would have been more harfii and ofFenfive to t!ut body of Chriftians : and this great preacher v s fcs all gentle and healing exprefilons to thofe D-. 5 i::cr. vi. i, i. >- Gal. vi. weaker Defended and Illuftrated. weaker Chriftians whom he endeavours to correct and improve. By this abruptnefi and tranfition the Apoftle more effectually addrefles himfelf to every man's conference, he prefles it clofe and home i awakens his reader, and gives every indi- vidual Chriftian an intereft and concern in the danger and duty a . We have the like tranfition in Xenofhon^ ~A$A# TT/OV^KS Totiq no teeny , A collective noun, tho'in grammar of the fin- gular number, and neuter or feminine gender, may have adjectives join'd to it of that number and gender of which the perfbns are, which are included in thefenfej o 0%A)craup/^e(j ^ yi\>to I have writ- ten thefe things to you , concerning thofe who endea- vour to deceive you. Verbs neuter or intranfitive often acquire a new fignification, and become tranfitive ; and fo in- troduce a new and different conflrudion. A vail number of critics and commentators have agreed to call this an Hebraifm j and contrary to the geni- us and purity of the old Greek language, Gataker and Grotius make it a Hebraifm, and in (lance SfiapSsuu, which, in its firft fignification, is to triumph over a defeated enemy y but in (acred wri- ters is to caufe another per f on to triumph p . Mr. L ock too rafhly advances a notion on this head;, which cannot at all be defended : " The " cuftom or familiarity of which the Hebrew cta argofl-tOetrav. Thucid. 7. 4f4. 1, if. g Plat. Phsedrus 2.60. 1. ult. St. Mark. xiii. ip. Both moods are join'd together in the fame fignification in that place: a'rs y-Jyciu? av art aVaova/jtat r'avo/gta. Demofl. Mid. 411, 1. C. * Thucid. 3. 191. 1. 17. 1 St. John xviii. 50. k i Tim. vi. 8. 106 77je SACRED CLASSICS pure and amounts to the fame fenfe. e l>si> & v TUV otW-juy fofcicrmtoi effscfle, Be you inftr utters of the reft 1 . For si sy ru cc%tz\u Sega7rev . * ' v "' ', S, 7?QVY)0Qy Tl TCOiEl OJ TCfGCTsyS^STOy Kj TIs.S'JTsJV JAOV -, it does prejudice to whatever it Ph:. Gonviv. p. i ipo. Francof. in St. Luke vi. 7. P.'g. 481. 1. D. Xen, CX-con. p. 70. St. M;U. xxiii. z, s Sr. James i. 1 1, adheres* Defended and lllufir cited. 107 and at lajl totally difjbl-ves and defrays it r . So dTfSTTSfJt^ev evQvc rfa (p.gxazc, immediately remands her to prifon *. The firft aorift is likewise us'd for preterpluperfecl; tenfe; ore hetecrsy o 'lyrSg Trdvlzs V ' / t ' \ N V 111] rj' w /i ^ o ^'/'/^/^ T"^ T"^' /1 ^* ** / ^T (O 2 / 'y V W^^J- ^T^ f}^^f fafi r)/7 /7 heard many reproachful fay ings, he drew his fword upon Mafiftes u . In St. y^w xi. 2,. it feems moft natural to take zXefyGurct in this fenfe, Mary OD/?/^ ^^/ formerly anointed our llejjed Saviour y and to conclude it to have relation to a noted ftory which is deliver'd by St. Luke w . Tis not probable that the Evangelift fhou'd relate a ftory by way of pre- vention, which was in a fhort time to be repeated with fuch various and lively circumftances x . Such a fhort hint cou'd neither give light to the hifto- ry, nor fatisfa&ion to the reader j who was fo {peedily to be entertain'd with an admirable ac- count of that office of piety in this good woman. Let the aorift have its full force and meaning as above, and the reafon plainly appears why Betha- ny is call'd the town cf Mary and Martha, and r Plat. Refp. 10. 311. 1. antepenult. s Plat. Gorgias fif . 1. 8. vid. Ifoc. ad Demon, p. 1. 1. 8, 9, Bafil. Graec. Plutarch nup. Prsec. 85. 1. 3. after B. Horn, 'IX. I'. 180. Virg. Geor. r,v. 330, 331. r St. Mat. xxvi. i. u Her, Gr. f4$>. L *. v St. Luke vii. 37. x St. John xii. 3. Vid. Dr. Ligktfovt on St. John xi, :.. p. f8o, Eng. Works 1684, P 2 nor io8 The SACRED CLASSICS not of Lazants j why they gave our Saviour no- tice of their brother's ficknefs with fb much free- dom and familiarity , and why our Saviour ho- nours the devout and generous family with fuch peculiar tendernefs,, and diftinftion of friend- ihip y . The prefent tenfe is put for the future, and join'd with it when both refer to the fame time; and this change in the {acred writers expreiles {peed and {uddennefs , and aiTurance of the cer- tainty of the thing j of which the very expreffion it {elf gives you a reprefentation and image : /- "Xpij.zi PCI T&%V ^ xivtfcru z ' ^y, svQi>$ atyyvu ctvrov ztf UTTSIUI *' Mx*Tv?i' and xsxgafev in the {ame claufe t j j 5 is cenfur'd by Erajmus as an innovation in St. John b , but is in the oldeft and beft authors : 2ra- yei'fu fAH TtgocrSxhXei $ &% sT>.s, he invades Stagi- rus, lut took it not c . 'AvstSstfyu in St. 'John is for dva^tjcrofJLOti 9 I flail in a few --weeks alfcond d : otfupt is for JiuVw, in Herodotus: %v& uv Tol %gwoy ^ %$- yvfov Ji'^tt/, for which civilities I will give you an immenfe fum of gold and jilver\ y Vid. Lightfoot ut fupra. * Revel, ii. f . J Plat. Apol. Soc. p. if. 1. if. Camb. In DemMenes we have both mood and tcnfe chang'd : XT* cpu'yoi;/ a-j STC a7ragva,a'j ^ Mid. 411. 1. C. b St. John i. if. c Thucid. f. zp^. 1. penult. 4i St. John xx. 17. e Hcr.^Gr. 3. 2.14, 1. 40. - j The Defended and llluftrated. 109 The preterimperfeft tenfe for the prefent tenfe is rare but claflical : ovrog ?v ov SITTOV, this is he of whom Ijfoke { . tfeTy ITCTTOV navv ffndvioy rjv, 'tis rare to fee a horfe *Perfia B . On the contrary, fome- times the prefent tenfc ftands for the preterimper- fect. So in Galatians og&onoSSffi for ' ofSc7rc&$y h > feeing that they did not walk uprightly, si dvrew 7teigyr]vai q&ehrjffe si n oOwiS peTS%iiGri l 9 if he Toad a mind to try 'em whether they had any courage. Kc- \afylLwxcy in St. Peter, is for xofaur&yffofASviis*, J^- $ovTotc 9 mThucidiJesy is (OT Stiff ovrots 1 : So in He- rodotus we have Qsov rov ovx ovoXctfyfievog VTT s t uiu m , a God not to le nanid, or which Jhall not le named, ly me on this occasion. That exchange in Revelation iv. dent manner of application and addrefs this faith- ful interpreter and happy follower of the facred writers imitates in his addrefs to his own audience. Let us therefore fiake off this mifchievous Jleep For if that day furfrife us Jleeping, eternal death will fucceed. Does it now feem to le bright day, dont we all imagine that we are awake and P- Rom. xiii, 13. Vid. Dr. Bull. Har, Apof. z. p. 62. $. i^ in The SACRED CLASSICS fober? yet we are all like per fans flee f ing andfnoring in dead of night. If this tranfition from one perfbn to another, for fuch weighty caufes and ftrong reafbns, be a neglect of grammar, the critics muft at leaft ex- cufe it, becaufe 'tis frequent, and admir d as em- phatical and a beauty in Homer and Firgil, in Xe- wophon and Plato, and all the fublimeft writers in both the languages. Agamemnon makes an ab- rupt change of the perfbn in his eager fpeech to the ore OTTOT ev tiAvu y.svscajss ouaarSs q . Xenopboft, in his fpeech to the angry foldiers about to plunder Byzantium, ufes great addrefs, firft ipeaking to them about their juft refentment, which he approv'd ; and then when he fuppofes things harfli and fuch as he could not approve, Ipeaking of himfelf as one of their number, (b taking the propereft method to allay their rage, and divert 'em from their fatal refblutions : That you are angry, Gentlemen Soldiers, and judge float you have 'very unjujt and barbarous ufage in that you are deluded, I do not wonder. But if we i Horn. 3 I\. $>'. v. up, 130. Vid. Plat. Gorg. fO}.!. 3, before D. Vid. Dr. ffhitby on tttw iii. 3. i flould Defended and Illuftrated. \ \ j Jhoutt gratify our pafjion, and punijh the Lacede- monians, for that cheat, and plunder a city which has committed no faulty conftder ferioujly what will Joe the conferences r . 7. Change of the particles, or the lefter in vary'd words, that add to the fignification of nouns and verbs, and ferve to make conftruc~tion eafy and plain, and the connection of the ieveral parts natural and graceful ^ and the variety of their fignifications, with their omiffion and feem- ing fuperfluity in fome places in the new Tefta- ment, has by many fcrupulous and formal inter- preters been thought to perplex and depreciate the (acred ftyle. But thefe changes and varieties are by more able judges pronounc'd to be the beau- ties and graces of the language; and they are jufti- fy'd in their opinion by the ufage of the chief mailers of noble ftyle and compofitionj who take the iame liberties, and often greater than the Apo- ftles and Evangehfts of our Lord. The particle y#f generally (erves to draw an in- ference, or give a reafbn of fbmething before ad- vanc'd. But in eao-ernefs and vehemence of con- o r Xen. Cyr. Exp. 7. i. itf. p. 385. By thefe and feveral more inftances it appears, that Dr. Ligbtfoofs obfervation is not juft, That change of perfons in grammatical con- ftruction is ufual in the Hebrews eloquence and. rhetorick. Dv. Lightfoot Har. on 4. Evang. p. 45-1. ccn? ii4 ?% e SACRED CLASSICS cern 'tis us'd abruptly by the fpcakcr in the very entrance of his difcourfe 5 which very naturally paints his furprize and confufion. So the Town- clerk of Ephefus coming with difturbance and ea- ger haile begins "Avfyss 7 E¬, -rig yz* l~lv a'^^TTcg f j Dennis of Phocis 3 in Herodotus, begins his fpeech in the fame abrupt manner, proceeding from a like difturbance and furprize, 'E?r2 T^g dxpjg s%STai qpTv rx Ttgfiypxroiy wfyse This particle inAffs viii. 3 p. is only an exple- tive and us'd as Jf or ty often are. Our Englijh tranflation is right, and the notion of Gvotws ieems a little forc'd : He faw him no more becaufe he went on his road, and Philip 'was carried ano- ther way. 'Tis frequently fuperfitious in the old Greek writers : C^ITAQ^^ & TX ie^o^ r/is yao ruv r;c Usf(7uy y upon the taking of the wall a Per- jian, not knowing Crxius, advancd to kill hzm v . The fame particle in the facred writers clofes a (entence with a firm clofenefs and a grateful (bund t:o the ear-, ^ a^ylsotV ii~o'^ sQ^w'io */%* "', So the old Claflicsj % 1 Acts xi x. ^f. 1 Her. Gr. 5. 335-, I. u Plat. Conv, 1188. Frnncof ' Her. Or. i. 5^.1.4. Vid, ./Efchin. in Ctef. 141. 1.8. Oxon. w St. Mark xvi. 8. St. John xiii 13. >: (>;rop 8. yi- Wei's. Jfocrates ad Demon p. 10. 1. f. Defended and llluflrated. \\$ Aid has a variety of fignifications in the facred writers parallel to thofe in the Claflics., which being confider'd and compared may be of life to interpret and ilhiftrate feveral paflages in the new, Teftament. A/2 with an accufative inflead of a genitive fig* nifies by or thro' , K#ycJ $ fox TOV ~cc\ztc<, I live thro the Father 9 he eflentially communicates life and divinity y . Plato in his tenth book of la\vs has the fame conftruction 5 hz TSXWi by art* : fox rzc Xf^x? 7^ TifiMTXi y.cvxC) they are only honour d by good men*. Aid rarely fignifies m> $icl co&c, in glory) glorious 13 j CM (lo% y in fear c . It fignifies the /"* * t\^ *^* C " s * i Is ^ */ ipace or time, oix TOIUV Yjusguv oixofofMjffto) m three days time I will luild it up d ; sysvsTo $, Grotius affirms that el for on is an impropriety in the Greek language f ; I wifli that very learned man had not affirm'd fb rafhly : Then that faying of divine infpiration will be foleciftical : TY axis-ov xflbeToti 7tx0 vyuv, Si o Qsoq vsxgxg sysigsi ; why is it judgd incredible by you y that God raifes the dead? But 'tis juflify'd againft all objection by authority, that when produc'd, muft be inconteftable and > St. John vi. 57. ''- Plat, de Leg. 10. ip5. 1. i<5, 17. 197. 1.14, if. Camb. 3 Ariftoph. Pint. ^3. Eccici". fpp. b 2, Cor. xi. c Thucid. 6. ^9- 1. 3. d St. Mark xiv. fb\ * Her. Gr. 7, 4 p. 1. y. f On Ads xxvi. 8. 2. decifive n(5 The SACRED CLASSICS decifive. ^Ef chines fays of his adverlary Demojlhe- neS) xx oiyz7.$. el y$ $M7]y frefiu/tsv, he that is author of fo many mifchiefs is not content that he is come 3 / Tig is put for sV/ h , and implies no manner of doubt 5 ex e%&iv el rif TI eyto eouv.z, f whatfoeV xs~ avT$ l . So 'tis in the noble hiftorian : rJ- sg $e sg TQV bugwx m . It is peculiarly put for l in Afts, AS/^ &eysi elg XVTOV n . So in JEfchi- oy elg kvflwQewg Trofarstxy , a prophecy TKpon or concerning the adminiftration of Demofthe- nes. So in fhucidides, el'g TS yvyafaxg ^ Trcti'^xg KJ $eg TtXTftoxg -ngotyeeopeya, things ufually faid upon *wi w rjtrj- yys. .YJ-J aD.ct ^ cl Qfaci \ Among the numerous fignificatioRS of the par- ticle Tf ' Her. Gr. 5. ipi. ]. 40. So driflopbancs Plut. v. 19. 2 I John iii. zo. *Xen. Mem. Soc. i.e. 1.8. p. 12.7. vid. Plat. Gorg. 4 la^vtrc. Xen. Cyr. Ex. I. I. 10. p. 75. "Wells Xen. Hellen. f. p. zj6. Ac~b i. 10. And in the Hebrew often is disjunctive and muft be renderd or, as Gen xxvi. n. Whofoever jhall touch this man and bis wife Anu s Plato himfelf fo ufes it 5 tin lyw ^ Fo^y.'a;, ivbetber I or Gor- gias. Plat. Gorg. 461, c John ix. 30, R and 111 The SACRED CLASSICS and Plato: Zrzyeifu ngoirSdXtei, ^ xx. sT>.s, he in- waded Stagirus, but, or, yet did not tale it \ Y^cd is often interrogative, and very aptly exprefFes a vehement concern, admiration, or iiirprize. K^' n$ 'Svvaereu owQijvoa^ who then can be favd*? So in Demojlhenes and Plato 5 K#/ n ty^o-sTS u zvtysg hxarai 'what will ye fay, O ye judges ? what fair and flaujibJe excufe will you le able to make*'? "Ox?, fignifying when or whereas, is found in 2 Pet. ii. i i . but I think fcarce in any other place of the new Teftament. The belt Claflics ufe it in the fame fen(e j c?/r yz? s^s3- 1. penult. w M:\rkx. 16. See iCor. ii. 2. x Dcmof. Mid. 390. 1. 2. See Plat. Theretc:. 188. after D. 1)1 d. Hen. Steph. Preface to hh G; ceb Tcfiamcnt. p. 2.1. >" Thucid. 8. 481. I. 18. Xen. Cyrop. p. 5-19. 2 worthy Defended and lllufirated. \ 2 $ worthy Gentleman, examine the inftances he pro- duces in the twenty firft page of his Prolegomena. The objections are principally taken out of St. Johns Go(pel, which yet is allow 'd lefs liable to exceptions than the other (acred writers. But before I enter upon this examination, I prefeiit my reader with a pafTage very much to our pur - pofe, out of the {choliaft of Thucidides, who feems to be a Chriftian, and as capable a judge both of the (acred and foreign Claffics, of the beauty and propriety of their ftyle, as Dwnyjius Alexandrine, whofe judgment the Dodor fol* lows, when he falls foul upon the ftyle of the facred books ; but regards it as little as any man in other matters, and eipecially when he (peaks favourably of the divine language of the new Te- ftament. f c Thucidides ought here, (ays the fcho- ff Jiaft, to have (aid (b and (b, according to the but was never, that I can learn, accus'd of barbarous Greek, and foleciims. A found and able critic ives this character of this Father. o Cf St. Gregory of Nazianzum is a great matter in ff the art of pcriuafion \ he explains him(clf in ff few words, and with force in refpecl; to the " fenfe > and with great delicacy in regard to his (c expreffions c ." Tne Doctor begins to introduce his inftatices of falfe Greek and folecifms with an air of aflurance, in my humble opinion, not be- coming. " That the writer of the Revelation and sic $ becaufe the Hebrews for both thefe particles put the prefix Beth. But 'tis very common with the old Greeks, who knew nothing of Hdsraifms., or Helleniftical language, to put sis for &'*, and sv for iV.;. In Herodotus we have ^Lustfog ifyy.zvcg eg rov p&fftfjjl'ov Smerdis fitting en a royal throne" : and in j IXETOLI xaQstyftewi sg TO 'H^.lc'^ fuppli- c ants fitting in the temple ^Juno f . So on the contrary, GmoretSweG oTtMtag sv r?j 2.tzs/.ic-, about to fend heavy armd men into Sicily 5 upon which place of fhucidides the judicious and learned Dr. Hudfon truly (ays, 'tis a w r ay of expreffion fre- quently us'd by this author g . Xenophon ufes it too, ol [ASV avTUv sv TV TTZTzuti s~(7o: , fome of them fell into the river h . That paflage in St. John\ Gofpel, o & 1 )/ iju.eic xsxuTridxare is next marked out: The firft iignification of the word is to labour or a John viii. }, if. e Herod. Gr. 184. 1. ancepenulr. I Thucid. i. if. 1. 6. g Thucid. j. 42.;. 1. p. not. b. II Xen. Heller. 5. p. 174. Wellr. Scpr. Hal. Grabe \r t ^fchin. adv. Gtcl. 51. 1. i, 5. Oxon. Eurip. Oreitcs 131; The /.// authors imitate this mariner of ex.preflion, i','.\v v/e efle in tantum bwkicw. Tcr. Eunuch, z. z. circa mej Sic-n, tte 116 The SACRED CLASSICS loe fatigud, and the objection muft be that the fenfe is alter'd, and that it becomes tranfitive, and fignifies to labour about, or work upon. But fuch changes of the fignification of verbs is perpetual in the belt authors \ and this little quibble is fully confuted above l . KtfTfteawfy sv IY, xolVfdSrjtfqt, for slg xetopr l %*y, is an u (clefs repetition,, being the fame with JFV %eifi above. The next paflage impeach'd is that T ? auct/lxvxpi f If we take #'JTW and ziJLot/iXW Rev. ii. 2. S 2, that 1 3 1 The S A c R E D CLASSICS that you and the reft ~ - f ecms to be addreft to the Bifhop , Prieftsj and other private Chriftians of the diocefe, who in a regular communion with their Bifhop had in a great apoftacy adher'd to the orthodox faith and found principles. 'Ey TTxefyoi?. itizt', which this learned man cavils at, is neither barbanfm nor (bled (in j only a word us'd in due conftruction of grammar, but in a different (enfe from what it is in other Greek au- thors. Such liberties are often taken by the moft noble writers, and we have given account already of fiich peculiarities: o hofog o s^og z %ufsT ev vy,Ty k > my 'word does not take place in you y is anfwer'd in the fame manner. There is an objection again ft epol xptMTe l y but the cafe is right, o yzg (3zFi?:sji' XP^uQslt m y and the word founds as well as ^.^Vt, only the conjugation is chang'd according to the cuftom of old Greece. 'Tis common with the beft Claffics to ufe a verb in two conjugations of the contracts j fbme- timcs they do in all. &fcbines has dn^M, the more common word is dny^u n . Tbucidides ufes smQvfJLou , the more common word is emQvfJLsu . Xenofhon in the fame paragraph has xxlsw/jwcrsy and w/jyusv p . And fliall a noble writer, and an ' John vii. 4. k John viii. 37. ] John vii. 2,3. Ho. i\' a. n yEfchin. adv. Ccef. ijf. 1. ult, Thucid.6. 363. Liz. P Cyr. Exp. 7. 4. 8. p. 417. 3 injfir'4 Defended and lllufirated. i 33- *nfpird nolle writer be call'd a fblecift and barba- rian, for giving a new turn to a word fb agreeable to the analogy and genius of the Greek tongue ? Indeed in that paffage of St. John, sv TZTU i$odffGq 7r?~'/j? y.u I'v z %&f7[ov 7cc/:jy Qsftfls % 'hoi has a pecu- liar and ftran^e nVnification : But it can but be eiteenVd a peculiarity and neither treipafles a- ;ainft. the government or concord of grammar. O O e^ And 'tis eafy to produce a hundred inftances out of the firft-rate authors of Greece, who take liber- ties in alterins; the fio-nification of w r ords, and the common conftrudion , as great as the ule of woe, in this fenfe amounts to. Homer ufes this particle in a great variety of fenfes ; that in the feventh ///- ad v. 3 5 3 . is an u(e of this little word which is,, 1 believe, very peculiar 5 I'voc prj pefypsv wJt, unlefs *we Jhall a$ after this manner. . 9. Out of a great number of places in the new Teflament which I have heard or read ob- jected againil, or which my (elf thought as great difficulties as any have been produc'd., I prefent the reader with a few. 'A~f;//, 'tis fufficient, is but found once in all the new Teffoment. Several -critics give it a dif- ferent fenfe from our tranilation. Anacreon has 1 John xv. 8. 1 3 4 The SACRED CLASSICS it in the fame: aW^f;* S/,/T;J yx? ckmfa, 'tis enough, for I already fee her'. 'Ev yz^fl ?x u y to be with child y feem'd to me peculiar to the Greek tranflators of the old teftanient, and the {acred writers of the new, 'till I found it in one of the nobleft authors of Greece: iu.~vj:yJ!rat oury kv ystrfi %&rr) f . On before an infinitive mood in St. Luke feems a little bold: bsugu on {JLSTZ i>j3fu$ [*.&jtv sa-so-^xt roy 7T/.5v \ I think there is a parallel place in Euripides : that in Plato is cer- tain and full : sixov on TTPUTOV syJ %$vat Q/jVxi Kar SULX.-JTW v . In that palTage pijfyy $ in the new Tcftament, and theSeptuagint fignifies the breaking out of the voice 'with eager joy and vehemence, and exactly exprefles the He- tmw word in Efaias, and Quvqy mult be under- ftood. Quvyjv is exprefs'd after the verb in Job, in Philo, and in Herodotus: 'cwxc, rig ainsw fyuvijy $%zg I^TTW TS KJ xzxS epfa%s tywrjv. Her. Gr. i . p. 35. in St. Matthew* is the (anie with and oppos'd to yvri j whereas 'tis generally in the r Anac. Od. 2.8. v. 415. Ed. Barn. Mark xiv. 41. ^ Mar. i. 18. Exod. xxi. 2.1. Herod. Gale ;if. 1. 37. * A&s xxvii. 10. v Plat, de Leg. p. 8p2. prope fin. Ed. Ser. & Steph. w Galar. iv. 17. Efaias liv. i. * Herod, Gale. p. jzf, 1. 37, y Mat. xix. 10. beft Defended and llluftrated. i 3 y beft writers us'd to ind ude both {exes, all human race : Herodotus ufes it for yibij z . Some pert tranfcriber, jealous that it was not pure Greek, or fearing that left learned readers might miftake, very officioufly put dvfyog into the text. The word is fo us'd in one of the nobleft Claffics : ToJy IB they carry d out all the men that 'were unferwiceaUe for 'war 'with the women and children. In St. Paul's firft Epiftle to the Thefalonians b that confirmation COV\OL si$ ypze feems a breach of a common gram- mar rule both in Greek and Latin: but it is jufti- fy'd by the fame conflruclion in the beft Claffics : Tc&gstS&vcti TXTQV sis vficxG, to deliver over this man to you> is in Demojihenes c j SvrxTqf ~aj dvfyl sxfefc- pew, is in Xenofhon d . 'ETriQwetav rr/g Mtyc, in St. Paul, fhou'd not offend any critic ., becaufe 'tis a more nervous and noble way of {peaking than e-xifyMsiocv sv$otz~ TCXTW e , and is clamcal, nnce Arijtotle himfelf in his third book of politics has cl Kvgici-Tij$ foyd.usuc, for [jietibx SvvoLusvo!, as a noble critic and found divine obferves to us in his note upon a parallel 7 - n^qadi'^cvrc rs TOV av$0cp7rav y^ Ic^txovro rev FIj/Vf gcrc; - Her. Gr. i. 2.3. 1. 10. a Thucid. i. 88. 1. 8. SoSal/tifli Homines adfciviflc dici- tur, muliercs ctiam aliquot. Bel. Car, p. M. Ed. Elz, 1674 b i ThciT. iv. 8. * Dcmoft. adv. Midian. 5 8f. ). ^ poft. C, ci Cyr. Expcd. p, 191. Wells. r Tiros ii. 13 3 expreffion .i 3 6 The SACRED CLASSICS expreflion in Lyccfhron ', where that great man (ays, (f Hence are rhofe perfbns confuted, who " call thcjfe and the like expreflions of the new C( Teilanient Hetratfms, that is excluilvely, fb as (( not at the iame time to allow them to be pure Greek. l\zdi?z';c iv ~Y, r.rt.si feem'd to me peculiar to St. "Luke '') before I read the Greek Cl allies with n view of comparing them with the facred writers .of our Lord's Goipel. I have found it in feveral good authors. We have in Demojlhenes Trfscr&i? re- Jiding or fettling their abode in Samos, they kept Ionia from revolting ', X^ ft ^> ocnl xzfiTcc, in St. John, perplex'd all the commentators^ till it was obferv'd that the particle x>fjl did not retain its ufu- al fignification in this place. Grace for gracej founds very harilily j and, as I humbly conceive , will Icarce be made fenie. But 'tis natural and eafy, if taken in the lenlein which it is us'd by Theognis, a very pure and Attic wri- ter : fcfys fxvT xwv Oiviaq k , and thon fendejt me f Bp. Potter on v. 318. p. 139. 8 Luke xxiv. 49. h Demoft. de Cor. xxiv. 1. 10. i Her. Gr. foi. J. f. ante fin. See alfo Herod. Gr. 7. ^pi. 1. 33. Tally has the fame expreflion: Nos Corcyrx non federemm. Epift. ad Fam. z(5. <5. p. f ii, Ed. Gracvii. k Thcog. v. 344. cala- Defended and Illufirated. 137 calamities upon calamities. So in the Gofpel of his Son, God Almighty vouchfaf'd mankind va- riety of blefTings, abundant grace., and multiply 'd mercies. That in St.jfude, xgostpfaevcre raW? 1 , according to our tranflation, he prophefyd ofthefe men, wou'd be for 7r=?l T8TUV, which, I believe,, wou'd be an unexampled conftru&ion. But if we render it, he frofhefyd agamjl thefe men, that is, he de- nounc'd the vengeance of God againft fuch pro fane notions, as thofe profligate people embrac'd, and fuch lewd and debauch'd lives as they led, the fenfe will run clear, and the conftruclion be regular. This cafe is us'd in the beft dailies to exprefs opposition and confutation. Thucidides for example has it in this fenfe : eysvsro ^ $ sv 2^' ( u5 'vSa H. svOa TroTWvrai ayaXXc/^-cvai -Trl?^'} :-an. 3 J\. 3'. v. 461, 5o v. 47 <7. t/HXOj/jtscv r;9 /t, sySse. ' Xen. Cyr. Exp. p. 18. Weils. Svi in Cyrop. 7. p, i<5~ ;, 2, Gi'KC. Oxon. /ay) /3aXoJ7(v svOsv^svSrV. Hinc arquc hinc va(la: rupes ./En. i. v. 161. l!!ic froena jaccnc, illic temor.e revulfus Axis ! Metam. i.v. 3i<5- 4 The "Defended and llluflrated. The particles ^ and uis enim /h^.-e mentis fcriptor. contradittionibtM* i'el Cent en- ****-* m .-I* * j tns abf'urdi;, vet vocabulis rnonjlrofis, & folecifmis urationem f'j>dtit? Picf. to Dr. A//7/'s Greek Teihment p.' i. * Vid. J i$. as Defended and llluftrated. 141 as it mufl be in many places of the nobleft ClaC- fics. 'O wxwv is a nominative cafe without a verb, which is fully accounted for above. 'Actew for /SA&Vjw or ?.v t u,ai'yo[jLsti y apply'd to the inanimate creation, is a lively Profopeia, and every man of (bund understanding in thefe mat- ters will allow both its force and propriety. The beft Greek authors ufe it fo, particularly Thucidides : TYJV y/jy ir^ UXctrai'tix py ddixsTv, to do no damage to the territory of Platea. yiifaoideg %iMd$tov teyovrsg may be either fblv'd under the collective noun, or may be put for steyov, which is refiftlefly aniwer'd above. I fhall, to what I have produc'd above, add a parallel place which I am now reading in the Fa- ther and Prince of Greek hiftory: AsMsfixipoyiuv fyap&vuv swat dydOqfia - - xx. ogQug teyovrsg a . In the next verfe to this nj/ ^iffjuc may natu- rally be governed of KCCTX underftood, as we have fhew'd in parallel places above: and figni- fies all the orders of being that are properly ca- pable of praidng and adoring the fbvereign Lord and Benefactor of all. And teyovrctg agrees in fenfe with afyhxg and ayfyuxxg included in ) being the two ranks and orders, into a Apoc. i. 4, f, iii. n. vi. 6. Thucid. 2. p. iij% Apoc. v. n, ii. Herod, i. p, ip, 1, z6, zj. Ed. Gron. which SACRED CLASSICS which we commonly divide the rational cre- ation. The change of cafe in Revelation xviii. 1 1, \z, 13. is agreeable to what we have faid up- on this fubjed in its proper place j the accu- fatives are governed of ayogdfyi, and the geni- tives of yopoi,' and this variation of the founds prevents this long period from being harfli and diftaftful to the ear. CHAP. C/*-^*^^r/S^^rys^v*('^^*Y>-^*y>.^^y*^^4/7N^ "X^A/ XsfA. AtA. At A^ - \tAs V^A^i .*J v> ^vs^ ^*-*^ w* w ^Jw ^t *^ ^?%3 ivJ%> "^ %> ^5^^ -^^S S/TPv "VVV^ ^/'\ < '*/'* > V / "V6\^ \ x * > V / VCv vTV v^*^^ VVv^S/'V s / 1 ' s/ s v v^ "x^tfV^ \ / 'ft v "v' Vi N v y \, / 5'\r , J v**%A iA^w\ -^^^u *^v^^ j t",^*Aj tA^Ajt-Sx^-^; i.\^^As ^^* >A.^/o i/^s-'-j -"\/~s/jcv\^j '- \*^V'3 t^^^\***^ : 'O'-j CHAP. III. Wherein fever al pajfages and exprejjions, which are looked upon Toy fome as hlemijhes and faults in the f acred writers, are provd to he proper and agree- able ^ and Jhewn to he exactly parallel to pajfages in the mojt noble and vigorous majters of Jtyle. words in the divine wri- ters are thought to be too weak i T i i to bear that weight, and impor- err ill r i tance or lenie winch they arc de* fign'd to exprefs. Every man of fenfe knows that fometimes leiTening expreilions convey the meaning of the thing to the mind with as much advantage^ as words or ftronger (bund and mean- ing, as they furprize the perfons they are addrefs'd to^ excite his cunoficy to coniider or the matter, and occahon variety of reflections. \Vhen God fays., I will not hold him guiltlefs, which taketb my Name in vain : The manner of the expreilion -car- ries no lefs Loiemnity and awe with it than if his eternal Majefty had {aid, I \vill feverely puniili him which taketh m Name in vain. This a\vful 144 75& SACRED CLASSICS phrafe gives rife to our meditations upon the At- tributes i and particularly, the juftice of the So- vereign Lord and Judge of all ; puts us upon deep- ly confidering the heinouineft of the crime for which infblent mortals fhall be found guilty at the bar of God j and what will be the confequence of the irreversible fentence In the Epiflle to the Hebrews the divine writer ufes a word which leems not to be fufficiently ex- preffive of the danger and horror of the thing he. is fpeaking of : For that will be unprofitable to you, that is, as the context requires, extremely bad and fatal a . A vigorous ClafTic ufes zOvfiQofoc, which pro- perly fignifies unprofitable or inconvenient, to ex- prefs a dreadful misfortune, no lefs than lofing a fea-fight, and the deftrudion which attends it b . "A%tff/ in its firft and general fignification is unpleafant, difagreeable j but is us'd by as great a matter of language as any in Greece, in the de- fcription of the deepen: calamity that can hap- pen c . The great Longinus cenfures Herodotus for weak- ning his noble defcription by too fbft a word j but Mr. k Fevre defends the hiftorian againft the critic 'AXucriTjXk, Heb. xiii. 17. b Thucid. 2. 140. 1. z, Kj TO ri\& cr(pi lyivjTO a^a^f, Her. Gr. 8. 464. 1. 1 1, 4 by Defended and llluflrated. 14$ by the example of vigorous authors 3 and efpe- cially Homer, who ufes dswi)?, efteem'd a word of low fignification , to exprefs the outrageous infolence and barbarity of Achilles in ignomini- ouily dragging the body of the brave He&or at his chariot-wheels d . And who will fay that Homer was either at a lols for words, or made an ill choice ? 'Af yoV in the (acred writer * is tranflated idle, For every idle word men Jfeak tlney fhall give an account in the day adjudgment. Which has rais'd fcruples in the minds of (bme Chriftians , as it our gracious God wou'd with feverity exact an ac- count of every word not carefully weigh'd, every little failure or impertinence of fpeech. Idleneis is the odious parent of fb many and great mit chiefs, that I think it will make up a black cha- racter, wherever 'tis apply'd. St. Chryfoftom did not think xcyc$ a weak word. Idle, (ays he, that is, what is not to the furpofe, void of reafon, ly~ ing, calumny and backbiting. Some critical gen- tlemen imagining the word not to be ftrong c- nough, have been fo complaifant to put in one they vainly imagin'd more proper and expreflive ; which is TF X. ^. V, ^9f . aei". n not. Longm. 113. Ed. Tollii. e Mat. xii. 56. See Sr Chryfoftom on the place. ( Vid, D, Mill in loc. U The SACRED CLASSICS vain or empty, in Sophocles, fignifi.es vile and lewd\ in Herodotus y abufi at hoy fJUff&oQot&y U7rdg%siv v , From whence he expeded a perpetual falary, that is_, one during his life. The Latins call great and high benefits immortal obliations w - o in Plato, fignifies only lafling, and is found in comparifbn x . 'ATroMviMtt, fignifies very often no more than to die, or to fuffer great troubles and miferies j tho' from fiich exprellions in the new Teftament fbme patrons of loofe and atheiftical principles wou'd infer that there are no future punilhments of wicked men, but that upon death they are en- tirely annihilated. The claflic authors take this and the fynonymous words for a flate of great trouble and perplexity j but never in this fenfe r Jude vcr. 7. v Thucid. 6. 363. 1. 18. w Tullii Ep.ad Fam. 6c Oratio Pod Redkum facpius x "ArXavra icr^UfOTtgJV >t, a-^avarcuTf^v. Plat. Ph^J. i. 2.6, Camb. that The SACRED CLASSICS that Latitudinarians wifli it might be taken in> but can never prove that it is. Herodotus has dvoMufAsveg for a perfon departed this life, and liv- ing in happinefs in another: OVTS aTFoSvijcnteiv euvrys VOfrflfeffl, <-' .::* TS TOV dTToMVfJLSVOV TTQtfa 'Z.OLfJLQXfyv oxifjLova y , they do not fappofe that they who die are finally extinff y lout that the perfon that departs this life gees to their God Zamolxis. We have in Xe~ nophon &xo /&}. i ru e infatuated is a trope very ftrong , and not in the lead agreeable c> r Cockman. Tul. OiTic. p. 151, 151, 155. f Mat. v. 15. Luke xiv. ^4. Plato abounds in bold me- Uphon, which, I bciicvc ? v.-ill be allow'd to be bcaucifu! and Defended and Ittuftrated. ijj agreeable to a true tafte. The Syriac verfion ren- ders it infatuated ; the other verfions mitigate the, teeming harihnefs of that bold word. The relation and ground of the trope is obvi- ous j if fait has loft its feafoning quality and fliarp- neft,, 'tis of all things the moft infipid and entire- ly ufelefi : as a man who has loft the u(e of his reafbn is a mere corpfe, and nuifance to the earth, Girding up the loins of your mind : is a ftrong ex- preflion, and a daring application and transfer- ring of the qualities of the body to the mind, or a communication of idioms, as Divines call it. The propriety of which proceeds from the clofe and near relation of an organiz'd body, and im- mortal fpirit in their aftonifhing union to make up one man. And thofe bold phrafes, Tsg rS vox StiyetrQau ryv ipu^Jy, and eteuSsffy nswxoTSs in the claflic authors are parallel \ Erafmus pays one of his ufual complements to St. James and others of the facred writers, when he cenfures that expreflion efafSTfeiw Trgotruxx w as and emphatical j tho they are more harih and catechreftical than any in the new Teftament : fome initances have been produc'd already, 1 fhall only, out of great numbers, add one fpeaking of a cowardly General : he fays of him, OTTO /jt0je T Nee lilidini potius luxuriaque, quam liberalitati & leneficentia par eat, there's no comparifon intended which way of living fliou'd be prefer'd; but luxury and extravagance are abfolutely con- demn'd. St. Paul to the Corinthians d wonderfully ex- prefles the generous zeal and forwardnefs that the Macedonian Chriflians iliew'd in doing good and contributing to the relief of their diTtreffed bre- thren, which he does in terms that {bme little fbphifls would pretend to cavil at. For of them" felves 'were they willing, according to their foiu- er (I hear 'em witnefs} yea and above their power. The Prince of Greek orators delivers himfelf in the c Tull. Off. i. See Luke xviii. 14. Xen. Hcllcn. 7- 456. Wells, vid, Tullii Epiit. Fam. 6. 6. p. 16-2.. 1. 7, 8, Ed. Grrevii. a 2. Cor. viii. 3. Kara cV^a.uiv xl UTT?^ c /v !am< 158 The SACRED CLASSICS fame vigorous manner cc I have perform'd all fC thefe things with juftice, and care, and great " labour, and induftry above my power e . That (eeming inconfiftency in St. Matthew and St. Mark*, as, to him that has not, even that which he has, Jhall he taken from him, is entirely recon- cil'd by a parallel place in St. Luke 1 , by that equitable conftruction, and thofe fair allowances that ought to be made to all good authors. We have the fame appearance of impropriety in the moft difcerning and moft exalted writers among the Claffics h . ' In fhort, great writers, fecure of the noble- nefs and importance of their fenfe, and the ma- fterly beauties of their language in general, are not always anxious to avoid a little deviation from common grammar, or a fmall feeming in- coherence 5 when little critics cannot judge or difcover either a beauty or material faulty but betray their ignorance and groveling temper in rigoroufly infifting upon the minuteft matters * Dem. de Cor. 1 16 1. pen. ^jXoTro^oor uVs * Mat. xxv. 2p. Mark iv. 25-. or oux ttffiffircu air ceuT. Lukeviii. 18. ^ os av fxq t^jj, ^ 8 cToxet h Juven. Sat. j.r. 208, iop. Nil habuit Codrus & tamen illud Pcrdidit infelix nil Her. Gr. i.zp. 1. zi. mere Defended and Ilhtftrated. 159 mere trifles, and often condemning that for a fault which is really an excellence. People that cannot fupply fuch defects as we have mention'd, and readily excufe and iblve fuch feeming in- coherences,, have not, I don't fay candor but, tafle and ilrength of genius to make 'em capa- ble readers of any good authors. CONCLUSION. BY what we have hitherto obferv'd, I promife to my felf that I have made good the affir- mation of the learned Falricius 1 , ana a great many other very eminent and judicious (cholars, That there are fewer mere Hebraifms in the books of the new Teftament than feveral famous men wou'd have 5 and no folecifms at all. 'Tis probable that it may be thought by {bme, that fbme things I have obferv'd, are too little and inconfiderable. But I don't pretend that complete mafters in thefe ftudies are to be entertain'd after this poor manner j I write chiefly for the ufe of younger (cholars, and others who may want fuch helps, til! ' FabrScii Bibliothec. Groec. lib. f . c. f . p. 124. time 1 60 Tie SACRED CLASSICS time and induftry fhali advance 'em to farther perfection : and I believe I have put nothina down that is entirely ufelcis and foreign to the purpofe. Other Gentlemen are indolent, and entirely unconcern'd whether the icyle of the new Telta- ment be free from (blecifms or no. We are, fay they, fatisfy'd and afTur'd that the holy writers were influenc'd and diredled by the holy Spirit > and that the fenfe of the (acred text is very im- portant and noble > and we are not concern'd whether the language be pure Greek or not. Now for this reafbn that the holy writers were under the influence and direction of the Spirit of infi- nite wiflom, who does all his wondrous works in proportion, harmony, and beauty, I am fully perfuaded he wou'd not fuffer improprieties, and violations of the true and natural reafon and ana- logy of grammar to be in writings dictated by himfelf, and defign'd for the inftruction and plea- fure of mankind to the end of the world. If we confider God, fays an excellent perfbn, as the Creator of our fouls, and fb likelieft to know the frame, and fprings, and nature of his own work- manfhip we ihall make but little difficulty to believe that in the book written for, and addrefs'd to men, he hath employ'd proper language, and genuine natural eloquence, the moft powerful and Defended and llluftrated. 161 and appropriated mean to work upon 'em. But fblecifm and abfurd language give an offence and diiguft to all people of judgment and good (en(e? and are not appropriate means to work and pre- vail upon human minds. The notion of folecifm is by all means to be remov'd from the infpif'd penmen, becaufe it hinders young fcholars from ftudying that book of fuch inefiimable ule and value with that chearful application and pleafure which are neceilary to make 'em tolerable mailers of its language and fen(e. When people have con- ceiv'd a prejudice againft the (acred writers, it ei- ther entirely takes 'em off from the ftudy of 'env or if they be oblig'd to read 'em, they do it with' reluftance and averfion 5 and aim at no greater knowledge than will qualify 'em to undergo an eafy examination, in order to get a livelihood and worldly profit by a profeflion, to which fuch people are generally a di (honour and {candal. 'Tis impoffible to defend our religion againft the in- fults and fophiftry of fubtil Heretics, or to be a Divine of any confiderable value, without a good and intimate acquaintance with the (acred text. The notion of folecifms, &c. has given (bmc conceited wits and (hallow rhetoricians a contempt of thofe ineftimable books. A worthy Cardinal durft not read the Bible for fear of (poiling his fine Ciceronian ftyle, and has Y the 161 The SACRED CLASSICS the horrid aflurance openly to condemn and de- fpife St. Paul's Epiftles j and calls 'em by a forry diminutive word which expreffes the greateft wan- tonnefs of contempt, and fcurrility k . 'Tis eafy to name two chapters in the new Teftament, even confider'd as a common book, that have more (enfe and genuine beauty of language than all Benibus's fix books of Familiar Letters. Tho' I think it wou'd be an abfurd thing to put natural eloquence, fublimity offenfe, and the beautiful graces of clear and eafy language, upon any com- parifbn with a pedantic ollentation of learning, trifles dreft up in ffcudied periods ; and a flavifh imitation, or rather a ridiculous aping ofTulIy. Dr. South's fatyr upon fuch infblence and profii- nefs is juft : cc He who faid he wou'd not read JV crx^v/fv. Spedlant: in Ssptemtrjones 6c Oacntem folem. Cxwr. Comcien. i lib. p. 4. Variorum. marrave Defended and llluflrated. 173 marriage h . The facred writer, to fhew the inte- refl and fbvereign power our Saviour has in the future ftate, fays that he has the keys of hell and faradife '. Plato fpeaking of perfbns fit to prefide in a well-conftituted government , fays, they are rich, not in gold., hit in that wherein a happy man ftould be rich, a good and prudent life k . Which is much to the fame fenfe with that noble exhor- tation of St. Paul to wealthy men, that they do acJs of charity, and le rich in good works \ 'Tis the opinion of fbme learned men , that the holy Jefus, the moft tender and dutiful Son that ever was born, when he call'd his mother plainly woman , declar'd againfl thofe idolatrous honours which he forefaw wou'd be paid her in latter ages, which is no improbable guefs. Bur in the more plain and unceremonious times it was a title apply'd to Ladies of the greateft quality and merit by people of the greateft humanity and ex- alnefs of behaviour. So Cyrus the great fays to the Queen of the Armenians, 'AA/.2 crv u yjwi m : and fervants addrefs'd Qiieens and their miftrefles in the fame language n . t, Thefmoph. 58 f. i Apoc. i, 1 8, k Piat. Rcip. 7. 99. 1.4, f, 6, ] i Tim. vi. 17. a'ya- Cc?ey'v, < rXTv cv xaXcT? spyoi?. m Xen. Cyrop. p. 103, 1. 4. ante fin. Gr. Ox. n Sophoc. Tracliinia: v, 1^4. To t/4 Tke SACRED CLASSICS To hunger and thirft after right eoufnefs, or the f attractions of true religion^ is an admirable meta- phor, beautifully bold and flrong . Both the Greek and Roman Claffics take delight in it. c Some tempers, {ays Xenopbon ? , nolefs cc hunger after praife than others after meats and fc drinks." "QVTUG eyw ?A* fizMere / * ^ t \ 1 / 5 ~ ^ XXTSff&lSTS fi}.~T y fitf V7TO aAA^AWV bVOfatoStfTS C : only here they are cleaner and ftronger; turn'd and finilli'd into a completer fenfe ana moral. Proverbial expreflions are generally very figni- ficant, and contain much fenfe in few words, as refulting from the long obfervation and con- ftant experience of mankind. In the ninth chapter of the, Atts 1 * there is a proverb that comes Mat. V. 6. ; o# /jc?9* oo-Ji? auro T/Ojjo- T. K. St. Chryf. in loc. P Xen. CEcon. p. pj*. Wells. 1 Xen. Cyrop. 4. 2.61. 1, penult. Wells. r Tull. de Orat. 3. p. 313. Ed. Pearce. s Plat. Ref. 9. 174. ad fin. Ed. Maflcy. c Gal. v. if. v A6bs ix. f. Sy.X>i^v CTCJ wgos y.ivl^, XaxD/^ew from Defended and Illuftrated. 175 from the mouth of the worlds Saviour, en- thron'd in fiipreme majefty$ by which he checks the madnefs of Saul, bidding defiance to him, and exercifing impotent malice and blind hoftility againft his moft bleffed and invincible name and Gofpel. The fame proverb is us'd by JEfchylus, Euripi- des, and Terence ; and the noble Pindar has it to the fame purpofe of expreffing the madnefs of murmuring againft, and pretending to refifl the power and pleafure of the great God w : Phy- ficlan heal thyfelf*, is parallel'd by the noble trage- dian JEfchylus*. Our blefTed Saviour's addrefs to Jerufalem is very moving and pathetical in St. Matthew, and is improv'd and heightened by a very natural and clear companion: O Jerufalem, Jerufalem! thou that killejl the prophets, and ftoneft thofe who are fent to thee, how often woud I have gather d thy children together as a hen gathereth her chickens, andyewoudnot? [What a melting exprobration, (to ufe the eloquent words of a great man) what vigour and winning compaflion, what a relenting w Pindar. Pyth. z, v, 175. * Luke iv, 25, >" Kaxos ^ iar^r o v co,r ris 1? voccv riscroov aGu/jteiV, ^ crauTov s'x s^etf. Eupeiv oTro/stf ^a^ccKOif fVi^(^. Prometheus. ftrain 176 7%e SACRED CLASSICS ftrain of tendernefs is there in this charitable re- proof of the great Inftrudor and Saviour of fouls z i Euripides and Sophocles a beautifully and appofitely ufe the (ame comparifoir, by which all the diligence of care^ tendernefs of companion, and readinefs of protection are happily exprefs'd. Two elegant and very appofite comparifons are join'd together in the firft Epiftle to theTbeffa- lonians b more forcibly and fully to reprefent the fuddennefs of our Saviour's coming to judgment; and the verbs are of the prefent time to make the defcription more affecting and awful: The day comes fuddenly, as a thief in the night upon peo- ple buried in fleet), utterly amazd and confounded at that difmal feafon, in that unarm d and helplefs pojlure Ruin andfnal deftruffiion feizes the impe- mtent unprepardj as the pangs of childbirth come upon a woman laughing, eating, and thinking of nothing lefs than that hour. The great Homer often gives you two or three fine comparifons pretty 7 - Mat. xxiii. 37. Dr. South Scrtn. Vol. V. p. s Euripid. Troad. 745*, 746. Nscocrci wVet Trlsguyaj <77rt'lva>y s/jta'?. 'Ot S^' H^y.Xetoj TraTc^sf f xoOTTrTsgss' ,2c)^w vsoorfcff. Here, furens. That paflage in James iii. f. 'I^ oX/yov -576^ X/x/jv eita7i r i&. is parallel to that of Pindar. Pyth. od. 5. FTcXXav r'o^ci TTUO svcr ffTrsf/uaT' svOtfgov aiVwcrij) uXav. b i ThefT. v. z, 3. aV./Cj? { V.wv. Sr, Chryf. in loc. clofe Defended and llluflrated. 177 clofe together upon the fame fubject, to fet it off with variety of ornaments, to give you a de- lightful view of it on all fides ; and entertain you with the unexhaufted flores and riches of his ge- nius c . The comparifon betwixt gold leing tryd and purified ly the fre, and the genuinefs of chriftian faith and piety by afflictions and fevere troubles is quick and clean ; gracefully infinuated, without the formality of bringing it in by the common marks and notices of companion in that noble paflage of St. Peter \ . 3. An excellent collection of morals may be drawn out of the claffical authors, much re- fembling the (acred writers both in fenfe and language. The brave refblution of Socrates > to do bis duty in the utmojl danger, exprefi'd with that native fim- plicity and undaunted courage which innocence and goodnefs infpire, is much the fame in words and meaning as that noble declaration of the Apoftles before the corrupt rulers of the Jews . c Horn. IX. 3'. ver. 4f f. ad v. 484. d i Pet. i. 7. c 'Tjua'f, co avc/Y? 'AOifjvcaci, acrTra^o/jtoa ^ (piXco, Ttreicrc/jtoa j r iaj /JtaXXcv y| J,aTv. Plat. Soc. Ap. If. 1. 7, 8. Camb. ts. A6ls V. 2,p. A a it 178 7%e SACRED CLASS ic s Had Homer exprefs'd that line in the firft Iliad *v. 11 8. in the angular number Qs lirmeQvrw zte T ex}.vsv it had been found morality , and exactly the fame in verfe as that divine maxim of the Evangelift in profe: if any man le a worjhipper of God, and doth his will) him he heareth*. We mujl, {ays Plato, thus judge of a righteous man, that whether he le in poverty or fcknefs, or any other apparent evils, they 'will turn to his advan - iage living or dying g . What a near refemblance is there between this noble pallage of the philo- iopher, and that exalted triumph of the Apoftle : I am perfuaded that neither death, nor life, nor an- gels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things pre- fent, nor things to come, &c. Jhall be able to fepa- rate us from the love of God, which is in Chrifl Jefus our Lord - ay.d we know that all things work together for good to them who love God'\ God refifts or fets himfelf in hoftility againft proud men, is an important maxim of morality,. ilrongly exprefs'd, and frequently inculcated both m the old and new Teftament 1 . We have the fame moral in Pindar beautifullye xprefs'd, tho' f John ix. 31. 8 Plat. Ref. p. L 334. 1. f, 6, 7. h Romans viii. 38, 39, 18. * Job xxii. zp, Prov. iii. 34, Jam, iv. 6, in Defended and llluftrated. 179 in a manner inferior to that of our facred wri- ters k . There is a found paffcge of morality in Tully, Plutarch, and Plato, importing that nothing buc the body and its lufts and appetites kindle {edi- tions, quarrels and war in the world', which ex- actly correiponds with two parallel paiTages in St. James and St. Peter m . But the thought is more */ o enlarg'd, the manner of the expreffion more live- ly and emphatic (befides the vehemence of a preffing interrogation and the addition of a vigo- rous metaphor) in the Apoftles than the Philo- fbphers: Whence are 'wars and fightings among jl you f are they not hence, even from your lufts that f war in your members ? fays St. James j and St. Pe- ter exhorts his Chriftians as pilgrims and ftr angers to alftainfrom carnal lufts, which TW afyQafrip TV TTfasog $ffv%fe TrvsvpaToc, o Tji! 7^ x.a>;i;'j a/.Xa V'K Iv TtS ay9w TO xay.j,'-;. Rom. Jiii. y. Ls!r. Vid. St. Ghryfolt, in loc. and i i The SACRED CLASSICS and sjoodnefs that: nothing in Epiltetus, Plutarck> or Ant ovine can vye with. The moralifts and he- rocs of the pap-an world cou'd not write or ad to I O the height of this. Some of the pagan moralifts, efpecially Plato \ have (poken very nobly of a brave man that repu- tably undergoes fcvere trials and cruel fuffenngs for the lake of religion, and the o-ood of his conn- ~ - ^ try 5 and fears death Ids than an unjuft action, or villainous compliance. As to the Stoics preferring their wife man in his fuffenngs to their Sovereign Jupiter) it is rank profanenef s ; and their pretence that he is as happy upon the rack and in the mod exquifite tortures, as on a bed of down in perfect health, is an ab- furd and unnatural rant. The chriftian moralifts follow nature and reafbn 5 and the Son of God improving them : They allow us to grieve as men y but require us as CTortftians not to defpair, or in- temperately grieve and perverfely complain 5 but c Plat. Refpub. 2. where he gives as lively a defcription of the perfon, qualifications, life and death of the Divine Man he fpeaks of, as if he copy'd the fifty third chapter of Ifaiah. He fays that this perfon mufl be poor, and void of all recom- mendation but virtue alone. Th.it a wicked world would not bear his inftructions and reproof j and therefore within three or four years after he began to preach he fhou'd be per- fecuted, imprifon'd, fcotirg'd, and at lad put to a cruel death. This is not the only prophecy of the Meflmh in Plato. rid. Mr. Lefley Truth of Chrijl 16*1. Plat. Alclb. z. p. J fo. whenever I)ef ended and llluftrated. \ g > whenever we fufTer to be patient and courageous : but when we fuffer for religion and conference, to count our fufferings as our valuable privileges - y and to rejoice in 'em as the matter or our chief glory and triumph. Our divine writers fir excel all others upon this topic 5 exprefs the triumphs of a chriftian fufferer in more exalted terms of ilrong eloquence 5 and lay down more prevalent reafbns and motives for glorying in the crofs of Chrift, and for joy in fuffering for the caufe, and after the example of Jefus, than any other fcheme of religion can bear. o How admirable and aftonifhing are the expref- flons of the A pottles on this head, especially St. Paul) who fees off the joy he took in his fuffenngs in magnificent ftrains of eloquence. 'Tis his dar- iing topic j and great critics obferve, that as all his writings are excellent, fo efpccially thofe which were lent from Rome, while he was in chains for the Gofpel v . What a mod amiable and extraordinary mix- rare of chantv, courage and faith in God do we * *^ find in that noble profeffion and exultation of St. Paul I No, tho 1 te facrificd upon the oblation and fervice of your faith > I rejoice and congratulate To EpbefiatiS) PtJ/I:/>f>ia;H, C objjians, to Philemon^ to Timothy. 10U: The SACRED CLASSICS you, all; on the fame account do ye rejoice) and con- gratulate me w . What great occafion has the good man to rejoice, and fb preffingly to urge hisChri- ftians to rejoice with him ? Did he expect fame, riches, preferment, fecular triumphs, empire ? Nothing but difgraces, ftripes, the confinement of a prifbn, the fword of a tyrant, and the bloo- dy crown of martyrdom. We have in the fifth chapter to the Romans x an accurate enumeration of the feveral bleilings which crown the brave champion of the crols which is a very eafy and beautiful gradation rifing to the height of happi- nefs, and making up a very agreeable and corn- pleat period. The Apoftle encourages his Philipfians not to be difturb'd or daunted at the malicious profecu- nous of the enemies of their Lord's Crofs, by a reafbn which is ftrongly conclufive upon the chri- ilian fcheme, but fills upon the pagan, which is exprefs'd in a ftrong Pleonafmus : Becaufcfor Chrijl to you is given not only to believe on him, but to fuffer for him Y . Given is not fully expreffive of the original word, which is, the free grace and favour is kejlowd. God does not only permit or order by his general providence, but he confers w Philip, ii. 17, 1 8. * Ron. v. 1, 5, 4, j-. )' Philip, i. 19. ixagiSrr,. vid. S:. Chryibft. in loc. & Or,u. 2.. on St. Paul, p. 37, 38. Tom. 8. Savil. upon Defended and llluftrated. 18 j upon you peculiar kindnefs and mercy ^ does you unfpeakable honour by admitting you to {iiffer for his Son's bleffed name and caufc. Thofe marvellous paflages of the fame divine author wou'd be extravagances and raving hyper- boles from any mouth or pen., but a Chriftian's. I therefore take fleafure in infirmities, in reproaches, in neceffities, in perfections, in diflrejfes for Chrift's fake. Tou hai ^v VSTTW Vgif x6//jisv. Vid. Sept. Dciu. i. 57. Xen'. Cyrop. i. 4. i. p. 17, 8 Heb. xiii. f. ,^ ffY] a ' V w, h I Tim, ii, 8> The SACRED CLASSICS in Thucidides l . Inftanccs out of all the 2##V authors might be produc'd in great numbers but 'tis unnecefTary. There is an elegancy in this dialed:, when theao cufative is us'd for the nominative, which is pretty frequent and very agreeable in the facred as well as foreign Greek writers. 'ifrovTsg ryvMafizv on Tz%tu$ avsg-ri KJ $}$) that is, on MX? fa Tj c^n' o-s xaKoarspai avg/ c^afcnj. Idyl. 27. v, 21. 2 the Defended and llluftrated. 195 the fame word. We have the JEolic dialed in St. Matthew, St. Luke, and St. Paul q . v Hv for in St. Luke is the Boeotian dialed:, and fb in St. Paul r . The poetical dialed is fre- quently met with in the (acred writers j and 'tis us'd by the bed profe writers of old Greece ^ and it enlivens and adorns the ftyle. "Hury for %y is poetical, but us'd by Plutarch f . kis&i&awun in St. 'John is like SlStiffopsv in Homer. "ATS? is a poetical prepofition in the (acred writer r , ol for CWT is us'd by Xenofhon and Herodotus v . I thought it proper to give a few inftances of the agreeable variety of the dialects in the new Teftament- any one that wou'd have more may be (atisfy'd in Pafors Lexicon, and his (acred Greek Grammar of the new Teftament of our Lord Jefus Chrift. . 3 . A ftrong fmgle word, or an apt expreC- five epithet, has often the light and force of a full definition. The words of the new Teftament have noble emphafis in their fignification , and i Mat. xiii. if. Luke vi. n. Ephef. v. 14. r Luke ii. 23. Romans iii. i 5. f "EXaf ov aw et' 'AX^av^p^KlW' P'utavch. Apotheg. Reg. p. 108, 1. 13. a fine. Bafil. if74- "H/anv feems ro come of s/xou as scr/jicw, and is us'd by Euripides^ Demoftbems, and other good authors, syw 3 sregJcTYis Jx. /jc>iv TEKVCOV. See Nou- velle Methode Grecque. p. 17^. Ed. Par. i6pd. Luke xxii. 6. v Xen. Exp. Cyr. p. o. Wells. He- rod. Gn i. 41. 1. f. ante fin. C c compre- 1 94 'The SACRED CLASSICS comprehenfion of fenfe : I {hall here only produce a few inftances, becaufe I fhall thro' this whole difcourfe make feveral fuch observations. When the malicious Jews came to Berea to exafperate the people againft St. Paul, the {acred writer ufes the moil fignificant and appofite word in lan- guage to defcribe the boifterous rage and mifchie- vous confequences of popular tumults. 2#/-Jw w is to Jlir the fea to the bottom with a violent ftorm y which cafleth up mire and dirt. The noife and outrage of a feditious people is often compar'd to the fury of a ftorm, and the roaring and rufhing of huge waters. And in the old Teftament, that great treafiiry of all the fublimityand magnificence of thought and language, it is exprefs'd to be the fole privilege of the Almighty to reftrain the rage of the waves,, and the unrulinefs of the people x . How admirably is that goodmeafure and juftice, and thofe generous returns of gratitude and good offices, which Chriftians are to make to one ano- ther, dreft up in thofe moft appofite and felecl: epithets: Msffov xxhov, Tcsxieo-fievov y^ (rscra/.svpsyoy, v7rsfS)i^vvofii/ov 9 Meafure juft and fair, preft to make it clofe : fhaken* and after all ways to make it j ' j j / w A<5ls xvii. 13. x Who ftilletb the raging of the fea 9 and the noife of its waves^ and the madnefs of the people ', Pfal. Ixv. 7. Ixxxix. p. cvii. 19. Job xxxviii. n. Pfal. civ. 7. foKd Defended and llluftrated. 195 folid and compact, Jtill running over y . A'JTW TU ftSTfu ) lul'ov 7 , is ^ found and bonejl precept in. Hejiod$ but not to be compar'd with the ftilnefs and vigour of this divine paflage. The Apoflle to the Hebrews in the fourth chap- ter a defcribes the Divine Majefty of the Aoyo$ or Son of God in a manner very fublime, that makes deep impreflion upon every pious and intelligent reader, and raifcs awe and admiration. Thofe two noble words in particular, yvpoi ^ TeTgz- o"Xy} urfjLhx contain a moil vigorous metaphor and graceful allufion to the cuftom in facrificing of taking off the skin from the victim, and cutting it open, whereby all the vitals and inward con- ftitution are laid open to full view. No words in language cou'd be fb proper and emphatical as thefe two j naked is what has no cover without, and open what has no concealment within. What our tranflation in Romans xii. 1 3 . ren- ders given to hofpitality, in the original fignifies more ftrongly follow after, or purfue hofpitaUty, Imitate the Saviour of the world, go about doing good, and feeking out opportunities of obliging mankind. Stay not till occalions of beneficence y I. like vi. 38. 2 'E^yaxJ r,,u I. v. 347. Illud Hcfio- Jeum Inudatur u doftis, quod ciidcm mcnfura reddere juber, oua accepcris, aut ctiam cumttlatiore, fi poflis. Cicer. de clar. ;r.Uoribi!S. * Urb iv. 13 C c i offer The SACRED CLASSICS offer themfelves. Not only receive poor vifitants, and diftrefs'd and fatigu'd travellers with a flow- ing and generous hofpitality^ but purfue and fol- low after thofe who have paft by your houfe ; bring 'em back, furprize 'em with unexpected bounty ; refrefh and furnifli 'em with fuitable and {eafonable fupplies b . St. Peter in a very ftrong and excellent word very happily exprelfes the fecurity that all fincere Chriftians have of being preferv^d fafe, to the glo- rious coming of our Lord Jefus, from their ghoft- ly enemies j and to be inflated in the joys and ho- nours of a bleffed immortality : rxg h Swapst 0f5 (pfUfvpewg % who are guarded and f referred ly the power and providence of God as in an impregnable zarifon. Can any violence or ftratagem of the ** f L r enemy overpower or furprize them who are un- der the protection of an Almighty hand, and un- der the vigilant obfervation, and moil gracious regards of an all-feeing eye c c B Aa T^ Trofvsi'ag d is in the judgment of the befl critics put in the plural number to obviate the cavils of Free-thinkers, who pretend that forni- b Vid. St. Chryfof. in loe. c i Pet. i. f . cc Add St. James iii. 17. How fully, how beautifully is ^The ivifdom that com.es from above dreft up and fet off", by that admirable variety of proper epithets ! dyvn, ^*]vixyj, rif, fjisjj) iXtss 1 y^ xa^Trwv ayaOcuv, *. d i Cor. vii, 2. catioa Defended and 11 foft rated. 15*7 cation is no fin. For in this number the word is emphaticalj all forts and inftances of impurity and carnal lewdnefs are included in it. Homers expreilions of warriors breathing out vigour and courage are juftly admir'd by the cri- tics : and is that of St. Paul's breathing- out threats o and murder againft the Chriftians an inferior or lefs vigorous beauty of fpeech ? The rage and bloody cruelty of a perfecuting fpirit cou'd not be better exprei^'d than by faying he breath' d out threats and Daughter ; nor the lamentable effects of a bar- barous and cruel zeal than by the words us'd ill this chapter and the Epiftle to the Galatians. A/WKW in the latter place has an allufion to the eager- ne{s of a victorious army purfuing a routed and flying enemy, to cut 'em all off and deftroy 'em. The other word properly fignifies to lay oi$ a ftrong word both in found and (Signification / Herod made war c? upon the Tyrians in his heart y and bore hoflile in- dinations towards them { . But that haughty-fpi- rited and tyrannous mortal was immediately pu~ nifti'd with the ignominy and tortures of a mod odious and insupportable difeafe j which is ex- prefs'd in proper words, harfti-founding and fuit- able to the direful occafion ysyo l ueyce mutwofyulog ^s&vzsvy he exfird being devour d by vermin g . The word ckroxMa&Mfa h , which our tranilators well render earneji expectation, fignifies, to lift up our heady and Jf retch our felves out as far as pojfl- lle to hear fomething agreeable and of great impor- TO criw^'iTcv 0'jcj.ci ojt TzroixiXfav riva CH t* ,uy > 'j KJ [J.ct. v cvjjTcijia'j nv, { Ads xn. lo. g A&s xii. 15. h Rom. viii. ip. V. i Pet. iii. 8. Can the cxtenfivenefs and fervor of goodncfs and charity be expreis'd in happier words? tance "Defended and llluflratecl. tance j to gain tie frft appearance and glimpfe of a friend that has long loeen abfent ; to gain the ken of a have a concern tn> or carries feme pafjenger very dear to us. Tis hard, if not impollibie, to reach the force of it in any language. Xenophon ' and Herodotus k u(e it xatfxfoHrjtroitTa iij; (*%%?]* ?/ ~fc~ STXI , with eagernefs and impatience waiting the event of the latteL In that pafTage of St. Paul, -x%oq TO sv<7%spov ^ svTTfdtrsfyov TW K^/w d7r6i.#- yuyu and vxumdfy} m , apply'd to mortifying and bringing under bodily appetites, we receive jufl j Xcn. Memor. Soc. p. 149. Wells. k Herod. Gr. 7. p, 454. 1. 21. J I Cor. vii. 35-. Grotius takes the various reading ctnra'gsc/^v inftead of coTr^'crfo^^v in the greater num- ber of books, fad. Erafmum & Grot. in. he. Plutarch has : lie word a7rg/aira?ov to lignify^ clofe application to ftudy, and retirement from the world j and all things that divert a man's Mind from contemplation and the ftudy of 'virtue. Plutarch. P- 310. ra rCor. ix. 27. notions loo The SACRED CLASSICS notions of that abftinence, and thofe wholefbme levcritics which the Chriftian inftitution requires, and reafon dictates to us as neceflary to allay our violent pailion to the pleafures of this world j and to refine our temper, and raife our affections to heaven. The firft fignifies to conquer an ene- my, and carry him captive with us in chains j the other is an allufion to the bruifes and blacknefs of eyes which the boxers give one another contend- ing for victory in the publick games Here a ce- lebrated critic will needs indulge his humour of o alteration and conjecture, and puts in VTr without competent authority n . He makes cus's exchange, parts with a reading of genuine value and noble fignification , for one or much weaker found and feebler meaning j and that not fupported by books fufficient either in number or value. St. James to teach Chriftians what a guard they ought to have upon that unruly member the tongue, ufes a ftrons; word form'd by the fame regular and O JO beautiful way of compoution : p^A/yaywyw , which is, to keep in and check the extravagancy of the tongue with all the rejlraints of resolution, pru- dence, and Chrijlianity j as fiery and high-mettled n Vid. Heinf. in loc. James iii. 2.. horfes Defended and lllufi rated. 201 horfes are kept in by the ftrongeft curb and rein, and the utmoft skill and dexterity of the rider. The obedience and faithfulnefs of fervants to their mailers is by St. Paul in the Epiftles to the Ephefians and ColoJJians fettled upon the firm eft foundation ; and dcliver'd in ftrong and fubftan- tial words, which fill and entertain the ear with the eafinefs and vigour of the compofition, and convey to the mind a clear and noble idea of the duty defcrib'd. Servants obey your majlers , not with eye-fervices as men-fleafers. Don't ferve 'em, only when under their eye and in fear of their dirpleafure ; but out of a principle, that will alle- viate the trouble of your condition, and raife the merit of your fervices, fincerity of heart and con- fcience of duty, and obedience to the Sovereign Lord of all j and the molt wife and gracious dif- pofer of your felvcs and all your affairs. There is a more natural and clean coalition in the com- pound words in the Greek than any other lan- guage. Our tranflation, tho' ftrong and good, yet for this reafon and others, finks much below the great original p . A celebrated critic on Ephef. vi. G. q makes a P Col. iii. 12. Ephef. ri. 6. Myj cv o?SaXjuc7'*X'cy^ cJf avO^j- Tra'^ec-xci) aXX' cv aTrXornrj y.a^ias

y/^vc{ 7- ov. 4 H.ibct imerdum voces elt-^nntcr compofitas Paul us, qua* Ics funt hie dux o9aX/xcc? A sXet'a & avO^Tra'gsc-y.oi Grot. D d flint ^oz The SACRED CLASSICS faint and low complement, when he lays, Paul hasfometimes 'words elegantly compounded. Had the excellent writer {aid, St. Paul has often words ve- ry elegantly compounded and nobly fignificant, it wou d have been but juftice to the Apoftle, and no difparagement to the skill and fagacity of the critic. The facred writers are full of the moil expref- five and beautiful compound words. I forbear enlarging on (everal places vigorous and appofite as thole I have product only refer the reader to a few that I have mark'd below r . $. 5 . Before we come to fhew the ftrength and beauties of fbme larger paflages of the new Tefta- -ment, I think it not improper to {elect a few of the fhorter out of great numbers. When St. Paul declares of himfelf that he was mad again ft the Chriftians, Ttsgi'fcrug ey.- xvTGts', cou'd the outrageous zeal and fiercenefs of the perfecutor., or the pious indigna- tion and forrow of the penitent afterward have been expreis d with a more forcible and comprc- v ACTS vii. fl. xv;ii. 14. 2 Tinn. ii. if. aiafw7rug TO ^a- ^,^;ji4 rd5t. 2. Tim. i. 6. ra r &/]Codw avs.^wTru^eiVo. Xcr. He.icn. f. P. 345*. Wells, i Cor. vi. 14. Colofl". ii. 4. Choice cnithcts and vigorous compound words are happily united in :.iW j'lorioin valTje, i Tim. i <*, 6. i Acts xxvi. n. he n five Defended at id llhiftrated^ 203 henfive brevity ? Chriftian charity mull not only be lincere, but intenfe and fervent j which we learn from the great St. Paul in the molt perfua- five and exalted manner; r/j (btia^Qiv. elg z/:/y r tee QAofogyoi c . The beauty of this fine paifage as much exceeds thofe moil celebrated in the fo- reign Claflics, as Chriftianity improves the good- neiS, and heightens the endearments of nature. In the Gofpel we have new motives and examples of charity , and emphatical expreilions of it 5 which were not known to the world before God was manifefted in the fleft. Cou'd the goodnefs and gracious condefcention of the Almighty be let off in a more wonderful and engaging man- ner than it is in the divine Epilile to the He- brews ? In the day that I took hold of their hand to bring them out of Egypt v . The Father of fpirits to en- dear himfelf to mankind, and more effectually to encourage our hopes and dependance on his gra- cioumefs and truth, accommodates himfelf to our infirmities ; and (peaks to us in language that we underftand with moft eafe,, and hearken to with moft pleafiire and fatisfaction. Our heavenly Fa- ther addreffes and applies to us in language that r Rom. xii. 10. OJ yS' c A n //ovcv (p/jcri avuTrcnp^TOV avca ffir, -r dyd^jjj) d\\& ^ Q^nrsTa/jtsvloi -^ ^sgjula) ^ 2|a7r'jfqv 3 S. CJhry- loit. in loc. v Hcb. viii. y. D d 2. natu- 104 The SACRED CLASSICS naturally flows from that moft dear relation, that of a parent being the moft quickly and anxioufly tender, and the moft fmcerely and deeply affedi- onate of all relations betwixt rational crea- tures. When Homer has made a pompous description of his Jupiter fitting in majefty on the top of mount Ida w , how are all his bright and fparkling exprelTions obfcur'd and extinguiilied, if fet in comparifbn with that very fhort but fuperlatively glorious defcription of the Lord and Heir of all things, vfyqloTSfo; TUV &f%mv*i which feems to be derived from that ;reat original in the D O Pfalmsy a paflage of the divined poetry and fub- limity y . The Lord is high above all nations, and his glory above the heavens. Who is like unto the Lord our God y who d^elleth on high ? Who humbleth him- felf to behold the things that are in heaven and in the earth ? That God ivotid fulfil all the benevolence of his Goodnefs, TTXCXV svfoxixy T'/j$ uyctiuvjvY,^, is the fhorteft, and moft charming, and emphatical re- prefentation that is any where to be found of that immenfe gracioufnefs and adorable benignity, which no words or thoughts can fully cxprefs.^ * Horn. 'IX 6'. v. 41, ficc. * Hcb. vii. 2.6. y Pfal cxiii. 4, f, 6. Vid. Hammond on the Place.. * 2. ThclF. i. ii. 1 but Defended and lllufir cited. 205 but was never fb happily and (b fully exprefs'd as here. God is the Saviour of all men, efpecially of believers', is a beautiful fentence of vigorous ftrength and clean comprehend ve brevity. That ever-blefTed Bein^ is kind and good to the un- o o ., grateful and wicked. He protects thole by his providence, who deny itj and feeds wretches with his bounty, who turn it into wantonnefs and occafions of profane abu(c. He lays his hand upon thoughtlefs wretches that are taking deiperate iteps to their own ruin ^ and plucks 'em back when they are jtift falling from a precipice. The eternal Majefty waits with wonderful lorr^- jfufFering and goodnefs for the reformation of ~ c> lewd and obftmate mortals 5 emphatically expo- ftulates with 'em, and condefcends to entreat and befeech 'em to become wile, and qualify them- f elves for his infinite mercies in language that at once caufes admiration, gratitude, joy, fear and trembling in every intelligent and pious reader, All the loftieft flights of Pagan theology and elo- quence on this head are low and fluttering to the inconceivable fubl unity of thofe moft marvellous paflages in the old and new Tefhment writers. c'067v,f ura'vrcov a.vl("cJ7ruv ; ua'/.i-a urij^y. I Tim. IV 1C *o6 The SACRED CLASSICS As I live, faith the Lord God, I have no fleafure in the death of the wicked: lut that the wicked man turn from his way and live. Turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways \ for why will ye die, houfe of Iirael b ?. God was in Chrijl reconciling the World to himfelf Now then we are am- lajfadors for Chrift, as tho God did lefeech you by us, we fray you in Chrift's ftead he ye reconciled to God c . But God is efpecially the Saviour of thofe who believe. He is their immortal Friend and Saviour ; treats them with peculiar care and ten- dernefs; turns the troubles and fufferings of this life to their advantage, and makes their enemies their benefactors : he bleffes them with peace and fatisfaction, fills them with joy in believing, and ftrong hopes of his future mercies : he has pro- mifcd to be their God and guide to death j and after to receive them to himfelfj and to be their exceeding great reward. b Ezek. xxxiii. u. xviii. 23. c zCor. v. ip, no. St. Chryfoflom greatly admires the cha- rity of thefc paflages, and enters into an accurate examina- tion of their various and vigorous beauties. Xoyov, CHAP. Defended and llluftratecL 207 CHAP. III. Wherein an Account is given of the genuine natural eloquence and excellencies of the f acred writers of the new Teftament in general, with fame olfer- *vations of antient and modern authors upon their flyle. confider- able writers that are pofleis'd of the old notion and tradi- tionary fancy of improper Greek, folecifms and harfli language in feme places of the 1.1 . new Teftament, who yet in the main have been oblio-ed, by the refiftlefs evidence of truth to ac- knowledge the true eloquence, and genuine beau- ties and graces of the ftyle of the divine writers. Gataker tells us, that it is fir from him to charge the venerable Amanuenfes of the Holy Spirit with unpolitencls, fordid bafenefs or burba- i ifiii j and readily allows, that with appearance of (olccimis (which are molt common in the beiu authors of the world in all languages) 4 m- (pir : d The SACRED CLASSICS fpir'd writers have gravity, majefty,* vehemence, perfpicuity and beauty d . Piscatory Beza, Ca/lalio, Erafmtts, and a great many others have in feme places fpoken with high and juft admiration and tranfport of the graces and perfections of their language. We have already heard what Bexa meant by the fb- lecifms pretended to be in the new Teilament ; and how little they are in his opinion to the pre- judice of that {acred book. Let us hear him as to the ftyle of the new Teftament in other re- fpects, efpecially of the Fpiilles of St. Paul: Speaking of the plainnefs and fimplicity of his language, " I am fo far, fays he, from blaming cc that, that I cannot fufficiently admire it. Yet f< when St. Paul has a mind to thunder, I do not f f fee what can be imagined more ftrono; and ve- o o ,arcr >,r/' 9 Pl.it. A-H. Sec. p. i,. Ed. Cam!), i.s an artificial^ ddiijivc, pl.utjible falfe ivord or fpsech. So the orienuil tranilicors of the new Teftarnent tranQite it in St. Peter. So the gre-'.r. PLito takes it : G; ij.,1 nr>-.a>-a'V as;~,\ G'VTW; ^tXccctcj. So.phifLi-. p. Li6-. 1. f. ante D, VU. Si. ChrYibft.in Si, johan, Prch P. fdi. cc plcafantnefs, ti4 The SACRED CLASSICS c pleafantnefs and clofe and quick difcernment: " in eloquence, variety,, and copioumefs k . The great St. Paul, when he tells the Corinthians that he came not to them in excellency of fpeecb or wifdom, only rejects the vain philofophy and fophiftical eloquence of the Pagan world j and fuch methods of fating himfelf off, as the intru- ders and filfe Apoftles us'd, who made a party againft him. On which words this is St. Chryfo- ftoms paraphrafe ic I came not to you framing " fyllogifms, or falfe and captious reafonings ! . 2.. True native eloquence confifts in proper and perfpicuous words, in ufeful and found fenfe, in clear and convincing reafon j in fhort, in fuch a ftyle and manner of fpeaking as is proper and fuitable to the fubjecl: ; and fuch as is apt to teach, to affect, and perfuade m . Of this the {acred writers, and particularly St, Paul, fo rudely attack'd by fome critics, were great mafters. St. Paul did not pretend to conquer the fophiftry, power and prejudices of Jews and Pa- gans by any wifdom or eloquence merely human : He had the power of miracles , the afliftance of the eternal Spirit of reafon and perfuafion , that enabled him to conquer all oppofition, and ex~ k Tull. dc Orr.t. 30f, 305. l i Cor. ii. i. 2 srXUjwv q ao^iffij-ara. m Tull. de Orac. tend Defended and llluftr cited. 2 1 j tend the triumphs of the Crofs thro' the whole world. Yet thefe divine gifts and graces did not fuperfede his own natural or acquir'd abilities. He did not labour after the beauties of language and eloquence, but they naturally attended and accompanied the fervor and wrfflom of his fpi- rit, As we believe neither he nor the other infpir'd writers ftudy'd or labour'd their periods ; yet we find in their writings periods as full, as noble, as agreeably diverfify d as any Greece or Rome can produce. When the great Apoflle fays of himfelf that he was rude in fpeech", in my opi- nion he {peaks not of his writings, but his di courfe and preaching, when he prov'd every thing by a miracle. Rude in fpeech is one that {peaks plain language, like a private and ordinary per- fbnj and fuch language muft be us'd to the per- Tons he was to addreis. .W ~1.".:< i u '.{, I i 1 8 'The SACRED CLASSICS cc the Spirit j not to allure 'em by fawning fpeech- fc es after the manner of flatterers. But when I " more nearly view the nature and character of if his language, I find no grandeur of fpecch f( whereby our Saviour took leave of his Apo- fc ftles, fays a great Man, expreffes fb much ec wifclom and goodnefs, fuch care and concern- cc ment for his poor difciples to fupport their fpirits when he fliou'd be gone,, that he teems only to take care to comfort them, and takes no notice of his own approaching agonies." In that farewel difcourfe the chief myfteries, cc doctrines and mod ibvereign confolations of Chriftianity are in one view, and in the moil {atisfa&ory, moving and emphatical manner repreiented and laid before us : never was ma* jefty and divine power expreffed in terms of greater magnificence and loftinefs , nor infinite goodnefs and compaffion defcrib'd in words fo cc encouraging, in language of iiach gracious fc and adorable condefcentioli w . w As is the majefty of thofe divine difcouvfes, fo is the mercy of them. One great end of our Saviour's declaration of his fovereign majefty and intereft both in heaven and earth, in fuch variety of noble and full terms, feems to be the more effectually to adminifter ftrong confolations to his for- rowful difciples j to encourage their entire dependence upon his protection, and their expectation of all happinefs from his_inHnite power and goodnefs, tc cc 1 cc ( ft it 7%e SACRED CLASSICS " I am very confident, fays a polite and found critic, Cf whoever reads the Gofpels with an heart as much prepar'd in favour of them, as when he fits down to Wrgil or Homer) will find no paflagc there which is not told with more natural force than any epifbde in either cf of thofc wits,, who were the chief of mere " mankind 34 . The canonical letters of the Apoftles are gene- rally written in an cafy, pleafant and familiar ityle, very proper toinftrud:, move and engage, 'Tis highly entertaining and inftructive to both the learned and the pious reader to obferve, that in many pafTages the plainefl and moft unlearn'd of the facred college are., by the noblenefs of their fubjeclj, and the affiflance and infpiration of their divine Director, rais'd to a furprizing grandeur and fublimity of ftyle : and that even the plain fifherman St. Peter, without the advan- tage of learning and polite education, is fbme- times equal in the marvellous and majejlic to the learned fcholar of Gamaliel, and great Doffor of the Gentiles. Thefe ineftimable writings have equal plainnefs and power j are fuited to the capacities of the weakeft , as well as the convic- tion of the wifeit. They have ftrong fenfe in x Guardian Vol. I. N 2.1. p. 8f. common 'Defended and Illuflrated. 213 common words ; and plainnefs with fublimity. They have no unnatural rants, no rwelling words of vanity 5 but the amiable, great and noble fim- plicity of language reigns in them; and they always give their reader an imdifguis'd and mov- ing defcription of all the fentiments of man's heart. The facred writers are, as we hinted before, fmcerc good men, entirely poffefs'd with their fubjecl:, fully perfuaded of its truth, and vehe- mently affecled with its infinite importance : Therefore their language is proper and emphati- cal, the natural rcfult and product of fuch found principles 5 inch an impartial regard for truth, fuch love and reverence for the majeity of God, and fuch unfeigned good-will to mankind y . And o o certainly the fublime notions, myfteries, and mo- rals of the new Teftament, with the immenfe va- riety of the hiftorical narration exprefs'd in a plain unaffected ftyle, and a graceful and beautiful iim- plicity, with the appearance of iome little confti- fion, folecifms, and negled of grammar (as feme judge) will give greater pleafure and improve- ment to men of tafte and genius j and better de- Icrvc the title of eloquence with capable judges :) > Peclus eft enim quod difertos fac : r, ^-cvis mentis, Quin- ail. Inflit, or, 10. p. 6of, char. 124 Tloe SACRED CLASSICS than all the tedious exactnefs, meafur'd periods, and fpruce embelliiliments of low and conceited writers, who are rather fcrupulous than judicious, who are deficient in fenfe, andfuperfluous in words. Nature and reafbn confirm this : and the ereat o men or all ages and countries have been of this fentiment, and will be for ever. Longinus in effect throughout his whole book tells you, that the great and immortal wits of an- tiquity rais'd their reputation, and charm'd and conquer'd mankind by the greatnefs and fublimity of their thoughts ; which made 'em often over- look leffer matters, and defpife a fcrupulous accu- racy z . Demetrius Phalereus fays, Cf Too much accura- cy is a mark of a low genius : That a Itrong paffion will only admit of plain and unaffect- ed language 5 and that too much fcruple and labour about the equal meafure of the feveral members of a period, and the oppositions be- " ing perpetually preferv'd, checks the vehemence cc of the thought, and enfeebles the difcourfe \ o Tully tells us, " That words and expreffions are cc always in his judgment fufficiently adorn 'd, if cc they be fuch, that they feem to proceed from cc the fubjedl and nature of the thing it felf b . 7 Longin. de Sublim. c. 33, 54, ^f. p. 180, &c. a Demet. Phaler. c. 17. p. 2.3. b Tull. deOrar. p. 176. 4 Let cc cc cc cc cc ft cc i < a i Defended and llluflrated. 215 Let us hear a noble fcholar and critic of our own. Cf It is certainly a fault in oratory to be curious in the choice of words; a bold pe- riod, tho' agamft rule, will pleafe more than to be always in phrafe ; and a decent negli- gence is often a beauty in expreffion, as well as drefs$ whereas by being over correct, or al- ways flourishing, our periods become either too " lufcious or too {tiff V " Whoever looks into " the laws of the Golpel, lays the learned Bifhop Kidder d , " may (bon difcern that it is a blefTed cc inftitution, It is full of weighty principles, (C of divine and heavenly precepts, of the moil cc endearing and pathetic motives to obedience. cc It hath nothing trifling in it, but is fraught cc with a wifdom that is divine; and is plac'd which yet < f reaches not the height of the fubje6i -, not like rc the flights of rhetoric, which fet out fimM o cf expreffible," I fubjoin to this juft and admi^ rable account of this great 1 man of the noblenefs o and natural eloquence of the facred writers in ge- neral, an account of a particular paflage in St. Luke by a very found and judicious critic, which I al- ways read with pleadire, only inferior to that which the divine original oives me. 'Tis the account of c> , O the manner of our Saviour's joining with two difciples on the way to Emmaus, as an ordinary traveller, and taking the privilege as fuch to en- quire of them what occalion'd a (adnefs in their countenances, &c. C( Their wonder, fays he, that any man fb " near Jerusalem iliou'd be a ftraiagcr to what * o G e i had .12,8 The SACRED CLASSICS <( had pafs'd there j their acknowledgment to one (C they met accidentally that they had believed in (C this prophet-, and that now the third day af- c ter his death they were in doubt as to their " pleafing hope, which occafioned the heavinefs '" he took notice of; are all reprefented in a .oycov rspO^eiav' r an^/sj'V,' rfj" s / lurir/jicy. Ds SACCJ'. 4. p. 1865 1 88, Camb. 1711. vchc cc (f (C cc cc cc Defended and Illuftrated. 1 3 y cf vehemence vindicate the doctrines of truth. f< And let no man, to excule his own idlenels, ff prelume to delpoil the blelTed Saint of thac ff greateft of ornaments and higheft of prailes. cc Whence, I pray, did he confound the Jews ;'^:. : 7/;, \vho was excellently admir'd for H h 2, his 1 3 6 T%? SACREDCLASSICS Cf his disputing and preaching ? For what reafon cc did thcLycaonians (uppoie him to be Mercury? ,oy:.j. St. Chryfoit. cJe Sricerd.i. 4* 188, 190. Cantab, i-'ii. 'Tis plain from the context th'tt V'y{^ and /Jycr; here lignify true nerfuafive elc- :, as they do in the bdl Creek writers: d\\d \oyxv ; on the account of his fla^tencs p Dcmolt. Mid. v \ his Defended and llluftrated. his addrefs, and infinuation into the Eivour and good opinion of thofe to whom he (ends his let- ters, in order to do them the moil important fcr vices, and engage them to confult their own true intereft and happinefs in doing much good f . How often does he admire his accuracy in the choice of the moil nobly-ftrong and expreilive words 5 his fharpnefs and vivacity ; the beautiful vehemence and pathos of his ftyle j the fuitable- nefs of his expreilions to peribns and things 5 his moving condefcenfion and refiftlefs power of per- fuafionj his juft confequences, and the clofeneis and conviction of his reafonings ? After St. Chryfoflom has admir'd and fet out the ftrength and beauty of the expreilion in that no- ble pailage, Rom. viii. 5 5. he concludes w^jth thofe very remarkable and lively words, u St. Paul runs cf over an immenie ocean of dangers and repre- 4C ients all things terrible to mankind in one em- o cc phatical word." After he has accurately iliew'd the winning addreis, and conquering tendernefs, the eloquence and innumerable graces of the Epi- file to Philemon in the twentieth verfe, he cries out ap%tra.i, I Cor. XV. I, 2,. p. 45/4. T-'.r -trapxtviw-s;? ,w^ lyx.aj/vi.'wv c" v -rrciet ^%- ^(x. -ars G"jjJiTs. Phil. i:. 12.. p. 4f. Philemon 16. p. 418, 4ip. i Cor. xv. 13. P. fOp. r Cor. xv. 8 498. ;;J iln. Rom xli. 2., 17)-. Ephef, iv IT, in 138 The SACRED CLASSICS in admiration and traniport, C( What ftone wou'd " not thefe words have mollify 'd ; what wild beaft