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Chapter LI.—Let the Partakers in Strife Acknowledge Their Sins.

Let us therefore implore forgiveness for all those transgressions which through any [suggestion] of the adversary we have committed.  And these who have been the leaders of sedition and disagreement ought to have respect 4273 to the common hope.  For such as live in fear and love would rather that they themselves than their neighbours should be involved in suffering.  And they prefer to bear blame themselves, rather than that the concord which has been well and piously 4274 handed down to us should suffer.  For it is better that a man should acknowledge his transgressions than that he should harden his heart, as the hearts of those were hardened who stirred up sedition against Moses the servant 4275 of God, and whose condemnation was made manifest [unto all].  For they went down alive into Hades, and death swallowed them up. 4276   Pharaoh with his army and all the princes of Egypt, and the chariots with their riders, were sunk in the depths of the Red Sea, and perished, 4277 for no other reason than that their foolish hearts were hardened, after so many signs and wonders had been wrought in the land of Egypt by Moses the servant of God.


Footnotes

244:4273

Or, “look to.”

244:4274

Or, “righteously.”

244:4275

I. ἄνθρωπον (man).

244:4276

Num. xvi.  I θάνατος ποιμανεῖ αὐτούς—“Death shall feed on them,” Ps. xlix. 14 A.V.—should be, “Death shall tend them.”

244:4277

Ex. xiv.


Next: Chapter LII