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THE TESTAMENTS OF
THE TWELVE PATRIARCHS
(VII TO XII)
VII.--THE TESTAMENT OF DAN CONCERNING ANGER AND LYING.
1. The record of the words of Dan, which he spake to his sons in his last
days. In the hundred and twenty-fifth year of his life he called together his
family, and said: Hearken to my words, ye sons of Dan; give heed to the words
of the mouth of your father. I have proved in my heart, and in my whole life,
that truth with just dealing is good and well-pleasing to God, and that lying
and anger are evil, because they teach man all wickedness. I confess this day
to you, my children, that in my heart I rejoiced concerning the death of Joseph,
a true and good man; and I rejoiced at the selling of Joseph, because his father
loved him more than us. For the spirit of jealousy and of vainglory said to
me, Thou also art his son. And one of the spirits of Beliar wrought with me,
saying, Take this sword, and with it slay Joseph; so shall thy father love
thee when he is slain. This is the spirit of anger that counselled me, that
even as a leopard devoureth a kid, so should I devour Joseph. But the God of
Jacob our father gave him not over into my hands that I should find him alone,
nor suffered me to work this iniquity, that two tribes should be destroyed
in Israel.[1]
2. And now, my children, I am dying, and I tell you of a truth, that unless
ye keep yourselves from the spirit of lying and of anger, and love truth and
long-suffering, ye shall perish. There is blindness in anger, my children,
and no wrathful man regardeth any, person with truth: for though it be a father
or a mother, he behaveth towards them as enemies; though it be a brother, he
knoweth him not; though it be a prophet of the Lord, he disobeyeth him; though
a righteous man, he regardeth him not; a friend he doth not acknowledge. For
the spirit of anger encompasseth him with the nets of deceit, and blindeth
his natural eyes, and through lying darkeneth his mind, and giveth him a sight
of his own making. And wherewith encompasseth he his eyes? In hatred of heart;
and he giveth him a heart of his own against his brother unto envy.
3. My children, mischievous is anger, for it becometh as a soul to the soul
itself; and the body of the angry man it maketh its own, and over his soul
it getteth the mastery, and it bestoweth upon the body its own power, that
it may work all iniquity; and whenever the soul doeth aught, it justifieth
what has been done, since it seeth not. Therefore he who is wrathful, if he
be a mighty man, hath a treble might in his anger; one by the might and aid
of his servants, and a second by his wrath, whereby he persuadeth and overcometh
in injustice: and having a third of the nature of his own body, and of his
own self working the evil. And though the wrathful man be weak, yet hath he
a might twofold of that which is by nature; for wrath ever aideth such in mischief.
This spirit goeth always with lying at the right hand of Satan, that his works
may be wrought with cruelty and lying.
4. Understand ye therefore the might of wrath, that it is vain. For it first
of all stingeth him in word: then by deeds it strengtheneth him who is angry,
and with bitter punishments disturbeth his mind, and so stirreth up with great
wrath his soul. Therefore, when any one speaketh against you, be not[1] ye
moved unto anger, And if any man praiseth you as good, be not lifted up nor
elated, either to the feeling or showing of pleasure.[2] For first it pleaseth
the hearing, and so stirreth up the understanding to understand the grounds
for anger; and then, being wrathful, he thinketh that he is justly angry. If
ye fall into any loss or ruin, my children, be hot troubled; for this very
spirit maketh men desire that which hath perished, in order that they may he
inflamed by the desire. If ye suffer loss willingly, be not vexed, for from
vexation he raiseth up wrath with lying. And wrath with lying is a twofold
mischief;[3] and they speak one with another that they may disturb the mind;
and when the soul is continually, disturbed, the Lord departeth from it, and
Beliar ruleth over it.
5. Observe, therefore, my children, the commandments of the Lord, and keep
His law; and depart from wrath, and hate lying, that the Lord may dwell among
you, and Beliar may flee from you. Speak truth each one with his neighbour,
so shall ye not fall into lust and confusion; but ye shall be in peace, having
the God of peace, so[4] shall no war prevail over yon. Love the Lord through
all your life, unit one another with a true heart. For I know that in the last
days ye will depart from the Lord, and will provoke Levi unto anger, and will
fight against Judah; but ye shall not prevail against them. For an angel of
the Lord shall guide them both; for by them shall Israel stand. And whensoever
ye depart from the Lord, ye will walk in all evil, working the abominations
of the Gentiles, going[5] astray with women of them that are ungodly; and the
spirits of error shall work in you with all malice. For I have read in the
book of Enoch the righteous, that your prince is Satan, and that all the spirits
of fornication and pride shall be subject unto Levi, to lay a snare for the
sons of Levi, to came them to sin before the Lord. And my sons will draw near
unto Levi, and sin with them in all things; and the sons of Judah will be covetous,
plundering other men's goods like lions. Therefore shall ye be led away with
them in captivity, and there shall ye receive all the plagues of Egypt, and
all the malice of the Gentiles: and so, when ye return to the Lord, ye shall
obtain mercy, and He shall bring you into His sanctuary, calling peace upon
you; and there shall arise unto you from the tribe of Judah and of Levi the
salvation of the Lord;[6] and He shall make war against Beliar, and He shall
give the vengeance of victory to our coasts. And the captivity shall He take
from Beliar, even the souls of the saints, and shall turn disobedient hearts
unto the Lord, and shall give to them who call upon Him everlasting peace;
and the saints shall rest in Eden, and the righteous shall rejoice in the new
Jerusalem, which shall be unto the glory of God for ever and ever. And no longer
shall Jerusalem endure desolation, nor Israel be led captive; for the Lord
shall be in the midst of her, dwelling among men,[7] even the Holy One of Israel
reigning over them[8] in humility and in poverty;[9] and he who believeth on
Him shall reign in truth in the heavens.
6. And now, my children, fear the Lord, and take heed unto yourselves of Satan
and his spirits; and draw near unto God, and to the Angel[10] that intercedeth
for you, for He is a Mediator between God and man for the peace of Israel.
He shall stand up against the kingdom of the enemy; therefore is the enemy
eager to destroy all that call upon the Lord. For he knoweth that in the day
on which Israel shall believe,[11] the kingdom of the enemy shall be brought
to an end; and the very angel of peace shall strengthen Israel, that it fall
not into the extremity of evil. And it shall be in the time of the iniquity
of Israel, that the Lord will depart from them, and will go after him that
doeth His will, for unto none of His angels shall it be as unto him. And His
name shall be in every place of Israel, and among the Gentiles--Saviour. Keep
therefore yourselves, my children. from every evil work, and cast away wrath
and all lying, and love truth and long-suffering; and the things which ye have
heard from your father, do ye also impart to your children, that the Father
of the Gentiles may receive you: for He is true and long-suffering, meek and
lowly, and teacheth by His works the law of God. Depart, therefore, from all
unrighteousness, and cleave unto, the righteousness of the law of the Lord:
and bury me near my fathers.
7. And when he had said these things he kissed them, and slept the long sleep.[12]
And his sons buried him, and after that they carried up his bones to the side
of Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob. Nevertheless, as Dan had prophesied unto
them that they should forget the law of their God, and should be alienated
from the land of their inheritance, and from the race of Israel, and from their
kindred, so also it came to pass.
VIII.--THE TESTAMENT OF NAPHTALI CONCERNING NATURAL GOODNESS.
1. The record of the testament of Naphtali, what things he ordained at the
time of his death in the hundred and thirty-second year of his life. When his
sons were gathered together in the seventh month, the fourth day of the month,
he, being yet in good health, made them a feast and good cheer. And after he
was awake in the morning, he said to them, I am dying; and they believed him
not. And he blessed the Lord; and affirmed that after yesterday's feast he
should die. He began then to say to his sons: Hear, my children; ye sons of
Naphtali, hear the words of your father. I was born from Bilhah; and because
Rachel dealt craftily, and gave Bilhah in place of herself to Jacob, and she
bore me upon Rachel's lap, therefore was I called Naphtali.[1] And Rachel loved
me because I was born upon her lap; and when I was of young and tender form,
she was wont to kiss me, and say, Would that I might see a brother of thine
from my own womb, like unto thee: whence also Joseph was like unto me in all
things, according to the prayers of Rachel. Now my mother was Bilhah, daughter
of Rotheus the brother of Deborah, Rebecca's nurse, and she was born on one
and the self-same day with Rachel. And Rotheus was of the family of Abraham,
a Chaldean, fearing God, free-born and noble; and he was taken captive, and
was bought by Laban; and he gave him Aena his handmaid to wife, and she bore
a daughter, and called her Zilpah, after the name of the village in which he
had been taken captive. And next she bore Bilhah, saying, My daughter is eager
after what is new, for immediately that she was born she was eager for the
breast.
2. And since I was swift on my feet like a deer, my father Jacob appointed
me for all errands and messages, and as a deer[2] did he give me his blessing.
For as the potter knoweth the vessel, what it containeth, and bringeth clay
thereto, so also doth the Lord make the body in accordance with the spirit,
and according to the capacity of the body doth He implant the spirit, and the
one is not deficient from the other by a third part of a hair; for by weight,
and measure, and rule is every creature of the Most High.[3] And as the potter
knoweth the use of each vessel, whereto it sufficeth, so also doth the Lord
know the body, how far it is capable for goodness, and when it beginneth in
evil; for there is no created thing and no thought which the Lord knoweth not,
for He created every man after His own image. As man's strength, so also is
his work; and as his mind, so also is his work; and as his purpose, so also
is his doing; as his heart, so also is his mouth; as his eye, so also is his
sleep; as his soul, so also is his word, either in the law of the Lord or in
the law of Beliar. And as there is a division between light anti darkness,
between seeing and hearing, so also is there a division between man and man,
and between woman and woman; neither is it to be said that there is any superiority
in anything, either of the face or of other like things.[4] For God made all
things good in their order, the five senses in the head, and He joineth on
the neck to the head, the hair also for comeliness, the heart moreover for
understanding, the belly for the dividing of the stomach, the calamus[5] for
health, the liver for wrath, the gall for bitterness. the spleen for laughter,
the reins for craftiness, the loins for power, the ribs for containing, the
back for strength, and so forth. So then, my children, be ye orderly unto good
things in the fear of God, and do nothing disorderly in scorn or out of its
due season. For if thou bid the eye to hear, it cannot; so neither in darkness
can ye do the works of light.
3. Be ye not therefore eager to corrupt your doings through excess, or with
empty words to deceive your souls; because if ye keep silence in purity of
heart, ye shall be able to hold fast the will of God, and to cast away the
will of the devil. Sun and moon and stars change not their order; so also ye
shall not change the law of God in the disorderliness of your doings. Nations
went astray, and forsook the Lord, and changed their order, and followed stones
and stocks, following after spirits of error. But ye shall not be so, my children,
recognising in the firmament, in the earth, and in the sea, and in all created
things, the Lord who made them all, that ye become not as Sodom, which changed
the order of its nature. in like manner also the Watchers[6] changed the order
of their nature, whom also the Lord cursed at the flood, and for their sakes
made desolate the earth, that it should be uninhabited and fruitless.
4. These things I say, my children, for I have read in the holy writing of
Enoch that ye yourselves also will depart from the Lord, walking according
to all wickedness of the Gentiles, and ye will do according to all the iniquity
of Sodom. And the Lord will bring captivity upon you, and there shall ye serve
your enemies, and ye shall be covered with all affliction and tribulation,
until the Lord shall have consumed you all. And after that ye shall have been
diminished and made few, ye will return and acknowledge the Lord your God;
and He will bring you back into your own land, according to His abundant mercy.
And it shall be, after that they shall come into the land of their fathers,
they will again forget the Lord and deal wickedly; and the Lord shall scatter
them upon the face of all the earth, until the compassion of the Lord shall
come, a Man working righteousness and showing mercy unto all them that are
afar off, and them that are near.
5. For in the fortieth year of my life, I saw in a vision that the sun and
the moon were standing still on the Mount of Olives, at the east of Jerusalem.
And behold Isaac, the father of my father, saith to us, Run and lay hold of
them, each one according to his strength; and he that seizeth them, his shall
be the sun and the moon. And we all of us ran together, and Levi laid hold
of the sun, and Judah outstripped the others and seized the moon, and they
were both of them lifted up with them. And when Levi became as a sun, a certain
young man gave to him twelve branches of palm; and Judah was bright as the
moon, and under his feet were twelve rays. And Levi and Judah ran, and laid
hold each of the other. And, lo, a bull upon the earth, having two great horns,
and an eagle's wings upon his back; and we wished to seize him, but could not.
For Joseph outstripped us, and took him, and ascended up with him on high.
And I saw, for I was there, and behold a holy writing appeared to us saying:
Assyrians, Medes, Persians, Elamites, Gelachaeans, Chaldeans, Syrians, shall
possess in captivity the twelve tribes of Israel.
6. And again, after seven months, I saw our father Jacob standing by the sea
of Jamnia, and we his sons were with him. And, behold, there came a ship sailing
by, full of dried flesh, without sailors or pilot: and there was written upon
the ship, Jacob. And our father saith to us, Let us embark on our ship. And
when we had gone on board, there arose a vehement storm, and a tempest of mighty
wind; and our father, who was holding the helm, flew away from us. And we,
being tost with the tempest, were borne along over the: sea; and the ship was
filled with water and beaten about with a mighty wave, so that it was well-nigh
broken in pieces. And Joseph fled away upon a little boat, and we all were
divided upon twelve boards, and Levi and Judah were together. We therefore
all were scattered even unto afar off. Then Levi, girt about with sackcloth,
prayed for us all unto the Lord. And when the storm ceased, immediately the
ship reached the land, as though in peace. And, lo, Jacob our father came,
and we rejoiced with one accord.
7. These two dreams I told to my father; and he said to me, These things must
be fulfilled in their season, after that Israel hath endured many things. Then
my father saith unto me, I believe that Joseph liveth, for I see always that
the Lord numbereth him with you. And he said, weeping, Thou livest, Joseph,
my child, and I behold thee not, and thou seest not Jacob that begat thee.
And he caused us also to weep at these words of his, and I burned in my heart
to declare that he had been sold, but I feared my brethren.
8. Behold, my children, I have shown unto you the last times, that all shall
come to pass in Israel. Do ye also therefore charge your children that they
be united to Levi and to Judah. For through Judah shall salvation arise unto
Israel, and in Him shall Jacob be blessed. For through his tribe shall God
be seen dwelling among men on the earth, to save the race of Israel, and He
shall gather together the righteous from the Gentiles. If ye work that which
is good, my children, both men and angels will bless you; and God will be glorified
through you among the Gentiles, and the devil will flee from you, and the wild
beasts will fear you, and the angels will cleave to you. For as if a man rear
up a child well, he hath a kindly remembrance thereof; so also for a good work
there is a good remembrance with God. But him who doeth not that which is good,
men and angels shall curse and God will be dishonoured among the heathen through
him, and the devil maketh him his own as his peculiar instrument, and every
wild beast shall master him, and the Lord will hate him. For the commandments
of the law are twofold, and through prudence must they be fulfilled. For there
is a season for a man to embrace his wife, and a season to abstain therefrom[1]
for his prayer. So then there are two commandments; and unless they be done
in due order, they bring about sin. So also is it with the other commandments.
Be ye therefore wise in God, and prudent, understanding the order of the commandments.
and the laws of every work, that the Lord may love you.
9. And when he had charged them with many such words, he exhorted them that
they should remove his bones to Hebron, and should bury him with his fathers.
And when he had eaten and drunken with a merry heart, he covered his face and
died. And his sons did according to all things whatsoever Napthtali their father
had charged them.
IX.--THE TESTAMENT OF GAD CONCERNING HATRED.
1. The record of the testament of Gad, what things he spake unto his sons,
in the hundred and twenty-seventh year of his life, saying: I was the seventh
son born to Jacob, and I was valiant in keeping the flocks. I guarded at night
the flock; and whenever the lion came, or wolf, or leopard, or bear, or any
wild beast against the fold, I pursued it, and with my hand seizing its foot,
and whirling it round, I stunned it, and hurled it over two furlongs, and so
killed it. Now Joseph was feeding the flock with us for about thirty days,
and being tender, he fell sick by reason of the heat. And he returned to Hebron
to his father, who made him lie down near him, because he loved him. And Joseph
told our father that the sons of Zilpah and Bilhah were slaying the best of
the beasts,[1] and devouring them without the knowledge of Judah and Reuben.
For he saw that I delivered a lamb out of the mouth of the bear, and I put
the bear to death; and the lamb I slew, being grieved concerning it that it
could not live, and we ate it, and he told our father. And I was wroth with
Joseph for that thing until the day that he was sold into Egypt. And the spirit
of hatred was in me, and I wished not either to see Joseph or to hear him.
And he rebuked us to our faces for having eaten of the flock without Judah.
And whatsoever things he told our father, he believed him.
2. I confess now my sin, my children, that oftentimes I wished to kill him,
because I hated him to the death, and there were in no wise in me bowels of
mercy towards him. Moreover, I hated him yet more because of his dreams; and
I would have devoured him out of the land of the living, even as a calf devoureth
the grass from the earth. Therefore I and Judah sold him to the Ishmaelites
for thirty[2] pieces of gold, and ten of them we hid, and showed the twenty
to our brethren: and so through my covetousness I was fully bent on his destruction.
And the God of my fathers delivered him from my hands, that I should not work
iniquity in Israel.
3. And now, my children, hearken to the words of truth to work righteousness,
and all the law of the Most High, and not go astray through the spirit of hatred,
for it is evil in all the doings of men. Whatsoever a man doeth, that doth
the hater abhor: though he worketh the law of the Lord, he praiseth him not;
though he feareth the Lord, and taketh pleasure in that which is righteous,
he loveth him not: he dispraiseth the truth, he envieth him that ordereth his
way aright, he delighteth in evil-speaking, he loveth arrogance, for hatred
hath blinded his soul; even as I also looked on Joseph.
4. Take heed therefore, my children, of hatred; for it worketh iniquity against
the Lord Himself: for it will not hear the words of His commandments concerning
the loving of one's neighbour, and it sinneth against God. For if a brother
stumble, immediately it wisheth to proclaim it to all men, and is urgent that
he should be judged for it, and be punished and slain. And if it be a servant,
it accuseth him to his master, and with all affliction it deviseth against
him, if it be possible to slay him. For hatred worketh in envy, and it ever
sickeneth with envy against them that prosper in well-doing, when it seeth
or heareth thereof. For as love would even restore to life the dead, and would
call back them that are condemned to die, so hatred would slay the living,
and those that have offended in a small matter it would not suffer to live.
For the spirit of hatred worketh together with Satan through hastiness[3] of
spirit in all things unto men's death; but the spirit of love worketh together
with the law of God in long-suffering unto the salvation of men.[4]
5. Hatred is evil, because it continually abideth with lying, speaking against
the truth; and it maketh small things to be great, and giveth heed to darkness
as to light, and calleth the sweet bitter, and teacheth slander, and war, and
violence, and every excess of evil; and it filleth the heart with devilish
poison. And these things I say to you from experience, my children, that ye
may flee hatred, and cleave to the love of the Lord. Righteousness casteth
out hatred, humility destroyeth hatred. For he that is just and humble is ashamed
to do wrong, being reproved not of another, but of his own heart, because the
Lord vieweth his intent: he speaketh not against any man, because the fear
of the Most High overcometh hatred. For, fearing lest he should offend the
Lord, he will not do any wrong to any man, no, not even in thought. These things
I learnt at last, after that I had repented concerning Joseph. For true repentance
after a godly sort destroyeth unbelief, and driveth away the darkness, and
enlighteneth the eyes, and giveth knowledge to the soul, and guideth the mind
to salvation; and those things which it hath not learnt from man, it knoweth
through repentance. For God brought upon me a disease of the heart; and had
not the prayers of Jacob my father intervened, it had hardly failed that my
spirit had departed. For by what things a man transgresseth, by the same also
is he punished.[1] For in that my heart was set mercilessly against Joseph,
in my heart too I suffered mercilessly, and was judged for eleven months, for
so long a thee as I had been envious against Joseph until he was sold.
6. And now, my children, love ye each one his brother, and put away hatred
from your hearts, loving one another in deed, and in word, and in thought of
the soul. For in the presence of our father I spake peaceably with Joseph;
and when I had gone out, the spirit of hatred darkened my mind, and moved my
soul to slay him. [2]Love ye therefore one another from your hearts; and if
a man sin against thee, tell him of it gently, and drive out the poison of
hatred, and foster not guile in thy soul. And if he confess and repent, forgive
him; and if he deny it, strive not with him, lest he swear, and thou sin doubly.
Let not a stranger hear your secrets amid your striving, lest he hate and become
thy enemy, and work great sin against thee; for ofttimes he will talk guilefully[3]
with thee, or evilly overreach thee, taking his poison from himself. Therefore,
if he deny it, and is convicted and put to shame, and is silenced, do not tempt
him on. For he who denieth repenteth, so that he no more doeth wrong against
thee; yea also, he will honour thee, and fear thee, and be at peace with thee.
But if he be shameless, and abideth in his wrongdoing, even then forgive him
from the heart, and give the vengeance to God.
7. If a man prospereth more than you, be not grieved, but pray also for him,
that he may have perfect prosperity. For perchance it is expedient for you
thus; and if he be further exalted, be not envious, remembering that all flesh
shall die: and offer praise to God, who giveth things good and profitable to
all men. Seek out the judgments of the Lord, and so shall thy mind rest and
he at peace. And though a man become rich by evil means, even as Esau the brother
of my father, be not jealous; but wait for the end of the Lord. For either
He taketh His benefits away from the wicked, or leaveth them still to the repentant,
or to the unrepentant reserveth punishment for ever. For the poor man who is
free from envy, giving thanks to the Lord in all things, is rich among all
men, because he hath not evil jealousy of men. Put away, therefore, hatred
from your souls, and love one another with uprightness of heart.
8. And do ye also tell these things to your children, that they honour Judah
and Levi, for from them shall the Lord raise up a Saviour to Israel.[4] For
I know that at the last your children shall depart from them, and shall walk
in all wickedness, and mischief, and corruption before the Lord. And when he
had rested for a little while, he said again to them, My children, obey your
father, and bury me near to my fathers. And he drew up his feet, and fell asleep
in peace. And after five years they carried him up, and laid him in Hebron
with his fathers.
X.--THE TESTAMENT OF ASHER CONCERNING TWO FACES OF VICE AND VIRTUE.
1. The record of the testament of Asher, what things he spake to his sons
in the hundred and twentieth year of his life. While he was still in health,
he said to them: Hearken, ye children of Asher, to your father, and I will
declare to you all that is right in the sight of God. Two ways[1] hath God
given to the sons of men, and two minds, and two doings, and two places, and
two ends. Therefore all things are by twos, one corresponding to the other.
There are two ways of good and evil, with which are the two minds in our breasts
distinguishing them. Therefore if the soul take pleasure in good, all its actions
are in righteousness; and though it sin, it straightway repenteth. For, having
his mind set upon righteousness, and casting away maliciousness, he straightway
overthroweth the evil, and uprooteth the sin. But if his mind turn aside in
evil, all h s doings are in maliciousness, and he driveth away the good, and
taketh unto him the evil, and is ruled by Beliar; and even though he work what
is good, he perverteth it in evil. For whenever he beginneth as though to do
good, he bringeth the end of his doing to work evil, seeing that the treasure
of the devil is filled with the poison of an evil spirit.
2. There is then, he saith, a soul which speaketh the good for the sake of
the evil, and the end of the doing leadeth to mischief.[2] There is a man who
showeth no compassion upon him who serveth his turn in evil; and this thing
hath two aspects, but the whole is evil, And there is a man that loveth him
that worketh evil; he likewise dwelleth in evil, because he chooseth even to
die in an evil cause for his sake: and concerning this it is clear that it
hath two aspects, but the whole is an evil work. And though there is love,
it is but wickedness concealing the evil, even as it beareth a name that seemeth
good, but the end of the doing tendeth unto evil. Another stealeth, worketh
unjustly, plundereth, defraudeth, and withal pitieth the poor: this, too, hath
a twofold aspect, but the whole is evil. Defrauding his neighbour he provoketh
God, and sweareth falsely against the Most High, and yet pitieth the poor:
the Lord who commandeth the law he setteth at nought and provoketh, and refresheth
the poor; he defileth the soul, and maketh gay the body; he killeth many, and
he pitieth a few: and this, too, hath a twofold aspect. Another committeth
adultery and fornication, and abstaineth from meats; yet in his fasting he
worketh evil, and by his power and his wealth perverteth many, and out of his
excessive wickedness worketh the commandments: this, too, hath a twofold aspect,
but the whole is evil. Such men are as swine or hares;[1] for they are half
clean, but in very deed are unclean. For God in the Heavenly[2] Tablets hath
thus declared.
3. Do not ye therefore, my children, wear two faces like unto them, of goodness
and of wickedness; but cleave unto goodness only, for in goodness doth God
rest, and men desire it. From wickedness flee away, destroying the devil by
your good works; for they that are double-faced serve not God, but their own
lusts, so that they may please Beliar and men like unto themselves.
4. For good men, even they that are single of face, though they be thought
by them that are double-faced to err, arc just before God. For many in killing
the wicked do two works, an evil by a good; but the whole is good, because
he hath uprooted and destroyed that which is evil. One man hateth him that
showeth mercy, and doeth wrong to the adulterer and the thief: this, too, is
double-faced, but the whole work is good, because he followeth the Lord's example,
in that he receiveth not that which seemeth good with that which is really
bad.[3] Another desireth not to see good days with them that riot, lest he
defile his mouth and pollute his soul: this, too, is double-faced, but the
whole is good, for such men are like to stags and to hinds, because in a wild
condition they seem to be unclean, but they are altogether clean; because they
walk in a zeal for God, and abstain from what God also hateth and forbiddeth
by His commandments, and they ward off the evil from the good.
5. Ye see therefore, my children, how that there are two in all things, one
against the other, and the one is hidden by the other.[4] Death succeedeth
to life, dishonour to glory, night to day, and darkness to light; and all things
are under the day, and just things trader life: wherefore also everlasting
life awaiteth death. Nor may it be said that truth is a lie, nor right wrong;
for all truth is under the light, even as all things are under God. All these
things I proved in my life, and I wandered not from the truth of the Lord,
and I searched out the commandments of the Most High, walking with singleness
of face according to all my strength unto that which is good.
6. Take heed therefore ye also, my children, to the commandments of the Lord,
following the truth with singleness of face, for they that are double-faced
receive twofold punishment. Hate the spirits of error, which strive against
men. Keep the law of the Lord, and give not heed unto evil as unto good; but
look unto the thing that is good indeed, and keep it in all commandments of
the Lord, having your conversation unto Him, and resting in Him: for the ends
at which men aim do show their righteousness, and know the angels of the Lord
from the angels of Satan. For if the soul depart troubled, it is tormented
by the evil spirit which also it served in lusts and evil works; but if quietly
and with joy it hath known the angel of peace, it shall comfort him in life.
7. Become not, my children, as Sodom, which knew not the angels of the Lord,
and perished for ever, For I know that ye will sin, and ye shall be delivered
into the hands of your enemies, and your land shall be made desolate, and ye
shall be scattered unto the four corners of the earth. And ye shall be set
at nought in the Dispersion as useless water, until the Most High shall visit
the earth; and He shall come as man, with men eating and drinking, and in peace
breaking the head of the dragon through water. He shall save Israel and all
nations, God speaking in the person of man. Therefore tell ye these things
to your children, that they disobey Him not. For I have read in the Heavenly
Tablets that in very deed ye will disobey Him, and act ungodly against Him,
not giving heed to the law of God, but to the commandments of men. Therefore
shall ye be scattered as Gad and as Dan my brethren, who shall know not their
own lands, tribe, and tongue. But the Lord will gather you together in faith
through the hope of His tender mercy, for the sake of Abraham, and Isaac, and
Jacob.[1]
8. And when he had said these things unto them, he charged them, saying: Bury
me in Hebron. And he fell into a peaceful sleep, and died; and after this his
sons did as he had charged them, and they carried him up and buried him with
his fathers.
XI.--THE TESTAMENT OF JOSEPH CONCERNING SOBRIETY.
1. The record of the testament of Joseph. When he was about to die he called
his sons and his brethren together, and said to them: My children and brethren,
hearken to Joseph the beloved of Israel; give ear, my sons, unto your father.
I have seen in my life envy and death, and I wandered not in the truth of the
Lord. These my brethren hated me, and the Lord loved me: they wished to slay
me, and the God of my fathers guarded me: they let me down into a pit, and
the Most High brought me up again: I was sold for a slave, and the Lord made
me free: I was taken into captivity, and His strong hand succoured me: I was
kept in hunger, and the Lord Himself nourished me: I was alone, and God comforted
me: I was sick, and the Most High visited me: I was in prison, and the Saviour
showed favour unto me; in bonds, and He released me; amid slanders, and He
pleaded my cause; amid bitter words of the Egyptians, and He rescued me; amid
envy and guile, and He exalted me.
2. And thus Potiphar[1] the chief cook[2] of Pharaoh entrusted to me his house,
and I struggled against a shameless woman, urging me to transgress with her;
but the God of Israel my father guarded me from the burning flame. I was cast
into prison, I was beaten, I was mocked; and the Lord granted me to find pity
in the sight of the keeper of the prison. For He will in no wise forsake them
that fear Him, neither in darkness, nor in bonds, nor in tribulations, nor
in necessities. For not as man is God ashamed, nor as the son of man is He
afraid, nor as one that is earth-born is He weak, or can He be thrust aside;
but in all places is He at hand, and in divers ways doth He comfort, departing
for a little to try the purpose of the soul. In ten temptations He showed me
approved, and in all of them I endured; for endurance is a mighty charm, and
patience giveth many good things.
3. How often did the Egyptian threaten me with death ! How often did she give
me over to punishment, and then call me back, and threaten me when I would
not company with her ! And she said to me, Thou shalt be lord of me, and all
that is mine, if thou wilt give thyself unto me, and thou shall be as our master.
Therefore I remembered the words of the fathers of my father Jacob, and I entered
into my chamber[3] and prayed unto the Lord; and I fasted in those seven years,
and I appeared to my master as one living delicately, for they that fast for
God's sake receive beauty of face.[4] And if one gave me wine, I drank it not;
and I fasted for three days, and took my food and gave it to the poor and sick.
And I sought the Lord early, and wept for the Egyptian woman of Memphis, for
very unceasingly did she trouble me, and at night she came to me under the
pretence of visiting me; and at first, because she had no male child, she feigned
to count me as a son. And I prayed unto the Lord, and she bare a male child;
therefore for a thee she embraced me as a son, and I knew it not. Last of all,
she sought to draw me into fornication. And when I perceived it, I sorrowed
even unto death; and when she had gone out I came to myself, and I lamented
for her many days, because I saw her guile and her deceit. And I declared unto
her the words of the Most High, if haply she would turn from her evil lust.
4. How often has she fawned upon me with words as a holy man, with guile in
her talk, praising my chastity before her husband, while desiring to destroy
me when we were alone. She lauded me openly as chaste, and in secret she said
unto me, Fear not my husband; for he is persuaded concerning thy chastity,
so that even should one tell him concerning us he would in no wise believe.
For all these things I lay upon the ground in sackcloth, and I besought God
that the Lord would deliver me from the Egyptian. And when she prevailed nothing,
she came again to me under the plea of instruction, that she might know the
word of the Lord. And she said unto me, If thou wiliest that I should leave
my idols, be persuaded by me, and I will persuade my husband to depart from
his idols, and we will walk in the law of thy Lord. And I said unto her, The
Lord willeth not that those who reverence Him should be in uncleanness, nor
doth He take pleasure in them that commit adultery. And she held her peace,
longing to accomplish her evil desire. And I gave myself yet more to fasting
and prayer, that the Lord should deliver me from her.
5. And again at another time she said unto me, If thou wilt not commit adultery,
I will kill my husband, and so will I lawfully take thee to be my husband.
I therefore, when I heard this, rent my garment, and said, Woman, reverence
the Lord, and do not this evil deed, lest thou be utterly destroyed; for I
will declare thy ungodly thought unto all men. She therefore, being afraid,
besought that I would declare to no one her wickedness. And she departed, soothing
me with gifts, and sending to me every delight of the sons of men.
6. And she sendeth to me food sprinkled with enchantments. And when the eunuch
who brought it came, I looked up and beheld a terrible man giving me with the
dish a sword, and I perceived that her scheme was for the deception of my soul.
And when he had gone out I wept, nor did I taste that or any other of her food.
So then after one day she came to me and observed the food, and said unto me,
What is this; that thou hast not eaten of the food? And I said unto her, It
is because thou filledst it with death; and how saidst thou, I come not near
to idols but to the Lord alone ? Now therefore know that the God of my father
hath revealed unto me by an angel thy wickedness, and I have kept it to convict
thee, if haply thou mayest see it and repent. But that thou mayest learn that
the wickedness of the ungodly hath no power over them that reverence God in
chastity, I took it and ate it before her, saying, The God of my fathers and
the Angel of Abraham shall be with me. And she fell upon her face at my feet,
and wept; and I raised her up and admonished her, and she promised to do this
iniquity no more.
7. But because her heart was set upon me to commit lewdness, she sighed, and
her countenance fell. And when her husband saw her, he said unto her, Why is
thy countenance fallen? And she said, I have a pain at my heart, and the groanings
of my spirit do oppress me; and so he comforted her who was not sick. Then
she rushed in to me while her husband was yet without, and said unto me, I
will hang myself, or cast myself into a well or over a cliff, if thou wilt
not consent unto me. And when I saw the spirit of Beliar was troubling her,
I prayed unto l the Lord, and said unto her, Why art thou troubled and disturbed,
blinded in sins ? Remember that if thou killest thyself, Sethon, the concubine
of thy husband, thy rival, will beat thy children, and will destroy thy memorial
from off the earth. And she said unto me, Lo then thou lovest me; this alone
is sufficient for me, that thou carest for my life and my children: I have
expectation that I shall enjoy my desire. And she knew not that because of
my God I spake thus, and not because of her. For if a man hath fallen before
the passion of a wicked desire, then by that hath he become enslaved, even
as also was she. And if he hear any good thing with regard to the passion whereby
he is vanquished, he receiveth it unto his wicked desire.
8. I declare unto you, my children, that it was about the sixth hour when she
departed from me; and I knelt before the Lord all that day, and continued all
the night; and about dawn I rose up weeping, and praying for a release from
the Egyptian. At last, then, she laid hold of my garments, forcibly dragging
me to have connection with her. When, therefore, I saw that in her madness
she was forcibly holding my garments, I fled away naked. And she falsely accused
me to her husband, and the Egyptian cast me into the prison in his house; and
on the morrow, having scourged me, the Egyptian [1] sent me into the prison
in his house. When, therefore, I was in fetters, the Egyptian woman fell sick
from her vexation, and listened to me how I sang praises unto the Lord while
I was in the abode of darkness, and with glad voice rejoiced and glorified
my God only because by a pretext I had been rid of the Egyptian woman.
9. How often hath she sent unto me, saying, Consent to fulfil my desire, and
I will release thee from thy bonds, and I will free time from the darkness
! And not even in thoughts did I incline unto her. For God loveth him who in
a den of darkness fasteth with chastity, rather than him who in secret chambers
liveth delicately without restraint. And whosoever liveth in chastity, and
desireth also glory, and if the Most High knoweth that it is expedient for
him, He bestoweth this also upon him, even as upon me. How often, though she
were sick, did she come down to me at unlooked-for times, and listened to my
voice as I prayed ! And when I heard her groanings I held my peace. For when
I was in her house she was wont to bare her arms, and breasts, and legs, that
I might fall before her; for she was very beautiful, splendidly adorned for
my deception. And the Lord guarded me from her devices. [2]
10. Ye see therefore, my children, how great things patience worketh, and prayer
with fasting. And if ye therefore follow after sobriety and purity in patience
and humility of heart, the Lord will dwell among you, because He loveth sobriety.
And wheresoever the Most High dwelleth, even though a man fall into envy, or
slavery, or slander, the Lord who dwelleth in him, for his sobriety's sake
not only delivereth him from evil, but also exalteth and glorifieth him, even
as me. For in every way the man is guarded, whether in deed, or in word, or
in thought. My brethren know how my father loved me, and I was not exalted
in my heart; although I was a child, I had the fear of God in my thoughts.
For I knew that all things should pass away, and I kept myself within bounds,
and I honoured my brethren; and through fear of them I held my peace when I
was sold, and revealed not my family to the Ishmaelites, that I was the son
of Jacob, a great man and a mighty.
11. Do ye also, therefore, have the fear of God in your works, and honour your
brethren. For every one who worketh the law of the Lord shall be loved by Him.
And when I came to the Indocolpitae with the Ishmaelites, they asked me, and
I said that I was a slave from their house, that I might not put my brethren
to shame. And the eldest of them said unto me, Thou art not a slave, for even
thy appearance doth make it manifest concerning thee. And he threatened me
even unto death. But I said that I was their slave. Now when we came into Egypt,
they strove concerning me. which of them should buy me and take me. Therefore
it secured good to all that I should remain in Egypt with a merchant of their
trade, until they should return bringing merchandise. And the Lord gave me
favour in the eyes of the merchant, and he entrusted unto me his house. And
the Lord blessed him by my means, and increased him in silver and gold, and
I was with him three months and five days.
12. About that time the Memphian wife of Potiphar passed by with great pomp,
and cast her eyes upon me, because her eunuchs told her concerning me. And
she told her husband concerning the merchant, that he had become rich by means
of a young Hebrew, saying, And they say that men have indeed stolen him out
of the land of Canaan. Now therefore execute judgment with him, and take away
the youth to be thy steward; so shall the God of the Hebrews bless thee, for
grace from heaven is upon him.
13. And Potiphar was persuaded by her words, and commanded the merchant to
be brought, and said unto him, What is this that I hear, that thou stealest
souls out of the land of the Hebrews, and sellest them for slaves? The merchant
therefore fell upon his face, and besought him, saying, I beseech thee, my
lord, I know not what thou sayest. And he said, Whence then is thy Hebrew servant?
And he said, The Ishmaelites entrusted him to me until they should return.
And he believed him not, but commanded him to be stripped and beaten. And when
he persisted, Potiphar said, Let the youth be brought. And when I was brought
in, I did obeisance to the chief of the eunuchs -- for he was third in rank
with Pharaoh, being chief of all the eunuchs, and having wives and children
and coucubines. And he took me apart from him, and said unto me, Art thou a
slave or free? And I said, A slave. And he said unto me, Whose slave art thou?
And I said unto him, The Ishmaelites'. And again he said unto me, How becamest
thou their slave? And I said, They bought me out of the land of Canaan. And
he believed me not, and said, Thou liest: and he commanded me to be stripped
and beaten.
14. Now the Memphian woman was looking through a window while I was being beaten,
and she sent unto her husband, saying, Thy judgment is unjust; for thou dost
even punish a free man who hath been stolen, as though he were a transgressor.
And when I gave no other answer though I was beaten, he commanded that we should
be kept in guard, until, said he, the owners of the boy shall come. And his
wife said unto him, Wherefore dost thou detain in captivity this noble child,
who ought rather to be set at liberty, and wait upon thee? For she wished to
see me in desire of sin, and I was ignorant concerning all these things. Then
said he to his wife, It is not the custom of the Egyptians to take away that
which belongeth to others before proof is given. This he said concerning the
merchant, and concerning me, that I must be imprisoned.
15. Now, after four and twenty days came the Ishmaelites; and having heard
that Jacob my father was mourning because of me, they said unto me, How is
it that thou saidst that thou wept a slave? and lo, we have learnt that thou
art the son of a mighty man in the land of Canaan, and thy father grieveth
for thee in sackcloth. And again I would have wept, but I restrained myself,
that I should not put my brethren to shame. And I said, I know not, I am a
slave. Then they take counsel to sell me, that I should not be found in their
hands. For they feared Jacob, lest he should work upon them a deadly vengeance.
For it had been heard that he was mighty with the Lord and with men. Then said
the merchant unto them, Release me from the judgment of Potiphar. They therefore
came and asked for me, saying, He was bought by us with money, And he sent
us away.
16. Now the Memphian woman pointed me out to her husband, that he should buy
me; for I hear, said she, that they are selling him. And she sent a eunuch
to the Ishmaelites, and asked them to sell me; and since he was not willing
to traffic with them, he returned. So when the eunuch had made trial of them,
he made known to his mistress that they asked a large price for their slave.
And she sent another eunuch, saying, Even though they demand two minae of gold,
take heed not to spare the gold; only buy the boy, and bring him hither. And
he gave them eighty pieces of gold for me, and told his mistress that a hundred
had been given for me. And when I saw it I held my peace, that the eunuch should
not be punished.
17. Ye see, my children, what great things I endured that I should not put
my brethren to shame. Do ye also love one another, and with long-suffering
hide ye one another's faults. For God delighteth in the unity of brethren,
and in the purpose of a heart approved unto love. And when my brethren came
into Egypt, and learnt that I returned their money unto them, and upbraided
them not, yea, that I even comforted them, and alter the death of Jacob I loved
them more abundantly, and all things whatsoever he commanded I did very abundantly,
then they marvelled. For I suffered them not to be afflicted even unto the
smallest matter; and all that was in my hand I gave unto them. Their children
were my children, and my children were as their servants; their life was my
life, and all their suffering was my suffering, and all their sickness was
my infirmity. My land was their land, my counsel their counsel, and I exalted
not myself among them in arrogance because of my worldly glory, but I was among
them as one of the least.
18. If ye also therefore walk in the commandments of the Lord, my children,
He will exalt you there, and will bless you with good things for ever and ever.
And if any one seeketh to do evil unto you, do ye by well-doing pray for him,
and ye shall be redeemed of the Lord from all evil. For, behold, ye see that
through long-suffering I took unto wife even the daughter of my [1] master.
And a hundred talents of gold were given me with her; for the Lord made them
to serve me. And He gave me also beauty as a flower above the beautiful ones
of Israel; and He preserved me unto old age in strength and in beauty, because
I was like in all things to Jacob.
19. Hear ye also, my children, the visions which I saw. There were twelve deer
feeding, and the nine were divided and scattered in the land, likewise also
the three. And I saw that from Judah was born a virgin wearing a linen [2]
garment, and from her went forth a Lamb, without spot, and on His left hand
there was as it were a lion; and all the beasts rushed against Him, and the
lamb overcame them, and destroyed them, and trod them under foot. And because
of Him the angels rejoiced, and men, and all the earth. And these things shall
take place in their season, in the last days. Do ye therefore, my children,
observe the commandments of the Lord, and honour Judah and Levi; for from them
shall arise unto you the Lamb of God, by grace saving all the Gentiles and
Israel. For His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, which shall not be shaken;
but my kingdom among yogi shall come to an end as a watcher's [3] hammock,
which after the summer will not appear.
20. I know that after my death the Egyptians will afflict you, but God will
undertake your cause, and will bring you into that which He promised to your
fathers. But carry ye up my bones with you; [4] for when my bones are taken
up, the Lord will be with you in light, and Beliar shall be in darkness with
the Egyptians. And carry ye up Zilpah your mother, and lay her near Bilhah,
by the hippodrome, by the side of Rachel. [5] And when he had said these things,
he stretched out his feet, and slept the long sleep. And all Israel bewailed
him, and all Egypt, with a great lamentation. For he felt even for the Egyptians
even as his own members, and showed them kindness, aiding them in every work,
and counsel, and matter.
XII. -- THE TESTAMENT OF BENJAMIN CONCERNING A PURE MIND.
1. The record of the words of Benjamin, which he set forth to his sons, after
he had lived a hundred and twenty years. And he kissed them, and said: As Isaac
was born to Abraham in his hundredth year, so also was I to Jacob. Now since
Rachel died in giving me birth, I had no milk; therefore I was suckled by Bilhah
her handmaid. For Rachel remained barren for twelve years after that she had
borne Joseph: and she prayed the Lord with fasting twelve days, and she conceived
and bare me. For our father loved Rachel dearly, and prayed that he might see
two sons born from her: therefore was I called the son of days, which is Benjamin.
[1]
2. When therefore I went into Egypt, and Joseph my brother recognised me, he
said unto me, What did they tell my father in that they sold me? And I said
unto him, They dabbled thy coat with blood and sent it, and said, Look if this
is the coat of thy son. And he said to me, Even so, brother; for when the Ishmaelites
took me, one of them stripped off my coat, and gave me a girdle, and scourged
me, and bade me run. And as he went away to hide my garment, a lion met him,
and slew him; and so his fellows were afraid, and sold me to their companions.
3. Do ye also therefore, my children, love the Lord God of heaven, and keep
His commandments, and be followers of the good and holy man Joseph; and let
your mind be unto good, even as ye know me. He that hath his mind good seeth
all things rightly. Fear ye the Lord, and love your neighbour; and even though
the spirits of Beliar allure you into all troublous wickedness, yet shall no
troublous wickedness have dominion over you, even as it bad not over Joseph
my brother. How many men wished to slay him, and God shielded him! For he that
feareth God and loveth his neighbour cannot be smitten by Beliar's spirit of
the air, being shielded by the fear of God; nor can he be ruled over by the
device of men or of beasts, for he is aided by the love of the Lord which he
hath towards his neighbour. For he even besought our father Jacob that he would
pray for our brethren, that the Lord would not impute to them the evil that
they devised concerning Joseph. And thus Jacob cried out, My child Joseph,
thou hast prevailed over the bowels of thy father Jacob. And he embraced him,
and kissed him for two hours, saying, In thee shall be fulfilled the prophecy
of heaven concerning the Lamb of God, even the Saviour of the world, that spotless
shall He be delivered up for transgressors, and sinless [2] shall He be put
to death for ungodly men in the blood of the covenant, for the salvation [3]
of the Gentiles and of Israel, and shall destroy Beliar, and them that serve
him.
4. Know ye, my children, the end of the good man? Be followers of his compassion
in a good mind, that ye also may wear crowns of glory. The good man hath not
a dark eye; for he showeth mercy to all men, even though they be sinners, even
though they devise evil concerning him. So he that doeth good overcometh the
evil, being shielded by Him that is good; and he loveth the righteous as his
own soul. If any one is glorified, he envieth him not; if any one is enriched,
he is not jealous; if any one is valiant, he praiseth him; he trusteth and
laudeth him that is sober-minded; he showeth mercy to the poor; he is kindly
disposed toward the weak; he singeth the praises of God; as for him who hath
the fear of God, he protecteth him as with a shield; him that loveth God he
aideth; him that rejecteth the Most High he admonisheth and turneth back; and
him that hath the grace of a good spirit, he loveth even as his own soul.
5. If ye have a good mind, my children, then will both wicked men be at peace
with you, and the profligate will reverence you and turn unto good; and the
covetous shall not only cease from their inordinate desire, but shall even
give the fruits of their covetousness to them that are afflicted. If ye do
well, even the unclean spirits shall flee from you; yea, the very beasts shall
flee from you in dread. For where the reverence for good works is present unto
the mind, darkness fleeth away from him. For if any one is injurious to a holy
man, he repenteth; for the holy man showeth pity on his reviler, and holdeth
his peace. And if any one betray a righteous soul, and the righteous man, though
praying, be humbled for a little while, yet not long after he appeareth far
more glorious, even as was Joseph my brother.
6. The mind of the good man is not in the power of the deceit of the spirit
of Beliar, for the angel of peace guideth his soul. He gazeth not passionately
on corruptible things, nor gathereth together riches unto desire of pleasure;
he delighteth not in pleasure, he hurteth not his neighbour, be pampereth not
himself with food, he erreth not in the pride of his eyes, for the Lord is
his portion. The good mind admitted not the glory and dishonour of men, neither
knoweth it any guile or lie, fighting or reviling; for the Lord dwelleth in
him and lighteth up his soul, and he rejoiceth towards all men at every time.
The good mind hath not two tongues, of blessing and of cursing, of insult and
of honour, of sorrow and of joy, of quietness and of trouble, of hypocrisy
and of truth, of poverty and of wealth; but it hath one disposition, pure and
un-corrupt, concerning all men. It hath no double sight, [4] nor double hearing;
for in everything which he doeth, or speaketh, or seeth, he knoweth that the
Lord watcheth his soul, and he cleanseth his mind that he be not condemned
by God and men. But of Beliar every work is twofold, and hath no singleness.
7. Flee ye therefore, my children, the evil-doing of Beliar; for it giveth
a sword to them that obeyeth, and the sword is the mother of seven evils. First
the mind conceiveth through Beliar, and first there is envy; secondly, desperation;
thirdly, tribulation; fourthly, captivity; fifthly, neediness; sixthly, trouble;
seventhly, desolation. Therefore also Cain is delivered over to seven vengeances
by God, for in every hundred years the Lord brought one plague upon him. Two
hundred years he suffered, and in the nine hundredth year he was brought to
desolation at the flood, for Abel his righteous brother's sake. In seven [1]
hundred years was Cain judged, and Lamech in seventy times seven; because for
ever those who are likened unto Cain in envy unto hatred of brethren shall
be judged with the same punishment.
8. Do ye also therefore, my children, flee ill-doing, envy, and hatred of brethren,
and cleave to goodness and love. He that hath a pure mind in love, looketh
not after a woman unto fornication; for he hath no defilement in his heart,
because the Spirit of God resteth in him. For as the sun is not defiled by
shining over dung and mire, but rather drieth up both and driveth away the
ill smell: so also the pure mind, constrained among the defilements of the
earth, rather edifieth, and itself suffereth no defilement.
9. Now I suppose, from the words of the righteous Enoch, that there will be
also evil-doings among you: for ye will commit fornication with the fornication
of Sodom, and shall perish all save a few, and will multiply inordinate lusts
with women; and the kingdom of the Lord shall not be among you, for forthwith
He will take it away. Nevertheless the temple of God shall be built in your
portion, and shall be glorious among you. For He shall take it, and the twelve
tribes shall be gathered together there, and all the Gentiles, until the Most
High shall send forth His salvation in the visitation of His only-begotten
one. And He shall enter into the front [2] of the temple, and there shall the
Lord be treated with outrage, and He shall be lifted up upon a tree. And the
veil of the temple shall be rent, and the Spirit of God shall descend upon
the Gentiles as fire poured forth. And He shall arise from the grave, and shall
ascend from earth into heaven: and I know how lowly He all be upon the earth,
and how glorious in the heaven.
10. Now when Joseph was in Egypt, I longed to see his visage and the form of
his countenance; and through the prayers of Jacob my father I saw him, while
awake in the daytime, in his full and perfect shape. Know ye therefore, my
children, that I am dying. Work therefore truth and righteousness each one
with his neighbour, and judgment unto faithful doing, and keep the law of the
Lord and His commandments; for these things do I teach you instead of all inheritance.
Do ye also therefore give them to your children for an everlasting possession;
for so did both Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob. All these things they gave us
for an inheritance, saying, Keep the commandments of God until the Lord shall
reveal His salvation to all nations. Then shall ye see Enoch, Noah, and Shem,
and Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, arising on the right hand in gladness. Then
shall we also arise, each one over our tribe, worshipping the King of heaven,
who appeared upon the earth in the form of a man of humility. And as many as
believed on Him on the earth shall rejoice with Him; [3] and then shall all
men arise, some unto glory and some unto shame. And the Lord shall judge Israel
first, even for the wrong they did unto Him; for when He appeared as a deliverer,
God in the flesh, they believed Him not. And then shall He judge all the Gentiles,
as many as believed Him not when He appeared upon earth. And He shall reprove
Israel among the chosen ones of the Gentiles, even as He reproved Esau among
the Midianites, who deceived their brethren, so that they fell into fornication
and idolatry; and they were alienated from God, and became as they that were
no children in the portion of them that fear the Lord. But if ye walk in holiness
in the presence of the Lord, ye shall dwell in hope again in me, and all Israel
shall be gathered unto the Lord.
11. And I shall no longer be called a ravening wolf [4] on account of your
ravages, but a worker of the Lord, distributing food to them that work what
is good. And one [5] shall rise up from my seed in the latter times, beloved
of the Lord, hearing upon the earth His voice, enlightening with new knowledge
all the Gentiles, bursting in upon Israel for salvation with the light of knowledge,
and tearing it away from it like a wolf, and giving it to the synagogue of
the Gentiles. And until the consummation of the ages shall he be in the synagogues
of the Gentiles, and among their rulers, as a strain of music in the mouth
of all; [6] and he shall be inscribed in the holy books, both his work and
his word, and he shall be a chosen one of God for ever; and because of him
my father Jacob instructed me, saying, He shall fill up that which lacketh
of thy tribe.
12. And when he finished his words, he said: I charge you, my children, carry
up my bones out of Egypt, and bury me at Hebron, near my fathers. So Benjamin
died a hundred and twenty-five years old, in a good old age, and they placed
him in a coffin. And in the ninety-first year of the departure of the children
of Israel from Egypt, they and their brethren brought up the bones of their
fathers secretly in a place which is called Canaan; and they buried them in
Hebron, by the feet of their fathers. And they returned from the land of Canaan,
and dwelt in Egypt until the day of their departing from the land of Egypt.
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