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Wherefore if we read of any foreigner, that is, one neither born of
Israel nor received by that people into the canon of the sacred books,
having prophesied something about Christ, if it has come or shall come
to our knowledge, we can refer to it over and above; not that this is
necessary, even if wanting, but because it is not incongruous to
believe that even in other nations there may have been men to whom this
mystery was revealed, and who were also impelled to proclaim it,
whether they were partakers of the same grace or had no experience of
it, but were taught by bad angels, who, as we know, even confessed
the present Christ, whom the Jews did not acknowledge. Nor do I
think the Jews themselves dare contend that no one has belonged to God
except the Israelites, since the increase of Israel began on the
rejection of his elder brother. For in very deed there was no other
people who were specially called the people of God; but they cannot
deny that there have been certain men even of other nations who
belonged, not by earthly but heavenly fellowship, to the true
Israelites, the citizens of the country that is above. Because, if
they deny this, they can be most easily confuted by the case of the
holy and wonderful man Job, who was neither a native nor a proselyte,
that is, a stranger joining the people of Israel, but, being bred of
the Idumean race, arose there and died there too, and who is so
praised by the divine oracle, that no man of his times is put on a
level with him as regards justice and piety. And although we do not
find his date in the chronicles, yet from his book, which for its
merit the Israelites have received as of canonical authority, we
gather that he was in the third generation after Israel. And I doubt
not it was divinely provided, that from this one case we might know
that among other nations also there might be men pertaining to the
spiritual Jerusalem who have lived according to God and have pleased
Him. And it is not to be supposed that this was granted to any one,
unless the one Mediator between God and men, the Man Christ
Jesus, was divinely revealed to him; who was pre-announced to the
saints of old as yet to come in the flesh, even as He is announced to
us as having come, that the self-same faith through Him may lead all
to God who are predestinated to be the city of God, the house of
God, and the temple of God. But whatever prophecies concerning the
grace of God through Christ Jesus are quoted, they may be thought to
have been forged by the Christians. So that there is nothing of more
weight for confuting all sorts of aliens, if they contend about this
matter, and for supporting our friends, if they are truly wise, than
to quote those divine predictions about Christ which are written in the
books of the Jews, who have been torn from their native abode and
dispersed over the whole world in order to bear this testimony, so that
the Church of Christ has everywhere increased.
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