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BUT if you would like to have this proved to you rather from
representatives of the Jews, consider the Jewish people when after their
unhappy ignorance and wicked persecution they were converted, and
acknowledged God here and there, and see whether they could not rightly
say, "Thou art our God, and we knew Thee not." But I will add something
else, to prove it to you not only from those Jews who confess Him, but also
from those who deny Him. For ask those Jews who still continue in their
state of unbelief whether they know or believe in God. They will certainly
confess that they both know and believe in Him. But on the other band ask
them whether they believe in the Son of God. They will at once deny and
begin to blaspheme. against Him. You see then that the Prophet said this of
Him of whom the Jews have always been ignorant, and whom now they know not;
and not of Him whom they imagine that they believe in and confess. And so
full well can those, who after having been in ignorance come out of Judaism
to the faith, say, "Thou art our God, and we knew Thee not." For rightly do
those, who after having been ignorant come to believe, say that they knew
not Him in whom up to this time they have not believed, and whom they
strive not to know. For it is clear that those who after their previous
ignorance come to confess Him, say that formerly they knew Him not, whom up
to this time they have ignorantly denied.
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