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Chronological Table,

ACCORDING TO THE DATES OF THIS HISTORY, FROM THE CREATION TO THE BABYLONISH CAPTIVITY.

PEOPLE OF GOD.

B. C.

EGYPT.

4001

Creation.

2349

Deluge.

2188

Menes, first king.

2160

Babel.

1921

Abraham in Canaan.

1891

Isaac born.

1838

Esau and Jacob born.

1822

Abraham died.

1729

Joseph sold.

1716

Isaac died.

1688

Jacob died.

1634

Joseph died.

1573

Moses born.

1556

1491

Israelites leave Egypt.

Pharaoh drowned.

1451

Moses died.

1406

1326

Joshua died.

1181

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to us from Heaven: it is to revelation, therefore, we must have recourse for the commencement of our history. No one could have known whence came the world that we inhabit, if God had not spoken from heaven to disclose the secret. For many ages after the creation, we have no information but what is contained in the Holy Scriptures; therefore, though Sacred History is not the peculiar object of our writing, it is with it we must of necessity begin.

As we know not where in the boundlessness of eternity time began, or where it will have an end, we have no means of dating events but by reckoning backwards and forwards from some known event. As Christians, we use the birth of Christ for this purpose-the event to us, of the most deep importance. Thus our only way of determining when the world was created is, by knowing it was 4004 years before the birth of Christ. From that point we may again date forward, as is done in reckoning Ann: Mund: but, in this history, we shall prefer to make use of the Ant: Christ: or backward dates.

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Four thousand and four years before the birth of our Saviour, it pleased the great God of all things to create for himself a world, in which to show forth his glory and the greatness of his power. Why he made it at all, or why he made it as he did, is not for us to know. It is enough that it was his work; and as God is in himself infinitely good and infinitely wise, his work must be the best it could be. If we see evil in the world he made, we must be fully assured that was no part of his work. When a mischievous hand defaces a fair picture, we do not say the artist painted it amiss. The blemish, whencesoever it arose, came afterwards. For, in the beginning, God himself pronounces that his work is good.

The only account we have of the creation is in the first chapters of Genesis, which Moses, by the direct inspiration of God, was enabled to write more than two thousand years after the event took place; a record which the same divine power has preserved through

many thousand years for our instruction. for our instruction. Whether or not the earth had been made before, we think is not positively stated; but it was without form, and void-a shapeless, uninhabited mass-till, breathing upon it by the Spirit of his power, the great Creator peopled it with creatures of forms and faculties as various as we now behold them; producing first the vegetable, then the animal creation; and lastly man, the noblest of his works on earth, the lord and possessor of all the rest; and, having finished the work in what is termed in scripture six days, the Almighty Being sanctified the seventh, to be a day of rest for ever to his people. Reviewing his work, He pronounced it good. Evil he created none.

The precise spot in which the Father of mankind was placed is not determined; but the description given of Paradise, speaks it to have been somewhere in that part of Asia, afterwards called Mesopotamia. On this spot began the history of the world. A single pair of happy beings, strangers to sorrow and to sin, strangers to every thing but good; surrounded with ten thousand blessings and endowed with ample powers to enjoy them; happy in fond affection for each other, and in constant communication with their God-these were the first and sole inhabitants of our globe, the parents of all who have succeeded them. It is hard for us now to imagine what might be its beauty then, or what the measure of their bliss. We can but imagine it by the unnumbered blessings that remain, and the many enjoyments allowed us, even now that the earth has been cursed for our sake, and taught to bring forth the brier and the thorn. But our first parents' happiness was short as it was perfect. A test of their obedience to God had been appointed. It is said they were forbidden to eat the fruit of one particular tree: they disobeyed the command and incurred the penalty of death, the forfeiture of their present happiness. It has seemed to some too hard a punishment for so small a fault as the eating once of a fruit for

bidden; but one act of disobedience is as sinful as another. Whether it were a great thing or a little thing that God commanded, it was his command, and therefore to break it was to commit as great a sin as could be committed by a creature against his Creator. He had made them of dust, he had created a world for their use, dressed it with every beauty, thronged it with every blessing. Could there be a greater crime than to disregard the only injunction he laid on them? It is to be feared the same false estimate of right and wrong pursues us still. Towards each other, crimes may be greater or less, according to the mischief they do. The man who murders another commits a greater crime towards his fellow-creatures than he who profanes the sabbath, because he does a greater injury; but God, who forbade the one, forbade the other: he receives no injury from either, but is alike disobeyed in both, and disobedience to him is the greatest of all sins. We should do well to consider this, when disposed to treat as trifling any thing that is in opposition to his will. No sin against God can be a little one.

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It is not our intention here to give the narrative of our first parents' fall. It is told in the first few chapters of Genesis, with a simplicity more striking than any thing we can write: but we must contemplate for a moment the consequences of their disobedience, since all that now passes in the world is the result of it, and we are ever prone to forget that we are not now what our Maker first created us. Scarcely any thing we see or read can be understood, if the fall of man is forgotten; for all without it is a maze of contradiction and inconsistency. Productions the most wonderful, the most magnificent, made the instrument of the basest crimes -gifts so bountiful, so precious, become the source of incalculable misery-man, the created Lord of all, become of all the greatest sufferer. How are we to understand it, if this first great change is forgotten or disbelieved? But we have in this event the key of all

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