Page:Selections. Translated by H. St. J. Thackeray (1919).djvu/177

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A Religion for the Many, not (like Greek philosophy) for the Few

That the wisest of the Greeks learnt to adopt these conceptions of God from principles with which Moses supplied them, I am not now concerned to urge; but they have borne abundant witness to the excellence of these doctrines, and to their consonance with the nature and majesty of God. In fact, Pythagoras, Anaxagoras, Plato, the Stoics who succeeded him, and indeed nearly all the philosophers appear to have held similar views concerning the nature of God. These, however, addressed their philosophy to the few, and did not venture to divulge the true doctrine[1] to the masses who were prepossessed by (other) opinions; whereas our lawgiver, by making practice square with precept, not only convinced his own contemporaries, but so firmly implanted this belief concerning God in their descendants to all future generations that it cannot be moved. The cause (of his success) was that he far surpassed (other legislators) in promoting the good of all men to all time by his scheme of legislation; for he did not make religion a department of virtue, but the various virtues—I mean, justice, temperance, fortitude, and mutual harmony in all things between the members of the community[2]—departments of religion. Religion governs all our actions and studies and speech; none of these things did our lawgiver leave unexamined[3] or indeterminate.) here replaces the usual Wisdom ([Greek: phronêsis]).]

  1. Lit. "the truth of the doctrine."
  2. The four cardinal virtues of the Platonic School, except that Harmony ([Greek: symphônia
  3. The Greek word is that used in Socrates' famous saying, "The life which is unexamined is not worth living" (Plato, Apology 38A).