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The Lives of the Saints Volume 1 - St. Patrick's Basilica

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www.freecatholicebooks.com<br />

defeat <strong>the</strong> divine mercy, not even by <strong>the</strong> scandal <strong>of</strong> those false<br />

Christians, whom jealousy, covetousness, and <strong>the</strong> spirit <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> world<br />

blinded and seared to every feeling, not only <strong>of</strong> religion, but even <strong>of</strong><br />

humanity. Religious missionaries, filled with <strong>the</strong> spirit <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

apostles, and armed with <strong>the</strong> power <strong>of</strong> God, baffled obstacles which<br />

seemed insurmountable to flesh and blood; and by <strong>the</strong>ir zeal, charity,<br />

patience, humility, meekness, mortification, and invincible courage,<br />

triumphantly planted <strong>the</strong> standard <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> cross in a world heret<strong>of</strong>ore<br />

unknown to us, and but lately discovered, not by blind chance, but for<br />

<strong>the</strong>se great purposes <strong>of</strong> divine providence.<br />

It appears from <strong>the</strong> Chinese annals, in F. Du Halde's History <strong>of</strong> China,<br />

that this vast empire is <strong>the</strong> most ancient in <strong>the</strong> world. Mr. Shuckford<br />

(B. 1, 2, 6) thinks, that <strong>the</strong>ir first, king, Fo-hi, was Noah himself,<br />

whom he imagines to have settled here soon after <strong>the</strong> deluge. Mr.<br />

Swinton, in <strong>the</strong> twentieth tome <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Universal History, justly censures<br />

this conjecture, and rejects <strong>the</strong> first dynasty <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Chinese history;<br />

which Mr. Jackson in his chronology, with o<strong>the</strong>rs, vindicates. We must<br />

own that <strong>the</strong> Chinese annals are unanimous in asserting this first<br />

dynasty, whatever some have, by mistake, wrote against it; and this<br />

antiquity agrees very well with <strong>the</strong> chronology <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Septuagint, or<br />

that <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Samaritan Pentateuch, one <strong>of</strong> which several learned men seem<br />

at present much inclined to embrace. As for this notion that <strong>the</strong> Chinese<br />

are originally an Egyptian colony, and that <strong>the</strong>ir first dynasty is<br />

borrowed from <strong>the</strong> latter; notwithstanding my great personal respect for<br />

<strong>the</strong> worthy author <strong>of</strong> that system, it stands in need <strong>of</strong> pro<strong>of</strong>s founded in<br />

facts, not in conjectures. A little acquaintance with languages shows,<br />

that we frequently find in certain words and circumstances a surprising<br />

analogy, in some things, between several words or customs <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> most<br />

disparate languages and manners <strong>of</strong> very distant countries: several<br />

Persian words are <strong>the</strong> same in English, and it would be as plausible a<br />

system to advance that one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se nations was a colony <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r.<br />

From such circumstances it only results, that all nations have one<br />

common original. Allowing <strong>the</strong>refore <strong>the</strong> Chinese an antiquity <strong>of</strong> which<br />

<strong>the</strong>y are infinitely jealous, Fo-hi was perhaps ei<strong>the</strong>r Sem himself, or<br />

one that lived very soon after <strong>the</strong> flood, from whom this empire derives<br />

its origin. Confucius was <strong>the</strong> great philosopher <strong>of</strong> this people, who drew<br />

up <strong>the</strong> plan <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir laws and religion. He is thought to have flourished<br />

about <strong>the</strong> time <strong>of</strong> king Solomon, or not much later. He was <strong>of</strong> royal<br />

extraction, and a man <strong>of</strong> severe morals. His writings contain many<br />

sublime moral truths, and show him to have been <strong>the</strong> greatest philosopher<br />

that ever lived. As he came nearer to <strong>the</strong> patriarchs in time, and<br />

received a more perfect tradition from <strong>the</strong>m, he surpassed, in <strong>the</strong><br />

excellency <strong>of</strong> his moral precepts, Pythagoras, Socrates, and Plato. He<br />

taught men to obey, honor, and fear <strong>the</strong> Lord <strong>of</strong> Heaven, to love <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

neighbor as <strong>the</strong>mselves, to subdue irregular inclinations, and to be

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