[Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ by Lew Wallace]@TWC D-Link book
Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ

CHAPTER V
3/15

By them let us compare the Hebrew and the Roman.
"The simplest of all the signs is the daily life of the people.
Of this I will only say, Israel has at times forgotten God, while the Roman never knew him; consequently comparison is not possible.
"Your friend--or your former friend--charged, if I understood you rightly, that we have had no poets, artists, or warriors; by which he meant, I suppose, to deny that we have had great men, the next most certain of the signs.

A just consideration of this charge requires a definition at the commencement.

A great man, O my boy, is one whose life proves him to have been recognized, if not called, by God.
A Persian was used to punish our recreant fathers, and he carried them into captivity; another Persian was selected to restore their children to the Holy Land; greater than either of them, however, was the Macedonian through whom the desolation of Judea and the Temple was avenged.

The special distinction of the men was that they were chosen by the Lord, each for a divine purpose; and that they were Gentiles does not lessen their glory.

Do not lose sight of this definition while I proceed.
"There is an idea that war is the most noble occupation of men, and that the most exalted greatness is the growth of battle-fields.
Because the world has adopted the idea, be not you deceived.


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