VI. THE atheistical pretence of religion's being an invention of statesmen, and therefore false, clearly confuted, and shewn to be both impertinent and false. For that, was the Atheist's account of religion right, it would not follow that religion was false, but the contrary-But the pretence false and groundless, religion having existed before the civil magistrate was in being
I.—Introduction, shewing that the universal Pretence to Revelation, proves the Truth of some, and particularly of the Jewish 11.-Enters on the third Proposition-Some general reflections on the high anti- quity of Egypt; and of the equal extravagance of both parties in their attempts to advance or depress that antiquity.