C 940 ) 
all. The ancient Egyptian theology, t)[\^t God is All, rl nlv. Pan, 
God diffused through all. Eiffo^^Emeph^and Fhtha,ihQ Fgjf*^- 
4» Trinity, Foets. depravers of the p^^,^^ Theology. Hepd's 
Thecgonia^imdiUt of the Inferior gods. Sophocles, Euripides, &c» 
aflcrters of oneSupreiam.Confent of the Latin Poets hcrein.£/>/- 
curu^, the only Philofopher afTercing many Independent gods^ 
Fythagora^'s Monad, WisTetra&ys, the ^etragrammaton or He- 
hrcrv Name of God confiftingof four letters. Heraclitm^ Anax* 
agoras.Parmenides^Meliffm, Zeno Eleates, Empedocles^ Tiwaus 
Locrus^ Euc/ides, Antifibenes, Socrates, Plato, Arijlotle, SpeHcipptts, 
Xenocrates, Theophrafius, Cleanthes, Cicero, afferrers of One Su- 
pream. SOySymmachfis,Seneca,Plutarch,Galen^Maximus Tyrifes^ 
Plotinm, C^. Varro\ Natural Theology, diftindi from the My • 
rhycal and Civil. Vulgar Fagans acknowledg'd alfo Many gods, 
yec One Supreanu The Roman and Samothraciun Trinity or Ca- 
iiri. Kyf /S iKinQovtthG Pagan Litany to the Supream God. Pagans 
held the World to be one Animal. Not cut off from ihe Deity. 
Their knowledge of One Supream afTerted by the Hebrews. 
Teftified inScrip:ure» They w^orfliipped the reft as ^lediators. 
The Supream God Polyonymous ^mot\g{i^^ea^,Pan,Janffs,Geniu^, 
Saturn.^c^ all Names of the Supream God* More popular and 
PoetickGods,thcrame» The Phtlofopbick dx\6 Phyjiologicl^ThtQ- 
logy d\^tr^v\i,ApuleiU4*s reduflion of the Pagan Gods co Platas 
Idea's. God, according to the P^^^;; Theology, pervadethall 
things. A higher ftrain of the Pagan Theology, that God is all 
things. The parts of the World perfonated and Deify their 
P)&j(;^i?/(?g/W Theology. This,not T^rr^^'s Natural. They hence 
approve of worChiping God in his Works, Accident s zwd A f- 
fehions by them perfonated and Deify 'd. Of thofe Pagan Theo- 
logers,vvho made God the Soul of the World.To there,the parts 
of the Worldjthe parts of God. This Mundane Animal worfliip- 
cd in its feveral parts. Of the Platonifts fupermundane and 
Eternal Gods,*£K,N»j & 4ux^.ThisTrinify of thep^^^/n/ derived 
from a divine Cabala, A Trinity of Gods. Homooufian, Yet de- 
pendent and fubordinate. The agreement and dUagreement of 
this, and theCbriftian* ThtTritheifiick Trinity of fomeof the 
Fathers. The true Notion of 'o^»C'^. The Cabala of the Tri- 
nity, altered by ]umor Platonifls^ Procluis Monad, before the 
Trinity,&c. 
The laft Chapter confutes all the Atheiftick Cxomds de- 
monftrates 
