TO ALL THOSE WHO BELIEVE


TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.[1]
CHAPTER II.[9]
CHAPTER III.[19]
CHAPTER IV.[30]
CHAPTER V.[39]
CHAPTER VI.[54]
CHAPTER VII.[72]
CHAPTER VIII.[83]
CHAPTER IX.[107]
CHAPTER X.[119]
CHAPTER XI.[128]
CHAPTER XII.[146]
CHAPTER XIII.[155]
CHAPTER XIV.[161]
CHAPTER XV.[183]
CHAPTER XVI.[193]
CHAPTER XVII.[199]
CHAPTER XVIII.[204]
CHAPTER XIX.[209]
CHAPTER XX.[212]
CHAPTER XXI.[220]
CHAPTER XXII.[226]
CHAPTER XXIII.[233]
CHAPTER XXIV.[239]
CHAPTER XXV.[247]
CHAPTER XXVI.[257]
CHAPTER XXVII.[267]
CHAPTER XXVIII.[277]
CHAPTER XXIX.[286]
CHAPTER XXX.[296]
CHAPTER XXXI.[321]
CHAPTER XXXII.[329]
CHAPTER XXXIII.[343]
CHAPTER XXXIV.[355]
CHAPTER XXXV.[370]
CHAPTER XXXVI.[376]

"UNTO CÆSAR"

CHAPTER I

"Beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole earth, is Mount Zion...."—Psalm xlviii. 2.

And it came to pass in Rome after the kalends of September, and when Caius Julius Cæsar Caligula ruled over Imperial Rome.

Arminius Quirinius, the censor, was dead. He had died by his own hand, and thus was a life of extortion and of fraud brought to an ignominious end through the force of public opinion, and by the decree of that same Cæsar who himself had largely benefited by the mal-practices of his minion.