[53] Genung, Job, The Epic of the Inner Life.
[54] See Atonement in Literature and in Life, by Charles A. Dinsmore. Boston, 1906.
[55] Numbers 16, Joshua 7.
[56] John 9:2.
[57] Hammurabi's code showed a disregard of intent which would make surgery a dangerous profession: "If a physician operate on a man for a severe wound with a bronze lancet and cause the man's death; or open an abscess [in the eye] of a man with a bronze lancet and destroy the man's eye, they shall cut off his fingers." Early German and English law is just as naïve. If a weapon was left to be repaired at a smith's and was then caught up or stolen and used to do harm, the original owner was held responsible.
[58] Numbers 35, Deuteronomy 19, Joshua 20.
[59] Mark 7:1-23.
[60] Hosea 2:5.
[61] H. P. Smith, Old Testament History, p. 222.
[62] Habakkuk 3:17, 18.