THE LAMENT (OR THE APOCALYPSE)

There will come a time when it will be seen that in vain have the Egyptians honoured the divinity with a reverent mind and with assiduous service. All their holy worship will become inefficacious.
The gods, leaving the earth, will go back to heaven; they will abandon Egypt; this land, once the home of religion, will be widowed of its gods and left destitute. 

Strangers will fill this country, and not only will there no longer be care for religious observances, but, a yet more painful thing, it will be laid down under so-called laws, under pain of punishments, that all must abstain from acts of reverence or cult towards the gods. 

Then this most holy land, the home of sanctuaries and temples, will be covered with tombs and the dead. 

O Egypt, Egypt, there will remain of your religion only fables, and your children in later times will not believe them; nothing will survive only words engraved on stones to tell of your reverent deeds. The Scythian or the Indian, or someother such barbarous neighbour will establish himself in Egypt.

For behold the divinity goes back up to heaven; and men, abandoned, all die, and then, without either god or man, Egypt will be nothing but a desert. . ..

Why weep, O Asclepius? Egypt will be carried away to worse things than this; she will be polluted with yet graver crimes. She, the most holy, who so much loved the gods, only country of the earth where the gods made their home in return for her devotion, she who taught men holiness and reverence, will give example of the most atrocious cruelty. 

In that hour, weary of life, men will no longer regard the world as worthy object of their admiration and reverence. This All, which is a good thing, the best that can be seen in the past, the present and the future, will be in danger of perishing; men will esteem it a burden; and then forward they will despise and no longer cherish this whole of the Universe, incomparable work of God, Glorious Construction, good creation made up of an infinite diversity of forms, instrument of the will of God who, without envy, pours forth his favour on all his work, in which is assembled in one whole, in a harmonious diversity, all that can be seen that is worthy of reverence, praise and love. 

For darkness will be preferred to light; it will be thought better to die than to live; none will raise his eyes towards heaven; the reverent man will be thought mad, the irreverent, wise; the frenzied will be thought brave, the worst criminal a good man. The soul and all the beliefs attached to it, according to which the soul is immortal by nature or foresees that it can obtain immortality as I have taught you, this will be laughed at and thought nonsense. 

And believe me, it will be considered a capital crime under the law to give oneself to the religion of the mind. 

A new justice will be created and new laws. Nothing holy, nothing reverent, nothing worthy of heaven and of the gods who dwell there, will be any more spoken of nor will find credence in the soul.
The gods will separate themselves from men, a deplorable divorce.
Only the evil angels will remain who will mingle with men, and constrain them by violence, miserable creatures,to all the excesses of criminal audacity, engaging them in wars, in gangs and live by pillage and robbery, frauds, and in everything which is contrary to the nature of the soul. 

Then the earth will lose its equilibrium, the sea will no longer be navigable, the heaven will no longer be full of stars, the stars will stop their courses in the heaven. 

Every divine voice will be silenced, and will be silent. 
The fruits of the earth will moulder, the soil will be no longer fertile, the air itself will grow thick with a mournful, gloomy sleepiness.
Such will be the old age of the world, irreligion, disorder, confusion of all goods. 

When all these things have come to pass, O Asclepius, then the Lord and Father, the god first in power and the demiurge of the One God, having considered these customs and voluntary crimes, endeavouring by his will, which is the divine will, to bar the way to vices and universal corruption and to correct errors, he will annihilate all malice, either by effacing it in a deluge or by consuming it by fire, or destroying it by pestilential maladies diffused in many places. 

Then he will bring back the world to its first beauty, so that this world may again be worthy of reverence and admiration, and that God also, creator and restorer of so great a work, may be glorified by the men who shall live then in continual hymns of praise and blessings. 

That's what the rebirth of the world will be; a renewal of all good things, a holy and most solemn restoration of Nature herself, imposed by force in the course of time . . . by the will of God.