By W. H. Griffith Thomas
The Gospels of ChristWe have now endeavored to consider the picture of Jesus Christ as it is presented to us in the Gospels—His character, claim, teaching, death and resurrection. It is necessary, however, at this stage to consider one feature which is apt to be overlooked. Indeed its very familiarity tends to make us forget its force and importance. It is this: taking the Gospels as they stand how are we to account for the delineation of Jesus Christ as there given? What is the relation between the character of Christ and the record in which it is found? The alternatives are only two: either the character is real, or else it was created by the writers. The value of this argument is such that it can be thoroughly examined and tested by even the most untrained mind, and it requires no technical scholarship and no presupposition of the Divine authority or inspiration of the Gospels. This is therefore a point of real importance because of its simplicity and directness, and the universality of its application.
Let us then state the argument again: either the character of Jesus Christ is real or else it was created by the writers. The character, as we observe it in the Gospels, bears every mark of reality, every indication of living personality.
Now we know who and what were the writers; they were ordinary men without any pretence to literary ability, still less to literary genius. And yet they have managed to depict for us a unique Figure which has been the greatest attraction of the ages. How are we to account for this even on purely literary grounds? Can we imagine such men inventing such a character? Is not the conception beyond anything merely human? As Dr. Fairbairn has well said—
Have we anything in literature at all like it? If we take the finest characters of history or the noblest ideal in fiction, we at once see the contrast. In all the world's great masterpieces we cannot find a single instance of a perfect human character. We think of Hamlet as perhaps the most perfect delineation of human character in Shakespeare's works, but no one would dream of saying that he was anything like a perfect human being. To paint the ideal is much, even for genius, but to picture the sinless is very much more. And yet in these Gospels, written by men possessing no literary genius, we have a perfect Human Being depicted.
And, what is in its way more remarkable than anything else, the sum total of the impression made by this sinless and perfect Being is one of absolute naturalness, with the entire absence of anything incongruous, unbalanced, or unfitting.
How is all this to be explained? Did the Person create the record, or did the record create the Person? If the writers of the Gospels can be conceived of as inventing the character of Jesus Christ, it is hardly too much to say that we should be face to face with at least as great a miracle as anything we now possess in connection with Christianity. This has been admitted by several leading opponents of Christianity. Thus, Theodore Parker—
And John Stuart Mill in like manner—
Rousseau's words, too, are often quoted—
To believe that unlettered Galilean fishermen, or even their immediate successors, invented a character which is so transcendent as to cast into the shade the finest efforts of all the greatest writers of every age, requires greater credulity than to believe that such a life was actually lived. And besides this, the individuality of each of the writers, so marked that an ordinary reader sometimes thinks one contradicts another, joined with the marvelous unity of the picture, which is clear to the mind of every student, together with the absence of all sophistry or special pleading, will not allow us to believe that the facts given are anything else than an accurate record by honest men of what they saw and heard. If Jesus was acclaimed, they put it down; if He was scorned, they recorded it. When He was called liar, blasphemer, deceiver, devil, when His own townsmen rejected His claims, they drew no veil over the unpalatable circumstances, but let the truth be put down just as it was.
It will readily be seen from what has been said that this argument is quite independent of any theory we may hold as to the origin, dates, and primitive character of the Gospels. It is the picture itself that has to be accounted for. There is no reasonable doubt that our four Gospels have occupied their present place in the Church at least since 200 A.D., whatever may have been their history previous to that date. How, then, are we to explain the picture of Christ? And even when we go further and accept the irreducible minimum of the Gospels allowed us by modern criticism, the general result is exactly the same.[10] Analyze the Gospels as we will, the Portrait is there. Not only so, but the more complex the origin and the more numerous the strata of the Gospels, the greater the problem of the Portrait. Even if we admit the presence of inaccuracies, inconsistencies, later additions, and interpolations, the Character remains and has to be accounted for. The larger the number of authorities, the more difficult to account for the unity. How is it that the net result of so many different hands at so many different times should be the perfect Picture, the consistent, balanced delineation of Jesus Christ as it stands in the Gospels today? And how and why, too, did this happen just then in Judea, under such adverse conditions? Why was the Perfect Man depicted then, and not before or since? How is it that the Gospels remain unique in literature today? Among the striking proofs of this uniqueness is the contrast afforded by the apocryphal Gospels.
Again: we may look at the question from the standpoint of modern criticism of the Gospels which, as we have already seen, regards Mark, or a document equivalent to our Mark, as the earliest Gospel. Does the acceptance of this position make any difference to the conception of Christ formed by readers? None whatever. The earliest Gospel is as full of the picture of a perfect and supernatural Christ as the later ones. This is admitted by critics who do not accept the orthodox Christian view of Christ and Christianity. Let us quote some representative testimonies of well-known scholars:—
Nor must we lose sight of the fact that the Gospels, whenever and by whomsoever written, represent not merely four men, the writers, but the entire Christian community among whom they arose and by whom they were universally accepted. The picture of Christ of the earliest Gospel is the Christ of the Christian Church, not only of the Evangelists. To quote Bousset again—
So also Otto Schmiedel—
As, therefore, we study closely the most recent and acutest criticism of the Gospels in the light of the generally accepted view that Mark is the earliest, it is impossible to doubt or question the conclusion drawn by Professor Warfield:—
It will be seen that our argument in this chapter has proceeded on two distinct though connected lines. The one is that of taking the Gospels as they stand, and as they have stood since 200 A.D., and seeking to account for their picture of Jesus Christ. The other is that of accepting the consensus of modern criticism as to our earliest Gospel and endeavoring to account for the picture and view of Christ there given. In both cases the result is the same; a supernatural Person is depicted and has to be accounted for. And this is surely sufficient, whatever criticism may say as to the origin and date of our Gospels.
But, as a matter of fact, the best of modern scholarship tends more and more to put back our Gospels to the position of contemporary documents, and to see in them the testimony of eye-witnesses to the Person and circumstances there recorded.
That the third Gospel and the Acts are by Luke, a companion of Paul, is now fully admitted by Harnack. The momentous consequence of this as a testimony to early date and contemporary knowledge is perfectly obvious to all who have given attention to the subject.[19] And even with the inclusion of the fourth Gospel this position is scarcely weakened. Dr. Sanday, speaking of St. Joh 21:24, says—
In the same way the Dean of Westminster says—
The more thoroughly the Gospels are studied the stronger will be the conviction that they have come from men who were eye-witnesses of Christ and who have faithfully reported the events of their Master's life. Dr. Kenyon, of the British Museum, closes an essay by referring to evidence which has become available during recent years for the study of the Gospels.
And so from the Gospels themselves, their conception of Christ, their reality and candor,[23] we argue for our position that Christ is Christianity. We invite the closest scrutiny, and ask men to submit the Gospels to the severest tests, feeling confident of the conclusion when all the facts and factors are properly taken into account.
This, then, is the problem of the Gospels in relation to Christ, and we are not surprised that men of very different schools of thought have realized its force and admitted its power. Thus Professor Gwatkin says—
And a very different thinker, Matthew Arnold, whose attitude to orthodox Christianity is well known, writes:—
Is there any solution of this problem except that which the New Testament and the Christian Church provide?
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[1] B. Lucas, The Faith of a Christian, p. 46. [2] Robertson Nicoll, The Church's One Foundation, p 43. [3] Fairbairn, The Philosophy of the Christian Religion, p. 303. [4] Robertson Nicoll, The Church's One Foundation, p. 47. [5] Fairbairn, The Philosophy of the Christian Religion, p. 330. [6] Theodore Parker, Life of Jesus, p. 363. [7] Mill, Essays on Nature, pp. 253-255. [8] See Robertson Nicoll, The Church's One Foundation, p. 41. [9] Religion and the Modern Mind. David Smith, "The Divinity of Jesus," p. 176. [10] Nolloth, The Person of our Lord and Recent Thought, chapters iii and iv. [11] B. Harris Cowper, Preface to Translation of the Apocryphal Gospels. [12] Quoted, Warfield, The Lord of Glory, p. 144, from Bousset, Was Wissen Wir von Jesus? [13] Quoted, Warfield, The Lord of Glory, p. 144, from Bousset, Was Wissen Wir von Jesus? [14] Quoted, Warfield, The Lord of Glory, p. 144, from Bousset, Was Wissen Wir von Jesus? [15] Quoted, Warfield, The Lord of Glory, p. 133, from O. Schmiedel, Die Hauptprobleme der Leben-Jesu Forschung. [16] Warfield, The Lord of Glory, p. 141. See also pp. 157, 158. [17] Robertson Nicoll, The Church's One Foundation, p. 11. [18] Salmon, Introduction to the New Testament, p. 581. [19] Harnack, Luke the Physician, passim. See also Ramsay, Luke the Physician, ch. i. [20] Sanday, Expository Times, vol. xx, p. 154. [21] Armitage Robinson, The Historical Character of St. John's Gospel, p. 9. [22] Kenyon, The Gospels in the Early Church, p. 48, "Essays of the Times," No. 3. [23] See a suggestive article in the Spectator for Jan. 30, 1909, on "The Candour of the New Testament." [24] Illingworth, Reason and Revelation, p. 151. [25] Gwatkin, The Knowledge of God, vol. i, p. 120. [26] Matthew Arnold, Preface to Literature and Dogma.
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