THE NEW TESTAMENT
OF OUR LORD AND SAVIOUR JESUS
CHRIST
INTRODUCTION.
As the whole revelation of the
will of God to mankind is
usually called the BIBLE, from
the Greek βιβλος, Biblos, that
is, the BOOK, by way of
eminence; so this sacred code
with us Christians is usually
divided into the OLD and NEW
TESTAMENT, or rather New
Dispensation, Law, or Covenant,
as the original expression, η
καινη διαθηκη, might be more
properly translated. The latter
word, indeed, rendered
“testament,” originally and
primarily signifies “a
disposition” or “appointment of
things:” and, because among men
things are ordered, disposed, or
appointed, by a law, or by
contract or covenant, or by will
and testament, the word has been
often used to signify any of
these. But, inasmuch as a
testament is of no force until
the testator be dead, and Christ
did not die, nor indeed come
into the world, till after the
law and the prophets (that is,
the writings containing the law
of Moses, and what other holy
men, termed prophets, delivered
by inspiration from God) were
finished, it does not appear to
be quite proper to call those
ancient records by the name of
“testament;” especially
considering that one part of
them, namely, the ceremonial
law, was abolished by the
testator’s death, and another
great part of them fulfilled in
his coming and dying. The name
of “testament,” however, belongs
more properly to the books of
the evangelists, the Acts of the
Apostles, and the Epistles,
which not only contain the “New
Law,” (so far as it is new,
either in respect of the full
and proper interpretation of the
moral law, or in regard of the
law concerning the worship of
God under the gospel, and the
government of the church,) but
also the new covenant, or “New
Dispensation” of the covenant of
grace. For, whereas the covenant
of grace was first made with,
and revealed to Adam, and in and
by him to the following
patriarchs, and through them to
the ages in which they lived;
and was declared and set forth a
second time, chiefly in types
and shadowy representations, to
Israel by Moses; it is much more
clearly and fully revealed in
these books, which contain a
third, and more perfect, and
indeed the last dispensation of
it, and are also the last will
and testament of our blessed
Lord and Saviour.
It may be observed further here,
nearly in the words of Dr.
Campbell, that although the
expression, η καινη διαθηκη, by
which the religious institution
of Christ is frequently
denominated, “is almost always
in the writings of the apostles
and evangelists rendered by our
translators, ‘the New
Testament;’ yet the word διαθηκη
by itself, except in a very few
places, is always there
rendered, not testament, but
covenant; and is the Greek word
whereby the LXX. have uniformly
translated the Hebrew, ברית,
berith, which our translators in
the Old Testament have
invariably rendered ‘covenant.’
That the Hebrew term corresponds
much better to the English word
‘covenant,’ though not in every
case perfectly equivalent, than
to ‘testament,’ there can be no
question; at the same time it
must be owned, that the word
διαθηκη in classical use, is
more frequently rendered
‘testament;’ the proper Greek
word for covenant being συνθηκη,
which is not found in the New
Testament, and occurs only
thrice in the Septuagint. But
that the Scriptural sense of the
Greek word is more fifty
expressed by our term
‘covenant,’ will not be doubted
by any body who considers the
constant application of the
Hebrew word, so rendered in the
Old Testament, and of the Greek
word, in most places at least,
where it is used in the New.
What has led translators,
ancient and modern, [sometimes,]
to render it ‘testament,’” seems
to be, “the manner wherein the
author of the epistle to the
Hebrews argues, Hebrews 9:16-17,
in allusion to the classical
acceptation of the term. But
however much it was necessary to
give a different turn to the
expression in that passage, in
order to make the author’s
argument as intelligible to the
English, as it is in the
original to the Greek reader,
this [certainly] was not a
sufficient reason for giving a
version to the word in other
places that neither suits the
context, nor is conformable to
the established use of the term
in the sacred writings.
“The term, ‘new,’ is added to
distinguish it from the ‘old
covenant,’ that is, the
dispensation of Moses.” It may
be observed here, by the way,
“that often the language of
theological systems, so far from
assisting us to understand the
language of holy writ, tends
rather to mislead us. The two
covenants are always in
Scripture the two dispensations,
or religious institutions; that
under Moses is the ‘old,’ that
under the Messiah is the ‘new.’
It is not denied that, in the
latitude wherein the term is
used in holy writ, the command
under the sanction of death,
which God gave to Adam in
paradise, may, like the
ordinance of circumcision, with
sufficient propriety be termed a
‘covenant;’ but it is pertinent
to observe that it is never so
denominated in Scripture; and
that when mention is made in the
epistles of the two covenants,
the ‘old’ and the ‘new,’ or the
first and the second, (for there
are two so called by way of
eminence,) there appears no
reference to any thing that
related to Adam. In all such
places, Moses and Jesus are
contrasted, the Jewish economy
and the Christian, mount Sinai,
in Arabia, whence the law was
promulgated, and mount Sion in
Jerusalem, where the gospel was
first published. It is proper to
observe further, that, from
signifying the two religious
dispensations, they came soon to
denote the books wherein what
related to these dispensations
was contained; the sacred
writings, of the Jews being
called η παλαια διαθηκη, and the
writings superadded by the
apostles and evangelists, η
καινη διαθηκη. We have one
example in Scripture of this use
of the former appellation. The
apostle says, speaking of his
countrymen, ‘Until this day
remaineth the veil untaken away
in the reading of the Old
Testament,’ 2 Corinthians 3:14,
επι τη αναγνωσει της παλαιας
διαθηκης. The word, in this
application, is always rendered
in our language, ‘testament.’ We
have in this followed the
Vulgate, as most modern
translators also have done. In
the Geneva French, the word is
rendered both ways in the title,
that the one may serve for
explaining the other, in which
they have copied Beza, who says,
Testamentum novum, sive Fœdus
novum, ‘the New Testament,’ or
‘the New Covenant.’ That the
second rendering of the word is
the better version, is
unquestionable; but the title
appropriated by custom to a
particular book is on the same
footing with a proper name,
which is hardly considered a
subject of criticism. Thus we
call Cesar’s Diary, ‘Cesar’s
Commentaries,’ from their Latin
name, though very different in
meaning from the English word.”
The title of this part of the
Scriptures, in some of the
original or Greek copies is, της
καινης διαθηκης απαντα, all the
books, or rather, all the things
of the New Covenant: a title
which, according to Dr. Hammond,
refers to “the consent of the
catholic church of God, and the
tradition which bears testimony
to these books as those, and
those only, which complete the
canon of the New Testament;” or
all the books which have been
handed down to the church so as
to be received into the number
of writings confessedly endited
by the apostles and disciples of
Christ. “I cannot indeed find,”
says Dr. Whitby, “that this
title is of any considerable
antiquity, but the more ancient
title of η καινη διαθηκη, the
New Covenant, prefixed to these
books, doth plainly intimate the
full and general persuasion of
the ancient church, that in
these books was comprised the
whole new covenant, of which the
blessed Jesus was the Mediator,
and the apostles were the
ministers and dispensers; and
therefore they must surely
contain all that is requisite
for Christians to believe and do
in order to salvation.” It may
be proper to observe here, that
in this latter dispensation, the
divine authority of the former
is presupposed and built upon;
and “the knowledge of what is
contained in that introductory
revelation is always presumed in
the readers of the New
Testament, which claims to be
the consummation of an economy
of God for the salvation of man;
of which economy the Old
Testament acquaints us with the
occasion, origin, and early
progress. Both are, therefore,
intimately connected.
Accordingly, though the two
Testaments are written in
different languages, the same
idiom prevails in both; and in
the historical parts at least,
nearly the same character of
style.” The books of the New
Testament obviously divide
themselves into the Gospels, the
Acts of the Apostles, the
Epistles of the Apostles, and
the Apocalypse or Revelation of
St. John. The evangelists,
through whom we have the
gospels, are four, Matthew,
Mark, Luke, John. Their
histories are termed ευαγγελια,
gospels, or good tidings, as the
word signifies, because they
contain tidings of the
appearance of the Messiah, and a
circumstantial account of his
birth, life, doctrine, miracles,
sufferings, death, resurrection,
ascension, and exaltation to
God’s right hand, as the
Redeemer and Saviour, the
Mediator, Advocate, and
Forerunner of his people. These
sacred writers are therefore not
called evangelists in the sense
in which the same expression is
used Ephesians 4:11, where it
signifies a certain class of
extraordinary officers in the
Christian Church, such as
Philip, Acts 8:5-29; and Acts
21:8; Timothy, 2 Timothy 4:5;
and many others: but as they
were evangelical historians. Of
those, however, Matthew and John
were apostles, and preachers of
the gospel, the other two were
only disciples of the apostles;
but, nevertheless, they
doubtless occasionally laboured
“in the word and doctrine.”
That these four persons were the
inspired authors of the four
narratives which bear their
names, we have, as Dr. Whitby
shows at large, the clear and
decisive testimony of the
ancient fathers of the Christian
Church. 1. A passage from
Polycarp, (who, as Irenĉus
informs us, was made bishop of
Smyrna by the apostles, and
conversed with many who had seen
the Lord,) is cited by Victor
Capuanus, in which we have the
names of these four gospels, as
we at present have them, and the
beginning of their several
histories. 2. Justin Martyr,
who, according to Eusebius,
lived, μετ’ ου πολυ των
αποστολων, not long after the
apostles, shows that these books
were then well known by the name
of “gospels,” and were read by
Christians in their assemblies
every Lord’s day. Yea, we learn
from him that they were read by
Jews, and might be read by
heathens; and that we may not
doubt that, by the “Memoirs of
the Apostles, which,” says he,
“we call Gospels,” he meant
these four, received then in the
church, he cites passages out of
every one of them, declaring
that they contained the words of
Christ. 3. Irenĉus, in the same
century, not only cites them all
by name, but declares that there
were neither more nor fewer
received by the church, and that
they were of such authority that
though the heretics of his time
complained of their obscurity,
depraved them, and endeavoured
to lessen their authority, yet
they durst not wholly disown
them, or deny them to be the
writings of those apostles whose
names they bore. Moreover, he
cites passages from every
chapter of St. Matthew and St.
Luke, from fourteen chapters of
St. Mark, and from twenty
chapters of St. John 4. Clemens
of Alexandria, having cited a
passage from “the Gospel
according to the Egyptians,”
informs his readers, “that it
was not to be found in the four
gospels delivered by the
church.” 5. Tatianus, who
flourished in the same century,
and before Irenĉus, wrote
συναφειαν τινα και συναγωγην των
ευαγγελιων, a chain or harmony
of the gospels, which he named,
το δια τεσσαρων, the gospel
gathered out of the four
gospels. And the “apostolical
constitutions” name them all,
and command “that they be read
in the church, the people
standing up at the reading of
them. 6. Inasmuch as these
gospels were “written,” says
Irenĉus, “by the will of God, to
be the pillars and foundation of
the Christian faith,” the
immediate successors of the
apostles, who, says Eusebius,
did great miracles by the
assistance of the Holy Ghost,
and performed the work of
evangelists in preaching Christ
to those who had not yet heard
the word, made it their
business, when they had laid the
foundation of that faith among
them, την των θειων ευαγγελιων
παραδιδοναι γραφην, to deliver
to them the writing of the holy
gospels.
If it be objected here, that
other gospels, bearing the names
of other apostles, or gospels
used by other nations, are
mentioned as having existed in
the early ages of Christianity,
it may be answered, that this is
so far from being derogatory
from, or tending to diminish,
the tradition of the church
concerning these four gospels,
that it tends highly to
establish and confirm it, as
will be evident from these
considerations: 1. That we find
no mention of any of these
gospels until the close of the
second century, and of few of
them till the third or the
fourth century; that is, not
until long after the general
reception of these four gospels
by the whole church of Christ.
For Justin Martyr and Irenĉus,
who cite large passages from
these four gospels, take not the
least notice of any other
gospels, mentioned either by the
heretics or by the orthodox. 2.
They who speak of them in the
close of the second, or in the
following centuries, do it still
with this remark, that “the
gospels received by the
tradition of the church were
only four,” and that the others
belonged not to them, nor to the
evangelical canon. For
authorities the reader must be
referred to Dr. Whitby, from
whom the two last paragraphs are
taken. He sums up the argument
as follows: “Seeing, then, 1.
That these four gospels were
received without any doubt or
contradiction by all Christians
from the beginning, as the
writings of those apostles and
evangelists whose names they
bear; and that these first
Christians both acknowledged and
testified that these writings
were delivered to them by the
apostles as the pillars or
fundamental articles of their
faith: seeing, 2. That these
same gospels were delivered by
the immediate successors of the
apostles to all the churches
which they converted or
established, as the rule of
their faith: seeing, 3. They
were read from the beginning, as
Justin Martyr testifies, in all
assemblies of Christians, on the
Lord’s day, and so must have
been early translated into those
languages, in which alone they
could be understood by some
churches; namely, the Syriac and
Latin: seeing, 4. They were
generally cited in the second
century for the confirmation of
this faith, and the conviction
of heretics, and the presidents
of the assemblies exhorted those
who heard them to practise and
imitate what they heard: seeing,
5. We never hear of any other
gospels till the close of the
second century, and then hear
only of them with a mark of
reprobation, or a declaration
that they were ψευδεπιγραφα,
falsely imposed upon the
apostles, that they belonged not
to the evangelical canon, or to
the gospels delivered to the
churches by a succession of
ecclesiastical persons, or to
those gospels which they
approved, or by which they
confirmed their doctrines, but
were to be rejected as the
inventions of manifest heretics:
— All these considerations must
afford us a sufficient
demonstration that all
Christians then had
unquestionable evidence that
these four gospels were the
genuine works of those apostles
and evangelists whose names they
bear, and so were worthy to be
received as the records of their
faith. What reason, then, can
any persons of succeeding ages
have to question what was so
universally acknowledged by
those who lived so near to that
very age in which these gospels
were endited, and who received
them under the character of the
holy and divine Scriptures?”
To this general and uncontrolled
tradition respecting the
authenticity of the gospels, we
may add further strength from
the following considerations: 1.
That since our Jesus was a
Prophet or Teacher sent from
God, he must have left to his
church some records of his
doctrines and his Father’s will;
since he was a King, and was to
reign for ever, he must have
left some laws by which his
subjects were to be for ever
governed; as the Saviour of the
world, he must have delivered to
the world an account of the
terms on which they might obtain
the great salvation purchased by
him; otherwise, he must have
been a Prophet, Priest, and King
in vain. Hence we infer that
some certain records of those
doctrines, laws, and conditions
of salvation, must be extant.
Now, unless these gospels and
other scriptures of the New
Testament contain those records,
they must be wholly lost, and we
must all be left under a
manifest impossibility of
knowing, and, therefore, of
doing the will of God. For to
say tradition might supply the
want of writing is to contradict
experience; since the traditions
of the Jews made void that word
of God they had received in
writing; and how much more would
they have done it had no such
writing been delivered!
Moreover, our blessed Lord spake
many things which were not
committed to writing. He taught
the multitude “by the sea;” Mark
2:13; “beyond Jordan;” Mark
10:1; “in the synagogues of
Galilee;” Luke 4:15; “at
Nazareth;” Luke 4:22;
“Capernaum;” Luke 4:31; “out of
Simon’s ship;” Luke 5:3; and
very often “in the temple;” John
7:14; John 8:2. He interpreted
to the two disciples going to
“Emmaus, throughout all the
Scriptures, the things
concerning himself;” Luke 24:27.
He discoursed to his disciples,
after his resurrection,
“touching the things of the
kingdom of God;” Acts 1:3; and
St. John assures us there were
exceeding many miracles which
Jesus did that were not written;
John 20:30. Now, whereas
accounts of all those miracles
and sermons which were written
are entirely preserved, and
firmly believed, tradition hath
not preserved an account of one
miracle or sermon which was not
written; and, therefore,
tradition can be no sure record
or means of making known the
doctrine or the laws of Christ.
In a word, it is evident that
even the church catholic hath
lost a tradition delivered to
her by St. Paul; for he says, “I
told you these things,” (namely,
concerning antichrist,) “when I
was with you; and now ye know
what withholdeth that he might
be revealed in his time;” 2
Thessalonians 2:5-6. He also
intimates, in the same chapter,
at verse 15, where he exhorts
them to hold fast these
traditions, that they were of
great moment to be known and
retained; and yet these
traditions have neither been
retained by the Roman, nor by
the catholic church, and it is
confessed by Anselm and Esthius
on the place, that, “though the
Thessalonians knew, yet that we
know not what they were;” so
that the tradition which the
church received touching this
matter is wholly lost. How then
can the church be relied on as a
sure preserver and true teacher
of unwritten tradition, since
she has confessedly lost one of
great moment deposited with the
Thessalonians. and the primitive
church.
2. That it was necessary that
the Christian doctrine or
revelation should be preserved
in some writing, may be fairly
concluded from the Holy
Scriptures themselves. For, if
St. Paul thought it necessary to
write to the church at Rome, “to
put them in remembrance of the
grace of God given to them,”
Romans 15:15, as also to send to
his Corinthians in writings “the
things they had heard and did
acknowledge,” 2 Corinthians
1:13, and to write “the same
things” which he had taught to
his Philippians; Philippians
3:1; — if St. Peter thought it
needful to write to the Jewish
converts, “to stir up their
sincere minds by way of
remembrance, that they might be
mindful of the commands of the
apostles,” 2 Peter 3:1-2, though
they at present knew them, and
were “established in the truth;”
2 Peter 1:12-13; and St. Jude to
write to the same persons, to
remind them “of the common
salvation;” verse 3; — if the
beloved evangelist closes his
gospel with these words, “These
things were written, that ye
might believe that Jesus is the
Christ, and believing ye might
have life through his name;” —
surely these persons could not
but think it necessary that the
essential doctrines of
Christianity should be recorded
in writing; and yet we are sure
they have only been so recorded
in those gospels and other
writings contained in the canon
of the New Testament; and,
therefore, we cannot reasonably
doubt of the authority of these
gospels and other writings. Add
to this, the apostles, and the
Holy Spirit, who influenced them
in the inditing of these gospels
for the church’s use, would
certainly not be wanting in
causing them to be transmitted
to those Christians for whose
use they were intended, because
they would not be wanting to
pursue the end for which these
gospels were written; and they
were therefore written, that the
disciples “might know the
certainty of those things in
which they had been instructed,”
Luke 1:4, and might be engaged
more firmly to believe that
Jesus was the Christ.
3. It is evident that the age
immediately succeeding could not
be ignorant of what was thus
delivered to them by the church
from the apostles, as the pillar
and ground of their faith; nor
is it easy to conceive, that
either they would have thus
received these gospels, had not
the apostles given them
sufficient authority and
indication of their duty so to
do; or that these writings would
have been esteemed so readily as
the charters of the Christian
faith, had not the apostles
delivered them unto the churches
under that character.
And lastly. We have good reason
to suppose that the providence
of God, which was so highly
interested in the propagation of
the Christian faith, and making
it known to the world, would not
permit false records of that
faith to be so early and so
generally imposed upon the
Christian world.
From the same consent and
suffrage of the primitive
church, we may conclude, with
the strongest evidence of
reason, that these four gospels,
and the other Scriptures,
received then without doubt or
contradiction by the church,
were handed down to them
uncorrupted in the substantial
articles respecting faith and
practice. For, 1. These records
were generally dispersed through
all the Christian churches,
though at a great distance from
each other, from the beginning
of the second century. 2. They
were universally acknowledged
and consented to by men of great
parts and learning, and of
different persuasions. 3. They
were preserved in the originals
in the apostolical churches,
among whom, says Tertullian,
authenticĉ eorum literĉ
recitantur, “their original
letters are recited;” it being
not to be doubted that they who
received the originals from the
apostles, and who had authentic
copies of them given to them by
their immediate successors,
would carefully preserve them to
posterity. 4. They were
multiplied into divers versions,
almost from the beginning, as we
may rationally conclude, because
the Church of Rome, and other
churches which understood not
the original Greek, having been
founded in the apostles’ days,
cannot be reasonably supposed to
have been long without a version
of those Scriptures which were
to be read by them in public and
private. 5. They were esteemed
by them as digesta nostra, “our
law books,” says Tertullian;
libri deifici deificĉ Scripturĉ,
“divine books of God’s inditing,”
or, “books which instruct men to
lead a divine life,” say the
martyrs; and believed by all
Christians to be θειαι γραφαι,
“divine Scriptures,” says
Origen, and, therefore, as the
records of their hopes and
fears. 6. They were so
constantly rehearsed in their
assemblies by men whose office
it was to read, explain, and
enforce them, and exhort to the
performance of the duties they
enjoined, and so diligently read
by the Christians, that they
were riveted in the memories of
many, and, according to
Eusebius, some had them all by
heart. 7. They were so
frequently referred to in their
writings, and passages of them
so often cited by Irenĉus,
Clemens of Alexandria, and
Origen, exactly as we now have
them; — that it must be certain,
from all these considerations,
they were handed down to
succeeding generations pure and
uncorrupt.
And, indeed, from these
considerations, we may with
greater certainty infer, that
the Scriptures were preserved
entire from any designed
corruption, than any person can,
that the statutes of the land,
or any other writings,
histories, or records
whatsoever, have been so
preserved; because the evidence
thereof depends upon more
persons, and those more holy,
and of consequence more averse
to deceive, and more concerned
that their writings should not
be corrupted, than any men are,
or have reason to be, respecting
other writings. So that we must
renounce all certainty of the
authenticity of any record, or
grant that it is certain these
are the genuine records of the
Christian faith. Again: The
corruption of the word of God,
or the substitution of any other
doctrine in the place of that
which had been delivered by the
apostles, could not have been
effected by any part or sect of
Christians, without its being
soon discovered by those who had
embraced the Christian faith,
and used the true copies of the
word of God, in other churches
of the Christian world. And,
therefore, this supposed
corruption, if it could at all
have taken place, must have been
the work of the whole body of
Christians. But surely it cannot
be reasonably supposed that the
ages immediately succeeding the
apostles should universally
conspire to substitute their own
inventions in the place of the
word of God, and yet continue
steadfast in, and suffer so much
for, that faith which denounced
the severest judgments against
them who should corrupt his
word: or that so many men
should, with the hazard of their
lives and fortunes, avouch the
gospel to be the truth of God,
and yet make such a change even
in the frame and constitution of
its doctrine, as rendered it
ineffectual, both to their own
salvation and that of their
posterity. Lastly, that these
sacred records of the word of
God have not been so corrupted
as to cease to be an authentic
and sufficient rule of faith and
practice, may be argued from the
providence of God. For nothing
seems more inconsistent with his
wisdom and goodness, as the
Governor of the world and of his
church, than to influence his
servants to write the
Scriptures, to be a rule of
faith and manners for all future
ages, and to require the belief
of the doctrines, and the
practice of the duties contained
therein, and yet to suffer this
divinely-inspired rule to be
corrupted in things necessary to
faith and practice. Who can
imagine that God, who sent his
Son into the world to declare
this doctrine, and inspired his
apostles to indite and preach
it, and who by so many miracles
confirmed it, should suffer any
weak or ill- designing persons
to corrupt or alter any of those
terms on which the salvation of
the world depended? Surely none
can think this rational but such
as are of opinion that it is not
absurd to say that God repented
of his goodness and love to
mankind in vouchsafing them the
gospel; or that he was so unkind
to future generations, that he
suffered wicked men to rob them
of all the benefits intended
them by this new declaration of
his will. For since those very
Scriptures, which have been
received as the word of God, and
used by the church as such, from
its first ages, profess to
contain the terms of our
salvation; to be Scriptures
indited by men commissioned from
Christ, and such as avouched
themselves “apostles by the will
of God, for the delivery of the
faith of God’s elect, and for
the knowledge of the truth,
which is after godliness, in
hope of eternal life;” they must
either be the word of God in
reality, or providence must have
permitted such a forgery as
renders it impossible for us to
perform our duty in order to
salvation; for if the Scriptures
of the New Testament should be
corrupted in any essential
requisite of faith or practice,
they must cease to be “able to
make us wise unto salvation,”
and so they must fail of
answering the end which God
intended they should answer when
he indited them.
Now the authenticity of the
gospels being thus demonstrated,
or that they are the genuine and
uncorrupted writings of the
persons whose names they bear,
their truth and divine
inspiration follows of course.
For, first, with respect to the
evangelists Matthew and John, we
may observe with Dr. Macknight,
as they were apostles, “they
were eye-witnesses of most of
the things they have related.
They attended our Lord during
his ministry; they heard him
preach all his sermons, and saw
him perform the greatest part of
his miracles; they were present
at his crucifixion; they
conversed with him after his
resurrection; and they beheld
his ascension. Besides, as
apostles, they possessed the
gifts of illumination and
utterance. By the former they
were absolutely secured from
falling into error, in any point
of doctrine, or matter of fact,
relating to the Christian
scheme. By the latter they were
enabled to express themselves
clearly and pertinently upon
every subject of Christianity
which they had occasion to treat
of, either in their sermons or
writings. These gifts our Lord
had expressly promised to all
his apostles. See John
14:25-26.” He also promised
that, when they should be
brought before governors and
kings, it should be given them
what they should speak; that he
would give them a mouth and
wisdom which their adversaries
should not be able to gainsay or
resist; yea, that the Spirit of
their Father should speak in
them. Matthew 10:18; Matthew
10:20; Luke 21:15. The whole of
these promises were punctually
fulfilled. For, about ten days
after our Lord’s ascension, the
disciples received a glorious
effusion of the Holy Ghost,
while they tarried in Jerusalem,
according to their Master’s
order, in expectation of being
“endued with power from on
high.” See Acts 2:3.
“From that moment forth the
Spirit gave clear indications of
the reality of his presence with
them; for he enabled them, all
at once, to speak the various
languages under heaven as
fluently as if they had been
their native tongues, and
thereby qualified them to preach
the gospel in all countries
immediately upon their arrival,
without the necessity of
submitting to the tedious and
irksome labour of learning the
languages of those countries.
Moreover, he gave them the power
of working all manner of
miracles; nay, he enabled them
to impart unto those whom they
converted the power of working
them, and the faculty of
speaking with tongues, and of
prophesying or preaching by
inspiration. The apostles of the
Lord, having such convincing
proofs of their inspiration
always abiding with them, did
not fail on proper occasions to
assert it, that mankind might
everywhere receive their
doctrine and writings with that
submission which is due to the
dictates of the Spirit of God.
Hence we find them calling the
gospel which they preached and
wrote, “the word of God, the
commandment of God, the wisdom
of God, the testimony of God;”
also, “the word of Christ, the
gospel of Christ, the mind of
Christ, the mystery of God the
Father, and of Christ.”
Wherefore, Matthew and John
being apostles, and having
received the gifts of the Spirit
with the rest of their brethren,
there can be no doubt of their
inspiration. Their gospels were
written under the direction of
the Holy Ghost, who resided in
them; and upon that account they
are venerated by all Christians
as the word of God, and have
deservedly a place allowed them
in the sacred canon. 2. “The
characters of Mark and Luke come
next to be considered. They were
not apostles, it is true, yet
they were qualified to write
such a history of our Lord’s
life as merits a place in the
canon of Scripture.” For as they
were, in all probability, early
disciples, it is not unlikely
that they were eye- witnesses of
most of the things which they
have related; and were even in
the apostles’ company on the day
of pentecost, and then received
the extraordinary gifts of the
Spirit together with them;
consequently they wrote by
divine inspiration also. But, if
that were not the case, it must
be granted that these two
evangelists accompanied the
apostles in their travels. “The
matter is certain with respect
to Luke; for, in his history of
the Acts, he speaks of himself
as Paul’s companion; and, in the
preface to his gospel, he
expressly mentions the
information of the ministers of
the word, as distinct from that
of the eye-witnesses, to lead
us, probably, to think of Paul,
with whom he had long travelled,
and who had not the knowledge of
Christ’s history by personal
acquaintance, but by revelation.
See Galatians 1:11-12; 1
Corinthians 11:23. As for Mark,
he is generally reported by
antiquity, and currently
believed, to have been Peter’s
assistant. And, in conformity to
this opinion, all interpreters,
both ancient and modern, suppose
that Peter speaks of Mark the
evangelist in 1 Peter 5:13 :
‘The church that is at Babylon
salutes you, and so does Marcus
my son.’ This appellation Peter
gives to Mark, because of the
great intimacy and friendship
which subsisted between them,
agreeable to the Apostle Paul’s
description of Timothy’s
affection. See Philippians 2:22.
If Mark was Peter’s companion
and fellow-labourer in the
gospel, although he was neither
an apostle nor an eye-witness,
he must have been well
acquainted with our Lord’s
history, because he could not
but learn it from the
conversation and sermons of
Peter, who was both. Wherefore,
to use the words of Luke, since
these evangelists took in hand
to write the history of our
Lord’s life, according to the
informations which they had
received from the eye-witnesses
and ministers of the word, and
executed their design while they
accompanied the persons from
whom they received those
informations, we may reasonably
suppose they would submit their
works to their examination.
Accordingly, Clemens
Alexandrinus, quoted by
Eusebius, Matthew 6:14, tells us
that Mark’s gospel was revised
by Peter. And Mr. Jones, in
support of this opinion, has
collected eight particulars from
the other gospels, all tending
to the honour of Peter, which
are entirely omitted by Mark,
because Peter’s humility, as he
supposes, would not allow him to
tell these things to that
historian. But if it be true
that Mark and Luke wrote
according to the information of
the apostles, and had their
gospels revised by them, it is
evidently the same as if their
gospels had been dictated by the
apostles.
“I cannot but observe, however,”
proceeds the doctor, “that
though none of all the
suppositions just now mentioned
should be granted, there is one
unquestionable matter of fact,
which fully establishes the
authority of the two gospels
under consideration; namely,
that they were written by the
persons whose names they bear,
and while most of the apostles
were alive. For, in that case,
they must have been perused by
the apostles, and approved; as
is certain from their being
universally received in the
early ages, and handed down to
posterity as of undoubted
authority. The apostolical
approbation was the only thing,
without the inspiration of the
writers, which could give these
books the reputation they have
obtained. And had it been
wanting in any degree, they must
have shared the fate of the many
accounts which Luke speaks of in
his preface; that is, must have
been neglected, either as
imperfect or spurious, and so
have quickly perished. But, if
the gospels of Mark and Luke
were approved by the apostles
immediately upon their
publication, and for that reason
were received by all Christians,
and handed down to posterity as
of undoubted authority, it is
the same as if they had been
dictated by the apostles. Hence
they are justly reckoned of
equal authority with the other
books of Scripture, and admitted
into the canon together with
them. Such proofs as these,
drawn from the sacred writings
themselves, are sufficient to
make all Christians reverence
the gospels as the word of God.
And, therefore, they are fitly
produced for the confirmation of
our faith.”
It must be observed further,
here, that while we believe the
sacred historians have recorded
nothing but what is true, we
must not suppose they have
related all the things which
with truth they might have
related. “Each of them, indeed,
has delivered as much of
Christ’s doctrine and miracles
as is necessary to our
salvation. Nevertheless, many
important sermons and actions
are omitted by each, which, if
the rest had not preserved, the
world must have sustained an
unspeakable loss. We have even
reason to believe that it is but
a small part of our Lord’s
history which is preserved among
them all;” for John has said
expressly, that “there were many
other things which Jesus did,
which, if they had been written
every one,” he supposed “that
even the world itself could not
contain the books that would
have been written.” The other
evangelists affirm, in effect,
the same thing, in the summaries
which they give of such
discourses and miracles as they
did not think proper to relate
particularly. Thus we read,
“Jesus went about all Galilee,
teaching in their synagogues,
and preaching the gospel of the
kingdom, and healing all manner
of sickness and all manner of
disease among the people. And
his fame went throughout all
Syria; and they brought unto him
all sick people that were taken
with divers diseases and
torments, and those which were
possessed with devils, and those
which were lunatic, and those
that had the palsy, and he
healed them,” Matthew 4:23-24.
In Luke 7:21 it is said, “And in
that same hour he cured many of
their infirmities and plagues,
and of evil spirits; and to many
that were blind he gave sight.”
See also Matthew 14:35-36;
Matthew 15:30-31; Matthew
19:1-2; John 2:23; and John 3:2;
and the passages referred to
above in the paragraph
respecting the insufficiency of
tradition, page 6.
And, “as the evangelists did not
intend to relate all the sermons
and actions of Christ, so it was
not their purpose to mention
every circumstance of those
which they undertook to relate.
Each evangelist, directed by the
Spirit, makes his own choice.
This circumstance is mentioned
by one, and that by another, as
they judged most proper.” And
“we must by no means urge
omissions, whether of facts, or
circumstances of facts, in such
a manner as to fancy that the
inspired authors rejected all
the things they have omitted, or
even that they were ignorant of
them. For, from the summaries
above mentioned, it is plain
they have passed over many
particulars with which they were
well acquainted.”
But it must be observed, though
Jesus performed many miracles,
which the evangelists have not
recorded, and probably many
equal in greatness to those
which they have recorded; yet,
it is likely “that those
recorded were more remarkable
than the rest, either for the
number of the witnesses who were
present at them; or for the
character and quality of those
witnesses; or for the places
where they were performed; or
for the consequences which they
gave rise to; or for the reports
which went out concerning them,
and fame which accrued to Jesus
from them. This observation,
which may be applied likewise to
our Lord’s sermons, deserves the
rather to be attended to,
because it accounts for what
would otherwise be very
difficult to be understood,
namely, how the evangelists,
notwithstanding they had such an
infinity of sermons and miracles
to make a choice from, came all
of them, except John, who
designed his gospel as a
supplement to the rest, to
mention, in most instances, the
same sermons and miracles; I
say, in most instances, because
in a few cases each evangelist
has departed from this rule,
omitting things, which on
account of their importance,
their notoriety, their
consequences, and other reasons,
are recorded by the rest; while
he has taken notice of
particulars which, to
appearance, are not so material.
Thus, Mark 14:51, the cure which
our Lord performed on the high-
priest’s slave, whose ear Peter
cut off, is omitted; while the
young man who followed him with
a linen cloth cast round his
naked body, is mentioned. In
these, and such like instances,
the evangelists seem not to have
considered how their readers
would be affected with the
transactions recorded by them.
If that had been a matter of
care with them, they would in
every case, have made choice of
those particulars only which
might have prejudiced their
readers in favour of their
Master, or led them to form a
high idea of him. Wherefore, as
they have not done so, they
possess evidently the character
of writers who have no distrust
of their cause, but who tell the
truth as it presented itself,
without artifice or disguise.
“According to this view of the
matter, it appears that the
evangelists, in their histories,
have given only a faint sketch,
as it were, of our Lord’s life,
and not a full delineation.
However, though the miracles and
sermons which they have recorded
be few in respect of the whole,
it is certain that the miracles
mentioned do put Christ’s
mission beyond all reasonable
possibility of doubt; and the
sermons related give a just idea
of his doctrine. Nay, such is
the importance of the things
related, that each evangelist
must be acknowledged singly to
have comprehended in his gospel
as much of the knowledge of
Christ as is sufficient to the
salvation of the world. At the
same time, by confining
themselves to the principal
miracles which our Lord
performed, and to some select
sermons which he preached in the
course of his ministry, they
made their histories such small
books, that every Christian had
it in his power to purchase some
one of them. And although at
first sight this may seem but a
matter of little moment, it was,
in reality, a singular benefit
to mankind, especially in those
ancient ages, before printing
was invented, when a book of any
considerable bulk amounted to a
large sum. Brandt, in his
History of the Reformation in
the Low Countries, (vol. 1., p.
23,) tells us, that for one copy
of the Bible, tolerably written
on vellum, it was usual to pay
four or five hundred crowns;
and, even after the invention of
printing, sixty for a printed
copy, till the art grew more
common. We may therefore
presume, that it was not without
the particular direction of the
Spirit, that the evangelists, in
writing their histories, thus
consulted the benefit of the
poor; who, if they got any one
of the gospels into their own
possession, could be at no loss
for the knowledge of Christ
necessary to eternal life.
“Concerning the words and
phrases which the inspired
writers have made use of,” it
may not be improper to subjoin
the following observations from
the same judicious author. “If
two or more evangelists, on any
occasion, ascribe to our Lord
the same words, we may safely
believe they have preserved the
words which he uttered on that
occasion. However, when they
introduce him speaking, they do
not always mean to repeat the
precise words, but to give the
sense of what he said; nothing
more being intended oftentimes
by those who undertake to relate
what was spoken by another.
This, I think, is plain, from
Acts 10:4, compared with verse
31. In the former of these
passages, the angel says to
Cornelius, ‘Thy prayers and
thine alms are come up for a
memorial before God;’ in the
latter, Cornelius, rehearsing
the angel’s words to Peter,
delivers them thus: ‘Thy prayer
is heard, and thine alms are had
in remembrance in the sight of
God.’ Wherefore, both Cornelius
and the historian thought the
angel’s words were repeated,
when the sense of them was
delivered. This observation
reconciles all those passages in
the gospels, wherein our Lord is
introduced expressing his
sentiments in different words on
the same occasion. Nevertheless,
where different expressions are
found, it is possible that all
of them may have been uttered by
him, especially if they convey
different thoughts, and, when
joined together, make a
connected discourse. In most
cases, however, the former is
the more natural solution;
because, if the evangelists have
given the true meaning of what
our Lord said on every occasion,
they have certainly delivered
what may be called the words of
Christ, though the expressions
in each gospel should be
different, or even to appearance
contradictory. A remarkable
example of this we have Matthew
10:9, where Jesus is introduced
speaking to his apostles thus:
‘Provide — neither shoes nor yet
a staff;’ but, in the parallel
passage, Mark 6:8, which
exhibits the repetition of those
instructions, he commanded them,
that they should take nothing
for their journey, save a staff
only; words in sound
contradictory to the former,
though in sense perfectly the
same. Such of the apostles as
had staves in their hands might
take them, but those who were
walking without them were not to
provide them; for, as the
providence of God was to supply
them with all necessaries, to
have made the least preparation
for their journey would have
implied a disbelief of their
Master’s promise. In like
manner, the words of the voice
at Christ’s baptism, Matthew
3:17, ‘This is my beloved Son,
in whom I am well pleased,’
though different as to sound
from the words Mark 1:11, ‘Thou
art my beloved Son, in whom I am
well pleased;’ yet being the
same in sense, they are truly
repeated. So likewise are the
words of institution in the
history of the sacrament, and
the words of the title that was
affixed to our Lord’s cross.
“By the way, these principles
afford an easy solution of the
difficulties which arise upon
comparing the citations in the
New Testament with the passages
of the Old, from whence they are
taken; for, if the meaning of
the passage is truly given, we
must allow that the quotation is
justly made. Hence, though the
words, ‘He shall be called a
Nazarene,’ Matthew 2:23, are not
to be found in the writings of
the prophets, yet, as the thing
meant by these words frequently
occurs in them, the application
is made by the evangelist with
sufficient propriety.
“But further, it ought to be
considered, that our Lord’s
discourses were all delivered,
and his conferences managed, in
a language different from that
wherein they are handed down to
posterity, namely, the
Syro-Chaldaic, called ‘the
Hebrew tongue,’ Acts 21:40,
because it was a dialect
thereof. For which cause, though
all the evangelists had
remembered the precise words of
every person introduced in their
histories, when they related
them in a different language,
they could hardly avoid making
use of different expressions,
even on supposition that they
wrote by inspiration, unless
that inspiration absolutely
deprived them of the use of
their own faculties; or unless
the Holy Spirit, who inspired
them, could not suggest
different words to each, equally
proper for conveying the
sentiment he designed to
express.
“According to this view of the
matter, the four evangelists
differ from one another no
otherwise than any of them might
have differed from himself, had
he related the same passage of
the history twice. Both
narrations would have been the
same as to the sense, though
different words might have been
made use of in each. Wherefore,
it can be no good argument
against the inspiration of the
evangelists, that their accounts
are different. Let the reader
compare the two histories of our
Lord’s ascension, given by Luke,
the one in the end of his
gospel, the other in the
beginning of the Acts; also the
three accounts which the same
historian gives of Paul’s
conversion, the first in the
ninth, the second in the
twenty-second, the third in the
twenty-sixth chapter of the
last-mentioned book; and he will
acknowledge the truth of what I
have been saying.”
In the mean time, let him
observe that, while these
apparent inconsistencies, thus
rightly understood, are easily
reconciled, they prove
undeniably that the evangelists
were in no combination to make
up their histories and deceive
the world: so far from it, that
these inconsistencies are of
such a kind, as would lead one
to believe the subsequent
historians did not so much as
compare the accounts of
particular transactions, which
they were about to publish, with
those that were already abroad
in the world, but that each
evangelist represented the
matters which are subjects of
his history, as his own memory,
under the direction of the Holy
Spirit, suggested them to him,
without considering how far they
might be agreeable to the
accounts which his brethren
historians had already given.
And as this admirably discovers
the sober spirit of truth by
which those writers were guided
in every part of their
narrations, so the modesty
wherewith they have written
their histories is very
remarkable. For not only none of
them singly has related all the
transactions of our Lord’s life,
or affected to give a complete
history thereof, but, “such
things as they have thought fit
to mention, though great and
wonderful above measure, they
have not painted with the gaudy
colourings of rhetoric, nor
heightened with the magnificence
of pompous language, but have
told them with a simplicity
unexampled in so great a
subject. And as they have not
studied human eloquence in the
composition of their histories,
so they have not followed human
prudence in the choice of their
subjects. For although they must
have been sensible that the
transactions they were about to
relate were not likely to be
believed by the generality,
being many of them opposite to
the established course of
nature, it is evident they were
at no pains to consider what
particulars were least liable to
exception, nor so much as to
obviate the difficulties which
arose from them. This thought a
late writer has well expressed.
‘It does not appear,’ says he,
‘that it ever came into the mind
of the evangelists to consider
how this or that other action
would appear to mankind, or what
objections might be raised
against them. But, without
attending at all to this, they
lay the facts before you, at no
pains to think whether they
would appear credible or not. If
the reader will not believe
their testimony, there is no
help for it. They tell the
truth, and attend to nothing
else.’ To conclude, it is
remarkable that through the
whole of their histories, the
evangelists have not passed one
encomium upon Jesus, or upon any
of his friends, nor thrown out
one reflection against his
enemies, although much of both
kinds might have been, and no
doubt would have been done by
them, had they been governed
either by a spirit of imposture
or enthusiasm. Christ’s life is
not praised in the gospels, his
death is not lamented, his
friends are not commended, his
enemies are not reproached, nor
even blamed, but every thing is
told naked and unadorned, just
as it happened; and all who read
are left to judge and make
reflections for themselves; a
manner of writing which the
historians never would have
fallen into, had not their minds
been under the guidance of the
most sober reason, and deeply
impressed with the dignity,
importance, and truth of their
subject.”
Upon the whole, by the force of
the arguments now advanced, and
others of a similar nature, “has
the gospel history gained a
belief next to universal in ages
past, and by these it stands at
present firmly established
against the manifold violent
attacks of its enemies, who,
with unwearied application, are
assaulting it on all quarters.
In a word, founded upon these
arguments, it can never be
overturned in any age to come;
but, while men are capable of
discerning truth, will be
believed and received to the end
of the world.” Observe well,
reader, from the undoubted truth
of the gospel history, we infer
with certainty that the
Christian religion is divine.
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