ARGUMENT.
IT may not be improper to
observe, before we enter on the
work of illustrating the Sacred
Volume, that the Holy
Scriptures, or Holy Writings,
are termed the BIBLE, or Book,
(from the Greek βιβλος by way of
eminence, as they constitute the
best book that ever was written.
The great things of God’s law
and gospel are here recorded,
that they might be reduced to a
greater certainty, might spread
farther, remain longer, and be
transmitted to distant places
and ages more pure and entire,
than possibly they could be by
tradition. That part of the
Bible which we call the OLD
TESTAMENT contains the acts and
monuments of the church of God
from the creation almost to the
coming of Christ in the flesh,
which was about four thousand
years: the truths then revealed,
the laws enacted, the prophecies
given, and the chief events that
concerned the church. This is
called a Testament, or Covenant,
because it was a declaration of
the will of God concerning man
in a federal way, and had its
force from the designed death of
the great Testator, “the Lamb
slain from the foundation of the
world,”
Revelation 13:8. It is called
the Old Testament with relation
to the New, which doth not
cancel, but crown and perfect
it, by bringing in that better
hope which was typified and
foretold in it.
This part of the Old Testament
we call the PENTATEUCH, or
five-fold volume, because it
contains the five books of
Moses. These books were,
probably, the first that ever
were written; for we hear no
mention of any writing in all
the book of Genesis, nor till
God bid Moses write, Exodus
17:14. However, we are sure
these books are the most ancient
writings extant.
The first of them, named in the
Hebrew, from the first word,
Bereshith, but which we call
Genesis, Moses probably wrote
either while he was a shepherd
in Midian, or rather, after he
had been on the mount with God.
And as he framed the tabernacle,
so he did the more excellent and
durable frame of this book,
according to the pattern shown
him in the mount; into which it
is better to resolve the
certainty of the things
contained therein, than into any
tradition that might be handed
down to the family of Jacob.
GENESIS is a name borrowed from
the Greek: it signifies the
original, or generation. Fitly
is this book so called; for it
is a narrative of originals and
generations: the creation of all
things; the original happiness
and fall of mankind; the
entrance of sin and death into
the world; the fate of Adam and
his posterity before the flood;
the general corruption of the
human race, and the deluge sent
to punish it; the preservation
of Noah and his family in the
ark, and their repeopling the
earth; the invention of arts,
the rise of nations, and the
confounding of languages; and
especially the planting of the
church, and the state of it in
its early days, with God’s
marvellous providences toward
the families of Lot and Nahor,
of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and
Joseph, and their improvement of
the same. In short, it contains
a divinely-inspired, and
therefore perfectly authentic
history of the great and
surprising events of two
thousand three hundred and
sixty-nine years. The beginning
of the New Testament is also
called GENESIS, Matthew 1:1 :
“The Book of the GENESIS, or
GENERATION, of Jesus Christ.”
Lord, open thou our eyes, that
we may see the wondrous things
of thy LAW and GOSPEL!
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