By William Burt Pope, D.D.,
THE DIVINE RULE OF FAITH.
CHRISTIAN Theology, as the science of Christianity, the one, perfect, and only Religion, is based upon the documentary records of God's revelation of Himself and of His will in Christ Jesus. Of necessity, therefore, its first inquiry should be directed to the nature and authority of its Sacred Writings, which contain at once the historical development and the finished result of the Divine revelations to mankind. One proposition gives here the summary of the whole truth. The Holy Scriptures are the Divine Rule of Faith: a statement which, unfolded, opens three departments of investigation. First, they are the documents and the depository of the Christian Revelation, or the Christian Faith, which is the consummation of all religious knowledge. Secondly, they are Divine in their origin: the product of the Holy Spirit's inspiration. Thirdly, they are the Rule of the Faith, as forming a body of canonical Scriptures, regulating forever the doctrine and teaching of the Christian Church. Hence we derive the three great words which are the superscription of the whole body of dogma concerning the written oracles of God: Revelation, Inspiration, and Canon. REVELATION OR THE CHRISTIAN FAITH. These two terms may be studied as counterparts, and in some sense as synonymous. The Christian Faith is the perfected Revelation, and the perfected Revelation is the Christian Faith; each and both being coincident, generally speaking, with the Christian Scriptures. But Revelation refers them to God the Revealer; Christian Faith regards them as received by man. It will be useful to make this distinction govern our treatment of the whole subject. Human faith and Divine revelation are DOUBLE ONE AGAINST THE OTHER. 1What God is pleased to make known, man's acceptance makes his Faith. 1 Ecclus. 42:24.REVELATION. The term Revelation signifies in its last and highest theological meaning the unveiling or disclosing of God's redeeming purpose to mankind. This definition distinguishes it from more general manifestations of the Supreme Being, and gives to the Christian revelation its distinctive character, as including all other forms of Divine teaching and adding its own supplement and consummation. It is at once the most elementary and the-most comprehensive word of our theological system. Revelation, taken in its broadest sense, includes every manifestation of God to the consciousness and perception of man: whether in the constitution of the human mind, in the framework of nature, or in the processes of Providential government. The term is used to embrace the whole compass of the Divine disclosures, whether in act or word, whether by immediate contact of the Eternal Spirit with the human soul or by mediating instrumentalities, whether of truth generally or any special token of the Divine will. In this more general application other words are used besides apokalupsis, or revelation: such as photizo, of the light of the Son in human reason which lighteth every man that cometh into the world; fanerón, 1 of the declaration of the Divine glory in the universe, and of the testimony of the Supreme to all men to whom that which may be known of God is manifest,2 referring to His providential guidance of the Gentiles before whom He left not Himself without witness, OUK AMARTURON.3 It is sufficient for our present purpose that all these lower and more unrestricted or improper revelations and methods of revelation are taken up into Revelation proper. The Records of the Faith are the records of all the teachings that at sundry times 4 and in divers manners preceded and prepared for it.There is, however, a special and limited meaning of the term. But, before considering this more fully, it may be well to note some theological distinctions which lead the way to it. 1 John 1:9; 2 Rom. 1:19; 3 Acts 14:17; 4 Heb. 1:1 1. The word revelation unites the two ideas of a Divine unveiling or apokalupsis, and making known or fanerosis, of the mysteries of religion, or of the soul's relation to God. We must remember the conventional meaning of these terms in theology. There are secrets gradually unveiled in the worlds of mind and matter, the slow disclosure of which is appointed to be the aim and the reward of human science; but we do not call them mysteries. Nor do we call their discovery revelation, save as they are directly connected with religion and taken up into the economy of the Providential government of the world. 2. This leads to another distinction: Revelation, in this higher theological meaning of the term, is general and special. As GENERAL it is undoubtedly common to the human race as such: the foundation of what may be called natural theology and natural religion.Although, as we have seen, the highest word is not: used of this universal unveiling of God in the creature, it may be called natural as distinguished from supernatural revelation. This latter is SPECIAL; as being imparted not so much in man; as to man, through the medium both of Divine works and Divine words, as will be hereafter seen.3. External and internal revelation are to be separated: the former is as it were given objectively and for all; the latter is specially imparted to the organs of revelation, and to those who receive it in faith. They are united in St. Paul's words: by revelation He made known unto me the mystery which in other ages was not made known unto the sons of men, as it is now revealed unto His holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit. 1 Here is the special revelation not included in the former general manifestations of God; the disclosure to the organs of inspiration as a body; and the internal unveiling to St. Paul by the Spirit, to make all men see what is the fellowship of the mystery. But it is obvious that all external revelation must also be internal, though the converse may not be said with the same propriety.1 Eph. 3:3-9. Revelation, in the stricter, deeper, and fuller sense, is the unfolding of the eternal counsel of God in Christ, for the restoration of man to fellowship with Himself. This is the sum and substance of truth as truth is in Jesus; 1 it is the conclusion of the whole matter of Divine manifestation to man; and, as such, it is perfected in the Christian Scriptures, that is, in the final testimony of Jesus. His testimony is the last word of all objective revelation. In this definition there are three salient points; the one Eternal Purpose in Christ the Revealer, the perfect Scripture, and the identity, or rather coincidence, of the Christian oracles with the Christian Faith.1 Eph. 4:21. 1. Revelation proper is consecrated to the mystery hid with Christ in God, the one Secret which it unfolds. This is the common burden of the prophets and of the Apostles and of Christ Himself. It is the ONE TRUTH of the whole Word of God. The entire range of its disclosures, in all their many forms, is governed by this supreme purpose, and all pay their tribute to this one subject. Christ, Himself the Sum of all revelation, is Himself also the one Revealer or Apocalyptist. He is the Revealer in act and in word. First, and above all, in act He is Himself the personal revelation of God and His whole eternal purpose towards the human race. This profound truth of Christianity is presupposed throughout the New Testament. It may be studied in the combination of several Pauline passages. In the first the great Mystery of Godliness is spoken of as being manifest in the flesh: 1 this refers to the Person of Christ Incarnate, who elsewhere is termed the Mystery of God, which is Christ,2 the one Secret to be revealed in Whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.3 Again, this manifestation is said to be reflected from the mirror of the Gospel, which consummates all Divine disclosures: But we all, with open face receiving as in a glass the glory of the Lord.4 Finally, it is still more clearly explained in a passage which combines the others, as the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ,5 the Countenance of the personal God in His incarnate Son looking upon man and giving him, in the light of that countenance, all that he needs to know for time and eternity. Our Lord Jesus Christ is Himself the substance of all revelation of God, according to His own testimony: He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father.6 Secondly, therefore, He is the Revealer in word. No one knoweth the Son but the Father; neither knoweth any man the Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son willeth to reveal Him: ho Huiós apokalúpsai.7 Christ is THE WORD 8 in His original and eternal estate, Who, however, became incarnate to be the Oracle of God in the temple of humanity. No man hath seen God at any time; the Only begotten God, Who is in the bosom of the Father, He hath made Him known.9 In His incarnate estate He is also THAT PROPHET, 10 Who should absorb into Himself all prophetic functions, whether of announcing or of foretelling the will of God. In virtue of that first name, He has been from the beginning the Revealer: it was His voice that uttered the ancient oracles. In virtue of the latter name superadded to the former, He has summed up, satisfied, and consummated the revelation of all past ages in one perfect revelation for ages to come.He spake by the prophets; He spake upon earth; and, though gone from us, He yet speaketh. His word means all revelation, and all revelation means His word. The ORACLE and the oracles are one.11 Tim. 3:16; 2 Col. 2:2; 3 Col.2:3; 4 2 Cor. 3:18; 5 2 Cor. 4:6; 6 John 14:9; 7 Matt. 11:27; 8 John 1:1; 9 John 1:18; 10 John 1:21. 2. The Scriptures contain and are this perfect disclosure and finished revelation. Of their Divine origin we need not think as yet; though it is anticipated in the fact that the Savior has given His authenticating testimony to the whole body of them in their integrity. That sanction, first, makes the Old Testament the revelation of Christ. As it testified of Him so He testifies of it. He took it into His hands, and blessed it, and hallowed it forever as His own. As revelation is Christ, and Christ is the subject of the Old Testament, the Old Testament is of necessity the revelation of God. Knowing better than any human critic can know all its internal obscurities and difficulties, He sealed it nevertheless for the reverence of His people. The canon of the ancient oracles, precisely as we hold them now, no more no less, He sanctified and gave to His Church as the early preparatory records of His own Gospel and kingdom. That sanction, secondly, assures us that the New Testament is His own authoritative completion of the Scriptures of revelation. Leaving the fuller study of this proposition for a further stage, we need only note the general fact that our Lord declared His own purpose to complete an unfinished revelation. Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill, allá pleeroósai: 1 not only to fulfill the predictions both of law and prophecy, but to fill out their meaning; to set on them the seal of perfection by revealing fully what they revealed only in part. All the lines of Old-Testament revelation were broken off and incomplete: He gathered them up into Himself and His word, so that in Him they might have their vanishing point and yet not vanish. In regard to the Old- Testament oracles the word of St. Paul does not hold good: When that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part will come to an end. 2 And He made full provision for the preservation of His perfected doctrine. All that we need to assure our hearts of this was given in one large promise, which declared that His sayings should be revived in their unbroken unity in His disciples' memory, He shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you; 3 that what He could not yet speak concerning His Person, His Spirit should reveal, He will guide you into all truth; 4 and that the same Spirit should show them the things to come. The Spirit was no other than Himself by His Agent re-uttering His own words, revealing His own Person and work, and filling up His prophecy of the future. Hence, lastly, our Lord's sanction makes the complete Scriptures the finished revelation, never to be superseded. Nothing can be more plain than that the entire fullness of what the Revealer had to say to the world was to be communicated to the Apostles by the Holy Ghost; and that, not as a further disclosure on the part of the Spirit, but as the consolidation of the Savior’s teaching into its perfect unity, and its expansion into its perfect meaning. No future streams of revelation were to rise higher than the fountainhead of truth opened in Himself. Hence we may repeat concerning the Book what has been said concerning the Lord's teaching: the Bible means all revelation and all revelation means the Bible.1 Matt. 5:17; 2 1 Cor. 13:10; 3 John 14:26; 4 John 16:13. 3. We are justified, therefore, in holding that the Scriptures of revelation and Christianity, as the Christian Faith, cover the same ground and strictly coincide. As yet, we have nothing to do with the question of inspiration, nor with inquiries into the genuineness and integrity of individual books and individual passages; but only with the general fact that in all sound theology the Bible and Christ are inseparably connected. Not that they are in the nature of things identical: we can suppose the possibility of an Incarnate Revealer present in the world without the mediation of the written Word. Indeed we are bound to assume, as has been already seen, that there is a wider revelation of the WORD in the world than the Scriptures cover. Moreover we may assert that His revelation of Himself is still, and even in connection with the Scriptures, more or less independent of the Word.But, as the basis of the science of theology, the Bible is Christianity. It has pleased God from the beginning to conduct the development of the great mystery by documents containing the attested facts, the authenticated doctrines, and the sealed predictions of revelation. The process of the Divine Counsel has been bound up with the enlargement of the Volume of the Book. That Book is the foundation of Christianity: the Lord of the Bible and the Bible are indissolubly the Rock on which it is based. We have no other Christian Religion than that which is one with its documents and records; we have no documents and records which do not directly or indirectly pay their tribute to the Christian Religion; and there is no revelation in any department of truth of which the same may not be said. All revelation is identical with Christianity and summed up in it. Hence, generally speaking, and as yet regarding the Scriptures only as a whole, we may say that the character of Christianity is the character of the Bible; the claims and credentials of the one are the claims and credentials of the other. This observation will lead us by an easy transition to the counterpart of Revelation: the Christian Faith. The Revelation given by God is the Christian Faith as received by man. The entire body of revealed truth is addressed to the principle of faith, receiving on Divine evidence what becomes matter of certitude and assurance. This is the objective dogmatic Faith delivered to the saints. But this same Faith may also be regarded as having to win the assent of the world, and as presenting its credentials to the reason in order to universal acceptance. Hence we have two general aspects of our present subject: first the Christian Revelation as accepted by faith, and, secondly, as presenting its evidences to reason. THE CHRISTIAN REVELATION AS ACCEPTED. The Christian Revelation in all its compass of truth is addressed to faith primarily, to reason only as subordinated to faith. It is committed to the supreme tenure of that principle which is the evidence and substantiation of spiritual things. This faith extends explicitly to all the facts, doctrines, and promises of the Holy Scripture, and implicitly to all its mysteries whether already revealed, in course of revelation, or reserved for the future. Its supreme object is Christ and the truth as TRUTH is IN JESUS. 1 But it must be remembered that the Christian Faith is effectually such only to those whose belief is quickened by the Holy Ghost into the assurance of personal knowledge and experience.1 Eph. 4:21. It is obvious that this general proposition involves a consideration of the credentials of Christianity; but we have now to do with Revelation only as addressed to faith. As containing the Christian system of truth, and recorded in the Bible, it appeals to a universal principle of human nature, the faculty of believing This primary faculty is profoundly seated in our constitution: it works as the acceptance of truth on sufficient evidence, whether of consciousness, or intuition, or testimony. It is at the root of all knowledge generally, especially of all knowledge of spiritual things. Now it is to this principle pre-eminently that Revelation appeals: to faith alone as it is a revelation of spiritual principles and truth: to faith conjoined with reason as it is a Divine record of facts through which these principles are taught. These two points have now to be briefly discussed. I. Faith must here in all things have the pre-eminence. 1. The grand revelations of the Word of God are all committed to that highest and noblest faculty which the Scripture calls the evidence of things not seen. 1 The existence of a Supreme First Cause, the creation of the world framed by the Word of God, 2 the nature of sin and the glory of redemption, the Person of the Incarnate and His atonement, the union of the Holy Spirit with the spirit of man, the processes and issues, in time and eternity, of the redeeming economy, in short all that belongs to the supernatural world, must be believed or they are not the heritage of the soul. There is no faculty competent to deal with them, to receive them, to appropriate them, but faith. Reason of itself is the soul's judgment according to sense: if it is regarded as occupied with the mysteries of the spirit and the spiritual world it is no longer reason but faith under the name of reason.Faith is to the other world what the senses are to the world that now is; the eye, the ear, the taste, and the touch that perceives what the physical senses cannot perceive. All is thus summed up: The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned. 31 Heb. 11:1; 2 Heb. 11:3,4; 3 1 Cor. 2:14
2. Hence it is that, inasmuch as the principle of faith belongs
as certainly to human nature
as reason does, the evidences of the; supernatural world are
addressed to a faculty which
they ought to awaken, even as light ought to awaken the faculty
of seeing. If the great
truths of Revelation excite no response it is because a deadly
evil vitiates the faith which
does not vitiate the natural senses. It is necessary to dwell
upon this, because reason,
thus set aside, will ask why it is that Revelation addressed to
a universal faculty in man
does not meet with instantaneous and universal acceptance.
3. There is a spirit in
man, and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth them
understanding.
And St. Paul says, concerning His argument, that it is nothing
less than demonstration: en
apodeíxei pneúmatos,
1
4. To those who receive the light, in the sense of not refusing
it, revelation is one whole,
and all its glorious system of truth is received and surely
believed. To them it is both
objectively and subjectively
II. But some of these remarks have already suggested that faith
is strictly allied with
reason in the acceptance of Christianity as a system of truth.
The Spirit Who awakens
faith regenerates the reason so that it humbles itself to
receive mysteries which it cannot
understand; the evidences on which faith rests are such as; the
reason is called on to
approve, here the judgment of the mind having its full honor;
and in the acceptance of the
whole economy of the Scriptures of Revelation faith and sound
reason; are blended into a
perfect unity.
1. The Christian Faith presents to the faculty by which the
infinite and the eternal are
perceived a system of truth which human reason cannot fathom or
understand, against
which it naturally rebels. But the same Spirit Who opens the eye
of faith gives reason its
perfect soundness, so that it consents to accept what it cannot
itself verify. Here of course
we regard Revelation as one organic whole, which has for its
unifying principle one
overwhelming truth, the union of God and man in Christ. Around
this centre revolve
other equally incomprehensible doctrines; and beyond these in a
wider orbit many which
are not in the same sense beyond the human faculties. And
speaking of the one vast
Revelation we may say that it is committed to faith and
submissively wondered at by
reason. Faith is elevated to receive it and reason humbled to
submit to it.
2. But this faith is not arbitrary or despotic. It gives its
rights to reason in all things over
which reasoning presides. It presents the evidences for the
being of God, for the
Incarnation of the Son, for the mystery of the Atonement; and
reason must either admit
the evidence as in the case of the Divine existence, or confess
that it has nothing to plead
against it, as in the case of the Incarnation. Like sin before
the presence of Divine justice
reason shuts her mouth and is silent. But, descending into the
province of the general
external evidences of Revelation the matter changes its
character. Either it must be said
that here reason and faith are one under different names, or
faith must be regarded as no
longer the faculty of perceiving the infinite but as the
principle of believing on evidence.
In either view faith and reason are here inseparable. Faith
accepts and relies on what there
is every reasonable ground for believing. Our great term, THE
THE CREDENTIALS OF THE CHRISTIAN REVELATION.
Revelation, which is one with the Christian Faith, which is one
with its documents and
records, presents its sufficient Credentials to the reason and
heart and will of man as one
great body of irresistible evidence. First, it comes to mankind
as a response to the
universal desire and expectation of communication from above: to
the craving of the
human heart for communion with God. Secondly, Revelation
exhibits, in its own
structure, the Divine attributes as stamped upon every part of
its system in the form of
miracle, prophecy, and inspiration. Thirdly, it furnishes, in
the Person of Christ the
Revealer, its heavenly guarantee of its own truth. Fourthly, in
its perfect consummation
as Christianity, it appeals to the character of its influence in
human history: positively in
its victory over the world's evil, and negatively in its victory
over all opposition. Lastly, it
relies, as a Divine revelation might be expected to rely, on the
demonstration of the Holy
Spirit. All its credentials may without much difficulty be
classed under these several
heads: so far that is as they are a general apology and
vindication of the Christian Faith
contained in itself.
The Revelation of Christ in the Scriptures enforces its own
claims, and theology must pay
supreme deference to those internal credentials. These become
Evidences when they are
arranged in their order. What the Law was to the earlier Gospel,
Evidences are to
Credentials: added because of human weakness. They have their
use, as it respects both
the believer and the unbeliever; to the former for confirmation,
to the latter for
conviction.
1. The believer is taught by them how to give a reason of the;
hope that is in him: to be
ready or prepared, prós
apologían,
Both for the confirmation of his own faith, and for the
conviction of the gainsayer, every
Christian, especially every Christian minister, should have the
form of sound defense at
hand to guard the form of sound words the Hupotúpoosin,
2. As to the unbeliever, the Credentials must be so arranged as
to form a complete body
of evidence for his possible conviction: without either
undervaluing or over-estimating
their importance. They must not be despised by a transcendental
reliance on the selfevidencing
light. Christianity, like its Founder, has a mission to seek
that it may save. Its
history, both within and without the Bible, is a record of calm
reasonings with the mind,
even of those who turn away. Evidences or signs are for those
who believe not. There
may be cases in which the arguments used concerning Revelation
may induce the skeptic
to listen to the voice of Revelation itself. But, on the other
hand, too much must not be
expected from them, as they are external evidences apart from
the interior demonstration
of the truth. Our Lord and His Apostles have left us no instance
of argument with those
who held not some measure of faith to which their reasonings
might appeal. As the Book
of Revelation does not reason with Atheism, neither does
Christianity lay any stress on
reasoning with Infidelity and disbelief.
3. Various terms have been here introduced: such as unbeliever,
disbeliever, doubter, and
skeptic. These bear their shades of meaning, which it is
important to remember and
discriminate in all discussions on this subject. It is well
known that in the New Testament
there is everywhere a clear and broad distinction between two
classes: believers and
unbelievers. But it is not Implied that the state of unbelief is
that in which nothing is
believed: on the contrary,
4. Let it be further observed that these credentials have no
reference to those branches of
evidences that concern the volume externally viewed: they come
from the heart of
Revelation as it is one great communication in Christ; and the
question of the authenticity
and authority of the several parts of the Holy Scriptures must
be postponed. It must be
remembered also that the Apologetics of the Christian Faith
accompany the several
doctrines; every article of the creed requires its own defense;
and therefore the evidences
of Christianity must needs be distributed over the whole course
of our dogmatic system.
Again, they allow opportunity for the fair consideration of
everything that can be said for
or against Christianity as such, without descending, however, to
innumerable subordinate
questions, which have no importance in themselves. Once more,
the exhibition of these
credentials in all their grandeur will simplify the later
evidences as to the several
doctrines of the Bible, and at the same time lend those
evidences their own force. Finally,
this arrangement enables us to do justice to the cumulative
character of the argument: it is
not merely an accumulation of all that may be said on the
subject, but such an orderly
presentation as will make every argument, whether more or less
important, both give and
receive strength through its connection with the rest.
THE RESPONSE TO THE RELIGIOUS EXPECTATION OF MANKIND.
Christianity, or the perfect Divine Revelation, presents itself
as the answer to a universal
demand. It explains while it appeals to the innate craving of
the human mind to know
God, or its sentiment of religion, and accounts for the general
expectation of the Race, as
expressed in its traditional Religions: appealing to them by
what they contain of truth,
and by what they contain of falsehood. It comes with these
credentials; and, moreover,
pleads as being the perfect utterance of a Revelation which has
been among men from the
beginning, and, therefore, as the response to an expectation
kept alive in the world by its
own earlier teachings. Under this first department of
credentials must be included all
those preliminary considerations which are sometimes reckoned as
Presumptive
Evidences.
In systems of Apologetics, or Evidences, presumptive arguments
are commonly arranged
in a threefold gradation. First, it is shown that a Divine
revelation is
Instead of arguing over the first proposition, the affirmation
of which is contradicted by a
certain school of philosophy, we must assume it to be true by
appealing to the
consciousness of all men, the doubters included. To conduct this
argument without taking
some revelation for granted is a thing impossible. And it is
certain that it is more after the
manner of the Bible to set out with the credentials of
Revelation itself than to array a
number of internal and presumptive evidences in its-absence.
THE DESIRE OF THE HUMAN MIND.
Divine revelation appeals to a preparation in the human spirit
which it explains and
accounts for: first, the instinctive and indestructible sense of
dependence on a First
Cause; secondly, the consciousness of responsibility to a
Supreme Authority; and, thirdly,
the union of these in the deep desire to know and have
fellowship with the Source and
End of life. This three-one fact in human nature revelation
challenges; and here is its first
credential. The instinct in man and the response from God meet.
From the first word of
the Scriptures to the last the Voice of the Creator speaks to
the still small voice of His
creature: the Voice of the All-sufficient answering the cry of
dependence, of the Merciful
Judge dealing with guilt, and of the Eternal and Invisible
conversing as Man with
humanity. In the Bible, as completed by Christianity, there is
not a possible question of
human nature to which a response is not given. The positive
strength of this plea will be
considered when we come to establish the existence of God.
Meanwhile, it may be
necessary here to obviate two opposite objections which may be
urged against this most
mighty presumptive argument.
1. Atheistic philosophy of every order is content to assert that
the sentiment in human
nature is one of the fruits of its own imagination, begotten of
fear or hope; and that it has
invented a revelation to satisfy the demands of its own
delusion: the imaginary revelation
from heaven being, like heaven itself, its most consummate
delusion. With such
theories of the soul it is vain to argue: at least, they do not
enter into the present
discussion. Save, indeed, so far as they sometimes undertake to
deny that what we may
term this instinct is really universal in the constitution of
man. This is simply an appeal
to experience and induction. No race of humanity has ever been
found which does not
contradict this denial. Among the very lowest tribes there are
traces of a certain sense
of dependence on another world: the degraded feeling which looks
with awe at some
fetish symbol of the unknown is the same tribute at the one pole
as the philosophical
speculation of Agnosticism is at the opposite pole, to a sense
in man of the Infinite. The
finite instinct for the Infinite, which is faith, undergoes in
them the same degradation
which; all their other mental and spiritual faculties have
undergone: no more, no less.
But of this more will be said hereafter.
2. Deism has another and very different kind of counterargument.
It sometimes insists
that these instinctive preparations for the voice of God are
themselves the revelation of
the Supreme, and that there can be no other: that is to say, a
transcendental Deism refuses
to allow that there can be any other authenticated revelation of
the Infinite to the finite
than that which is direct in the consciousness of those who
receive it. But it forgets that
the; very highest religious sentiment in man is only a desire
unsatisfied; and that, as every
strong and universal instinct has its answer from without, so
also must this the strongest
and most universal of all. But it may be denied that there is
any longing of the human
mind for an external revelation. Many who admit that the
irrepressible yearning of the
human soul towards the Infinite is an. argument for the
expectation of a secret revelation
of God in the depths of the yearning spirit nevertheless refuse
to admit the force of this
appeal in favor of a revelation coming from above with all the
external appendages that
belong to the Christian Faith. It is sufficient to reply that
this style of argument ignores
the fact that the relation of man to God is such as to demand an
external communication
as well as an internal. If he were, as he should be, at peace
with the Object he seeks, the
communion with his Maker might be conducted altogether within.
Yet even then not
altogether within; for the whole universe around him would be
full of symbols, the
visible revelation of his Creator. But he is, by the very
supposition, estranged from God.
The original conditions have ceased to exist: and no argument
can be based upon them.
The unutterable longing to which Christianity responds is that
of a guilty spirit; not only
dependent on the Supreme, but trembling before Him. Man looks up
to heaven—as his
Greek name, anthroopínee,
testifies; but he looks up to an outward Judge and not within
to an interior God; and expects and hopes that the Supreme will
appear to him and speak
to him by some being, or voice, or token. And this is the germ
of all revelation.
Moreover, it is undeniable that in every age and in every region
men have longed for and
believed in an external expression of the Divine mind. In fact,
Christianity is but one of
many responses to man's groaning unutterable towards God. But
this leads to a further
stage in our credentials, to which what has been said is only
introductory.
CORRECTION OF THE RELIGIONS OF MANKIND.
As Divine revelation responds to the spirit in man, so it
explains and responds to the great
Anticipation of the Human Race, as testified by its universal
Religions. This also is a
most mighty credential, which may be regarded under several
aspects.
1. The Christian Religion explains the religiousness of mankind,
and pays respect to the
forms in which this has been expressed. St. Paul, the amplest
expositor of Natural
Theology, preaches in the Acts, and teaches in the Epistle to
the Romans, that the whole
world has always been under a Divine education: drawn by God's
works of creation to
contemplate His power, and by the benefits of His providence to
consider His goodness,
in order that it might thus be prepared for a third revelation
which should display both
His power and His goodness in redemption. The Apostle, as the
leading representative of
this argument, professes only to
2. All this has taken for granted that the forms of religion
always existing in heathenism
have possessed certain elements of truth. Otherwise they would
be worthless as evidence
of a universal aspiration towards communion with heaven.
Whatever strong assertions we
may find in the Old and New Testaments of the doctrinal errors
and moral abominations
of heathenism, we discern everywhere an acknowledgment of
something good lying at
their root, of which they are only the perversions. Much truth
is tacitly recognized in the
sacred traditions of mankind, however waning and ready to
perish: that is to say, much
truth dispersed among them and variously represented, though no
one system may be said
to exhibit even the perversions of all truths. Perhaps almost
all the great tribal or national
expressions of the feeling after the Infinite have more or less
paid their tribute to the unity
and supremacy of the One Unknown God, with a dim perception of a
plurality in that
unity; to the existence of intelligences higher than man, as it
were between God and man,
this notion being disguised in a thousand ways, from Polytheism
down to the
personification of all the forces of nature; to the degradation
of man himself through a
fall, and the universality of sin as personal guilt and
liability to punishment; to a
mysterious Deliverer desired of the nations; to the sense of the
necessity and
acceptableness of worship by sacrifice ; in the ethical domain
to the rights of the Bight
and the goodness of the Good; to the inextinguishable hope of
immortality, more
distorted perhaps than almost any other truth. Now it is a
credential of the Christian
revelation that it acknowledges all this; or rather that all
this is true. Professing to be the
supreme, the only direct, communication from God to man, it
points to a universal
consent among the nations that some such revelation was expected
and was needed.
3. But this leads to the further argument, that Christianity
explains and corrects these
errors while it confirms the truth underlying them all. It comes
as the correction of every
delusion into which it declares the Eternal had permitted the
world to fall as the
consequence of its resistance of His Spirit. It teaches the true
doctrine concerning God.
Sweeping away the pantheism, the polytheism, the atheism of the
nations: it amends the
doctrine of sin, by connecting it with redemption; it
substitutes the true Divine-human
Sacrifice, its expiation cleansing the heathen temple, its gift
of the Spirit supplying the
need of the heathen philosophical schools; it reforms the whole
economy of worship, by
revealing a Mediator; it supplies the defects and reproves the
corruptions of the world's
ethical systems; and it brightens and simplifies its doctrine of
the future state.
4. Such are the credentials of the Christian revelation: such
are its claims to be heard. No
further plea is at present urged than this. No other system,
among the many candidates for
acceptance, has ever made such pretensions as these. No ancient
creed or religion,
however missionary in its spirit, ever professed to come from
God with the explanation
and sure guidance of the world's spiritual desires. Christianity
alone explains heathenism,
with a solution at once gentle and stern. And it alone brings in
the time of a universal
reformation. This is, however, laid down only as its credential:
as such it has all the force,
although no more than the force, of a preliminary demand for
profound respect and
solemn attention to its appeals.
5. Objections to this credential, as such, and limited strictly
to the present stage of the
argument, may be noticed at once and disarmed in a few
sentences. It will be said by
the Atheist, or the Antitheist, that Christianity, in common
with every other form of the
religious sentiment among men, is no more than an invention of
the human mind—or that
subtle action of matter which is called the mind—and the most
beautiful, though not
always the most beautiful, evolution in man of those strange
phenomena which in the
lower orders of creation make man himself their object. All the
history of religion, in
every part of the world, and among all the tribes of mankind, is
only the record of the
evolution of something in man that has no name, no object, and
apparently no meaning.
We are not at present concerned with the Atheist; and may
postpone further reference to
this subject. Meanwhile, there is another form of the objection
which cannot be thus
summarily dismissed.
(1.) It appears to many students of what may be called
Comparative Theology that the
existence of so many other religions, containing so many noble
and uncontested truths, is
a bar to the acceptance of Christianity as the one definitive
revelation of God. They deny
the distinction between natural religion and super-natural,
between natural theology and
revealed. They assert that all the faiths or mythologies of
mankind are natural or supernatural
alike, according as these words are understood. All are
supernatural, in the sense
that the Creator has lodged in the spirit of man a faculty for
the Infinite, which has
developed in a few great historical religions; just as the
Creator gave man a, supernatural
endowment of language, which has been developed into a few great
families of speech.
All are natural, in the sense that all have their natural
pedigree, and may be traced
through the various nationalities as, equally with language and
perhaps more than
language, the foundation of race distinctions. Hence, the
Science of Religion
distinguishes in various ways the religions of mankind. There
are the religions which
should be traced to individual founders: such as Moses,
Zoroaster, Buddha, Confucius,
Lao-tse, Christ, and Mohammed. And there are those which are
national, and have never
been connected with human names: the religions of the ancient
Brahmans, the Greeks,
Romans, Teutons, Slavs, and Celts. Again, we have the Faiths
which have Sacred Books
and those which are without them: of the former eight being
reckoned, Brahmanism and
Buddhism among the Hindus; Zornastrianisrn among the Persians;
among the Hebrews,
Mosaism and Christianity; among the Arabs, Mohammedanism; among
the Chinese,
Confucianism and the religion of Lao-tse. These distinctions
rise at last into the division
of two or three great families. First, the Aryan, subdivided
into the Brahmanism of the
Yeda, Buddhism which sprang from it and revolted against it, and
Zoroastrianism, which
departed from the ancient Yedic faith. Secondly, the Semitic,
with its Old and New
Testament religions, the latter transferred, however, into Aryan
soil: and
Mohammedanism. These have played the most distinguished part in
the history of the
world hitherto; but a third must be added, the Turanian, to
which the branches of Chinese
religion belong. The argument deduced from the study of
Comparative Theology is
simply this: that there is not one religion which is of Divine
right, and must needs be
separated from all the rest. In plain words, whatever other
distinctions there are—
between Monotheistic and Polytheistic, Documentary and
Traditional, Cultivated and
Fetish—the distinction between true and false religions is not
to be allowed. There is no
final, definitive, supreme religion for mankind, any more than
there is one universal
language for mankind. This science, which is comparatively new,
makes a fair show of
zeal for all religions; and, indeed, most triumphantly
vindicates the truth, depth, and
universality of the Godward tendency in our nature. But this is
at the expense of
Christianity, however seemingly on its side. In fact, it takes
away all the strength of the
credential now under consideration, so far as it concerns
Christianity, while leaving it in
its full force so far as it concerns revelation generally, or
the religion of nature. What then
is to be said in defense of our argument?
(2.) First, and foremost, the Science of Religion pays too much
honor to the Faiths of the
World when it brings Christianity into conjunction or comparison
with them. After
allowing all that the catholic Apostle asserts as to the
religiousness of mankind—our
argument has done justice to that—we must not forget his dark
testimony against the
outward forms of that religiousness. The world by wisdom knew not God.
CHRISTIANITY THE PERFECTING OF FORMER REVELATIONS.
It is a continuation of the same argument to say that
Christianity is itself an explanation
of the preparatory disclosures of revealed truth, and the
consummation of them all.
1. This is, in fact, the crowning presumptive argument in its
favor, that it is the end and
completion of a revelation that has been going on from the
beginning. It is not a religion
that literally began in Judaea with the advent of Jesus. It does
not profess to be the first
supernatural communication to mankind: it is not the opening of
the heavens for the first
time. It finishes a testimony that began with the fall of man:
in the best sense, it is
therefore as old as the Creation. This last sentence has been
made the watchword of
English Infidelity: as if its being coeval with the human race
were a disproof of its Divine
original. But this is in fact its glory. It is the last accent
of a Voice which spoke first at the
gate of Paradise. That voice was the Primitive Revelation from
the perversions of which
all the innumerable forms of mythology arose. But that Voice
awakened the desire of the
human race to which all revelation has been a response, and has
constantly deepened that
desire whilst it responded to it. But only in a peculiar line,
and within a limited area. On
either side of that line, and beyond that area, men groped after
the lost, Creator and the
forfeited Paradise in their own way: being dealt with both in
justice and in mercy. The
mercy of the Supreme has in every age guided the instincts of
all the sincere. St. Peter is
as catholic as St. Paul on this subject. Discerning in Cornelius
the best religion of the
Gentiles, he said: I
perceive that God is no respecter of persons: but in every nation he
that feareth Him and worketh righteousness is acceptable to Him.
It is the last of many words, and leaves nothing more to be
desired in the present estate of
mankind.
2. The force of this credential will be felt only by those who
already accept, or are
disposed to accept, the revelation of Jesus. The more it is
pondered the more satisfactory
will it seem to all who take a large view of the dealings of
Providence with man. There
are, of course, unsearchable mysteries in the subject: mysteries
so perplexing that they
have driven some speculatists to the renunciation of a God. To
those who do believe in
God the gradual education of a world free and responsible is a
thought to be accepted and
reposed in. It is more tolerable at least than other thoughts
which would displace it. It is
more in harmony with every high conception of the Supreme to
suppose that He has in
every age been communicating His will with more and more
clearness to mankind,
having always in view a final and full disclosure, than to
suppose that He planted a
religious germ in man's heart which has been always developing
with infinite variety in
every variety of soils, no provision whatever being made for the
survival of the best,
without indeed allowing that there is or that there can be any
best.
(1.) But the objection may be urged that it is below the dignity
of a Divine revelation to
keep the world so long in suspense. In answer to this we can
only refer to the analogy
of all the other dealings of God which come within our
cognizance. The earth as man's
abode, the history of all the creatures that it inherit,
especially the progress of everything
pertaining to its chief inhabitant, has been under a law of
secular and slow evolution.
Supposing the entire economy of things to be under the
government of one Supreme
Mind—that is to say, supposing the God of revelation to be the
Author of nature—there
can be, or there ought to be, no difficulties in the way of
considering at least the claims of
a revelation which professes to describe the methods of a
gradual education of the human
race. To the Theistic advocates of development this ought to be
a strong recommendation
of the Holy Scriptures, and of their final solution of all
mysteries in Christianity. With its
Materialistic or Positivist advocates of course we have nothing
to do: there are no
credentials which appeal to them. They must give up their
delusion of Nescience or
unintelligent and meaningless Law, and first be reconciled to a
Personal Author of all
things, before the Christian Revelation even looks their way.
But those who admit that
the laying of the material foundations of the superstructure of
intelligent life required
incalculable ages ought not to shrink from the preliminary
announcement that God has at
sundry times and in divers manners spoken to the human race, and
finally consummated
all His words in His Son.
(2.) If, once more, it be pointed out—as it constantly is—that
what professes to be the last
revelation is after all only a partial response to the deep
questions of mankind, this may
be granted as a fact, but it is robbed of its force as an
argument by the suggestion that
even Christianity is only part of a scheme, understood only by
the Infinite Mind, the first
elements of which alone are brought within the range of our
faculties. It will be shown
hereafter that there is not a solitary question of the
human-spirit, on the answer to which
its present peace and its probation for eternal happiness
depend, which the Holy Oracles
do not satisfy. More than that we have no right to expect. Had
the revelation of Jesus
professed to leave no mystery unexplained, that would have been
a stronger plea against
its Divinity than infidelity has ever yet been able to find.
SUMMARY.
The cumulative strength of these pleas, the line of which only
has been indicated, is or
should be irresistible. They have immense force as a moral
demonstration of the claims
of Christianity to be heard and weighed with the most profound
solemnity. Not to listen
to Christ is to be self-condemned. His words are the only
response to the universal
anticipation of the human; race: as existing in the very
constitution of the mind, as
testified; by the consent of nations, and as kept alive from the
beginning by supernatural
and gradual disclosures of the Divine will. Either I God has
thus finally spoken, or there
is no God, and man is the incomprehensible creation of chance
and the sport of the
chance that created him.
THE EXHIBITION OF GOD AND OF HIS ATTRIBUTES IN REVELATION.
Another class of the credentials of revelation is found in its
exhibition of the Divine
attributes, displayed in the tokens of the presence of God
generally, and particularly in
the supernatural order of miracles, prophecy, and inspiration as
including both, which
everywhere reigns. These are not so much notes and qualities of
revelation as the fabric
of the revelation itself; and have always been, whether
separately or combined, the strong
enforcement of, its claims upon attention and acceptance.
REVELATION SUPERNATURAL.
God is a Personal Presence in the whole economy of revealed
truth. But He is not present
in the same sense as that in which He is immanent in the world:
revelation is, has ever
been and must ever be, a supernatural order, blending with the
natural And moving on
harmoniously with it in general, whilst exhibiting most
essential differences. But here it
is necessary to define terms, or rather to remind ourselves of
their conventional relations.
1. There is a sense in which the natural order of things—that
is, the constitution of nature
as governed by certain fixed physical and metaphysical laws—must
always be touched if
not pervaded by the supernatural, that is, by what is not matter
of our constant
experience. The invisible world, and all interventions from the
spiritual world, are
supernatural. Hence it follows that the introduction of man into
this system of things was
a supernatural intervention; and all revelations of the unseen
in the constitution of his
nature are supernatural; and all evidences of the presence and
glory of God in the
universe as seen by man are supernatural.
2. This then being granted, there is a sense also in which the
great economy to which the
Bible bears witness is in a preeminent sense supernatural. From
beginning to end—that
is, from the first intimation of a coming Redeemer to His final
manifestation with final
and eternal truth upon His lips—all has been beyond and above
the nature of man's
ordinary experience. All has been one vast and never-ceasing
demonstration of God
moving among men and supernaturally operating in human affairs.
His wonderful works
pervade the whole, though only on occasions bursting into what
we call Miracle. They
have displayed His presence in His own immediate acts, or in
acts above nature performed
by the instrumentality of His creatures. They have displayed His
one design in the
communication of knowledge concerning it to His ministers in
Prophecy. They have
displayed His wisdom in the preservation, through men raised up
to be objects of
Inspiration, of the continuous record of His revealed economy of
salvation. Thus the laws
of the supernatural operation have been threefold.
3. These three may be regarded as one great continuous Miracle,
and one great body of
credentials commending to us the Scriptures of revelation. But
these credentials for faith
must have their own evidences for reason. As they belong to the
supernatural order they
must be received by faith. They imply, indeed they assert, the
being of God, and His
intervention for objects, and in a manner, before which reason
sinks confounded. But as
facts recorded and humanly attested, they must be received on
evidence which is
trustworthy and amenable to the tests of trustworthiness. These
two must combine; just as
in all things pertaining to religion, faith and reason must
unite: being reconciled when
they differ, and blended into the harmony of certitude. In
examining these several
evidences of God in revelation each must be viewed as distinct.
But, in considering them
as credentials of one great scheme professedly the revelation of
a God Whose existence is
admitted, we are not under the necessity of examining at length
the question which
touches their abstract possibility in a philosophical point of
view. We regard them as the
internal demonstrations of Scripture, and have only to ask what
their force and meaning
are as credentials, and to prove that no condition of such
credentials is wanting.
THE CREDENTIAL OF MIRACLES.
There are many and distinct terms used in Scripture to signify
what we call miracles.
They are called generally the ergon, or works of God; sometimes these
works are referred
to as acts of the Divine power that effects them, and they are
then
WONDERFUL WORKS OF GOD
The former, the highest expression of which is in the
Pentecostal word, The wonderful
works of God,
It makes miracle the special intervention of omnipotence: in
this sense also there is no
power but of God. Revelation shows us the Maker of the laws of
the universe, which we
understand only as the invariable sequence of cause and effect,
introducing when He
pleases a new cause: not violating His own laws, or suppressing,
or arresting them; not
using the operation of more extensive laws than those known to
exist, but simply
bringing in new causes of new effects when He sees fit. Faith
recognizes the
SIGNS.
The second term, shmeia,
(Greek) 'oth, (Hebrew) theologically
and in our present
connection the more important, is never wanting in Scripture,
though used with a more
limited application. It indicates that God declares Himself
present in certain particular
miracles, and challenges attention to His own words or the words
of His messenger thus
authenticated. Now, revelation has not at its great epochs been
without this credential.
While the Wonderful Works are literally never absent in
revelation, —always in course
of procedure, open or secret, known or unknown, in miracles of
nature and in miracles of
grace, during the ages while the Volume was constructed and
since it has been finished,
for ever and ever throughout the whole economy of salvation,
—the Signs have been
occasionally given at certain great and important epochs, and in
confirmation, both to
believers and unbelievers, of messages from heaven. It is
needless to ask whether it might
have been otherwise: in His wisdom God has seen fit to accompany
all supernatural
communications by signs and infallible tokens. But, though
needless, it is not
unprofitable to consider how absolutely necessary such signs and
tokens must be to
authenticate tidings so amazing as those which the Scripture
brings. Here a few
distinctions may be useful.
1. The grandest miracles which are the credentials of revelation
are in the substance of
the revelation itself. Very many of the extraordinary
interpositions it records are not
bound up with the nature and purpose of the economy of God's
redeeming will, but have
been miraculous attestations of individual missions. When,
however, we rise from its
appendages, circumstantials, and preliminaries to the Great
Redemption itself, the case is
different. Christ the Author of Christianity and its Substance
and its End is the supreme
Miracle, and everything connected with Him is miraculous. As
soon as we come within
the sphere, of His sacred presence the definition of miracle
becomes enlarged: it is then
an immediate act of Divine omnipotence which has its necessity,
its reality, and its
exhibition in the redeeming economy. To the central or final
congregation of wonders in
Him those of the Old Testament looked forward, and with them the
great series virtually
ended. The advent of Christ was a miracle; of which the entire
history of His words and
works, of His life and death, of His resurrection and ascension,
is a continuation. Hence it
is obvious that with regard to the Christian system as a whole
miracle is essential to its
demonstration. For without miracle there is no Christian
revelation.
2. But, descending from this high level, we may confidently
assert that the authentication
of the human agents of the Divine will required such
attestations from heaven as we call
miracles. It may be going too far to say that the common
instinct of mankind expects that
if God sends a messenger He will excite attention by signs
preceding and confirm His
word by signs following. No founder of a human religion has ever
failed to appeal to this
general expectation. Confucius and Buddha and Mohammed are
sometimes said to have
been exceptions; but they were exceptions only to this extent,
that they did not profess
themselves to work miracles. Buddha was a strange anomaly in
every respect. He
appeared only as a reformer of an old religion, and did not
found, or rather did not claim
to found, a religion of his own. In other words, he needed no
credentials, for he did not
profess to come from God. Confucius brought no revelation: his
honest task and his
honest work was to revive and classify and perfect the religious
literature of his people.
Mohammed pretended to no power of working miracles: wisely
declining to come into
competition with the true prophets of God whose revelations he
appropriated and
perverted. But he did bring, or assume to bring, a new
revelation; and accordingly he
made his appeal to miraculous messages and communications which
were in the place of
the miracles he could not perform. But, apart from the question
of universal expectation,
—which is of some importance, though not decisive, —we find that
from beginning to
end the Author of revelation is represented as taking this
expectation into account, and as
always investing His ambassadors and heralds with the
credentials of miracle. The
importance of these signs by which the Divine Being has
authenticated the beginnings at
least of every new economy of truth is sometimes undervalued. It
is said to be more in
harmony with heavenly decorum to communicate truth directly to
the human mind; and
more consistent with the dignity of truth itself that it should
depend on its own intrinsic
adaptation and fitness. But they who reason thus are needlessly
jealous of the Divine
prerogative and of human dignity. He who knows what is in man
has never offered a
revelation to the race without such signs and wonders as were
sufficient to establish it in
the world, leaving those inexcusable who should refuse to
believe.
3. This leads to the nature of the credential itself, or the
value of the miracle, as it is a
sign. Generally, and taking revelation as a whole, it appeals to
the body of evidence that
God has interposed in human affairs, in a manner transcendently
extraordinary, as its
plenary and abiding demonstration. That is to say, in few words,
the Christian Faith rests
its strong claim on this among: other things, that there is a
series of wonderful works and
supernatural acts behind it, around it, and encompassing it,
which no sincere and candid
mind ought to be able to resist. More particularly, every
messenger, the Supreme
Messenger not excepted, coming with professed revelation from
above, has invariably
been authenticated by miraculous endowments which God Himself
has deemed necessary
and sufficient to vindicate His servants' mission. Lastly, the
miracles which satisfied the
generation receiving these credentials are, as will be hereafter
seen, committed to the
documents which hand down the truths they taught; and the
miracles and the documents
together with those truths become matter of historical
testimony.
4. Finally, it is obvious that the value of miracles as such,
and apart from all other
credentials, is to be found mainly in the authentication of the
messengers to their own
contemporaries. Their immediate effect on those who behold them
is expressed by
Nicodemus: Rabbi, we know
that Thou art a Teacher come from God; far no man can do
these miracles that Thou doest, except God be with him.
EVIDENCES AND TESTS OF MIRACLE.
The entire question of the trustworthiness of the testimony to
the miraculous facts of
revelation may be resolved into a statement of the criteria or
tests to which these
supposed facts may fairly be subjected.
1. Such Divine interventions must authenticate missions worthy
of God. And it requires
no argument to prove that the miracles to which the Christian
revelation appeals have a
cause behind them of supreme value. As a whole—from the
miraculous attributes of the
trees in the garden down to the ascension of the Incarnate Son
of God and the Pentecostal
opening of the heavens —they sustain the grand fabric of the
Divine education of
redeemed mankind. Here we must divert our attention from many
isolated wonderful
works and think only of the One Work of God upon earth. But,
descending to particulars,
and sending a general glance backward through all the economies,
we see that the great
assemblages of miracles were wrought at crises pregnant with
importance to the Great
Cause in the Old Testament. The ante-Mosaic miracles were
authentications, not of God's
messengers-only, but of His own dread Name and attributes. At
the introduction of the
Mosaic institute there was reason for the glorious
manifestations of the Divine power,
rebuking the long-endured perverseness of Egypt, authenticating
the Lawgiver so slowly
accepted by His own people, proving the Divinity of what we call
the Mosaic economy,
and confirming that proof by signs following down to the
miraculous entrance into
Canaan. While the Theocracy lasted, every recorded wonder
attested at the critical hour
that Jehovah reigned. The miracles which cluster around the
persons of Elijah and Elisha
asserted His supremacy when the cause of God was at stake in the
chosen land. And,
finally, after long comparative cessation, there was a great,
and, in some respects,
unexampled renewal of miracles to rescue the sinking faith of
the people during their
captivity. It scarcely needs to be pointed out that the New
Testament yields the same
analysis. The prolonged miracle of the Divine Person, Whose deep
humiliation for
mankind rendered necessary the vindication of His Godhead,
stands out from all
wonders of the Bible as one continuous Virtue from His
Divine-human presence. The
Resurrection, with its infallible signs, completed the education
of the Apostles' faith, and
laid the corner stone of all evidences forever. The miracles of
the Acts are exhibited
only on critical occasions, but always then: witness the minor
renewals of Pentecost
for the conversion of the Gentiles, for Samaria, and for the
relicts of the Baptist's
ministry; lessening, as it were, through these several phases,
according to the importance
of the occasion. Not always however were they lessened. The
resurrection-miracles of
St. Peter and St. Paul followed hard on the Savior’s highest
acts: to demonstrate by the
hand of two or three witnesses, after His rising, the fact of
the victory over death which
He had demonstrated most effectually by His rising itself. The
abundance of St. Paul's
miraculous gifts were the
signs of an Apostle
And, finally, the miracles wrought in the early churches were
enough and no more than
enough to attest the reality of the Pentecost; being, so to
speak, the same kind of
confirmations of that great day as the few resurrections of the
Acts were confirmations of
that other day of the Resurrection proper. It must be
remembered, however, that in
conclusion the Supreme has not absolutely restricted His
wonderful works to the great
eras of revelation: the power of God, like the word of God, is
not bound. We discern a
certain law of miracles which seems to limit them to great
epochs; but there is nothing in
it which requires us to limit the Holy One, or to render it
impossible that miraculous
interventions have occurred since the full establishment of the
organic Church in the
world. Moreover, the occasional instances in which the wonders,
or teras, have been
wrought by the permitted agency of wicked men are so referred to
in Scripture as to
strengthen this credential of revelation. As Balaam in the Old
Testament and Caiaphas
in the New delivered sublime predictions, so the magicians in
the Old Testament wrought
supernatural wonders under a Divine restraint; and Antichrist,
to come with his lying
wonders, is predicted in the New. But the true workers of
miracles in the Scripture are its
holiest men;
2. It may be demanded that these wonders of the Finger of God
should generally teach
worthy lessons, besides asserting the power of God in the
supernatural order of the world:
in other words that they should be essential constituents of
revelation itself, as well as
being its credentials. We must not, indeed, presume to judge
what in every case is the
worthiness of the lesson taught: some miracles may seem too
trivial, such as the recovery
of the axe,
3. It may be expected, further, that the miracles which bring
the Supernatural Hand into
human affairs shall, as credentials, allow of the application of
fair criteria in the case of
those who witnessed them, and further that they shall be
supported by; sufficient
evidence for posterity,
(1.) As to the former, the demand may be as abundantly satisfied
as the case admits.
Many of the wonders recorded in the Bible are simply matters of
record, and their
circumstantials are lost forever. But these may claim the
benefit of being blended with
the mass of those which are as it were wrought before our eyes,
in the midst of all their
surroundings. If the question were of the integrity of Scripture
these exceptional instances
might be challenged, and must be defended. But for our present
argument that is
needless: it is enough to assert that the grand miraculous
credentials of the two covenants
were wrought openly, under the cognizance of men's senses, and
amidst such
circumstances as forbid the possibility of deception. The
miracles which accompanied the
advent and legislation of Moses: were witnessed by large
numbers; and the testimony of
the rivals; who used their enchantments is in evidence. Of
course we have only the record
of Scripture itself to guide us; but for our present argument
that is enough. We have all
the evidence the case allows that the Egyptians as well as the
Israelites saw and believed
things that were not done in a corner. We have not con-temporary
documents to which
appeal can be made. But the entire history which flowed out of
these miraculous
interpositions speaks for them. From generation to generation
the annals of the nation are
full of allusions to what was steadfastly believed from the day
of its occurrence. And the
whole economy of Hebrew revelations was founded upon that faith.
However, it is
obvious that this question touches the Gospel miracles more
particularly. With regard to
them our Savior Himself may be asked for evidence. He admitted
that publicity and
openness and candid invitation of criticism were to be expected
from anyone who
claimed to bring a special message from heaven. And what He said
as to His words held
true of His miracles, which were His acted words: I spake openly to the world; I ever
taught in the synagogue, and in the temple, whither the Jews
always resort; and in secret
have I said nothing.
(2.) As to the latter: we are, as posterity, in a different
position, and miracles are matter of
historical evidence. There are no events in the past history of
the human race, which have
become matter of accepted history and are doubted by no sane
person, more amply and
circumstantially attested than the miraculous life and
resurrection from death of our Lord
and Savior Jesus Christ: that is, the whole range of the central
miracles of Christianity.
They were not questioned at the time of their supposed
occurrence; at least, the only
challenge they underwent was of such a kind as to turn to their
advantage. All kinds of
spectators watched the more public miracles; and the only
disparagement recorded was
that of those who ascribed the Lord's works to Beelzebub, and
His absence from the
sepulcher to the cunning stratagem of His disciples. The
resurrection of Jesus was the
critical or crucial miracle the establishment of which would
assure all the rest. Now that
event was guaranteed to many hundreds of persons by many
infallible proofs; it was
believed from the time by a large body of conscientious and
credible witnesses, whose
mental and moral character sustains every test, who, moreover,
to the number of
hundreds sealed their conviction by an entire consecration of
life, and some of them by
the sacrifice of life itself. Finally, the great miracles of
revelation are connected with
posterity by the existence of public monuments which owe their
existence to a
widespread and profound confidence in their genuineness. In
ancient times the
Passover attested the national faith in the deliverance from
Egypt, and it has continued
from generation to generation to declare the strength of the
evidence based upon the faith
of a whole people. Similarly, the Lord’s Day has declared down
to the present time the
faith of an immense body of witnesses that the Savior rose from
the dead. And, in fact,
the Christian Church as an institution vouches, if not for the
reality of the miracle of
Christ's life and death and resurrection, at least for the
satisfaction with which the
evidence of it was received from the earliest Christian
generations. Supercilious
skepticism may affirm that no amount of evidence can ever avail
to enforce upon the
mind the acceptance of facts which are contrary to the eternal
laws of nature. The only
reply which, at this stage, we can give is that this is quite
true, if no God exists; but that,
if a Personal Ruler of the universe is believed in, such
supernatural facts are not
incredible; and, finally, that these events were witnessed and
relied upon by a very large
number of trustworthy witnesses who; have sent down their
evidence signed and attested
to posterity.
4. Once more, the dignity of eternal truth demands that it
should not lay the main stress of
its demonstration on miracles: certainly never on miracles
alone. No one in all the
records of revelation is represented as having made the validity
of his mission depend on
his works; though no one, thus authenticated, was ever known to
decline producing
this credential when; challenged. There is no subject connected
with the evidences of
the Faith that requires more careful statement than this.
Exaggeration on both sides is
very frequent. Certainly, it might sometimes appear as if
everything was staked upon
miraculous intervention: for instance, the challenges of Moses
and Elijah seem to confirm
this notion, as also a few of the minor miracles of both
Testaments. But it ought to be
remembered that the wonderful works wrought in Egypt were not
merely the credentials
of Moses: they were also and chiefly marks of the Divine
displeasure against the false
gods of that land, and chastisements of the perverseness of
those who refused to obey.
The same may be said of the contest on Mount Carmel. The people
were bidden to
choose between the True God and the false gods before the tokens
came from heaven;
and when these came, they took the form of chastisement, as in
the case of Egypt. Merely
as portents, to astonish the beholders and thus enchain their
attention, miracles were
never vouchsafed. But at all the great crises of revelation they
have been given to enlist
and pre-engage the hearers by tokens of Divine goodness and
power. In fact, and on the
whole, as they are the Hand of God demanding attention to His
Voice, the relation of
miracles to the doctrine of the Teacher who performs them is
always most simply stated
and guarded throughout the Scripture. The tokens when rejected
are very soon
withdrawn: There shall no
sign be given unto this generation
When it is said that God confirmed the word of His servants
both with signs and wonders
and with divers miracles and gifts of the Holy Ghost
5. Lastly, there is a criterion or postulate which believers in
revelation add to those
already considered. The miracles of Scripture, in their wide
variety and unbounded
grandeur, are the economy of a
Again, the undeniable occurrence of prodigies such as witchcraft
and necromancy and the
performance of wonderful works through the agency of evil
spirits, are sometimes a
stumbling-block to faith: only however to a faith which does not
admit, what the
Scriptures everywhere testify, that such things as these have
been permitted by God for
reasons to a great extent incomprehensible to us. Finally, the
question of the continuance
of miraculous signs since the days of the Apostles presents a
topic of difficulty. But the
difficulty vanishes if it is honestly admitted that there is no
reason why the Supreme
should not still manifest His power in endowing His servants
occasionally, whether with
the gift of prophecy or with the gift of miracle. This granted,
the question becomes then
simply matter of evidence. All these and other seemingly
unsolvable problems become to
the believer in the supreme miracles of the Incarnation and the
Resurrection no more and
no less than trials of humility and intellectual submission and
faith.
PROPHECY MORE GENERAL.
1. Prophecy is the utterance of Divine revelation; and a prophet
is one raised up and sent
to communicate God's truth. The meaning of nabiy’ is an Announcer; and that of chazah,
is Seer, the earlier name of the same office, or one who
receives what he is to utter in
visions. The visions were not universally characteristic of the
office; but the office itself,
and the employment of it throughout the whole economy of
revelation, is one of the great
credentials of the Bible, as pervasive as the miracle, with
which indeed it is indissolubly
bound up, being only one aspect of a continuous Divine
intervention in human affairs.
The prophet was not an ordinary announcer of the will of Heaven,
like the priest who
might read and expound the law. He was an instrument of the
Divine will raised up out of
the order of nature, to receive communications which may be
called supernatural, being
imparted by an influence of the Holy Ghost sometimes called
Vision, sometimes the
Word of the Lord: for instance, The word of the Lord was precious in those days;
there
was no open vision.
2. The essence of this credential of Divine revelation is this,
that it represents every
communication from God as directly imparted by a Divine
afflatus, the influence of
which the prophet could not mistake, and the reality of which
the people might test. This
direct contact of the Spirit of God with the spirit of man is
the pervading law and the
pervading glory of the Divine revelation from Moses downward.
There is nothing
resembling it in the history of perverted religions. So far as
the oracles, soothsayers,
and diviners of heathenism offer any analogy, it is only as a
foil to the grandeur of this
credential. It is thus spoken of by the voice of Jehovah
Himself. When Miriam and
Aaron murmured against the superior dignity of Moses as the
prophet of the Hebrews,
they said: Hath the Lord
indeed spoken only by Moses? hath He not spoken also by us?
3. We find everywhere, however, the most careful provision for
the vindication of this
credential. The interior consciousness of the prophet was the
guarantee to himself that the
Lord was with him; this however could not be transferred to
others, and is no argument to
unbelievers who regard the entire mystery of the prophetic
function as a delusion. But
Jehovah gave His people tests by which they might verify the
claims of these prophets.
Those whom God sent could appeal to the fact that the honor of
Jehovah was their
supreme end. What our Savior said concerning Himself was true of
all who had come
before Him, and of all who should follow Him. My doctrine is not Mine, but His that
sent Me. If any man will do His will, he shall know of the
doctrine, whether it be of
God, or whether I speak of Myself. He that speaketh of himself
seeketh his own glory.
PROPHETIC PREDICTION.
Prophecy is thus more specifically the impartation of a Divine
knowledge of the future to
man: that is, it embraces the prediction of future events. All
revelation from the beginning
has been prediction unfolding into prediction. This, we have
seen, is its law; concerning
which no more can be said than that the God of revelation has so
willed it. We can
imagine it otherwise: every generation might have been taught
its lesson, as based upon
the past, but not including the future. But we are shut up to
the assumption that revelation
is the progressive disclosure of one great event to which the
eyes of all generations, as
well before it; as after it, were to be directed. Moreover,
according to the testimony of
Scripture itself the prediction of future events followed by the
accomplishment of those
predictions has always been one of the Divine methods of
authenticating revelation. Here
then we have the general laws of prophecy proper, and its
criterion; as a credential.
THE GENERAL LAWS OF PROPHETIC PREDICTION.
There are a few general principles the study of which are of great importance in order to a
right estimate of Scriptural prediction as a distinct and
pervasive credential of revelation.
1. The first is that
Meanwhile, all that is necessary here is to dwell on this law as
stamping the credential
character of prophecy. There are indeed predictions in the Old
Testament—such as those
minutely describing the destruction of some of the ancient
cities of the world —the
accomplishment of which is known and read of all men who study
history. They must not
be forgotten. But whoever examines the New Testament carefully
will see that the whole
strain of allusion to the Great Fulfillment of the fullness of
time points to the coming and
kingdom of Jesus as the one accomplishment that guarantees all
the rest. There is nothing
more certain in the annals of mankind than that a series of
predictions runs through the
ancient literature of the Jews which has had a most exact
fulfillment in the advent and
work of Jesus. This is the supreme credential of prophecy in
revelation.
2. Another unfailing evidence of the Divine presence in the
prophetic Scripture is the
peculiar law of
Every age is under the sway of some governing prophecy the
accomplishment of which
introduces the government of a new order of prophetic
expectation. The fulfillment of
one prediction becomes the starting-point of another, with wider
issues and a larger
number of subordinate tributaries.
(1.) It may be said that one transcendent prophecy begins the
Scripture, commands the
whole of revelation, and binds time and eternity in one: the
first Gospel of a coming
Redeemer. But even this illustrates, like all others, that
largest application of the principle
which divides the whole series into the Old-Testament
predictions and those of the New.
All the ancient prophets spoke of what Isaiah, in their name,
calls the Last Days,
Particularly, it is stamped with perfection in the New Testament
by three tokens: it is the
time of the last days when God spoke His perfect revelation
in His Son,
(2.) The same principle may be traced in the subordinate cycles
throughout Scripture. The
patriarchal predictions, while always faithful to the first law
and keeping the Messianic
age in view, terminated in Canaan, to begin again with an
altogether new order of
prophecies. The predictions of the Jewish prophets, so far as
they referred to the
Captivity, found their accomplishment in that event, the first
goal of the largest of all
clusters of foreannouncement; but with that accomplishment
another series emerged into
prominence. Similarly, there are, in the New Testament,
subordinate cycles of predictions
out of the accomplishment of which other predictions arise. Over
the Incarnation there
was a large array of prophetic songs, pointing to the Advent but
including also its ulterior
results. Our Lord's own predictions referred to His death and
resurrection and ascension;
to the outpouring of His Spirit, the establishment, of His
kingdom, the destruction of
Jerusalem, the final resurrection, and the end of the world: the
largest and most
comprehensive series of predictions delivered by any one Voice
since prophecy began.
The same law is latent in the Apocalypse, the last book of
prophecy; but here our eyes are
holden, and it is not given to those who now read to trace its
operation otherwise than in
broad outline. The more this general principle is studied, in
its application to the entire
mass of the predictions of Scripture, the more glorious will
appear to all dispassionate
students the economy of prophecy which the Omniscient Mind has
ordered. Whatever it
may be to those who are bent upon resisting all evidences that
recommend the Word of
God, to those who are
3. Once more, and pursuing the same topic a little further, all
prophecy is under the law
of
Looking back upon the long series as irradiated by the light of
Pentecost we see that
every general and every more particular prediction had its
determinate reference to the
Great Fulfillment; but we can see also that not one of them was
clear enough to preclude
unbelief in the case of those who were disposed to murmur
against Divine Providence.
Every generation could rejoice in the fulfillment of the
prophecies that had gone before
concerning itself; but as to its own future it was under the
sway of an indefinite hope.
There is no exception to this law throughout the economy of
prophecy. When it was
approaching its Old-Testament close, it might appear as if the
law was somewhat relaxed;
for Daniel's predictions are exceedingly minute, and their
specifications of the Seventy
Weeks, and of the peculiarity of the last week of the Seventy,
goes beyond the general
indeterminateness of prophetic utterance; but his prophecies are
no real exception, having
been until the Messiah came almost as indeterminate as the date
of the Millennium. The
New Testament introduces the same law, and is everywhere
faithful to it. Reserve begins
again; and it reigns over the expectations of the Christian
church at the present hour.
Our Lord's foreannouncements of His passion were veiled in a
certain obscurity; and it
was not until after His resurrection that even the
4. Finally, an important law of all prophetic announcements is
that it has been constituted
by the Holy Spirit a sign to every successive generation: in
other words, like the miracle
proper, and equally with the miracle, it has been a Divine
credential of revelation. In the
unlimited wisdom of the Supreme the prophetic office was
ordained to subserve many
purposes. It was the medium through which the supreme
communications were, from
time to time, made to the chosen people, of encouragement or
warning to themselves, and
of defiance and threatening against their enemies. Hence for a
long series of ages it was
the vehicle of the entire economy of Divine instruction:
containing the doctrines and the
ethics of the religion common to all dispensations, with a
glorious prospective
announcement of the Christian truth hereafter to be revealed.
Hence the prophetic books,
and the prophetic elements in all the other books, are to us an
inexhaustible fund of
instruction apart from their predictions of future events. But,
all this being true, it is
equally plain that the whole system of foreannouncement was
intended to be from
generation to generation a standing and permanent credential.
There is abundant evidence
of this in all parts of the Old Testament. And if thou say in thine heart, how shall we
know the words which the Lord hath not spoken? When a prophet
speaketh in the name
of the Lord, if the thing follow not nor come to pass, that is
the thing which the Lord hath
not spoken.
1
THE TESTS OF THE PROPHETIC CREDENTIAL.
1. It is undeniable that the prediction of future events is the
prerogative of Omniscience
alone; and also that in the Scriptures; God is represented as
making it one great purpose
in His commission of the prophets to establish clearly this
claim. We may suppose
therefore that the predictions of Scripture will generally, if
not in all individual and
isolated cases, have such a character as to be beyond the reach
of human calculation. It
may safely be granted that in some cases it is impossible to
prove the event
foreannounced to have been beyond the range of skilful
foresight. But it must be
remembered that the weight of the argument from prophecy does
not rest upon
isolated examples: it depends upon certain great and prominent
and vast predictions
such as only the Supreme Mind could have given to men, and the
accomplishment of
which is before our eyes. Beginning with these, and fortified by
their undeniable strength,
we have only afterwards to stand on the defensive with regard to
the rest: nothing is
necessary beyond establishing that the opposite conclusion
cannot be proved. First, then,
let this test be applied to that One Great Object of prophecy to
Whom all the prophets
bore witness. During a thousand years a perfect picture is
gradually drawn, by more than
a hundred distinct predictions, of One Person, and of Him as
unique in the history of
mankind: that distinct picture being the filling up of an
outline which had been sketched
thousands of years before, in fact from the very beginning of
the world. Could the
Deliverer of mankind have been foreseen in all the marvelous
traits of His character, and
in all the minute circumstances of His appearance and history
and life and death and
resurrection and reign, by the enthusiasm of national longing?
Could the converging
foresight of a series of prophets have drawn this most elaborate
and most sacred Portrait?
The same may be said as to the steadfast predictions of the
fates of some of the leading
nations of the world. After the Person of the Messiah, the
Israel after the flesh which
rejected Him takes the next rank in the historical perspective
of prophecy. There is a
similar wonderful unanimity in the predictions of their entire
history whether as
originally Hebrews, or afterwards Israelites, or in more modern
times Jews. Their destiny
as depicted in the Bible, that is in both Testaments, brings
prophecy and fulfillment into
such plain and undeniable harmony that no room ought to be left
for infidelity. This is a
topic that must be pursued through the whole Bible, which shows
that the rejection and
dispersal of the people was foretold when it was most
prosperous, its elevation and
dignity when it was most dejected. Moses, the founder of Hebrew
greatness, foretold the
dispersion of Israel as the result of their disobedience, and at
the same time their
preservation through all ages as distinct and unconfounded among
the nations. Scarcely
one of the later prophets but has repeated this wonderful
prophecy, applicable to no other
race. The nations among which they were scattered have
disappeared, or are in course of
disappearance: the ten tribes are wanderers over the face of the
earth still. They have
survived the greatest revolutions of history: a standing proof
that the Eye of the Supreme
foresaw what His omnipotent Hand has accomplished. Though I make an end of all the
nations whither I have scattered thee, yet will I not make an
end of thee.
A minute study of these prophecies will show, and the more
minute the study the more
effectually will it show, that Omni-science was in these
predictions. Hosea, Amos, and
Isaiah pre-dieted that the kingdom of Israel and Jerusalem also
would be scourged by
Assyria; and it was so. The fulfillment was exact as to the
ravage of Samaria, and the
restraining hand that saved Jerusalem from destruction. In the
year 712
Concerning Babylon also, the successor of Assyria, there were
equally sure words of
prophecy. No fact in human annals is more certain than that the
Babylonian captivity was
foretold by Isaiah, and also the deliverance of the people; nor
than that Micah, two
hundred years before their accomplishment, predicted the same
events. The burden of
Tyre in Isaiah described its ruin, by the Chaldeans in a manner
so clear and explicit, and
so fully confirmed by history, as to make it one of the triumphs
of prophetic evidence.
But for confirmation of the evidence the prophecies themselves
must be carefully studied.
This branch of the Apologetics of revelation is only glanced at
in this general summary; it
will amply repay the most exhaustive examination.
2. As the first test pays its tribute to the Omniscience of the
God of revelation, so the
second pays its tribute to the Omnipotence. Only He Who gave
them could fulfill the
predictions of Scripture. But it has been urged by the opponents
of the Faith that many of
those so-called vaticinations which undeniably are found in the
rhapsodies of the
prophets were really fulfilled; but fulfilled through the
determination of those who were
interested in their accomplishment that they should be
accomplished. It is pleaded with
great subtlety that patriotic enthusiasts, gifted with keen
foresight, gave hints of what
they saw in the germ of probability; and that these hints
fulfilled themselves. It is not a
hopeless, nor is it even a difficult, task to vindicate the
whole body of Old-Testament
foreannouncements from this charge. But it most concerns us to
examine it in its
reference to the New Testament, where it is applied, with some
show of plausibility, but
with no real force, to the Supreme Fulfillment of all prophecy.
The spirit of infidelity
does not shrink from making the career of Christ a studied
adaptation to Himself of the
scattered prophetic hints of the ancient records. It seizes upon
the Scriptural word, that it
might be fulfilled;
The formula that it might
be fulfilled
But, speaking generally, they are safe in their own integrity.
Their leading
foreannouncements were such as could never have fulfilled
themselves, nor have been
fulfilled by those who artfully seize upon these hints. Have the
nations and empires
whose overthrow was predicted and accomplished, fulfilled the
predictions by their own
cunning? Are the Jews executing on themselves the judgment
written? They are the most
determined enemies of the Christian Fulfillment; but they do not
deny that the hand of
God has been long against them. He has smitten them, they think,
for the chastisement of
the world's peace; and wounded them for the transgressions of
mankind; but surely they
have not smitten and wounded themselves in order to fulfill
predictions bound up with
their own disgrace.
3. The test of prophecy takes yet another form. It is very
confidently asserted that some of
the avowed predictions of Scripture were written
The Book of Daniel is declared to have been written after the
leading events which it
records, these being mainly predictions concerning Antiochus
Epiphanes; while its
remarkable miracles are supposed to prove its unauthentic
character as well as later
origin. It has been seen that the Lord has thrown His shield
around this prophet; He
mentions him by name; receives from him His Messianic
designation, Son of Man, and
that of His kingdom, the kingdom of heaven; and generally
protects him by anticipation
against all assaults. The Lord's own apology is sustained by the
best modern research;
and, after the utmost critical sifting, its most vehement
opponents have no argument to
allege but the extreme minuteness of its prophecies and the
supernatural hand in its
events. The Holy Gospels contain predictions of the Supreme
Prophet; and they also are
therefore assigned, in spite of the strongest evidence of
antiquity, to a period after the
destruction of Jerusalem. In this case also our loyalty to the
Lord almost forbids
argument. If Christ Jesus be worthy of any confidence the main
predictions of the Old
and New Testaments must have been delivered before their
fulfillment. As to a multitude
of lesser prophecies, about which there may be contention, the
application of our test, and
the consequent vindication of the prophets in detail, will
require the close study of
prophetic Scripture as a distinct branch of theology. But that
minute investigation is not
necessary to show the triumph of this particular credential of
revelation as such in its
broad outlines. Doubtless the New Testament followed the Old,
and the Old was not
written after the event. The dispersion of the Jews, the spread
of Christianity, the ruin of
the great empires whose burdens rest upon the prophets, the
signs of Antichrist, the latterday
infidelity, —all are fulfillments of distinct prophecy, which
assuredly was written
before their accomplishment.
PROPHECY AND MIRACLE.
The evidence of Prophecy as a credential of revelation is of the
highest order: whether
taken by itself or in connection with miracle generally.
1. In common with miracle proper it is a standing and perpetual
token of the Divine
presence in the whole sphere of revelation. He Himself appeals
to both as His high
prerogative in many of the sublimest passages of the prophets. I have declared the former
things from the beginning; and they went forth out of My mouth,
and I showed them; I did
them suddenly and they came to pass.
2. Viewed apart, and by themselves, these prophecies are
peculiarly cumulative in their
demonstrative force. Unlike the miracles, the fulfilled
predictions constantly enlarge the
materials of their evidence. There is a sense indeed in which
this observation, frequently
made, is not true. The miracles recorded in Scripture are
thought to be more feebly
commended to the acceptance of every succeeding generation; as
if the testimony on
which they rest grows weaker as it recedes from the present. But
that is not
philosophically true. Moreover, the most evident and noblest
miracles—if any such
distinction may be made—are yet constantly performed; and the
Finger and Hand of God
are evermore at work in the hearts of men and in the heart of
society. Still, the
accumulating force of the prophetic credential is more
conspicuous than that of the
miracle. We live under a vaster amount of fulfillment than any
former age; and he who
shall take the historical prophecies of the Old Testament and
trace their fulfillment in the
course of Oriental history will have an irresistible
demonstration of Christianity at his
command.
3. Finally, like the miracles, the prophecies are bound up with
the teaching of the Bible;
and, apart from their evidential force, yield an unlimited
treasure of instruction in the
ways of God, the work of Christ, and the destiny of man. Neither
miracle nor prophecy
can easily be over-estimated as the vehicle of Divine teaching:
neither can be while time
lasts exhausted.
INSPIRATION, OR THE DIVINE HAND IN SCRIPTURE.
The specific doctrine of inspiration, as the ground of the
Divine authority of the
Scriptures, will be considered in its place. It may here be
regarded very briefly as one of
the credentials of revelation, on a level with Miracles and
Prophecy and completing or
consummating their evidence.
1. Inspiration is a distinct element of the supernatural order
of revealed truth: one of its
laws and characteristic attributes. As such it simply means that
the sacred documents are
worthy of the Divine Author; and that they are not unworthily
described as
Strictly speaking only the writers are inspired; but the last
word on the subject
in the New Testament gives the epithet to Scripture itself:
Pása grafeé Theópneustos
But there remains a very interesting argument that may be
briefly touched upon
here.
2. Generally speaking, the records of revelation are worthy of
their Divine authorship or
of the Divine authorship which they claim. Dispassionately
taking up the whole Bible,
with the hypothesis in our thoughts that it was composed by
writers under a special
control of the Holy Spirit, we find nothing, or very little, to
make us hesitate in admitting
the claim; but, on the contrary, perpetual demonstration that
the several authors cannot
have been left to themselves. The children of this Wisdom
justify her on the whole; and
where they seem to do otherwise it is only that we cannot
penetrate the secret which
makes any one of them say, in the language of St. Paul, I speak as a fool.
1
3. For, it must be remembered that the records of revelation
exhibit a characteristic
Divine-human excellence corresponding with the only sound theory
of inspiration. They
are worthy to be assigned to the authorship of the controlling
Spirit: supposing that Spirit
to employ human faculties and human editorship. They may not be
at all points, in every
line and every record, what we might expect from the immediate
dictation of the Holy
Ghost, or from the writing of His Finger on tables delivered to
man. But, if they are
below what God might be supposed to send down straight from
heaven, they are certainly
altogether beyond the unassisted ability of man, higher indeed
than any ability of man,
even assisted from above, could have produced: that is to say,
there are disclosures in
various parts of the Bible, and one in particular everywhere,
which imply not the raising
of earth to heaven but the descent of heaven to earth. We have
only to contemplate their
tranquil, authoritative solution of questions that no other
books have attempted even to
investigate; their profound and natural familiarity with God and
the things of God; the
simplicity and awfulness of their doctrine of sin; the supreme
moral interest that
everywhere reigns; and their universal, never-failing appeal to
what is good in human
nature, as if a Divine Voice were issuing from them for ever
speaking to something in the
human spirit that must hear. If God records His truth for man,
this is just what He would
write: whether we have respect to what is given or to what is
withheld. There is a perfect
Divine dignity and perfect human purity: it is both the Voice of
God and the voice of
man; combined in so marvelous a way as to make the claims of
Inspiration rightly
understood a most impressive credential of the Faith.
4. Hence the simple and undeniable fact of the supremacy of the
Bible, as a collection of
religious documents, may be appealed to as itself a mighty
presumptive argument of its
own truth and of the truth of the religion it propounds. There
is nothing parallel, nothing
similar, in human literature. Place it by the side of the most
ancient religious books, the
Indian Vedas, the Chinese Classics arranged by Confucius, and
the other sacred writings
of the world at large, and comparison must soon give up its
task. Soon give it up: not
immediately; for there are undoubtedly certain outlines of
primitive truth in the ancient
writings of the East which show that they also were written not
without a certain degree
of the Divine afflatus. The Holy Ghost has ever been the Voice
of One crying in the
wilderness, and saying. Prepare ye the way of the Lord. In the
books which treat of the
Science of Religion, and give us systems of Comparative
Theology, more than justice is
done to this element common to the sacred books of what we call
heathenism and the
Holy Scriptures: so far as mere justice is done, the advocate of
Christianity heartily
assents, but when the other holy writings are collated with the
Christian at all points it is
an exaggeration of justice that becomes most unjust. The Bible
refuses to form one
column of a great Biblical Polyglot. There is outside of the
Christian Scriptures no document
extant among men which really professes to have been written
under the inspiration
of God: and among those which may seem to make such a claim
there is not one which
does not in half its contents refute the claim, common sense
being the judge. Again, there
is no document of the kind extant for which it may be pleaded
that, though as standing
alone it has no divinity, it recovers its character when placed
in a collection of sacred
books. But there is not a book of the Jewish and Christian
Scriptures which does not
vindicate its own dignity and sanctity at all points when
studied as belonging to the entire
volume. This leads however to a distinct argument.
5. The Unity of the Scriptures of revelation is a very strong
credential in its favor as
professing to be from God. It is one great vision, and its
interpretation one: beginning and
ending with the same Paradise, with thousands of years of
redeeming history between. It
has been instinctively called, what it does not call itself, the
Bible: one Book divided, if
divided at all, into two parts. That the New Testament as
fulfillment should so perfectly
correspond with the Old Testament as prophecy is in itself the
most wonderful
phenomenon in literature: it is evidence as near demonstration
as need be of the
intervention of a Divine Hand. The Redeemer made manifest in the
later Scriptures
answers face to face and feature for feature to the Form
predicted in the older Scriptures.
But it is not merely that the Same Being is foreannounced in one
book Who comes in
another. He is the sole predominant subject of many books in
both departments of the
Bible. One idea runs through the whole: the kingdom of God set
up or restored in His
incarnate Son. To this idea authors of various ages and of
various races contribute in a
harmony which never could be the result of accident or mere
coincidence. Only the
Divine power could have made so many men, of different lands,
concert, without
concerting, such a scheme of literature. These men belonged to
no school of consecutive
writers: yet they seem as if they had been, before time was, in
the counsel and councilchamber
of Jehovah, and to have come forth each predestined to furnish
his own
contribution. If they had not asserted their inspiration of God,
that hypothesis must have
been invented to account for the facts and phenomena of their
writings. But they have
asserted it: the claim is bound up with every page of the word
they have left behind them.
6. There is a special aspect of this argument which will be
found of great importance by
those who examine it from this point of view: that is, the unity
of teaching which is
maintained through a long and diversified course of development.
The leading doctrines
which distinguish Christianity from every other system of
supposed religious truth are to
be traced through the many books of the Bible in a line of ever
widening and everdeepening
expansion. Each prominent article of our Faith may be traced
upwards to its
germ in the earliest Biblical documents, and downward again as
it threads its way distinct
from others until it finds its full expression. And all combined
converge through the older
Scriptures to a consummate harmony in the New Testament. These
two facts are
undoubted: they ought not, at least, to be doubted by anyone who
is familiar with the
history of doctrine in the Bible. The Holy Trinity, with the
redeeming relation to mankind
of the Second Person in that Trinity, and the relation to the
universe of life sustained by
the Third Person; the establishment in the world of a kingdom of
grace destined finally to
triumph; the acceptance of every penitent sinner by God on the
ground of what is called a
Righteousness of Faith; the essential difference between soul
and body, with the transient
separation caused by physical death; the eternal issues of the
present life of probation;—
these are all doctrinal truths which run through the whole
Bible, so that Christian
preachers may take their proof-texts from almost every book; but
which run through the
Bible with always progressive clearness. The development of
doctrine we have to study
elsewhere. It is referred to now as a clear indication of the
presence—perhaps it would be
better to say of the very strong probability of the presence—of
a Divine Hand in the
construction of the Bible. The supreme truth—that of the Sacred
Trinity in the
Godhead— might be shown to bear up the pillars of this argument.
There is not a single
reference in the Old Testament to the Messiah as a Person near
to Jehovah, or as Jehovah
Himself, that is not perfectly consistent with the amazing
secret concerning His being
which the New Testament brings to light; nor is there a single
reference, among
multitudes, to the Spirit of God that is not perfectly in
harmony with what the later
Scriptures declare as to His relation to the Father and the Son.
Such is the effect produced
on the devout mind of a believer in Christianity by the
consideration of this wonderful
harmony that he is disposed to place it among the foremost
evidences of the Faith. Most
certainly it is one of its most emphatic and persuasive
credentials.
7. It must be remembered that the argument based upon the
presence of the Divine Hand
in the construction of the Bible is not exhibited as final and
demonstrative: it is, as has
just been remarked, only a credential hard to resist. Here a few
further observations
may be made which will suggest hints to be followed out by the
student himself to any
extent.
(1.) There is in this no more demonstration than the analogical
argument generally
presents. Throughout the works of God— granted that the creation
is a work of God—
we perceive the universal sway of a law of evolution, qualified
however by a subordinate
law of occasional interventions that seem to break the former.
Precisely what we find in
nature and in providence we find in the gradual construction of
Scripture. Why it
should be so, it is vain to ask. That it is an absolutely valid
proof of the Divinity or
supreme authority of the Bible it is vain to assert, It might by
the most wonderful of all
coincidences have happened that such a Book should be composed
at long intervals by
authors independent of each other, and retain such a character
of steady, uniform, evergrowing
development. But the probabilities against this would have been
exceedingly
great.
(2.) Again, it must be borne in mind that the Divine influence
and agency in Scripture is
not asserted to be absolute and unqualified. What was said as to
the miracles, and might
have been said as to prophecy—that residual difficulties were to
be expected in the nature
of the case—may be said of the credentials of inspiration.
Objectors frame hypotheses of
miracle and prophecy with which the facts are not found to
accord: and they are offended.
So, also, they frame hypotheses of inspiration with which the
records of revelation cannot
be harmonized: and they turn away with suspicion. This subject
will be more fully discussed
when we come to the doctrine of inspiration. At present it is
enough to say that
there is in the human elements of the workmanship of Scripture
nothing utterly
inconsistent with the supposition of a Divine Hand overruling
and controlling and even
arranging the whole compass of sacred literature.
SUMMARY.
These three credentials of Miracle, Prophecy, and Inspiration
ought to be united: they
mutually give and receive strength, and are strongest when they
are combined. The
miracle is of course most demonstrative to the extant generation
of beholders, the
prophecy is of course demonstrative only to the generations who
come afterwards. The
present generation in the midst of which miracles are wrought
cannot hand down to us in
the fullest degree the evidence of their senses; we who behold
the fulfillment cannot send
back to those who heard the prophecy our vision of accomplished
prediction. Inspiration
embraces the two in one: it records the fact of the miracle,
and, as inspiration, makes it
present to every age; while, as inspiration, its record of a
prophecy makes the fulfillment
as if it were already come or were already past to those who
hear it. This may be made
plainer by applying it to the narratives of our Lord's mission.
Throughout the holy
Gospels Jesus is found working miracles and uttering prophecies.
When His works and
His words were alike approaching their close, He predicted the
coming of a miraculous
power which should provide for the permanent record of the
whole: He promised the
Spirit of inspiration Who was not only Himself to abide with His
disciples but also to
cause the Lord's words to abide with His Church. Certainly the
Savior when He gave
this assurance uttered a prophecy, which was fulfilled from the
Day of Pentecost onward;
while the prophecy predicted a miraculous effusion of the Holy
Ghost Who was to be a
Memory within the disciples' memory, and a special expositor of
their Master's words.
And the fulfillment of the prophecy was the Spirit of
inspiration through Whose influence
and superintendence the Four 'Gospels were written. But these
three are more or less
united throughout the history of the Bible: they have never been
disjoined since the
construction of the Biblical Library began. Strictly speaking,
it was prophecy which
commenced, miracle abundantly followed, and in due time
inspiration provided one
permanent record. The three have kept pace through all the ages
of revealed truth; and
they ended together, when their common work was done. Yet they
have not ended. In
the Bible miracle, and prophecy, and inspiration abide: but in
some respects the greatest
is inspiration; for it really absorbs the two others, and gives
continuance and permanence
to the whole.
THE CHARACTER OF CHRIST THE REVEALER.
The Person of Jesus Christ, the Author and Finisher of the
Faith, is its highest and most
sacred credential. This is true of our Lord's historical
manifestation generally; but for
our present purpose it will be sufficient to regard Him as the
Founder of His own
religion, and to mark the perfect consistency with which He
supports His claim to be the
Incarnate Revealer of all truth. The more closely we examine the
Four Gospels the
more clearly shall we perceive that He Himself in His
Divine-human self-consciousness
rested upon this for the enforcement of His claims: not only in
the case of those who were
around Him in the flesh, but also throughout all the future. The
strength of this argument
as such will be found to be only increased by the various
explanations from time to time
devised to resist it. There is no rational way of accounting for
the Person and Work of
Christ but that which accepts the Divine origin of Christianity.
Here we have reverently to consider the claim of Jesus, the
Supreme Revealer, and the
consistency of His teaching with His claim: both these being
viewed as completely
exhibited in the Christian revelation as a whole.
1. The Savior’s testimony to Himself is not to be gathered from
any one of His assertions,
but from the entire strain of the Gospels, as these are
corroborated by the exposition of
His Apostles. The sum is, that He came down from heaven as the
Son of God, and
appeared on earth while still in heaven as the Son of man, to
reveal the words of His
Father and to accomplish His Father's, will, for human
redemption. There is nothing
parallel to the pretension of Jesus; nothing like it ever
entered into the mind of man. The
anticipation of mankind had never risen to such a conception:
scarcely had the Old
Testament itself prepared for it, Jesus is the Incarnate Son of
God: this fact, or this claim,
entirely rules the new dispensation. For the Christianity which
does not bring this
credential we do not plead: such a Christianity has descended to
the level of other
religions. It might almost be said that the very claim is a
sufficient credential. That such a
Being as Jesus of Nazareth undeniably was —so lowly and pure, so
unselfish and
reverent, so mighty in word and deed, with such irresistible
power over all who
approached Him—should declare Himself to have come down from
heaven with the
mysteries of eternity, with eternal truth in His words and
eternal love in His heart, is itself
something so new and transcendent that it might almost take our
faith captive at its will.
This is the thought of those who are already His. But it is a
sublime credential which
provokes the unbelief of the unregenerate reason, and must
defend itself.
2. There is no more wonderful characteristic of our Lord's
revealing mission, and no
stronger assertion of its divinity, than the absence of
everything that might place Him on
a level with other teachers, or with men generally. From His
first word to His mother in
the temple down to His prayer before the cross, there is not a
single expression uttered by
Himself which, fairly interpreted, makes Him a member of the
fellowship of the human
teachers of mankind. Nor is there a single expression in the New
Testament which, fairly
interpreted, makes Him a member in common of the human race.
(1.) It is true that on some few occasions Jesus spoke as a man,
and seemed to ally
Himself with the Rabbis around Him. To Nicodemus He said, We speak that we do know,
and testify that we have seen; and ye receive not our witness:
(2.) Further, and it is of great importance, our Lord never once
allied Himself with
mankind in any such way as would be inconsistent with the
infinite peculiarity of His
claim as His Father's Representative in the human race. The more
deeply this fact is
pondered the more wonderful will it appear, and the more mighty
as a credential of the
Christian Faith. Though His
delights were with the sons of men,
Whosoever studies the question in all its bearings will find
that in this fact is one of the
most effectual internal evidences of the truth of our holy
religion.
ITS JUSTIFICATION.
The full exposition of the character of our Lord in all His
offices must be reserved. But
there are some reflections which arise from a general review of
the history of His
revelation of Himself, and of the truth in Him, which will set
this sacred and central
credential in its proper light.
1. Though it is undoubtedly true that nothing in human history
runs parallel with this
claim of the Redeemer, it is found to be in strict harmony with
the profoundest desires
and instincts of the race. Not indeed that the incarnation of
the Son of God had ever been
anticipated. The loftiest aspiration of the religious spirit in
man had never aimed so high.
The transcendental philosophy which makes the Infinite and the
finite two necessary
poles of thought finding their axis, as it were, in the union of
the Absolute and the
Conditioned in Christ could never have existed if the Gospel had
not given it the idea.
The difference between the modern and the ancient Pantheistic
philosophy is to be traced
to this: Hegel and the moderns have ploughed with the heifer of
revelation, that is, of
New Testament revelation; for scarcely did the Old Testament
disclose this deepest secret
of the counsel of God. Whatever approximations towards the idea
of a personal union
between God and man, exhibited in any one historic person, are
to be found in the ancient
or modern systems of religious philosophy lack, as close
scrutiny proves, the essential
element of the Christian incarnation. They never conceived, nor
did they approach the
conception, of a real and permanent union of the Divine and
human in one personality.
Yet the very distortions of the truth are profoundly suggestive.
They are like the
magicians' imitations of the miracles in Egypt: permitted
exhibitions of what man's
fantasy will do with Divine truth, when Satan is the teacher and
not the Holy Ghost. But
to return The manifestation of our Lord among men—the Son of Man
and the Son of God
in one—was the pure and perfect realization of the highest
unconscious longing of human
nature: that of seeing the Divinity reflected again in itself as
a mirror. He was in that
sense also the Desire of
all nations.
1
2. Christ's personal character, if such language may be used, is
in precise harmony with
the assumption of so unheard of a relation. It is a character of
which it must be said that
it is neither altogether Divine nor altogether human: it is
Divine-human; with the
perfection of God in it, but exhibited in the life of a man.
Human holiness has in Him
its consummate ideal: judged indeed by a standard that He has
set up; one however that
our own reason approves. Following Him throughout His career,
and forgetting so far as
we can His Divinity, we mark that every act and word, and
believe, are constrained to
believe, that every thought also, is consistent with His
assertion that Satan had
That is, it is a holiness which is guaranteed by the Divinity of
the Son of God. The
miraculous conception insured the sanctity of the human nature;
and the Divinity of the
Son insured the permanent necessity of that sinlessness. Hence
it was Divine sanctity.
We see that it is not a holiness that has retrieved itself, that
our Lord's resistance to
temptation is not that of one who can fall, that He does not
speak of law and of duty save
as a God. In short, the religious character of the Savior is
Divine-human: it is what
God, supposing Him also man, would exhibit; and that is all the
argument requires.
3. The Incarnate mission of Jesus is conducted precisely under
such restrictions as are
consistent with the twofold nature of His one Person; and this
alone we have a right to
demand. All His works and all His words are Divine. The universe
is under His
authority: there is a sense in which we see all things already
put under Him. And nothing
can be more certain than that our Lord claims to know everything
pertaining at least to
human destiny: as the impression produced in our mind is that
supreme power is at the
Savior’s command, so also we feel a conviction that He has
unlimited knowledge. In Him
are hid all the treasures
of wisdom and knowledge:
4. Christ's style of teaching exhibits the same harmony. It is,
on the one hand, perfectly
after the manner of men. He uses human documents, quotes them
humanly, and adopts
the purest arts of human rhetoric. His presentation of truth as
a Teacher is simply the
highest in human literature. But it is absolutely Divine: those
who are drawn by the cords
of a man, for instance, in the beginning of the Sermon on the
Mount must be constrained
to own at the close that they have heard the voice of a God and
not of a man. We feel that
His dealing with the conscience is not that of a human witness,
nor of a sanctified human
teacher, but of a Judge, Who not only gives laws and administers
them but also demands
of all who hear Him an account of their conduct. No one can read
carefully the Four
Gospels without feeling that the Master of Christian doctrine
and morals is more than
man. It may be sometimes matter of doubt whether the Teacher is
one to whom in an
extraordinary manner the Divine authority was delegated, or
Himself the Divine Son of
God. But there can be no doubt whether or not the Voice of Jesus
speaks with the confidence
of a final Revealer of doctrine and Arbiter of duty. And the
very doubt to which
reference has been made implies the pure humanness of His
ministry. The two sides of
His teaching character—the one expressed by the people's
question. How knoweth this
man letters, having never learned?
5. The end and consummation of the Savior’s whole work reveals
this credential in its
infinite clearness and force. The Founder of Christianity
Himself lays the chief stress of
His appeal to mankind on His redeeming mission, and His atoning
death. It must be
expected, therefore, that in the crisis and culmination of the
incarnate history—that is, in
the transactions connected with the death of the cross—the deep
secret of our Lord's
Divine-human nature would be exhibited in its most impressive
way. Accordingly, we
observe that in almost all the details of our Lord's suffering
and death there is evidence
that the Victim of manifest human violence and of hidden Divine
justice is both human
and Divine. He approaches His passion as a man: the Man of sorrows, and acquainted
with grief,
6. Once more, it must strike every thoughtful observer of Jesus,
and hearer of His words,
that the peculiar character of His predictions concerning the
future of His cause upon
earth is in strict harmony with His Divine-human claims. Almost
from the outset of His
manifestation it is obvious that the Teacher of Nazareth speaks
of that future with two
voices that are really one: that is to say, on many occasions it
might seem as if He were
sent to make a great experiment, the issue of which would depend
upon His servants'
fidelity; while, on many other occasions, He spoke in the full
consciousness of the
accomplishment of a Divine purpose the end of which was known to
Him as clearly as
the beginning. There can be no doubt that these two aspects of
our Lord's prevision are
manifest everywhere. When
the Son of man cometh, shall He find faith on the earth?
7. This leads, however, to another view. The provision made by
the Founder of
Christianity for the continuance of His cause or kingdom on
earth exhibits the same
tokens of consistency with His Divine-human character. The human
provisions are
throughout perfect in their calm, deliberate foresight. The
Seventy and the Twelve were
carefully chosen: the former to prepare the Lord's own way in a
transitory manner, and
accordingly with rules for their guidance not adapted for
permanence; the latter to pave
the way for His Gospel among all nations after His departure;
and accordingly with a
long-continued discipline the perfection of which appears
throughout the Gospels. We
see also that while the Lord speaks of a kingdom over men He is
also preparing for a
Church gathered from among men: its foundation is laid, and the
Two Sacraments—the
most wonderful expedients in all legislation—appointed for the
initiation and abiding test
of worthy membership. Besides these two fundamentals of
ecclesiastical order many
other regulations were made. In fact, nothing was left
unprovided for: every hint and
germ develops afterwards into profound significance, fitted into
a perfect system. But the
provision is at all points Divine; and in truth its adaptation
depended upon the Lord's own
survival and victory as God over death and continuance in life.
All was made to rest,
further, upon a heavenly Substitute for His visible presence,
Whose glorious descent from
heaven, a Messenger from Himself, is as clearly before the
Redeemer's mind as His own
descent through death to the world of spirits. This argument—for
it is really such—
requires to be studied with care, especially in the light of the
final discourses in St. John.
Can anything be conceived more grand or sublime than the
Savior’s tranquil committal of
the interests of His kingdom to Another Divine Person, for whose
advent He had made all
necessary preparation? The idea of a divided function— His own
in heaven and the
Spirit's upon earth—is one with which we are so familiar that we
are apt to lose our sense
of its perfect uniqueness. If it did not come from above, it
could not have come from
below. If its origin was earth, then never did earth produce so
strange a thought before. In
other words, the great future is humanly provided for, but under
Divine conditions, by
one and the same Incarnate Head of our religion.
8. We might trace still further this marvelous chain of
consistency, the links of which are
the credentials of our Lord's mission. But the best apology of
the Christian Religion for
ever keeps the Person of its Founder in view and considers the
combination in Him of
Divine dignity and human humility. The claims of Jesus to the
homage and devotion of
men are at all points exactly what might be expected of Deity
Incarnate, but to be
accounted for on no other assumption. Without that great
pre-supposal all is obscure and
incomprehensible : that being admitted all is harmonious and
worthy of acceptation. In
our Savior’s character as the Head of a religion are seen in
marked distinctness the two
sides. There is a series of records which represent Him as one
of ourselves, and even as
claiming to be the Refuge of the weary because He could say,
I am meek and lowly in
heart;
1
9. We complete the chain, thus feebly held and traced, when we
point to the inexpressible
influence of the Savior’s character, both while He was upon
earth and since He has gone
into heaven If He came down to this world, the Eternal Son in
the flesh, and delivered
these credentials of power and goodness, and died for us as the
Incarnate Lover of our
souls, we might expect that His Divine-human ascendency over men
would be supreme
and permanent. No one can read the four Gospels without feeling
that the sway of Jesus
of Nazareth over those who came within the sphere of His
influence was strictly
answerable to our hypothesis. To none was He an object of
indifference; no one ever
crossed His path, or exchanged words with Him, who was not
thenceforward a different
man. It is impossible to account for His supremacy over all on
any human principle. The
narratives that record it are too artless and simple to be
suspected of depicting a mere
human hero: they have no air of embellishment, and rather
understate than exaggerate.
There is not a sentence in them that calls attention to the
character or works of Jesus as
their subject. They simply record facts, and leave those facts
to produce their own
impression. We follow the steps of the Redeemer; and mark that
His influence on all men
is precisely what the influence of God incarnate would be. If
the recorders of His life had
purposed to describe such a Being, supposing them able to form
the conception and to
execute it, they could not have better accomplished their task.
The scene with the doctors
and His parents in the Temple, the conclusion of the discourse
on the mountain, the
testimony of those sent to entangle Him, the various accounts of
His colloquies with His
disciples, occasional intercourse with individual strangers, and
controversies with the
malignant Jews, with the solemn pathos of awe which He inspired
into every person who
had to do with His death, all conspire to prove that the Jesus
of the Gospels is always
consistent with His claims to be the Incarnate Son of God.
Never man spake like this
Man!
HYPOTHESES EXPLAINING THE MANIFESTATION OF CHRIST.
Many have been the attempts to give an account to human reason
of the most wonderful
phenomenon in all human history: that is, to parry the force of
this argument, the most
precious and the most effectual of all that Christianity has to
bring forward. It has been
felt by friends and enemies alike, that this is the inmost
stronghold; and consequently
both the most determined assaults and the most resolute defense
have been found here. A
few remarks may be made on the methods adopted by infidelity:
the student will perceive
that the consideration of these methods will tend only to
strengthen our position.
1. It is remarkable that the Gospels, which contain predictions
of the entire future of the
Redeemer's kingdom, very accurately predict, both by word and in
act, the kind of assault
that would be directed against the name of Jesus. During our
Lord's sojourn on earth the
representatives of every subsequent speculation spent their
surmise and questioning upon
Him, and the representatives of every subsequent attack are
found confronting Him. The
colloquy between the Master and the disciples at Caesarea
Philippi throws much light on
the divided opinions of the generation. Whom do men say that I, the Son of man, am?
2. The methods of infidel resistance to the claims of Christ
have been very various; but
usually they have wavered between two sides of an alternative:
while all accept the
reality and in a certain sense the truth of the Record, some
have labored to find flaws in
this Image of holiness, or, if they have not disparaged the
Lord's character, have aimed to
prove that it exhibits nothing beyond human attainment; while
others, despairing of this,
and leaving His character untouched, have made it a picture
drawn by the enthusiasm of
His disciples vying with each other in laying on the Picture
touches of perfection. What
more has to be said definitely on these points will be only
briefly indicated: reverence
imposes a restraint as to the former class; and future
discussion of the Person of Christ
will introduce much that might otherwise be said on the latter.
THE PERSONAL CHARACTER OF JESUS.
Our Lord's personal character, whether in itself or in relation
to His mission, has been
brought into controversy from the beginning: but with very
different subordinate objects,
and on very different principles. Generally, the assault has
been negative or positive:
either the absolute sinlessness of Jesus has been denied, or
some positive moral
impeachment has been ventured on.
1. Negatively, it has been asserted that the sinlessness which
Christianity imputes to its
Founder is simply and absolutely an impossibility. Concerning
this assertion it is
enough to say that it pays an unconscious tribute of high
importance to the fact that our
Savior’s claim to be, in virtue of His Divine personality,
eternally and essentially what
His servant calls Him,
Separate from sinners.
2. Positively, the elements of our Lord's character have been
analyzed, and found to be
wanting in some attributes essential to perfection. This is a
chapter in our Apologetics
which the Christian mourns to approach, and would fain make very
brief. He can see no
spot in the Lamb of God; and the more he studies the character
of his Master the more
fully persuaded is he that it embodies all perfection. But many
who say that they are
dispassionate critics come to a different conclusion. The
Savior’s asperity against His
enemies; His avowed indifference to ascetic practices, and
disrespect to the conventional
morality which would separate a Rabbi from convivial assemblies
and prevent his
numbering women among his disciples; His recoil from sufferings
and from death; His
vacillation during the last days of His life; the bitterness of
the final Woes uttered before
He left His people; these are features in which—by recent
English Infidelity, to its
disgrace—He has been counted less great than some of His own
disciples. But there is no
difficulty in answering these objections. As to the Lord's
indifference to the conventional
ethics of the time, it is enough that we adopt His own defense.
As the Lord of the Sabbath
He relaxed the prescriptive observances which had clustered
around the day; as the Lord
of the Temple He acted there as men did not generally act; and
as the Lord of all
proprieties He made Himself the Friend of publicans and sinners.
Moreover, as His
morals were well known to be strict in principle co the verge of
rigor, it was His good
pleasure to show in practice that the wisdom which cometh from
above is justified of all
her children: that her severity is not asceticism and her
abstracted-ness from created
things is not indifference to the welfare of mankind. The Savior
did indeed bow under the
burden of His unfathomable Messianic sorrows, and His human part
shrank from the
bitterness of that death which was prepared for Him. But to
shrink from death is not
necessarily to fear it: the Redeemer only paid a tribute of
salutation to the enemy whom
He came to destroy. Moreover, his eyes must be holden indeed who
does not perceive
that in Gethsemane, as distinguished from Calvary, the question
was of something
infinitely more than death. On the cross, in the presence of
multitudes of witnesses, no
infirmity is betrayed for a moment: in the garden before the
cross there is a most
mysterious and incomprehensible struggle of the Incarnate
Redeemer which points to the
sacrificial endurance of the visitation of Divine justice for
the sins of the world. This was
not the sinful fear of dying: witness the words, My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto
death!
As to the last impeachment, our Lord is the perfect Counterpart
and Representative of the
Old-Testament Jehovah. As He said, Ye believe in God, believe also in Me,
HYPOTHESES AS TO JESUS AND CHRISTIANITY.
As it respects the public appearance and work of the Founder of
Christianity, the
argument is turned against our Faith in many ways. It may be
well to glance rapidly at
the; stages through which the assault generally travels, or
rather at the various restingplaces
where the spirit of unbelief halts.
1. The first hypothesis reduces Jesus to the level of the other
great reformers of mankind,
assigning Him it may be the first place:
Suffice that he led captive the whole world at his will; and for
some unexplained reason
was more successful than any before him had ever been. The
peculiarity of this
hypothesis is that it treats the Founder of Christianity with
great respect, and in fact has
been accepted by many who accept the Christian revelation as
from God: a Divine
economy but without a Divine Head. But it is utterly inadequate
to explain the Savior’s
own testimony to the nature of His mission; and is therefore at
best a great unreality. He
Himself utterly disavowed it. From the beginning to the end of
His public teaching He
separated Himself from other human teachers as summarily as He
separated Himself
from other children of Adam. Although the words all that ever came before Me are
thieves and robbers
2. A second hypothesis makes Jesus a Jewish fanatic, who was
inspired by an intense
study of the ancient documents and legends of Judaism, formed
during his silent youth
the amazing scheme out of which Christianity sprang, kindled his
own enthusiasm in the
hearts of a few others whose natures he could read as he read
Simon's, came to believe in
himself as the creation of his own enthusiasm, cast all upon the
hazard of a great
experiment, and at length paid the penalty of his daring. But a
single glance at the awful
tranquility and reasonableness of the Lord's character at once
dispels this illusion. An
enthusiast He was, beyond any that ever lived: He was the second
Adam, hungering and
thirsting for what the first Adam had lost; both His anger and
sorrow at the effect of sin,
and His eagerness to redeem the world, sprang from His supreme
charity. All the glorious
enterprises of Christian love of souls have been only rills from
the ocean in Him. But a
fanatic He was not, nor is there one trace of fanaticism in all
the narratives concerning
Him. Those who read the Gospels in the light of the Old
Testament, and with sufficient
knowledge of Hebrew customs, will see no traces of religious
frenzy in the acts of Jesus.
It was no more than a meet tribute to His own honor and the
honor of His own Father that
He cleansed the Temple: that is, the outer court and approaches
of it, where alone the
guilty traffic took place, and where such an act of zealotry as
His would require only
authority to sanction it:
By what authority doest Thou these things? and who gave Thee
this authority?
3. So far we have been considering what arguments may be urged
against the Divine
origin of Christianity as represented by its Head. But these
have had little success.
Accordingly, the attack has been more generally directed against
the documents of the
Faith: and elaborate theories have been devised to account for
the Author of Christianity
without any special reference to Himself or His own character.
These are sometimes
dignified by high-sounding names, and have had much more
attention than they deserved.
By whatever names known they are simply variations on the
central theme that the
Christian religion is a remarkable development under favoring
circumstances of a
fortunate germ. This germ could not, however, have developed
without the help of the
early adherents of Jesus, who are supposed, in every form of the
hypothesis, to have
raised the superstructure—for the figure must now be changed—of
the Christian system
on the foundation of the name of Jesus: that name being supposed
by some to have been
merely the centre of legendary accretions, by others the symbol
or expression of a
national Messianic myth, and again by others as the watchword of
opposite parties in the
early church, in the interests of which the Gospels were
invented, thus creating a
Christendom that forgot the true meaning of the name Jesus,
being the expression only of
theories or tendencies.
(1.) First comes what may be called the Legendary Hypothesis of
Christianity. It simply
assigns to it an origin which requires no more than a slight
nucleus of reality in the
person of Jesus and His personal influence of word and work: the
industrious enthusiasm
of His followers invented all the rest. This method of
accounting for the Christian
economy is applied to it in common with the whole scheme of
revelation and all the
supernatural events and wonderful histories of the Bible. In
fact, it is the normal and
necessary argument of unbelief in the Divine conduct of the
universe generally, and of
human affairs in particular. It is based on a philosophy,
falsely so called, which makes the
religious sentiment merely an accident of human nature, either
its embellishment or its
disease as the case may be. It supposes that the universal
instincts, traditions, and
religious records of mankind are merely the produce of
imagination under a special
influence, for which no account can be given. In particular, it
assumes that the entire
fabric of the Bible is a tissue of the national legends of a
people smitten more than most
others with the religious phantasy. With the application of the
notion of legend and
invention to the Bible generally we have not now to do: save so
far as its utter futility in
the case of the Gospels discredits its value in regard to all
revelation. As to the history of
Jesus it is hard, inexpressibly hard, to believe that so
compact, affecting, and heavenly a
narrative could have been made up of the floating traditions of
Galilee and Judea. It is
enough to point to the inexpressible air of reality suffused
over the accounts, their pure
and childlike simplicity, the self-forgetful-ness of the
writers, their impartiality in
recording what showed the weakness as well as what showed the
strength of the great
Hero of their narrative, the transcendent Picture drawn so
absolutely beyond invention,
and the natural flow of the narrative into the current of later
history which cannot be
assigned to legend.
(2.) The Mythical Hypothesis is but a modification of the
former: more seemingly
dignified but not more rational. The myth may be defined as the
vesture in which great
national ideas have, from generation to generation, clothed
themselves by a certain
necessity of human development, and without the concurrence of
any conscious
legendary invention. Undoubtedly the myth, muthos, means the product of fancy but not
the product of falsehood. Every race has had its great illusion.
The hope of a coming
deliverer has been bright in the expectation of every people,
especially of every people
whose history has been, like that of the Jews, calamitous. The
Messiah had been for ages
predicted and expected among them, especially since the
Captivity. The Messianic idea
was the great myth which was realized from time to time. When
the Roman oppression
was at the worst the idea took form in many persons; but that of
Jesus was the fairest. He
was only the resultant of many forces springing from the common
expectation. His
disciples made him the centre of their unconscious but necessary
creations; and thus only
embodied the supreme Judaic fiction. This hypothesis hardly
merits refutation. It is
utterly inconsistent with the facts. The Jesus of Christianity
and the Christianity of Jesus
did not spring up in poetry by which a nation expressed its
hopes: the nation as such
disavowed the whole. It was undeniably a very small company who
were responsible for
the form of the new revelation. The hypothesis must be applied
to the plain,
straightforward, and earnest circle of the Apostles. On the one
hand, it in some sense
lowers them to the level of childish dreamers; on the other, it
ascribes too much to their
mythologic and creative faculty, which is thus supposed to have
invented one of the most
elaborate systems of belief known to man. The four Gospels and
the Acts and the Epistles
are not composed of the stuff that myths are made of. They are,
or profess to be, clear
history, and doctrine based upon the history; with reasoning of
the severest kind binding
the whole together. Legends and myths are after all impalpable
things: Christ and
Christianity are hard realities.
(3.) The most popular theory among philosophical opponents of
Christianity in its perfect
form makes it the result of conflict among various parties in
the Christian Church.
Those who hold it may or may not accept the idea of a mission
assigned by Providence to
Christ: they may or may not believe in God. Generally they leave
that matter
undetermined. But there are two parties at two opposite extremes
who have their
specific notions as to the person of Jesus. The one hold Him to
be the temporary
expression of the eternal incarnation by which the Pantheistic
God is for ever evolved in
consciousness; the other hold Him to be the simple expression of
a human ideal. But all
agree that the system contained in the New Testament sprang up
from a union of many
opposite, or of two chief, tendencies: hence it is sometimes
called the hypothesis of
Tendency. It would be scarcely necessary to examine this were it
not that it has been
by far the most influential theory in the attempt to harmonize
the various books of the
New Testament. It assumes that Jesus lived and taught and died;
but that no record of His
history was thought of until far into the second century. Then
arose gospels or memoirs
with many aims or designs. Those which merely gratified an
unsanctified curiosity found
no permanent credit, and are now preserved only as relics. Some,
however, were written
in the interest of a Judaic Gospel, and of them St. Matthew
takes the lead: some sentences
preserved by him, and by him alone, might seem to make Jesus no
more than a zealous
assertor of the perpetuity of Judaism. Others were written in
the interest of a Gospel for
all the world, and of these St. Luke takes the lead: some of the
most touching parts of his
work introduce the heathen as receiving the glad tidings.
Meanwhile, the hand of the
partisan is to be found here and there and everywhere cunningly
interpolating his own
view: making the author whom he transcribes and whose text he
corrupts speak a
language inconsistent with his views. Accordingly, critics of
this school have a reason to
give for every various reading, and their only perfect text is
that in which all writers
absolutely agree. But there is another and more interesting
application of the hypothesis,
which might with more propriety be termed the
There is not a page of the New Testament where may not be found,
either in letter or in
spirit, the evangelization of the world. The simplicity of the
history, both of the
coincidence and of the divergence of Christianity and Judaism,
forbids the acceptance of
this notion that the idea of Jesus was perverted by Paul. The
Pauline Christ does not
differ from the Petrine or the Johannaean. It is St. Paul who
calls Him a Minister of the
circumcision;
1
SUMMARY.
1. Our Lord in delivering to His people the Faith delivers it,
so to speak, with His own
hand, and His own Person is His highest credential. He is the Author and Finisher of
the Faith.
Jesus is His own Interpreter, and His own Apologist: the Sun in
the moral firmament that
needs no other proof than that it is a pleasant thing to see the
light. This great argument
should be the helmet and breastplate of the Christian,
especially of the Christian minister.
It gives immense corroboration to all other defenses; abates the
strength of every form of
opposition; and consummates and crowns the whole system of
Christian apology. Other
series of evidences may convince the judgment, but this central
one gives rest to the
heart. Come unto Me, all
ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest,
2. Doubtless, this appeal—which as a whole is unique in the
Gospels—was not limited to
those whose minds were troubled with perplexities as to the
truth. But certainly they
were included. We find the Savior often referring to the
embarrassments of the age in
which men's thoughts were directed to the great Messianic
expectation and they
mused in themselves. Himself being the Christ, and knowing full
well the thoughts of all
hearts, He felt the most profound sympathy with the struggles of
those who came to Him
for the solution of their doubts. We may be sure that His
promise of rest was given to
such men as were feeling their way to Himself through a
multitude of prejudices and
difficulties which it is hard for us to estimate. We are apt to
forget that He was not only
the Friend of publicans and sinners, but the Friend of doubters
also. The more carefully
we examine the accounts of His intercourse with men, the more
certainly we find that the
difficulties in the way of their faith were always present to
His thoughts. We plainly see
and hear how solicitous He was to vanquish unbelief and win the
hearts of all. But this
great apostrophe to disquieted minds and the great promise of
rest teaches us that He
Himself has no argument more mighty and more influential than
the study and emulation
of His own character:
That I am meek and lowly of heart.
1
THE INFLUENCE OF CHRISTIANITY.
Christianity in the world is its own permanent apology. Its
credentials have been
presented to mankind from the beginning in the slow but sure
accomplishment of the
Divine purpose which it proclaims. To this it made its appeal in
Apostolic days, and to
this it makes its appeal now: what religion should accomplish in
the free spirit of man
personal or individual and social or collective the Christian
religion has done and is
doing. In one sense this is the most plain and palpable among
the evidences of the Faith;
in another sense it is one of the most difficult, inasmuch as
the many obvious and
reasonable objections which arise and demand to be considered
are not always easily to
be refuted. The best method of exhibiting this line of argument
is, to state clearly what
the claims of Christianity, as a power, are, and what they are
not; then to point to the
proof that it has answered and is answering its ends,
notwithstanding the facts that may
be urged to the contrary; and to show that every opposing or
rival system has either been
utterly powerless, or is slowly confessing its defeat.
THE AVOWED AIM OF CHRISTIANITY.
The key-note of this method of demonstrating the truth of
Christianity is found in St.
Paul's assurance that Christ in His Gospel is the power of God, and the wisdom of
God.
1. The Gospel, making foolish the wisdom of this world,
professes to impart perfect truth.
The wisdom in St. Paul's sentence is what our Savior meant when
He said, I am the Way,
1
2. Again, the system of Christianity proclaims that it brings to
mankind generally, which
of course in this matter is also man kind individually,
deliverance from spiritual evil: that
is, from the consequences of transgression by a provision for
righteousness and from the
consequences of separation from God by a provision for
sanctification to Him and His
service. These two, it will be observed, are very closely
conjoined, so as to form one idea
dikaiosúnee te kaí hagiasmós.
If the infidel spirit asks how sin should reign in spite of an
atonement that has put away
sin, the answer is twofold: first, evil does not absolutely
reign in the world, as will be
hereafter shown; and, secondly, the claim of the Gospel is not
to deliver every man by a
physical necessity or despotic application of power, but
everyone who uses its provisions
as an infallible remedy abundantly supplied.
3. The religion of Jesus professes to redeem the world of
mankind or the race of Adam
from all its evil: to be set for the healing of the nations.
4. Such are the claims, and with such qualifications, for which
alone the religion of Jesus
is answerable. In an argument which pleads its effects and
results we are bound to take
Christianity according to its own profession. It does not claim
to be an instrument in the
hand of absolute omnipotence: providing a heavenly Man or a
Divinity in man who
should first instruct the race in duty, then go down to the pit
where its past generations
were gathered, and rescue them; then send forth His influence to
abolish sin, either in this
world by moral teaching or in the next by purgatorial
discipline; and, finally, put an end
to all the evil that could not otherwise be removed. Neither is
that the Gospel which
Christ preaches, nor could we well apologize for it if it were.
Be that as it may, the
Christianity which it is our business to defend by showing its
own credentials is of a very
different character. It professes to be the sole instructor of
mankind: but only in
religious truth, and only through a word which a Divine
Interpreter must explain. It
promises to save men from their sins: but only through such an
atoning provision on
behalf of all as each must appropriate for himself. It engages
to emancipate our world
from all its evils; but only as that world is created anew in
Christ, and made up of
individuals who receive His salvation. If the opponents of
Christianity forget the
freedom of man's will, and the moral character of the influence
religion brings to bear
upon it, then they contend against a religion which we are not
anxious to defend.
CHRISTIANITY HAS FULFILLED ITS MISSION.
It may be confidently asserted that the Christian Faith has made
good its glorying,
whether we look generally at its influence in the world, or at
its specific triumphs under
the several heads already adverted to as the substance of
Apostolical apology.
THE DIVINE WISDOM IN THE GOSPEL.
That Christianity has introduced into the world a system of
doctrine worthy to be called
Divine is the plea itself sets up, and one that may be
sustained: in fact, it alone has a
system of doctrine. All must admit that its exhibition of truth
is at least the most compact
and perfect the world has ever known: this must be allowed even
by those who demur to
many of its individual dogmas. Remembering that the Christian
Religion means both its
Testaments, that which it received and that which it created, we
may say that it presents a
body of professedly authoritative teaching on all subjects of
interest to mankind, —
ranging from heaven to earth, from earth to things under the
earth, and thence back to
heaven again, —in comparison of which all other teaching that
belongs to the race is but
as legend and fable. It is no exaggeration to affirm that
whatever great fundamental truths
are found in other systems come in a nobler form and in a more
consistent connection
from the lips of Jesus and His Apostles. There are doubtless
many great spiritual ideas
held by the Eastern Religions especially in common with the
Gospel. But in the Gospel
they are released from those appendages which almost distort
them out of recognition;
and, what is more than that, they are taught as parts of one
vast and literally infinite circle
of truth the centre of which is God. Although the outermost
circumference of this circle is
nowhere, its inner circumference, which comprehends strictly
human doctrines, is clearly
defined and traceable all round, without any arc of
indistinctness. It is the compactness,
completeness, and consistency of the Evangelical system of truth
that sustains its claim to
be the wisdom of God. But the argument—so far as it is
argument—will be better
exhibited by considering what may be said in opposition.
1. It would hardly be a fair objection to the Christian system
of teaching that it is, as a
whole, beyond the grasp of the human intelligence. Man's
faculties are limited, and
cannot expect to understand all the mysteries of religion. We
know that we are
encompassed about with innumerable worlds, which are but parts
of the universe; but
beyond our own planet we know little even of physical nature:
how can we expect to
understand the things that pertain to spirit and the God of
spirits? Whatever truth is, it
must at all points transcend our capacity. But it may be urged
that many of the doctrines
of Christianity are inconsistent with reason, or opposed to its
primary laws of thinking:
indeed, this is even charged against all the fundamental and
peculiarly Christian
revelations of truth. The Holy Trinity, that in the necessary
unity or soleness of the
Divine essence there are three Personal Subsistences; the
creation of the physical
universe and the beginning of limited existence; the probation
and fall of spirits for ever
unsaved and of redeemed mankind, as involving the dependence of
an Infinite Being on
contingent events; the Incarnation of the Eternal Son of God,
one Person in two natures
as distinct as Infinite and finite can be; and the vicarious
sacrifice of that Divine-human
Person for the race of man; the vast contrast between this
insignificant world and the
price of its redemption; the doctrine of original sin as
infecting the race, and yet virtually
atoned for .at the beginning or before it began its course, as
actually after many ages
expiated at the cross, and nevertheless eternally punished in
many:—these are but
specimens of 'doctrine absolutely essential to the Christian
system which are said to
militate against the first principles of human thought.
Similarly, the entire record of the
providential government of the world with which these doctrines
are bound up, especially
some of the more wonderful facts of Scripture, such as the
series of stern Divine interventions
and judgments in the old world and the prophecies in the New
Testament of yet
sterner to come, excite the rebellion of human thought, which
measures the unknown
God by a standard of its own. Against this class of objections
to Christianity there is no
other argument than that which Christianity itself uses in the
Scriptures of the New
Testament. Both the Master and His Apostles speak as perfectly
aware that they
announce things utterly beyond human comprehension and things
which seem to
contradict reason. Their reply to every objection is, that the
whole system of Divine truth
is beyond and above mere human criticism; in fact requiring a
special faculty, and that
faculty to be specially illumined from above. Here was the force
of our Lord's appeal to
Nicodemus, who was perplexed by one of the seeming paradoxes of
the new religion: If I
have told you earthly things, and ye believe not, how shall ye
believe, if I tell you of
heavenly things.
He may also appeal to the instinctive hope of an equalizing and
reconciling hereafter and
that future solution which is reserved for the vindication of
the ways of Providence. But,
after all that may be said, those who defend the Faith must be
content to use an argument
which man in his irrational pride despises: the argument that
imitates the Bible and
refuses to argue with one who will not accept more than he can
understand. Christianity
imposes a doctrinal as well as an ethical cross. In many cases,
the burden of the Faith is
the chief ethical cross: that of which our Lord said, speaking
of the mysteries committed
unto Himself for babes:
Take My yoke upon you and learn of Me!
2. The history of heresy in Christendom, the manifold
perversions of doctrine within the
Church, and the endless diversities of opinion among believers
themselves, are pleas of
which much use has been made. It cannot be denied that every
truth has been perverted,
and that almost every truth has been denied, among the
communities professing to hold
the Head; and, more-over, that the same documents have been and
are still made the
standard of appeal by maintainers of very opposite opinions on
some most important
points. But this undoubted fact is, on the whole, rather in
favor of the Christian system
than to its prejudice. Religious truth is not like truth
mathematical. It is probationary,
and does not command assent. Had it been otherwise it might have
banished every error
from the world in the course of one age. But it has the entire
strength of sin and sinful
prejudice against it; and those whose lives it cannot reform
would fain reform its
teaching. The Wisdom of God in the Gospel has ever waged,
according to its own
prediction, a double conflict: against errors in the world
without, and against the foes of
its own household. To obviate the argument that might and would
be found in the
unfaithfulness of the professors of His religion, our Lord has
left on record His own
testimony that many false
prophets shall rise and shall deceive many.
1
THE RELIGIOUS POWER OF PERSONAL CHRISTIANITY.
The effects of Christianity upon the character of him who
heartily embraces it, and yields
to its personal discipline, most abundantly confirm its claim to
be a religion provided by
God for man. It offers, through the atoning mediation of Christ
accepted by faith, a
perfect deliverance from the sense of guilt, and a perfect
system of education for holiness.
These are the elements of a salvation needed, and equally
needed, by all mankind: the
universal cravings of the race have been known to seek them as
long as the history of
man has been known. On these two great necessities hang all the
obligations of religion.
It must meet these, or it is useless: and. if it truly meets
these, then it leaves nothing
wanting. New Christianity in all its doctrinal and ethical
teaching keeps those two
supreme demands in view. It makes everything, as it were,
subordinate to them. It professes
to show every man living the Way of Peace and the Way of
Holiness: the method
by which he may obtain knowledge of the remission of his sins,
and full deliverance from
the sinfulness of his nature. It promises to every believer a
conscious union with his God:
the power of a Divine life within making him happy and holy and
fit for fellowship with
the company of heaven. The testimonies of Scripture on these
subjects are confirmed by a
cloud of innumerable witnesses in the history of mankind,
beginning with the Biblical
records and continued to this day. Against this evidence of the
truth of Christianity as
against every other many things may be urged.
1. It may be said that this kind of argument is altogether
subjective, and begs the
question. That the Christian religion makes such a claim is
evident, and also that many
have supposed themselves to be living witnesses of its truth;
but that all such sup posed
experience is or may be the result of delusion, or of
imagination, or of strong faith in an
idea which goes far towards accomplishing its own will. Now the
effects produced by the
Gospel in those who have entirely surrendered themselves to its
sway have been such as
no imagination could produce. Multitudes have felt relief from
the burden of a guilty
conscience, either gradually or suddenly imparted, which has
been to them as if, in the
language of Jesus, they had
passed from death unto life;
2. It may be said further that the average lives of professors
of the Faith from the
beginning have not sustained this argument: that the Gospel
failed when it was first sent,
accompanied by miraculous aids; that it then elevated only a
very select number; and that
its spiritual transformations and triumphs have been
comparatively few from the very
first, so few that they are fitly named the elect. Here again
the apologist has little to say.
He must admit that our religion has waged war against a strong
power in human nature,
and that this has been often a wavering or a failing war, even
among its best professors.
But if we grant that the influence of Christianity is moral only
and not physical, there is
no argument as against its own Divinity in its comparative
failure. The earliest prophecies
in the New Testament predicted precisely what has taken place;
while they also assure us
that the triumph of the Gospel shall prove hereafter to have
been exceedingly great: much
greater indeed in every age than the eye of man could discern.
3. But the plea most earnestly urged against this argument is
this, that the best effects of
Christianity have been produced by other systems either
independent of it or contrary to
it. Almost all the so-called natural religions of older or of
more recent times have names
to present which are thought not to suffer in comparison with
the saints of Christendom.
The Eastern faiths have a wonderful catalogue both of ascetic
and of mystic devotees;
and the Greek and Roman philosophies, — which have gloried in
such men as Socrates,
Seneca, Marcus Antoninus, —are not behind them. This is a plea
that it is not hard to set
aside, although the method of doing so may seem somewhat
bigoted. First, no true
advocates of our Faith deny that godliness has existed outside
of direct revelation. The
early apologists of the Faith were wont to dwell much upon what
they called the
4. Finally, it is said, as already intimated, that this is an
argument in a circle. We assume
that Christianity is true because it produces certain effects
which itself only declares to be
Divine. Nor can we altogether disavow this. The evidences of the
Faith are of necessity
deeply infected with the Petitio Principii. From beginning to
end the New Testament
refers to the effects of its own proclamation of the Gospel as
being produced by God. It
accustoms the individual believer—and to the individual
reference is now made—to look
for and to be content with the testimony of the Divine Spirit,
concerning Whom and His
influence it asserts, He
that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself.
CHRISTIANITY RENOVATING THE WORLD.
The world is under a manifest process of deliverance from all
the evils that weigh upon it
as the fruit of sin. The pledge j given by our Lord in that
first sermon at Nazareth has so
far been redeemed that we may with confidence predict that it
will be redeemed in full.
1. It is, alas, a too obvious plea that the organization of
Christianity itself has been to a
very great extent flagrantly corrupt. Very soon—to put the
counterplea in its worst
aspect—the religion of Christ, or rather the outward form of it
in the world, fell under
temptation. Errors crept in which were all the more perilous,
and all the more
humiliating, because they sprang from corruption of the noblest
principles of the faith. It
is not necessary to enumerate, what it is impossible to deny,
that the Church which
should reform the world seemed unable to keep herself pure. This
plea cannot be
answered without humiliation that it should be so, and
thankfulness for the confidence we
have that the foundation
of God standeth sure.
2. But a still more serious difficulty here arises. It is urged,
and has been urged in all
ages, that the supposed remedial economy of the Gospel is
either, on the one hand,
arbitrarily under the sovereign and elective control of God, or,
on the other, dependent on
the free agency of man: in either case, too slow and partial to
be a real and effectual relief
of the miseries of mankind as such. Perhaps no objection to the
Christian scheme has
weighed more with thoughtful minds than this. It seems hard that
a Divine scheme for the
rescue of a world should in any sense suffer defeat, or be slow
in its processes and partial
in its operation. Of mere human systems this might be expected;
but surely not of the
system which is said to declare both the wisdom and the power of
God. The facts
themselves are to the most cursory consideration very
embarrassing. The countless
multitudes of the descendants of Adam have been only slightly
touched by the Gospel:
comparatively few have even seen the tree whose leaves are for
the healing of the
nations, and still fewer have put forth their hands to it. What
can be said to these things?
Scarcely anything but what the Scripture itself says on this
very subject. The delay of
Christianity to accomplish its mission, while the dying
generations of men wait for it, is
indeed a mystery unfathomable; but it is no argument against the
Christian Faith to those
who remember that it is one branch of an infinite scheme, every
department of which is
oppressed or glorified by the same mystery. And those who
believe that the Creator
works by a law of evolution that required numberless ages for
the preparation of the
earth, and in a long series of developments before man was
reached, ought not to rebel
against the slow process of man's redemption. There is no reply
but the appeal to the
unfathomable mystery that surrounds our being on every
conceivable hypothesis. Those
who reject Christianity because it does not search to the bottom
and expound the enigma
of life are not wise: it at least goes immeasurably farther than
any other philosophy. We
cannot with our present faculties, or at any rate with our
faculties in their present stage of
discipline, reconcile the inscrutable counsel of God, on the one
hand, and the profound
abyss, on the other, of human control over human destiny.
Meanwhile the Christian
economy is most certainly accomplishing the redemption of the
human family; there is no
other force in the world that even aims at this. We may predict
that it will make an end of
sins, and bring in everlasting righteousness for the race as
such. We may be sure that the
time will come when all miseries and evils that grace can
vanquish will be vanquished
and be forgotten; and that the wisdom of God will hereafter give
account of everything
that seems to impeach His goodness. As to the multitudes of
individuals whom the
Gospel seems to forget or fail to save by the way, they must be
left with God and His
Christ. Shall not the
Judge of all the earth do right?
1
THE PERSISTENCE AND PERMANENCE OF CHRISTIANITY.
Christianity has sustained its other credentials, and added a
new one, in the fact of its
early spread, its enduring life, and its outliving every form of
opposition. Its triumph over
all the assaults of its foes as well as all the contingencies of
time was predicted by our
Lord for the encouragement of His disciples, when He first
announced the foundation and
destiny of His Church. The earliest use of the term is very
suggestive in this light: Upon
this rock I will build My church; and the gates of Hades shall
not prevail against it.
THE EARLY SPREAD OF THE FAITH.
The history of the early victories of Christianity is a strong
enforcement of its claims. As
a religion it had everything against it: so decisively against
it that, on the supposition of
its being one more new cults introduced by a human innovator,
or, as St. Paul says, but a
man's covenant,
Nothing in its relation to Judaism was favorable: the new Gospel
was a miserable disappointment
to the Jewish people: its proclamation of a crucified Messiah
was unto the
Jews a stumbling block.
1. Against this it is urged that the power of a great idea fitly
represented has, in every age,
swayed mightily the minds of men, and that Christianity was only
one more instance
and not really more influential than some others. Something in
the state of the world
predisposed it for the peculiar idea of redemption introduced by
Jesus and His Apostles;
nor is it necessary—the argument runs—that we should know the
peculiar secret. But it
may be absolutely denied that any system of religious thought
has ever commanded all
kinds of people and excited such a perfect devotion. Brahmanism
and Buddhism and
the other Eastern religions never even pretended to be forces
for the world; and though
they have long existed they are tending towards extinction, and
the Nirvana of one of
them is written on all. Mohammedanism has lived by the truth it
borrowed from the
Bible, and been spread only by secular force: it has indeed
ruled a large portion of the
globe; but it has long ago lost its missionary character.
Christianity in all respects
stands alone. Of course, there is no demonstrative force in the
mere argument of success;
nor would there be, if success had been much greater. But at
least it may be said that in
connection with other pleas this has great force: apart from a
Divine power, there is no
mystery in the religion of the Christ greater than its early
triumphs.
2. But, although there was much external might to oppose the
spread of Christianity, it
has been argued that there was much within it naturally to
further its diffusion. A subtle
case has been made out of the concurrence of fortunate
circumstances: such as the pure
and vehement zeal of the Christians, their new doctrine of a
future life, the miraculous
powers attributed to them, their austere morals, the union and
discipline and vigor of the
commonwealth. But it is obvious that this style of argument does
in reality pay a high
tribute to the new Faith, while it has little force as a human
explanation of its triumphs.
The reasoning unconsciously points to that very Finger of God
which it aims to withdraw
from human affairs, if not to abolish altogether.
THE CONFLICT WITH JUDAISM.
1. Judaism was the first enemy that Christianity encountered,
and has been in all ages the
most virulent if not the most formidable. Its opposition had
this peculiarity, that it was
manifested against the Founder of the Faith: in fact, it was the
only human and visible
opponent that He met upon earth. He came unto His own and His own received Him
not.
1
2. During the early ages there was a fierce polemic kept up
between the Christians and
the Jews. At first it seemed as if a compromise would be
affected. A considerable body of
Jewish converts received Jesus as the Messiah, but only as the
greatest of the prophets,
and as raised up for the ancient people: others being admitted
to these privileges only by
complying with their rite of initiation, and by binding
themselves to keep the law. But
when that expedient failed, and the Christianity which had its
final expression in St.
Paul's writings gained the ascendancy, it was bitterly opposed
by the ancient people, and
all the more bitterly because they ascribed to Jesus and His
religion the ruin of their
polity. But Judaism the mother declined, and Christianity the
daughter triumphed. From
generation to generation there has been a ceaseless enmity
between the Israel after the
flesh and the true Christian Israel after the Spirit; but,
applying any fitting test whatever,
we must be persuaded that the Christian Messiah has gotten to
Himself the victory. His
renewed, enlarged, baptized, and perfected Judaism lives on
earth: the Judaism which
still clings to the law, and still looks for Another, lives
indeed, but is dead while it lives.
It has had its schools of learning, and names of high
excellence. It has also displayed
marvelous virtue in its charities, in its indestructible
patience of hope—though a hope
that must make ashamed—and in its meek endurance of unexampled
wrongs, often from
Christian hands. But it is, as a system, dead, twice dead; and
never can be revived.
Moreover, it is remarkable that the greatest intellects produced
by modern Judaism—
Maimonides and Spinoza, the latter especially, —have done much
to unsettle the
religious ideas of mankind.
3. But the affecting and unnatural conflict between Christianity
and Judaism is itself, and
apart from any great success, a strong argument in favor of the
Christian cause. Both
systems are world-wide in their extent; both pervade, or bid
fair to pervade, the whole
earth; but how entirely different are the issues of their
progress respectively! The one is
advancing on a career of beneficence, in the course of which it
sweeps away all systems
of idolatry, cruelty, and wrong. The other simply overspreads
the earth without any
mission or pretence of a mission: in obedience, as it were, to
some fate or absolute
compulsion. Why the Jews are diffused among the nations, more or
less dishonored of
all, and in spite of the enlightened views of the present day
never able to throw off the
universal ban that is upon them, is a mystery that can be solved
only by their own
Scriptures, now become not theirs but ours. In them, as
interpreted by the New
Testament, the reason is given so plainly that he may run who
readeth it. It goes back to
their very origin: The
Lord shall scatter you among the nations.
1
THE CONFLICT WITH HEATHENISM.
1. When Christianity appeared, the Gentile religions were both
at their best and at their
worst: they had reached the highest result of their wisdom and
art; but they had also
descended to the lowest point of their moral impotence. The
world was never so highly
cultivated, and never so ethically vile. But both the strength
and the weakness of
heathenism were armed against the new faith, which was the
object of the converging
attacks of all the forces of the Gentile world. Christianity
during the first three centuries
was of course aggressive as well as persecuted. The ten imperial
persecutions were only a
reaction of heathenism against a spiritual persecution which
itself had to endure from a
religion that spared none of its weaknesses and poured contempt
on all its errors. That
religion prospered in spite of every attack; and drove the
mightiest mythology the world
had known into the villages, whence it derived the name of
PAGANISM. That which had
been branded as an Exitiabilis Superstitio compelled before the
fourth century the
homage of all civilized nations of the empire. An attempt was
made to revive heathenism
under Julian the Apostate; but it signally failed. The great
Apologies of the second
century were never answered. And when, somewhat later, the
advocates of the ancient
and effete religions charged upon Christianity the decay and
ruin of the empire,
Augustine's treatise De Civitate and other similar writings,
silenced the argument of
heathenism for ever. Although many extraneous causes conspired
to aid the Christian
Religion in gaining ascendancy, the dispassionate verdict of
history must be that its own
internal power gave it the victory. And that power was the Holy
Ghost leading it in
triumph in Christ.
1
2. This triumph of Christianity is all the more remarkable
because as conquering it was
itself infected by many of the errors it displaced. Scarcely a
form of superstition was
overcome which did not contribute its measure of corruption to
the faith of Jesus. The
earlier and later heresies were to a great extent results of the
infusion of the old leaven of
Oriental and Classical modes of thought. Gentile philosophy was
vanquished; but its Parthian
arrows left their poison, and the final superiority of orthodox
Christianity over the
subtle errors of Gnosticism, Manichssism, Pantheistic mysticism,
with the superstitions
of materialistic sacramentalism in later days, manifested its
eternal power not less than its
original suppression of heathen error. If we take a broad and
catholic view of Christian
history in its doctrinal development we shall see that there has
been a steady, continuous
victory of truth over all forms of the Gentile lie whether
without or within the Church. No
weapon formed against it, however often reappearing, has finally
prospered.
3. No species of heathenism has ever effectually withstood the
power of the Christian
religion. Not always has its mode of assault been in harmony
with its own precepts.
Too often has its war with the old idolatries and superstitions
been in harmony with that
spirit which the Lord condemned in His sons of thunder.
4. On the whole, a calm survey of the state of the world under
the influence of the
Christian religion will lead every philosophic student of
history to the conclusion that the
Head of the Church will surely become the Master of the whole
earth. Human prophecy,
guided by the lights of the past and the analogy of the present,
must concur with
prophecy Divine in predicting this. In the struggle for
existence—if we condescend to use
current phraseology —the survival will be on the side of
Christianity. Give it time
enough and it will, even apart from supreme interpositions of
the Spirit, displace every
other system. It has annihilated many; it has transformed some;
it has touched all with the
earnest of a fundamental change. The mystery of its slow
development is in some
respects unfathomable. But its ultimate supremacy is to human
calculation the highest
possible probability: to faith in the word of revelation it is
as certain as the being of God.
And its past, present, and future triumph is its irresistible
credential.
THE CONFLICT WITH NATURAL RELIGIONS.
1. It has been already seen that the teaching of Christ is as
much a republication of the
original principles of natural religion as it is an expansion of
the religion of Judaism. It
rests upon these two as its pillars, so far as it is a religion:
that is, a system of observances
and morality and worship, which is all that religion or threeskeías, means. Christianity is,
however, a great revelation, an unveiling, of the supernatural
world or order of things;
and against all that it brings over and above the teaching of
nature there has been from
the beginning a protest. In fact, the early Apologies abound
with arguments vindicating
the religion of Jesus against those who asserted the sufficiency
of the light of nature. But
the victory over opponents of this class was then easy, as the
world had been long
accustomed to the thought of heavenly interventions. Antiquity,
which really had nothing
but the traditions of a lost revelation, or what is called
natural religion, was never without
a strong conviction that it had at the same time something much
better. It would hardly
have understood the force of any argument against a revelation
as such.
2. Perhaps the first, certainly the most influential,
development of opposition to
Christianity proceeding on this line of thought was
As it regards this last point, in which the English Deists were
followed by the destructive
critics of France and Germany, more must be said when the
documents are under
consideration. The Nationalism also that underlies the entire
system of attack must be
examined elsewhere. Meanwhile, it is enough to say that the
Christian revelation has not
only survived, it has vanquished, Infidelity or Deism. The
strength of this system—its
theistic belief in God and adherence to the principles of
natural theology—proved its
weakness. The argument of Analogy was triumphantly applied to
show that the believer
in a God Who controls the course and constitution of nature
ought not to reject the
revelation of the Bible, which introduces only a wider extension
or larger view of the
same scheme of the same God. It silenced all rational opposition
to the Christian Faith;
and the silencing of opposition is in this case victory. As our
Savior said: Ye believe in
God, believe also in Me.
1
THE CONFLICT WITH SCIENTIFIC THOUGHT.
1. Generally speaking, there has never been any opposition
between Christianity and true
science. For Christianity pro-fesses to be, and is, a scientific
presentation of the largest
and broadest philosophy ever expounded to mankind. Hence St.
Paul speaks of
oppositions of science falsely so-called.
2. This being true, it may be granted that it is true only of
genuine Christianity. There has
been in all Christian ages an unsound development of certain
doctrines against which
sound science has successfully protested. The Christian Faith
ought not to be held
responsible for the additions of men; and there can be no doubt
that it has pleased God to
rebuke by the ministry of human learning many errors which have
dimmed or perverted
the Faith. During the Middle Ages the authority of the Church
was armed in favor of
false interpretations of Scripture, and science came to the aid
of the simplicity of truth.
Christendom has had much to unlearn and much to learn through
its contact with
scientific criticism and research. It may have something yet
both to unlearn and to learn:
many most important helps for the solution of difficulties, the
removal of obstacles, and
the reconciliation of apparent contradictions in the exegesis of
Scripture, may and indeed
certainly will be afforded by the investigations of scholars and
physicists. Science
furnished the key to open some of the dark chambers of
cosmogony. And as the origin of
things is better understood since modern geology sprang up, so
also the origin of man is
and will be better understood when the chaos of modern
anthropology is reduced to
shape. If it should seem in any case that a clear result of
inductive science clashes with
Scripture or the Christian religion, it will be found, as it has
been found in times past, that
the contradiction is not real: either the Scripture and the
particular truth concerned has
been misunderstood, or the scientific induction may itself have
to be corrected, or some
yet unknown mediatorial fact must be waited for. There is much
ground common to
science and the Faith in the archaeology, chronology,
anthropology, and history of
Scripture, not yet fully explored. Meanwhile, science in this
relation is comparatively
young, and Christianity is absolutely old. The foundation of the
eternal verities that make
up the relations of God and man has never been shaken by sound
human learning and
research. On many contested points there is doubtless much
controversy. But religion has
nothing to fear; and it is a consolation, though a subordinate
one, that this is the firm
conviction of many who are at once the most profound students of
modern science and
the most humble disciples of Holy Scripture.
3. There is, however, a false science, a pseudonumos gnosis,
Skepticism, or suspended judgment on many points, may be
tolerated; though universal
skepticism is utterly alien from the spirit of the Bible, which
appeals to the common
sense of mankind against the chaos both of universal skepticism
and universal nescience.
The same may be said of Pantheistic science: though based on a
principle which has
commanded the homage of much human thought in all ages, it is
not scientific; for it
annihilates the distinctness, or at least the permanent
distinctness of the thinking subject,
whose fleeting phenomena cannot constitute knowledge.
Christianity has overcome
Pantheism : by the very fact that the noblest Pantheists, the
mediaeval, mystical, and the
German transcendental philosophers, have aimed to Christianize
their system, and, in
fact, have held it as Christians. Where it has not leaned on the
Christian doctrine of the
Trinity it has had no semblance of scientific precision:
Spinoza's mathematical system
died with himself. Positivism is the supreme delusion of the
nineteenth century:
professing to be sure and absolute science in every department,
it leaves out the endless
phenomena which revelation has taught the world, and that with
the general consent of all
true science, to call spiritual. Materialism is the modern form
of Atheism which seems to
threaten the hold of religion on men's minds. It is the last and
most uncompromising of its
enemies: never during earlier ages having risen with anything
like strength, it seems now
to be encouraged to assault the Faith by the aid of physical
science. But sound science
must, sooner or later, utterly disavow a system that abolishes
the notions of cause and
effect, of all final causes and ends, and asserts, in the face
of evidence most absolute, the
spontaneous origin of life. Most of these forms of the falsely
called science will be
considered in their appropriate place. Here it is enough to say
that they have opposed
Christianity in rain. The religion of Christ, with its earlier
and later documents, gives a
grand and consistent, though at some points most mysterious and
unsearchable,
explanation of all things. It may be said to have already
vanquished all systems and
hypotheses which are destructive only and have no positive
principles or explanations of
their own to substitute for what they take away.
THE HOLY GHOST THE LAST CEEDENTIAL.
No view of the credentials of Divine Revelation is complete
which omits a distinct
reference to the Holy Ghost, Whose special influence accompanies
the Truth as its seal,
demonstration, and assurance. This has been of necessity
referred to already, and will in
due course be more fully exhibited under other aspects and
relations. Here it is sufficient
to lay down this principle as the sum and conclusion of the
whole matter: the Spirit of
God and of Christ alone gives to all evidences their force, and
imparts to those who
sincerely consider them both the faith that believes and the
confirmation of that faith.
Moreover, though it may seem a hard saying, the secret of an
unbelieving rejection of the
Christian Revelation must be traced to an implicit or explicit
resistance of His neverfailing
and impartial testimony. The presence of the Holy Ghost promised
and pledged
and bestowed, is the last and crowning credential of the Faith.
THIS CREDENTIAL IN THE NEW TESTAMENT.
It will be necessary only to indicate the force of the
testimonies of Scripture on this
subject: testimonies forming an unbroken series, the course of
which may be easily traced
by the following leading instances of their use and application.
1. Our Lord, laying the foundation of the Faith, declares that
the Spirit of the truth should
convict the unbelief of the world: of sin, because, they believe not on Me.
He that believeth on the Son of God hath the Witness in himself.
2. It is very important, in connection with this, to remember
that the actual presence of
unbelief in the Christian revelation is referred by St. Paul
plainly and unambiguously to
the rejection of the Spirit: he tells the Corinthians, after
reminding them that ye were
Gentiles, carried away unto these dumb idols, even as ye were
led, that No man can say
that Jesus is the Lord but by the Holy Ghost,
1
ITS PRACTICAL VALUE.
This is the bare outline of a doctrine concerning the objective
and subjective testimony of
the Divine Spirit which the entire New Testament fills up. A
careful consideration of the
current of its teaching on this subject will convince all,
whether students or preachers or
defenders of Christianity, that an appeal to the never-absent
demonstration of the Holy
Ghost is their sheet-anchor for themselves and their last appeal
for others.
1. As apologists for the Religion we believe in we must remember
for our encouragement
the limits of our own obligation. St. Peter instructs the early
Christians who had, like us
their descendants, to defend their creed, that it was their duty
to be ready always to give
an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that
is in you with meekness
and fear.
If we happily succeed in disarming opposition or securing
attention or exciting the
beginnings of trust, the glory is God's: Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit,
saith
the Lord of hosts.
1
2. As preachers also in
quietness and in confidence shall be your strength.
3. As Christian men, we have to take care that we find our own
full assurance of faith in
the conscious influence of the Spirit of Christ. No theologian,
in these days of doubt and
despair of truth, can keep his soul in peace who does not so
live that his mind may be the
temple of the Holy Ghost, giving him the full assurance of understanding, to the
acknowledgment of the mystery of God,
1
Thus far we have only sketched the course that Apologetics may
take in presenting the
Credentials of the Christian Revelation generally and as such;
and as distinct from the
evidences necessary to establish particular doctrines and
particular documents. When we
have to discuss the Canon, and proceed with the separate topics
of theology, we shall find
ourselves always obliged to maintain a defensive position. The
contest is prepared at
every point. The Christian system is everywhere militant; and
some of the best evidences
of the Faith are those which arise under the several heads of
its individual dogmas, each
of which has its own cause to defend. Meanwhile the general
credentials of Christianity
prepare the way for those more detailed evidences and add force
by anticipation to the
arguments introduced to sustain both the books and the
doctrines. When the glorious
revelation as a whole is accepted, that acceptance renders the
mind more accessible to
persuasion on subordinate points, and disarms captious criticism
of documents and minor
difficulties of every kind. When the objective Christian Faith
is subjectively received by
the faith of man accepting its credentials—credentials adapted
to our probation, and
amply sufficient, as sealed by the Holy Ghost—then it becomes
comparatively easy to
proceed to the specific methods by which that Faith has been
communicated. The
consideration of those methods connects this topic with that
which now follows: in which
we descend from revelation as objective, universal and one, to
the form it assumes in
holy books. |
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