By William Burt Pope, D.D.,
THE CANON: The Divine Rule of Faith Earlier and Later History of Canon OBJECTIVE STANDARD OF DOCTRINE AND MORALS AND PRIVILEGES RATIONALISM AND TRADITIONALISM Having considered the Faith as the revelation of God in Christ accepted by man, and the Divinity of its records as insured by their inspiration, it remains that we complete the discussion of the subject by making prominent the specific character of the Bible as the Canon or authoritative Rule of Christian doctrine and practice. Two different uses of the term will suggest a division. Objectively, the body of sacred writings was determined, under the guidance of the Divine Spirit, by the application of a Canon, or rule, to which they were found to be conformed: here we shall have the Canonical Scriptures. Subjectively, under the illumination of the same Spirit, these tested Scriptures became the absolute and final standard within the Christian Church: here we shall have to consider The Rule of Faith and its interpretation as a Sacred Text. The word kanónos, signifies literally a straight rod; and metaphorically a testing rule or the organ of the critical faculty in ethics, or art, or language. It is also, in a passive sense, used to denote that which has been measured and determined. St. Paul applies the term both actively and passively in the only passages where it occurs in the New Testament. 1 In the Patristic writings it is employed with reference to the Rule of the Church, the Rule of Faith, and the Rule of Truth; and the decisions of synods were called Canons. The derivatives of Canon were applied to the Scriptures before the term itself: they were Canonized Books, Libri Canonizati. Amphilochius, in a catalogue of the Scriptures (cir. 380), first adopted the word to signify the rule, or criterion, or standard, by which the contents of the Bible must be settled. From the time of Jerome it has been current and established in both senses, the one dependent on the other.1 Gal. 6:16; 2 Cor 10:13-16. The objective Canon is the collection of all the sacred writings of the two dispensations. The Christian Church received the Canon of the Old Testament in its integrity from the Jewish, and that of the New from the Apostles, the Savior’s authority being the guarantee of both. It will be necessary first to establish these points by Scripture itself, and then to review the history of the formation of the entire Canon: examining briefly the subsequent variations of opinion as to its exact limits: both, however, only so far as they affect the Christian Rule of Faith. The Canon of the Old Testament is ratified in the New, as containing the infallible and sufficient Oracles of God for the older dispensation: thus the Hebrew Scriptures, precisely as we now receive and hold them, are authenticated, and the so-called Apocryphal books are excluded. The collection of writings now called the New Testament also give indications of what might naturally be expected, that they would in due time constitute a new and supplementary Canon consummating the former. THE OLD-TESTAMENT CANON. We have the fullest assurance that the Old Testament, as we hold it, was accepted by our Lord. He refers to the ancient distinction of The Law, Towraah, containing the Pentateuch: The Prophets, Nabiy; and The Writings or The Psalms, zamiyr, the Hagiographa. The demarcations of these three departments were not precisely defined; but sufficiently to identify our present Hebrew volume as the same which Jesus had in His Land and bade His disciples’ study. The importance of such a supreme testimony cannot be exaggerated: it may be placed, and sometimes we must place it, in the stead of many other arguments. 1. This testimony excludes the apocryphal books: the three-fold arrangement is, in fact, recognized and admitted by some of these writings themselves, which shows that they were avowedly excluded from the Canon. The term APOCRYPHA came into use in the second Christian century, to designate books of hidden origin (occulta origo), or perhaps secret authority (secreta auctoritas); and certainly with the further meaning of spurious and heretical in opposition to the accepted writings of the Church. Whatever was the precise application of the plain Greek word, it implied an absolute authority in the collection from which they were excluded, and the reason for their exclusion. The New Testament never quotes or alludes to these books. It may be said that this is not a decisive argument, as several books of the Old Testament are equally unrecognized: but it must be remembered that when the Law, or the Prophets, or the Psalms are quoted, all is authenticated that these conventional divisions were known to include. It may be urged also that the Lord does not, any more than His Apostles, specify the exact number of books contained in these divisions: especially in the last, which was the most undetermined. But we have the sufficient evidence of contemporary Hebrews to supply that deficiency.Josephus says: " We have only twenty-two books which are to be trusted as having Divine authority, of which five are the books of Moses. From his death to the reign of Artaxerxes, king of Persia, the prophets, who were the successors of Moses, have written in thirteen books. The remaining 'four contain hymns to God, and documents of life for human edification." But thus we arc led to the next point. 2. This division seems to set its seal on the means by which the Old-Testament Canon had been arranged and ratified. Our Lord assumed, what St. Paul expressed, that to the Jews, as a people, were committed the oracles of God. By accepting these Scriptures, with their extant divisions, He silently confirmed a long history, most of the details of which are lost. It is evident in the current of Biblical history that there had been a gradual collection from the beginning. The Book of the Law was deposited in the side of the ark of the covenant of the Lord. 1 This original was to be copied by every future king: and it shall be with him, and he shall read therein all the days of his life. 2 Nevertheless, Josiah had not seen it when Hilkiah the high priest said unto Shaphan the scribe, I have found the book of the law in the house of the Lord; 3 though we know not in how many hands copies might have been found. For it had been enlarged by other writings, and autographs may have been circulated by Joshua, of whom it is said that he wrote these words in the book of the law of God, 4 and Samuel, who told the people the manner of the kingdom, and wrote it in a book, and laid it up before the Lord. 5 Hence Jehoshaphat sent out his Levites who taught in Judah, and had the look of the law of the Lord with them, and went about throughout all the cities of Judah, and taught the people. 6 Proverbs also were collected; as we read of the proverbs of Solomon, which the men of Hezekiah, king of Judah, copied out. 7 One general Book seems to have been authoritative, of which the prophet spoke, Seek ye out of the book of the Lord and read. 8 But, until the Captivity, there was no distinction in the classes of writings. It was one volume that Daniel quoted, and Ezra and Nehemiah read before the people from morning until mid-day. 9 When the Jewish polity was reorganized there was a final revision. The universal tradition of the ancient Church assigned to Ezra, and the Great Synagogue, the function of arranging their Scriptures in their present form; the persecution of Antiochus, and the proscription of the sacred books, having given occasion to the fixing of the Canon. This question, however, must be studied in its appropriate literature. It may be admitted that the supposed Synagogue of Jewish tradition represents a succession of pious men from Ezra to Simon the Just, who was high priest after the death of Alexander the Great. The final revision and collection was not, on this supposition, finished in the time of Ezra. But the Savior’s authority gives a retrospective sanction to the final authentication, however it was accomplished.1 Deu. 31:26; 2 Deu. 17:19; 3 2 King 22:8; 4 Josh. 24:26; 5 1 Sam. 10:25; 6 2 Chro. 17:9; 7 Pro. 25:1; 8 Isa. 34:16; 9 Neh. 8:3. THE NEW-TESTAMENT CANON. There is no plain declaration in the New Testament that the ancient Canon was to be supplemented by another collection of books: not only is there no plain declaration, but an almost total silence on the subject. When we remember how often the Old Testament refers to the Volume which was, from age to age, in course of enlargement, it seems an anomaly that there should be no similar reference in the New. We read of the Word of truth: 1 of the truth as truth is in Jesus; 2 of the new or better Covenant; 3 never of new Scriptures, certainly never of a new volume or collection Heb. of inspired documents.But there are not wanting indications, to which reference has already been made under the Doctrine of Inspiration, that the design of the Holy Ghost included the formation of a new Canon. 1 Eph. 1:13; 2 Eph. 4:21; 3 Heb. 8:8. 1. Though the several terms by which the New-Testament Testimony writers were accustomed to describe their enlarged message do not expressly refer to a new Bible, they are such as to lay the foundation for it in due time. And it is certain that the individual writings of the Apostles were held in the congregations which received them to have equal authority with the ancient and accepted Oracles of God, and that the Catholic Church addressed by St. Peter reckoned St. Paul's writings as co-ordinate with the other Scriptures. 1 It is remarkable, further, that almost every writer gives somewhere or other a distant hint, and even more than that, of the permanent authority of his own contribution.This needs no further illustration than it has received already. Looking back now, after the Canon has been ratified, we are bound to admit that these sayings are precisely what they might be expected to have used on the supposition that they calculated on their writings being consolidated into the unity of Scripture. 1 2 Pet. 3:16. 2. No argument, however, is needed beyond that of analogy. A new covenant would require new oracles; the entire economy of the New Testament was only a resumption and continuation of the ancient plan. Christ came to fulfill the Law and the prophets, and to fulfill them by supplementing both their words and their writings. He Himself was in the new economy what He had been in the Old: the universal and omnipresent Revealer by His Spirit in His servants, the Spirit of the Christ, which was in them. 1 But He raised up a series of agents and writers who were the representatives and reproductions of those who formed the Old Testament, though with other names. They were Chroniclers, Prophets, and Lawgivers, just as of old time. There is a perfect continuity in the history of revealed truth; had its method been changed in the end of the world, the Savior would have told us of the change. The silence of the New Testament, or its partial silence, as to any change of the Holy Spirit's plan, has the force of a confirmation of the established method. As in old time the volume of the book was gradually enlarged, and not finally ratified until inspiration had ceased, so we might expect it to be with the new economy. The New-Testament Scriptures were circulated among the churches as the standard of their faith long, before the Spirit led the Church to set on them the seal of what we call canonization: to them, as to the Old Testament, all parties, orthodox and heretical, made their appeal.1 1 Pet. 1:11. The history of the completed Canon includes its gradual settlement during the first centuries, and the fluctuations of opinion in later ages. A fair consideration of these two subjects will lead to the conclusion that the same Spirit Who gave the Scriptures has watched over them, and secured their integrity. The formation of the Canon runs through the entire ante-Nicene age. The fourth century closed before the faith and critical faculty of the Christian communities added our present New Testament in its integrity to the Old, the last lingering doubt as to any of the books having finally disappeared. 1. The first thing to be noted is the prerogative of the Church in regard to this. The Apostle tells us that unto the ancient people as such were committed the oracles of God: 1 a distinct testimony of great importance, if we mark the force of the term episteútheesan, and the Proóton, which introduces the sentence. There was a close analogy between the gradual acceptance of the new body of Scripture and that of the old. The ancient Canon was not fixed until the Spirit of inspiration had retired; it was the office of the Jewish Fathers to distinguish between the authoritative books and all others; the tests by which they determined the difference were, so far as we know them, the names and known inspiration of the writers, and the traditional consent of past ages. The final ratification was brought about by the pressure of persecution directed against the sacred writings; but there ought to be no doubt that this was under the special supervision of the Holy Ghost.The parallel is so far complete. But there were some peculiarities in the case of the new collection. The Gospel was diffused over the world, and every church was the guardian of its own holy books, while every province of early Christendom had its own special selection of Scriptures; there were also numberless heresies, multiplying their spurious productions. These two circumstances tended to make the concurrence of the Christian Church in the final acceptance of the New-Testament writings a more remarkable fact than the unanimity of the Jewish Church in regard to the Old Testament. When the set time was fully come the same Spirit who closed the Old-Testament volume closed also the New. 1 Rom. 3:2. 2. The tests applied to the books circulated among the Christian congregations were very simple. The main criterion was their apostolic origin or authorization, that being the guarantee of their inspired character. In case of residual doubt, the common Regula Fidei, or rule of faith, was brought to bear, as also the testimony of the churches that held the several documents in question. It was the sure belief of the primitive Christians that the Lord gave to the Apostles alone authority to direct the faith of His Church, both by their words and by their written communications. Apostolic authorship or Apostolic authorization was all they demanded in the sacred writings: they looked simply for the signs of an Apostle, Tá mén seemeía toú apostólou. 1 Hence the writings of St. Mark and St. Luke were never even classed among the doubtful books: they were understood to have been written under the sanction of St. Peter and St. Paul. Of the genuineness of those which claimed to be directly Apostolic, and of the validity of such as claimed indirect sanction, their harmony with the common Rule of Faith, and the testimony of the individual churches, were subordinate and sufficient tests.1 2 Cor. 12:12. 3. The result was the early division of the sacred books into two classes: those which were universally acknowledged as Divinely inspired, and those which were not at first generally received. The former, the HOMOLOGOUMENA, were, before the second century closed, the four Gospels and Acts, thirteen Epistles of St. Paul, the first Epistle of St. Peter, and the first Epistle of St. John. The ANTILEGOMENA were seven: not, indeed, rejected, but doubted about, and not at once received. The reasons for this suspended judgment are evident. Some were without the names of the writers, such as the Epistle to the Hebrews. Some were written to the Christian community in general, and were current at large, under the protection of no particular church. Others were addressed to individual men, and on that account incurred suspicion. A few were opposed to the views of some portions of the Church: such as the Apocalypse and the Epistle of St. James. It must be remembered that they were not spoken against, as the term Antilegomena might seem to indicate, but held in doubt only. In later times they have been termed DEUTEROCANONICAL, their authority being counted less than that of the other books.4. There were a few small treatises that were very generally received in early times with a peculiar veneration: written, it was thought, by Apostolical men, or companions of the Apostles, such as Clemens Romanus, Barnabas, and Hernias. They were publicly read in some churches, and were copied into the earliest Codices, where they are still found, though only as appendages at the end. Their pretensions did not long survive the jealous ordeal. 5. In an altogether different class must be placed the many writings that make up the APOCRYPHAL Christian Books. Some of these were written in the interests of a Judaising Christianity, others with a precisely opposite tendency, and the remainder for the gratification of legend-loving curiosity. There were apocryphal gospels, acts, epistles, and apocalypses; but not one of them was ever found in any private or public catalogue of the sacred writings. It may be added that the apocryphal shadows of the New Testament are far inferior in ethical character to those of the Old, some of which are of the highest merit. The former, in fact, are either worthless or utterly unchristian.6. Successive synodical decisions approximated more and more closely to the catalogue of holy books which we hold. They culminated at the Council of Hippo, and, four years afterwards, at the Third Council of Carthage, then under the influence of Augustine, in the Canon of the present New Testament. The persecution of Diocletian, in the beginning of the fourth century, led to the more careful scrutiny of what had, during the whole of the century previous, been called the " Evangelicum Instrumentum;" a term used by Tertullian, who also described the whole Bible as "Totum Instrumentum utriusque Testament." Only the pressing claims of other doctrinal discussions and decisions prevented the Council of Nicaea from accomplishing what was already virtually done: the task, that is, of defining the authoritative Canon of Holy Scripture. 7. The Old-Testament Canon was accepted and confirmed, as we now hold it, by many catalogues in the fourth and fifth centuries. The Alexandrian Church, represented by Athanasius, gives exactly our list of books: a remarkable fact, when we remember that the Greek version made in Alexandria had first given currency to the Apocrypha. But the study of Hebrew had declined: the Christian Church was contented with the Septuagint, enlarged as it was by apocryphal additions. The Hebrew Scriptures were too much left to the Masorites. Hence the New-Testament Canon was earlier and more unanimously settled in Christian faith and acceptance than the Old: even the Council of Carthage admitted, though with reservation, the Old-Testament Apocrypha. LATER HISTORY OF THE CANON. Later opinion as to the Canon may be studied with advantage Modern and for warning. Its outline, which should be filled up by a History. Careful study of the literature of the subject, is as follows: 1. The question of the Canon was long an open one in the mediaeval Church. The Council of Trent, in a decree passed by a Trent, few divines in 1546, followed an example set by the Council of Florence in 1441, and included nearly all the Apocrypha among the books of Scripture: a decree contrary to the former catalogues, which therefore many later Romanist divines have attempted to soften by distinguishing, in common with many of the Reformers, between a higher and a lower canonical authority. 2. The later Greek Church has always fluctuated in opinion on this question. After many attempts to mark off the Apocrypha from the Scripture proper, it coincided with the Tridentine decision at a Jerusalem, Synod held under Dositheus, in 1672. 3. The divines of the Reformation erred greatly on the side of laxity. Luther rejected the apocryphal books from the Canon, though he admitted them for edification. He separated the Antilegomena, especially Hebrews, Jude, James, and the Apocalypse, from the rest: applying to them a subjective standard, "their treatment of Christ," in which he pronounced them faulty; while the residue contained, in his judgment, " the kernel of Christianity." The Swiss Reformers more rigorously rejected the Apocrypha; and in this they have been followed by their formularies and the Westminster Confession. The Arminians received the Scriptures in full, though free in their judgments as to authorship. The English Church in this, as in many other things, was guided by a spirit of conciliation. Its Sixth Article defines Scripture as "those canonical books of the Old and New Testament of whose authority was never any doubt in the Church;" it does not enumerate the books of the New Testament, and admits the public reading of some parts of the Apocrypha: " the other books (as Hierome saith) the Church doth read for example of life and instruction of manners, but yet doth it not apply them to establish any doctrine." The Methodist communities everywhere reject the Apocrypha altogether, in common with the many bodies that accept the Westminster Confession. Modern assaults upon the Canon are, to a certain extent, bound up with opposition to the Christian revelation generally; though they also originate a distinct branch of critical inquiry. The determination of what constitutes the canonical collection involves many questions, relating chiefly to the genuineness, integrity, and authenticity of certain particular books; the defense of which is of great importance, as the faith of the Church of Christ rests upon the unity of the Scriptures as one organic whole. THE QUESTIONS INVOLVED. 1. The broader question as to the existence of any authoritative Canon is not here involved. That is settled by the acceptance of the doctrine of inspiration: we are bound to admit the great mass of the Scriptures of both Testaments as given by God to His Church. The question is not of the Bible generally, and as a whole; only of its limits. But both in the New Testament and in the Old there are some books which, as we have seen, have not always had an undisputed place. With reference to these especially, and as to one of the points in dispute with reference to all Scripture, the preliminary question must be asked and answered. First, it must be settled that the documents we hold are from the writers and times to which they profess to belong. This is a question of their GENUINENESS; and it concerns only the documents them-selves. It asks, with regard to all the books, and especially the contested ones, whether they were written by the authors whose names they bear. Then arises the important point of their INTEGRITY: making due allowance, that is, for the petty changes and interpolations of text to which all books are liable in course of transcription. Lastly comes the question of their AUTHENTICITY. This concerns the origin of the documents, as professedly from inspired men, and containing the oracles of God. It asks whether their claims are supported by those external and internal evidences or credentials which alone can sustain so high a pretension. It is obvious that these questions run into each other: hence, the term Authenticity, and the questions which hang upon it, may be reasonably made to cover the whole ground.2. The study of this branch of theology involves the ordinary historical investigation by which literary claims are sifted.' But it is not limited to this: the Holy Spirit approves the books which are "generally received in the Church" by the impress of His secret and yet evident stamp. On the principles which we consider fundamental, these two must control each other, but the testimony of Christ and His Spirit must be supreme. (1.) Whether as it respects the Old Testament or the New, every book and every fragment of every book must undergo the ordeal. This constitutes a distinct department of study, that of Historical Criticism: one of extreme difficulty, and not to be undertaken by any student who has not the means of prosecuting it thoroughly. Whatever confidence we have in our Lord's authentication of the Old Testament, and in the Church's settlement of the New-Testament Canon, the defense of every integral portion of the Bible is a necessity bound upon the theologian by the assaults of infidelity. It is not too much to say that every man set for the defense of the Gospel ought to have at command. The arguments which prove the genuineness and authenticity of every book; or, which is the same thing, the arguments which defend it against attack. Works known as Introductions to the Bible, or Biblical Dictionaries, or Histories of the Canon, furnish these in abundance, with all the argumentation for and against. But it must be remembered that, while every book requires its defense, the leading questions in dispute are really limited to a few vital points as to each Testament. (2.) Nothing is more important than to conduct any such inquiries with a clear sense of its limitations. These are of two kinds. First, the inquiry into the genesis and gradual construction of the various pans of Scripture, especially of the Old Testament, is beset with the most formidable difficulties. Very much of the material for judgment is gone past recovery. Hence the hopeless contradictions and confusions, the helpless chaos of ever-shifting hypotheses, which are found in the writings of the modern disintegrators of the Bible. The field is to them literally one of boundless conjecture; and very often conjecture and evidence are to them interchangeable terms. Hence, also, it is evident that the defender of the Bible must not expect to be able to determine many of these questions and must be content to leave them unsettled. Secondly, we are not required, we are indeed not permitted, to engage in these inquiries as if the life of Christianity were in them. The authenticity of the Bible as a whole—which is, after all, inextricably bound up with its genuineness — involves the TESTIMONIUM SPIRITUS SANCTI, or that inward witness which it bears, and which witnesses with our spirits who read any part of it.Hence, it may be laid down as a canon for the regulation of our confidence in the Canon that the Spirit of Inspiration is Himself the Divine Witness. As our Lord has ratified to us the older Scriptures, so the Holy Ghost has ratified us, in the Church and through the Church, the new Scriptures and the Bible as a whole. Criticism must bring its human evidence; but the supreme evidence is His. When it is said, however, that the Holy Ghost bears His witness to the Bible AS A WHOLE, this must not be misunderstood. He has in a remarkable way set His seal to the individual books, and especially to those which are most contradicted. The most vulnerable parts seem most amply defended. For instance, the Mosaic origin of the Pentateuch is very fully attested by the Savior and the Apostles: if we collect the quotations and references in the New Testament we shall find that the leading outlines of the history of the Five Books can be traced there. The events before Moses are referred to on his authority. And his account of the lawgiving, the wilderness, and all its events, the ritual economy of the tabernacle, the entrance into Canaan, and in fact the entire contents of the Pentateuch are accepted as of the Mosaic age and that of Joshua. The authenticity of Daniel has been assailed, the later part of Isaiah has been given to an anonymous author, the very heart of Zechariah has been taken from his prophecies: now these are the three portions of the Old Testament which the Savior has protected, next to Deuteronomy, with the utmost care. Among the books of the New Testament there are a few which criticism keenly assails; denying their apostolic origin and their inspired or authoritative character. It would not be true to say that these give in every case more abundant internal evidence for themselves; but certainly the Holy Ghost speaks through them to every rightly disposed heart. Who can resist the appeal of St. John's Gospel, the Pastoral Epistles, and the Epistle to the Ephesians, St. James, the Epistle to the Hebrews, and the Second Epistle of St. Peter? This last document was perhaps most slowly of all admitted, for reasons easily traced; but no devout mind can read its first chapter without feeling that the writer is full of the Holy Ghost and not a forger assuming the Apostle's name, and pretending that he had been on the mount of transfiguration. Of course, this argument may be abused. But to us it is supreme as to the entire Bible which the Spirit gave to the Church.THE CANON AS RULE OF FAITH. The Canon of Scripture, as the accepted collection of sacred writings, may be objectively viewed as the Rule of Faith to the Christian Church, or the final and infallible standard of what is to be believed as necessary either to personal salvation or to the integrity of the Christian faith; and subjectively as a body of Divine documents which is to be studied with all human appliances under the teaching of the Holy Ghost THE RULE OF FAITH: SCRIPTURAL. The plenary inspiration of the Scriptures implies their supreme authority, in every possible court, and at the same time justifies our appealing to their own testimony as to the bearings and extent of that authority. They everywhere speak as the final oracle of faith, duty, and hope, and reject every kind of co-ordinate standard. This high assertion of their claims is so set forth as to harmonies with the subordinate rules of faith or confessions adopted by the several branches of the witnessing Church, and with the exercise of private judgment: the supreme safeguard of the doctrine being the presence of the Holy Spirit as the effectual and sufficient Guardian of His Word. 1. Generally, the New Testament declares itself, as the consummation of Scripture, to be the STANDARD OF FAITH. Absorbing the Old Testament, or rather coordinating itself with the Old Testament, it declares by the testimony of one of the last and greatest writers that Every Scripture inspired of God is also profitable for TEACHING 1. . . that the man of God may be perfect. The man of God is here the Christian teacher, of whom it is said that his knowledge of the ancient oracles made him wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.2 The Apostles were to be guided into all the Truth; 3 into the whole compass of truth, as the truth is in Jesus.4 Hence the closing testimony in St. Jude is to the Faith which was once delivered unto the saints: 5 redelivered by its Supreme Authority to His new and perfect Church. The doctrine of our Lord is the RULE AND CRITERION OF MORALITY, and of all human duty. The Christian faith is the Christian law, and the Christian law is the Christian faith: Christ is the end of the law for righteousness; 6 and His whole economy has for its design that the ordinance of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit. 7 He is the Way, and the Truth, and the Life: 8 the truth being here in the centre. He summed up the Apostles' future teaching as all things whatsoever I have commanded you. 9 St. Paul knows no other ethics than what had been received and heard from himself, and bids his converts walk by the same rule, or kanóni, 10, 11 as the infallible directory and test of all obligation. And the book of truth and duty is also the CHARTER OF PRIVILEGES. It was with the widest possible meaning that Jesus said, All things that I have heard of My Father I have made known unto you: 12 the whole compass of the blessings dilated on in the Acts and Epistles is only the expansion of germs given in His promise. The New Testament is the book of the covenants of promise: 13 the new covenant between the Triune God and His people, ratified by the blood of Christ, announced in His promise, and conferred by His Spirit.1 2 Tim. 3:16,17; 2 2 Tim. 3:15; 3 John 16:13; 4 Eph. 4:21; 5 Jude 3; 6 Rom. 10:4; 7 Rom. 8:4; 8 John 14:6; 9 Mat. 28:20; 10 Phil. 3:16; 11 Gal. 6:16; 12 John 15:16; 13 Eph 2:12. 2. The Scripture everywhere appeals to itself for an end of all controversy. To the law and to the testimony! 1 was the ancient word in Israel. How then shall the Scriptures be fulfilled that thus it must be? 2 By these words our Savior makes the Scriptures concerning Himself absolute in their authority. Apollos, like the Apostles, proved by the Scriptures that Jesus was Christ. 3 The Bereans were therefore more noble-minded than they of Thessalonica, because they searched the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.4 The peril of neglecting the great salvation hangs upon its having been spoken by the Lord, and confirmed unto us by them that heard Him. 5 There is a perpetual appeal from one part of Scripture to another part of Scripture: sometimes to reason, sometimes to heathen authors, sometimes to traditions; but always the Caesar to which it finally appeals is itself. The Savior refers to the Old Testament; the Apostles to Him and to them, St. Paul, in addition, to himself; and St. Peter to St. Paul. This has the force of a universal law within the Bible. And it cannot be denied that throughout the history of the Church from the very beginning all parties have implicitly or explicitly made the Word of God their last court of decision.1 Isa. 8:20; 2 Mat. 26:54; 3 Acts 18:11; 4 Heb. 2:3. 3. Every other final authority is absolutely or by implication interdicted. Nothing can be more clear than that our Lord regarded the whole sum of religion as vitiated by infidelity to Scripture. In vain they do worship Me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men: 1 where the Pharisees are a mirror in which later traditionalists are reflected. And again, Do ye not therefore err, because ye know not the Scriptures? 21 Mat. 15:9; 2 Mark 12:24.4. The supreme authority sanctions, however, other inferior standards in the form of creeds. Those Rules of Faith which were constructed from the beginning were based upon the formulas of Scripture itself: expressing in compendium the belief of the Church. But of these, in all their forms, earlier and later, the Bible is the test: the court to which they must finally be brought. This applies to creeds, catechisms, standards, and formularies of every description: of which more will be said hereafter. 5. The Rule also presupposes and harmonizes, as subordinate to itself, Public Ministerial Instruction and Private Judgment, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit. The Scriptures are the textbook of a living continuous teaching which is an ordinance of God in the congregation: this may be and has been perverted; but it is nevertheless the appointed means in the Church for the continuation of the Apostles' doctrine. Moreover, the privilege, duty, and responsibility of private judgment are everywhere declared. The prophecies of God's Word are, indeed, not of private interpretation, 1 are not solved by themselves or any private solution— idías epilúseoos ou gínetai, —and this is true of all Scripture, which is not left without the interpretation of the Spirit Who gave it. Yet all believers must prove all things: 2 not only the Bereans, in process of conversion, but all Christians are responsible for the gift of reason, regenerate and sanctified to its highest use. Both, however, require the presence of the Supreme Interpreter. He still guides the living Church into the truth, notwithstanding all appearances to the contrary; He is the teaching unction from the Holy One 3 imparted to every Christian; and the combination of the three—the sanctified individual judgment, the didactic ministry, and the Holy Spirit—gives its perfection to the whole theory of the Rule of Faith, which is one in the unity of these three. Revelation, Inspiration, Canon are also three-one in the unity of the ever-present and ever-living Spirit of the Truth. 4
1 2 Pet. 1:20;
2 1
Thess. 5:21; 3
1 John 2:20;
4 John
16:13.
RATIONALISM AND TRADITIONALISM.
There are two errors on this subject which are more or less
prevalent. Rationalism, on the
one hand, undermines the authority of God's Word: either by
rejecting it as an external
revelation, or by accepting it and making human reason the sole
arbiter of its meaning.
Traditionalism, on the other, makes the Scripture only a
standard parallel with the living
tradition of the Church. Both, though in opposite ways, take
from the Bible its dignity as
the Rule of Christian Faith, and sever it from its connection
with the Holy Spirit as it is
the supreme instrument of His operation in things spiritual for
ever.
RATIONALISM.
The Rationalist method either makes human reason the substance
of revealed truth, or the
measure and arbiter of the meaning of Scripture. For, it is of
two kinds: one renounces
external and independent revelation altogether; another, that to
which we now more
particularly refer, accepts the Bible, but only as a
republication of the oracles of natural
religion, and makes the human understanding the sole, and, as it
were, undirected instrument
of its interpretation.
1. To the former the Scriptures are simply an historical record
and register of the gradual
development of the world's religious instincts. Evolution
governs all things in the
spiritual as in the physical domain; and the Old and New
Testaments only mark the
stages through which the spiritual faculties of earlier races
had passed. In Jesus and His
Apostles the religious consciousness of mankind reached a high
point, but not the highest
which it has to reach. The ever-developing reason of man must
make their doctrine, has
in all ages made it, the starting point for further evolutions;
and the end is not yet. This
theory for ever vacillates between Theism and Atheism, and has
no place save among the
enemies of the Christian Faith. Of this enough has already been
said when discussing the
evidences of revelation.
2. Rationalism proper accepts the supremacy of the Word as given
by God for the
regulation of the Church's doctrine, but insists that the human
reason is the sole judge of
its meaning. This spirit more or less pervades the Christian
communities which have
surrendered the doctrine of the plenary inspiration of the holy
oracles. It has many shades
and varieties of definition and expression; but these all unite
in the view that the
application of an honest and enlightened reason is alone
required by Scripture when it
teaches authoritative doctrine, enforces moral obligation, and
promises privilege to the
hope of believers.
3. It is obvious that this principle proceeds on a wrong
estimate of the function of the
human understanding, especially in relation to the Divine
Spirit, its guide: supposing a
Divine supervision of man to be admitted. It unduly elevates the
power of reason, reason
itself being witness. It is unreasonable to accept truth
concerning the Infinite Being, and
eternal interests, under the condition that it can be fathomed
and perfectly understood: on
this condition some of the most elementary facts of internal
consciousness and external
science must be rejected, for they are equally unfathomable.
Hence, declining to accept
heavenly guidance in an unknown region, the rationalist spirit
must needs renounce the
best, because the profoundest, parts of revelation. It forgets
the true and noble function of
reason: to be the minister of faith, which in all things
knowable is in a certain important
sense supreme. Reason must weigh the evidences presented for
faith, and deduce
consequences from what faith accepts; it must guard the result
from the assaults of the
spirit of rebellious and undisciplined unbelief, as well as from
the perversions of overbelief
and superstition. Carrying the subject into the region of
Scriptural testimony, we
find that the spirit of what we now call rationalism is
constantly condemned. The same
Word which from beginning to end honors reason by calmly
reasoning with it, by
appealing to its indestructible convictions and instincts, is
most peremptory in defining
the limits beyond which its province does not extend. 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.
1
TRADITION.
The true doctrine opposes every notion of a co-ordinate
authority in Tradition. This has a
legitimate office which must be vindicated, while its perversion
is condemned.
1. Tradition is paradosis,
either oral or written. And it is obvious that it holds an
important place in the economy of Divine revelation. St. Paul
commands the believers at
the outset of his writings to hold the traditions which ye have been taught,
whether by
word or our epistle;
2. But the abuse of Tradition has always been the bane of
doctrine, especially of all
Christian doctrine. Reduced to an ecclesiastical theory, it has
then two elements:
Scripture and the oral tradition of the Church constitute a
double Rule of Faith; and this
necessarily requires as its final arbiter an infallible
regulative authority in the Church
itself.
(1.) The co-ordinate Rule is that of Oral Tradition, adding
doctrines not contained in
Scripture; or Development, expanding those revealed in germ. It
has never been
authoritatively settled what is the " Verbum Dei non scriptum,"
or what constitute the
The Eastern Church maintains the Church's concurrent endowment
of inspiration, but
supposes that this was limited to the first ages: according to
its teaching the double rule,
Scripture and Tradition, was complete when its earliest and only
Creed was
authenticated. In a vague and indefinite form the same principle
is inconsistently held by
many divines in communions which owed their origin to a protest
against ecclesiastical
tradition as unduly paralleled with Scripture.
(2.) This theory loses sight of the true and most important
office of Tradition, which is
simply the human witness and guardianship of the Divine oracles;
it dishonors the
prerogative of the inspired writers, and builds, not upon the foundation of the Apostles
and Prophets,
Only in Scripture is there, strictly speaking, development of
doctrine proper.
THE INTERPRETATION OF THE CANON.
The Bible, as the Rule of Faith, is the foundation of theology.
It requires to be studied as
a collection of documents, both Divine and human, containing the
materials and the
directory of theological science. The departments of this study
are various. Biblical
Criticism is that branch of general criticism which makes the
determination of the Text its
object. The province of Biblical Introduction embraces the
substance and contents of the
Scriptures as a collection of Divine-human literature. Sacred
Philology has to do with the
original languages in which revelation was given. Hermeneutics
deals with the Bible as a
text to be exegetically and theologically expounded. The general
principles of these
several branches of study must be briefly sketched, as laying
the basis of the doctrinal
system of Christianity; but they are here referred to so far
only as they concern the
fundamentals of the study of theology.
The term Criticism means the art and exercise of judgment, and
has a wide application in
regard to Scripture generally. But Biblical Criticism does not
extend its range beyond
the judgment exercised upon the verity of the text. Its aim is
to give or restore the nearest
possible approximation to the original words of the Scriptural
Autographs, not one of
which remains or has been the subject of direct historical
testimony. In accomplishing
this object Criticism is guided by certain objective aids and
subjective canons more or
less unanimously accepted.
1. Its external materials are the Manuscripts which remain and
the earlier Versions,
especially the former. The MSS. of the Old Testament are not
ancient, dating no earlier
than the twelfth century. The criticism of the Hebrew text is
therefore limited in its scope;
it has to depend much upon the early care of those to whom these
Oracles were
committed. But it has still a wide range, and has made great
progress of late. The MSS. of
the Greek Testament are more abundant, better authenticated, and
in more perfect
preservation than those of any ancient classics: including the
Uncial, copies in Greek
capital letters, and the Cursives in smaller type, they amount
to nearly sixteen hundred.
The earliest of these are Uncials, and are of inestimable value
in the archives of the
Christian Church as the most venerable representatives of its
holy books. The
Alexandrian Codex, known as A, and now in the British Museum,
dates probably about
the beginning of the fifth century, and contains the whole of
the Two Testaments, save
the greater part of St. Matthew and a few leaves wanting
elsewhere. The Vatican, or B, is
the basis of the Vulgate, authoritative in Romanism; it is a
century older than A, but is
not so nearly complete in the New Testament. The Codex Ephraemi,
or C, is a
Palimpsest—that is, a manuscript written on a manuscript:
two-thirds of the New
Testament have been found underlying certain other writings on
this parchment. The
Codex Bezae, D, now at Cambridge, is probably of the sixth
century, and contains only
the Gospels and Acts. But Divine Providence has reserved for
this age the discovery of an
Uncial which is probably one of the oldest, certainly the most
complete, of the early
copies of Scripture. It is known as the Codex Sinaiticus, or
Alef, and contains the
complete New Testament. After these the Manuscripts, in the form
of more or less
complete copies used in various churches and of lectionaries,
rapidly increase. Multitudes
of these are lineally descended, as it were, from copies made in
the first centuries but now
lost; and it always remains a question whether they are not in
many cases as fair representatives
of the early text as those Uncials of antiquity which still
remain. The tendency
has been entirely to disparage them in comparison of the
earliest Codices; but for this
there seems no just ground. The early Versions are of great
importance in Criticism. The
Septuagint of the Old Testament is, on many accounts, the most
important, as being so
much used in the New Testament; but it is not the only one. Each
century from the
second to the seventh produced a remarkable version of the New
Testament, appeal to
which, especially to the Peshito, or Syriac, of the fourth
century, affords valuable aid in
the determination of the Text. The innumerable Quotations found
in the Fathers of the
first five centuries belong also to this branch, as they are
very often free translations, or
loose paraphrases of translations.
2. These manuscripts multiplied, and, more or less sinking in
authority as centuries
passed, are collated and thrown into Families or Recensions,
according to the leading
districts of early Christendom from which they sprang: a
distinction, however, that has
more historical than critical importance. Biblical Critics, by
the use of certain canons the
application of which requires the rarest judgment and
experience, seek by their aid
mainly to restore the text to its original state. They have to
consider the probable causes
of the Various Readings themselves: whether they have arisen
through accident or by
design. In the latter case, which is often to be suspected, they
have to track the changes in
the text to theological or other motives, and to estimate them
accordingly. It is their task
to weigh an endless variety of evidence in this sacred critical
court; and, in coming to
their decision on any controverted passage, they have to meet a
multitude of conditions
which demand attention. There are a few plain and reasonable
principles which decide
the great majority of cases: though their value is much
contested among critics
themselves; and their application to some residual difficulties
is unsatisfactory. These
canons are, for instance, that the shorter reading is more
likely to be the right than one
more diffuse, "brevis lectio praeferenda verbosiori;" that the
harder or rougher is more
probably authentic than the smoother, " pro clivi lectioni
praestat ardua;" that a text is
suspicious which manifestly favors orthodox dogmas. None of
these canons is
unexceptionable. And it remains that the settlement of the text
is a task that demands the
application of the keenest critical faculty under the guidance
of a most sober judgment. It
is the business or prerogative of only a rare order of scholars,
but the results achieved by
their labors are of universal interest and value.
3. The theological bearing of this science is obvious. Nothing
is more important than the
purity of the common standard of appeal in dogmatic discussions
and decisions. And,
apart from that, it is the instinctive desire of all who love
the Scriptures to read them in
their integrity: every evidence of sure advancement towards a
unanimously accepted text
is matter of deep joy to one who knows how much depends on the
issues.
(1.) This must not be exaggerated. It may be assumed that the
eternal verities of
revelation have not been permitted by the Holy Ghost to depend
upon any isolated
passage of His own word, nor upon the absolute integrity of the
text generally. The
majority of the contested passages, interpolations, and
varieties of reading are of no
doctrinal weight. Not one of them affects the sole fundamental
proof of any article of
faith: for the reason that no article of faith rests upon the
evidence of any one single text.
Hence, though the variations in the leading MSS. amount to
scores of thousands—
including all, from changes in letters up to whole paragraphs
inserted or omitted, —they
involve no question vital to Christian doctrine. We may hope to
see a text which humanly
speaking, shall be perfect or near perfection: known and read of
all men. But no thought
about the guarantees or the stability of the Faith need be bound
up with our hope.
(2.) Still, there are some variations in the text of the New
Testament which are of
profound interest. These, amounting to some twenty or thirty,
ought to be carefully
considered by every student; for, though no vital doctrine
depends upon them, their
evidence has a peculiar weight, and the secret history, so to
speak, of the variations
involves questions of deep theological import. For instance,
modern criticism very
generally agrees to give up " The Heavenly Witnesses,"
(3.) The Student may acquire sufficient skill to weigh well the
arguments on both sides of
these and similar leading points in the settlement of the text;
and to come to a humble
decision of his own. The peculiar and technical knowledge
required in this study, and the
variety of conditions that must meet in those who exercise
authoritative judgment as to
the Text, limit Biblical Criticism, so far as its processes go,
to a select number. The
results, however, as affecting theology, are open to everyone.
All may weigh the
evidences which others collect, and appreciate the judgments
they themselves could not
independently form.
1. The Bible as a whole is the history, the only history, of
Religion, or of the relations
between God and man, in the world. It contains the Chronicles of
the One Kingdom,
which has had three manifestations, ante-Mosaic, Hebrew, and
Messianic; and of a fourth
and final manifestation it contains an all-pervasive series of
predictions. This is the bond
of its unity, as one great Record of Prophecy and Fulfillment.
The study of the volume, as
unfolding one vast accomplishment now in process, and pointing
to another not yet
revealed, regards it as a complete organic unity, the bond of
its perfectness being Christ
and His kingdom.
2. But this organic unity may be resolved into subordinate
Divisions. First, we have the
several Great Dispensations already alluded to, and hereafter to
be exhibited. These may
be regarded in another form as the relation of the Two
Testaments. The Old Testament—
a name by which St. Paul almost seems to denominate the ancient
volume, in the reading
of the Old Testament
The New Testament is distributed into the Evangelicum or Four
Gospels, the
Apostolicum or Acts and Epistles, and the Apocalypticum or
Revelation. In more modern
times, the Gospels are distinguished as Synoptical, or the Three
which unite in one
general synopsis of the Lord's ministry, and Johannaean; the
Acts are regarded as
transitional to the Epistles, and the several types of doctrine
in the Apostolical Epistles
and the Apocalypse are compared with the rest of Scripture. All
these will be referred to
in due course more fully.
3. But every book has its own appropriate field of inquiry, this
includes the writer, date,
circumstances, and design of each document; especially the
analysis in relation to its
connection with its predecessors and successors. The theological
importance of this is
great: an accurate knowledge, however general, of the scope of
every document will
generally furnish its best defense against attacks; it will
throw light on its doctrinal
character and bearings, and thus locate it in the system of
Biblical theology. A clear view
of the literary and other peculiarities of every book in the
Bible is indispensable to the
student: it is one of the elementary requisites in theological
education; but, perhaps on
that very account, there is nothing which is more neglected. No
young minister, no
candidate for the ministry, should think he has acquired the
rudiments of his profession
until he has established in his mind a nucleus of information
concerning all the individual
documents: a nucleus around which additional knowledge shall
continually gather, until
there is no part left in obscurity.
BIBLICAL HISTORY.
1. The Bible must be studied as from beginning to end
historical. This is the law of its
construction in all parts, even the prophetical. Strictly
speaking, its history as such is that
of the Chosen People alone, as the pre-ordained race in which
God would manifest
Himself in the Incarnate Son; and the methodical study of that
history is one of the first
theological obligations. As contained in Scripture, and
confirmed by secular historians, it
is the most trustworthy series of national annals, as it is in
relation to the history of
redemption the most important. From Abraham to Moses, or the
Bondage in Egypt, we
have the Patriarchal Age; from the Desert to Canaan, or from
Moses to Samuel, the
foundation of the Theocracy; from the times of Judges and Kings,
the Division of the
Nation, the Captivity, the period of the glory of Old-Testament
Israel. After the close of
the inspired history of the old covenant comes the great
Interval of four hundred years,
ending with the Incarnation, the Appearance, Ministry, and
Rejection of the Redeemer,
and the Dispersion of the Tribes among the nations of the earth
as the consequence.
These are the critical facts in that sacred history which may be
regarded as in a certain
sense the central stream of all history.
2. These salient points regulate the Scriptural Chronology,
which, as a science, is perhaps
the most abstruse and difficult connected with the
interpretation of Scripture. It involves a
consideration of the several systems which are adopted for the
arrangement of Scriptural
dates, especially in the Old Testament: the Septuagint differing
from the Hebrew, and the
Rabbinical from both: while the principles which regulated the
sacred writers are not yet
precisely determined. The solution of many chronological
difficulties may be sought in
errors of transcription; but there is an uncertainty as to the
use of numerals which still has
to be cleared up: the key has yet to be discovered for the
scheme of Moses and the earlier
historical writers. If it should appear that the longer system
in which the Septuagint and
the Samaritan Pentateuch agree is the correct one, it will not
be difficult to harmonies the
Biblical Chronology of early times with all that sound science,
the authentic annals of
other nations, and even their traditions require. When we
descend lower in the stream of
history the chronology becomes more simple. There are a few
prominent epochs, the
dates of which may be regarded as fixed: the Exodus, the
Building of the Temple, the
Deportations, the Birth of Christ, the Pentecost, the Death of
Herod, the Destruction of
Jerusalem. It must be remembered that the Art of Verifying Dates
is comparatively
modern; and time must be allowed for the settlement of many
questions. Meanwhile, and
with regard to some epochs, a latitude must be allowed, the
limits of which are not
defined.
3. The Biblical Geography includes almost the whole earth, but
more particularly that
part of it which is the sphere of sacred history: the Holy Land,
originally Canaan, which
became the Land of Immanuel. This is not only very interesting
in itself, but bound up
inseparably with the interpretation of Scripture.
4. The Archaeology of the Bible is a peculiar department of its
history: including the
entire fabric of the ancient Economy, viewed as past and apart
from its relation to the
Gospel. There is a sense in which no jot or tittle is really
obsolete: as it may be asserted
that almost everything Judaic has outlived the changes of time.
But with this we have not
here to do. The Antiquities of Scripture have two ranges: one of
greater importance, including
the civil and political and religious constitution of Hebraism,
as lying under and
around the very foundations of Christianity; and the other
pertaining to the people as a
mere branch of the Semitic race, with social and religious
usages that may be compared
with those of other nations.
(1.) With reference to the former, the more essentially sacred
of the antiquities of
Hebraism, theological study has a wide scope. It includes the
national tokens of
severance from the world: the Covenant Signs, Circumcision, the
Passover; with the
earlier Tabernacle and the later Temple, and its interior
symbolical structure as the
dwelling-place of God among His people. Also the ceremonial of
worship: the Levitical
order; the High-priest-hood, with the relation of all other
functions to it; the service and
system of Sacrifice, the sin-offerings and thank-offerings, with
their varieties; the Three
Feasts, their history and meaning and typical significance; the
One Fast; the Sabbaths and
Sabbatic cycles; the New Moons; the voice of Prophecy, never
absent; and the several
methods of revelation, from Urim and Thummim, through symbols
and visions, down to
the Bath-kol which forms the transition to the next department.
(2.) There is also a post-Hebraic Archaeology belonging to the
Judaism of the Interval,
or, rather, to the time when Hebraism was passing into Judaism.
In some respects the
ancient Church appeared to greatest advantage after the
Captivity: it inherited the past, by
the lessons of which its chastisement prepared it to profit; it
gave rise to many new
institutions, some of which, specially sanctioned by our Lord,
contained the germs of
much that was incorporated into the Christian Church. It is
hardly possible to study too
carefully the annals of this Interval: for instance, the rise
and history of the Sanhedrim;
the constitution of the Synagogue and its order; the gradual
ascendancy of Scribes,
Rabbis, and other guardians of the law; the separation of the
people into Pharisees and
Sadducees and Essenes; and the new Festivals, such as the Purim,
which our Lord
approved, though not of direct Divine institution. A deep and
peculiar theological interest
attaches to this portion of the history of the great
Preparations. The study of this period,
as will be hereafter seen, never fails to be most amply repaid.
(3.) Many topics of Archaeology are subordinate, though such
only in a relative sense.
The interpretation of the New Testament requires an accurate and
seasonably applied
knowledge of the manners and customs of the ancient people:
their mode of life,
domestic architecture, merchandise, agriculture, festal and
funereal rites, social habits,
music, literary methods, style of writing, and forms of public
and private instruction. The
Commentaries furnish generally such information as the expositor
or preacher requires;
but the student should not be entirely dependent on incidental
reinforcements of his
memory. He should aim to be well read and at home in all these
branches of sacred
knowledge.
5. The Natural History of the Bible includes all that remains:
that is, the world of nature
in which Scripture lives and moves. It has its own comprehensive
range, not to be studied
as in the light of modern physical science, but not without its
interest even in this respect.
The Fauna and Flora of the Biblical records, as very faithfully
depicted in the best
Introductions and Monographs, have a theological as well as a
general value: almost
every fact will, somewhere or other, be found to affect the
interpretation or illustration of
New-Testament doctrine; and the importance of everything must be
measured by its
subservience to this object.
BIBLICAL PHILOLOGY.
The study of Scripture in its original languages lies at the
foundation of theology. The
text of revelation is in two tongues, each of which has its
varieties and peculiarities. A
certain knowledge of these is indispensable to the finished
theologian, though neither his
practical knowledge of the Bible nor the value of his pastoral
ministry is dependent on a
minute and thorough acquaintance with them.
1. The Old Testament is written in Hebrew, with the exception of
certain Chaldee
fragments.
2. The Greek in which it has pleased the Holy Ghost to enshrine
the New-Testament
Scriptures is the later classical dialect, the Koinh. This is its foundation; but it is
deeply affected by the Jewish-Hellenistic dialect, with more or
less infusion of Hebraisms
in style and words: in some parts being no other than Hebrew
thought in Greek clothing.
The Alexandrian age was the link between the Oriental and the
Western style; hence the
Septuagint Version, the Apocrypha and Philo, are important helps
for the study of sacred
Greek To this must be added a certain new and peculiar
phraseology and turn of
expression which the new ideas of Christianity introduced.
Taking all these things into
account, we may say that the language of the New Testament is a
distinct study, requiring
its own apparatus of philological appliances and aids.
3. The two sacred languages, as they may be called, are in our
days better understood,
and the aids to their acquisition are more abundant, than in any
former age. The Lexicons,
Grammars, and Concordances of the Hebrew and the Greek are so
accommodated to the
student's necessity, that he may with ordinary diligence acquire
at least a practical and
working knowledge of the original Scriptures. A profound
knowledge is possible only to
few; but none who lay early their foundations need be without
such an expertness in the
use of the instruments of sacred philology as will enable them
to appreciate the
exposition of guides more learned than themselves. It is of
great importance to be clear
on this point. The noblest results of modern learning are found
in Commentaries on the
Bible. These are often in conflict on some critical points of
exposition; and the reader is
necessarily thrown on his own judgment. And that judgment he
will be able to form if he
habitually makes the originals his study, according to his best
lights. And, apart from this,
a very moderate acquaintance with the Greek Testament especially
will bring the words
of the Holy Ghost much nearer than any translation even the best
can possibly do.
There is a distinct science of Hermeneutics: that is, of the
principles which are applied in
Exegesis, the exposition and interpretation of Scripture. The
science is an exceedingly extensive
one, but its theological application rests on a few general
principles, as simple as
they are important.
I. The history of Biblical Hermeneutics in the Christian Church
may be studied with
advantage. There have not been successive schools; but the
several schools have been
marked by the preponderance of the allegorical or mystical, the
ecclesiastica, or
traditional, the literal or purely historical and rational
principles more or less marked in
every age. The earliest principle of interpretation that
affected theology was that of the
Alexandrian school, which always tended to the allegorizing
method, as inherited from
the Jewish Cabbala. It did not altogether neglect the
grammatical interpretation of the
"body" of Scripture, but paid more attention to the moral
exhibition of its "soul," and
most of all to mystical or anagogical uses for the initiated or teleioi. It is obvious that no
definite or coherent system of dogmatic theology can be based on
this principle of
exposition, however rich it may be in results when duly
controlled. During the Middle
Ages this method more or less continued; but it was still more
characteristic of those
times that the exposition of Scripture was fettered by
ecclesiastical bonds: first the
Regula Fidei, or rather the Rule of the Church, directed it;
independent research was
checked; and Commentaries mostly took the form of Catenae, or
Synopses of Patristic
exposition, down to the Council of Trent. Meanwhile a free,
historical method had here
and there always-existed: especially in the early school of
Antioch, and among the
rationalist Schoolmen, such as Abelard. This has never been
absent as a protest of
learning against the excesses of the two other principles. Since
the Reformation these
tendencies have been perhaps more marked than before: the last,
especially, has found its
expression in the Rationalist exposition of modern times. It is
now the highest aim of this
science to combine the three: giving the profound spiritual
sense, the traditional interpretation
of the Church, and the scientific study of the text, their
respective rights.
1. Hence we may reproduce these several methods and apply them
to the general laws of
Hermeneutics. The grammatical study of the plain text answers to
all that was sound in
the historical school; the observance of the analogy of faith
displaces the ecclesiastical
principle, the analogy being to a great extent the internal
Biblical tradition itself as
maintained in the purest traditions and exegesis of the
Christian community; and dependence
on the Holy Ghost, the interior Teacher, preserves the best
secret of the allegorical
or mystical school without its errors.
2. At the root of all lies the grammatical or literal
interpretation: what is meant when it is
said that the Bible must be interpreted like any other book. The
Lexicons give the
meaning of the words; the Grammar, their right construction; and
the Concordance, the
several writers' distinctive phraseology. The student of
Scripture, like the student of any
ancient classics, has the key which enables him to understand
what the Bible says, and
what it means so far as the literal meaning goes.
3. It may be safely said that a very large proportion of the
difficulties, harshnesses, and
even apparent discrepancies of the Bible vanish before an exact
application of the rules of
grammar as to cases, prepositions, moods and tenses, especially
of the Greek. Very
much depends upon the simple grammatical meaning of the Aorist
in those two
correlative passages:
Even so death passed upon all men, because all sinned;
4. The peculiarity and abundance of the figurative character of
that text makes no
essential difference: it belongs to universal grammar; and,
though Biblical figure has its
peculiar laws, obviously it also is amenable to a simple literal
interpretation. The simpler
tropes—by which, as the word tropos signifies, words or extended terms
are merely
turned from their natural meaning according to a general habit
of mankind—abound in
the Bible, as in all Oriental books. The Simile, or pure
comparison; the Metaphor,
which is the simile without the link of comparison; and the
Metonymy, or Synecdoche,
which describes an object by some of its relations or parts, all
have the same meaning as
in other literature: this is true even of such metaphors as
I am the true Vine,
The Symbol, which is an indefinite trope that pervades
Scripture, ranging from a word or
a number up to actions with complicated scenery, has its own
laws, which form a deeply
interesting and important branch of sacred Hermeneutics; but
these laws do not in any
case dispense with the literal meaning.
II. The Analogy of Faith suggests a second canon of
interpretation which applies to
Scripture as different from all other writings. This is a wide
term, and includes, in fact,
three ranges of application: first, the close observation not
only of the writer's context but
of his general strain of teaching, as he is one representative
of the inspired doctrine; in
connection with that, perpetual reference to the universal
harmony of Scriptural truth, as
given by one inspiring Spirit; and, finally, the appeal to the
principles of the Faith as held
by the Catholic Church from the beginning.
1. Each inspired writer has his Charisma or Gift, his own style
of phraseology and of
theological thought. For instance, while the inspired Apostles
can have but one doctrine
of Christian Righteousness, St. Paul and St. James are
instructed to present it under a
different aspect; as each also employs the term Law with his own
distinct shades of
meaning. Now it must be a canon that the interpretation of both
be harmonized by
understanding each according to the analogy of his own general
teaching. The rule
applies with great force to the New Testament: St. Paul uses
many elect words, such as
Grace, Law, Reckon, in his own way; St. John has his terms also,
such as Heart for
Conscience; and the law of analogy requires that this key be
applied to every discussion
of the meaning of these writers respectively.
2. The same holds good throughout the Bible, whether of the Old
Testament or of the
New. There is an analogy of Scripture: a rule or standard of
doctrine, pervading the
entire oracles of God; and all exposition must be faithful to
it. This must govern the
interpretation of the Divine Word as being a gradual development
of one harmonious
Truth: there is one doctrine of the Trinity, of the Person of
Christ, of Sin, of Redemption,
of Faith and Works, of the Holy Spirit's influence, of
Immortality; and all these are in
harmony with the one keynote of the whole, the Reconciliation of
God and Man in
Christ. The application of this canon is in one sense
exceedingly difficult, in another it
is exceedingly easy. But, difficult or easy, it is an inexorable
law, that the exegesis of
every sentence of Scripture must accord with its own supreme
Rule of Faith. Christ is
everywhere. And, although the searching of the Scriptures in
order to find the testimony
of Jesus in them may be and has been carried to excess, it has
been so only in the case of
those who have not qualified this canon or guarded it by the
direct application of the
others.
3. Once more, there is what may be termed, adopting St. Paul's
expression, the Analogy
of the Faith—katá teén
analogían teés písteoos
III. The Holy Spirit's immediate presence in Holy Scripture—
both as its Defender and as
its Interpreter—is in this science both a law and a guide of
interpretation: as such it is the
corrective of the subjective spirit, whether mystical or
allegorical or rationalistic. The
Inspiration of the Bible is its Guardian also.
1. He is the Expositor within the Scripture itself; He ex-pounds
the Old Testament by the
New: type by antitype; and ancient text by new style and form of
quotation. Nothing is
more profitable to the human commentator than to follow in the
steps of the Divine:
marking diligently how He expounds the ancient oracles in the
new ones, and faithfully
making His methods theirs for the exposition of both.
2. He continues His interpretation in the Christian Church, and
to the minds of all who
steadfastly believe in the reality of His presence and guidance.
He preserves the
regenerate spirit in its true and deep sympathy with the written
Word; or, in His own
better language, gives the spiritual sense and discernment on
which the right
understanding of Scripture depends. Its truths are spiritually discerned.
1
The result of all these is Exegesis, either pure exposition of
the text or applied in the
pastoral teaching of the ministerial functions; Biblical
Theology, or the systematic
construction of Scriptural doctrine, as such, and in its purely
Scriptural forms and
arrangements; and Dogmatic Theology, containing the analyzed
results of all later
definitions and developments.
I. Exegetical theology is the fruit of the application of
Hermeneutics in particular, and
generally of all Biblical study, to the theological
interpretation of the text. Of course,
there are commentaries which deal only with its grammatical
rendering; but with such we
have nothing to do: the very word, in its Greek form of exegesis
or in its Latin form of
exposition, signifies more than that. It is the drawing out and
presentation of the sense.
1. As such it occupies a large and abundant place in Christian
literature: ranging from
monographs on detached passages and paragraphs, through
expositions of the several
books, up to commentaries on the whole of Scripture. There
cannot be much doubt that
the best and purest exhibition of Christian truths is to be
found in books devoted to the
direct exposition of the Sacred Word; but the value of these
books is generally in the ratio
of their concentration, and the richest products of modern
exegesis are the result of
earnest and learned labor on individual documents or on the
writings of individual men.
2. Exegesis is applied in Practical Theology: the most important
being that which takes
form in the ministry of the Word, or the pastoral teaching of
the congregation. The
principles that govern the application of Hermeneutics to
preaching belong to Homiletics:
which in modern times has been made a distinct science, aiming
to guide the Christian
Pastor in the best methods of unfolding the mysteries of the
Faith to his flock, and of
preaching the Gospel to those who are without.
II. Biblical theology is the noblest superstructure erected on
the foundation of
Hermeneutical science proper.
1. It arranges systematically, and in its unity, the boundless
variety of truth which in
Scripture is presented under a process of development, at sundry times and in divers
manners.
2. Biblical theology lies at the foundation of Dogmatic, giving
it its security and its
strength. From age to age Scriptural doctrine has assumed in the
Christian Church new
forms of statement, arrangement, definition, and terminology.
When the development of
Divine doctrine ceased, the development of human dogma began.
Doubtless one and the
selfsame Spirit has presided over both though His presidency has
not been of the same
kind. But the sole guarantee for the soundness of our Systematic
Theology, through all its
branches, is its fidelity to the exposition of the Word of God
as the only standard of truth,
the only |
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