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 THE 
 
 *:*• • 
 
 CREED OF CHRISTENDOM: 
 
 ITS FOUNDATIONS CONTRASTED WITH ITS 
 SUPERSTRUCTURE. 
 
 BT 
 
 WTLLTAM RATHBOKE GREG. 
 
 ' *t( %nevn of gljm foaa (or flg^f.' 
 
 TORONTO : 
 ROSE-BELFORD PUBLISHING COMPANY. 
 
 MDCCOLXXVIII, 
 
 \ 
 
Jl*^ 
 
 I 
 
 Ifh-il^O 
 
 i 
 
 ^■■^:. 
 
.xH'y 
 
 CONTENTS. 
 
 PAGE 
 PBEFATOBT KOTB TO THIS aDinOV , 7 
 
 INTBODCOnOM TO TBS THIBD BDmON 9 
 
 FBBFAOB TO THS VIBST XDITION 63 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 CHAPTER I. 
 
 INBFIBATION OF TBB BOBIFXUBES 75 
 
 CHAPTER II. 
 
 MODBBM MODIFIOATIOKB Of THB DOOTBIME OF IN8PIBATZ0N 96 
 
 CHAPTER III. 
 
 AUTH0B8HIP AND AOTHOBITT OF THB FBNTATBUOH AND THB OLD TES- 
 
 TAUBNT CANON QBNBBALLT 106 
 
 CHAPTER IV. 
 
 THE PB0PHB0IX8 126 
 
 CHAPTER V. 
 
 THEISM OF THE JEV7S IMPDRE AND PBOOBEBSIYB 146 
 
 CHAPTER VI, 
 
 OmOlN OF THB OOBPELB 153 
 
 CHAPTER VII. 
 
 FIDBtlTT OF THB QOSPEL HTBTOBT-NATHBL AND UmiB 168 
 
 ^■4:. 
 
6 CONTENTS. 
 
 PAGE 
 
 CHAPTER VIIT. 
 
 nDBLITT OF THX GOSPEL HISTOBY CONTINUED— UATTHBW 185 
 
 CHAPTER IX. 
 
 SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED— MABK AND LUKE 199 
 
 CHAPTER X. 
 
 SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED— GOSPEL OF JOHN V. . . 210 
 
 CHAPTER XI, 
 
 BE8ULT8 OF THE FOBBOOINO CBITICISM 223 
 
 CHAPTER XII. 
 
 THE LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHOBITT 235 
 
 CHAPTER XIII. 
 
 MIBACLES 2G3 
 
 CHAPTER XIV. 
 
 BESUBBEOTION OP JESUS 281 
 
 CHAPTER XV. 
 
 IS CHBISTIANITY A REVEALED BELIOION ? 297 
 
 CHAPTER XVI. -^ 
 
 CHBISTIAN EOLBOTTOISM 318 
 
 CHAPTER XVIT. 
 
 THE OBBAT RNIOMA 352 
 
 ) 
 
PAGE 
 . 185 
 
 , 199 
 
 , 210 
 
 . 223 
 
 , 235 
 
 , 2G3 
 
 281 
 
 297 
 
 318 
 
 352 
 
 PREFATORY NOTE TO THIS EDITION. 
 
 A WORK SO celebrated as Mr. Greg's " Creed of Christen- 
 dom" needs no introduction to the American public. 
 The present edition has been printed from the latest 
 English, — the fifth. Where possible the references, which 
 are very numerous, have been verified, and a considerable 
 number of clerical and typographical errors and other 
 slips have been corrected. These emendations, being of 
 a minute character, — for the most part in the number of 
 a chapter or verse in the Bible, — have been made silently, 
 so as not to incumber the text with additional notes. In 
 every other respect the text is an exact reprint of the 
 English edition. The utility of the work has been still 
 further enhanced by the addition of a very full indjx, 
 which no previous edition* either English or American, 
 has possessed. By these means it is hoped that the pre- 
 sent edition has been made the most accuratt,^ and com- 
 plete ever issued. 
 
" I Bhonld, perhaps, be a happier, at all eventi a more useful, man, if my 
 mind v, ore otberwise constituted. But so it is : and even with regard to 
 Christiani^ itnelf, like certain plants, I creep towards the light, even 
 though it draw me away from the more nourishing warmth. Yea, 1 should 
 do so, even if the light made its way through a rent in the wall of the 
 Temple."— C^LSBiDOfl. 
 
 " Perplex'd in faith, but poor in deeds. 
 At last he beat his music out ; 
 There y.ven more faith in honeet doubt, 
 Believe me, than in half the creeds. 
 
 " He fouf^ht his doubts and gathered strength ; 
 He would not make his judgment blind ; 
 He faced the spectres of the mind. 
 And laid them : thus he came at length 
 
 « To find a stronger faith hi> own : 
 
 And Power was with him in the night, 
 Which makes the darkness and the light, 
 And dwells not in the light alone, 
 
 " But in the darkness and the doud." 
 
 TranrrsoH. 
 
 " x« o inquirer can fix a direct and olesr-slghted gMe towards TVnth, who is 
 caating ude-glanoes all the while on the piroq)eots of bii soaL**— Mabiivxau. 
 
 " What hope of answer or redress? 
 Behind the veil, behind the veil." 
 
 TXNNTBOM. 
 
mTKODUOTION 
 
 TO THB 
 
 THIRD EDITION. 
 
 This book was originally published nearly a quarter of a 
 century ago. Its sale since then, though by no means 
 large, has been singularly continuous and regular — the 
 number of copies taken by the public having scarcely 
 varied from year to year ; and the second edition was 
 disposed of somewhat more rapidly than the first. It is, 
 therefore, fair to conclude that the work met a perma- 
 nent want felt by many of my countrymen which no 
 other writings at the time accessible to them could fur- 
 nish, and at least temporarily filled a gap in our literature 
 which, so far as I am aware, has not since been otherwioe 
 supplied. During the period that has elapsed since its 
 publication, moreover, I have received many gratifying 
 and even touching testimonies both from friends and 
 strangers as to the assistance which it rendered them 
 and the comfort which it suggested to them, when their 
 minds were perplexed and agitated by the doubts and 
 the questions which had disturbed my own. Under 
 these circumstances, I have acceded without demur to 
 the wish of my publisher to issue a new and revised 
 edition. 
 
 I have re-perused every chapter with great care, but I 
 have added little and altered less. Here and there I 
 have modified a phrase where I thought I had expressed 
 myself too confidently or too harshly, or where I appeared 
 to have fallen into incorrectness or exaggeration ; but the 
 changes introduced have been few and slight. Whatever 
 I have added in the way of commentary or confirmation 
 
10 
 
 INTROD JCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 J 
 
 i 
 
 is diitinguished by brackets [ ]. On the whole, I thought 
 it wisest and fairest to leave the text as it originally 
 stood, bearing distinct marks of the date at which it was 
 written, when the topics discussed were comparatively 
 new to English readers, and when the several authors 
 who have since handled them, and thrown so much light 
 upon them, had not yet put their views before the world. 
 But I have re-considered every point with caution, and I 
 am sure with candour ; I have read with attention and 
 respect and with a real desire to profit, the various criti- 
 cisms and replies which the book on its first publication 
 called forth ; and I am bound to say that I see no reason 
 to believe that I was in error as to any essential point. 
 The progress made in Biblical criticism and historical 
 science during the last five-and-twenty years has fur- 
 nished abundant confirmation, but I think refutation in 
 no single instance. It is in no spirit of elation or self- 
 applause that I say this-— even if with some unfeigned 
 surprise ; for I know better than most with how little 
 learning the book was written, and how much learning — 
 to say nothing of genius and insight — ^has since been 
 brought to bear upon the subject. Strauss's great work 
 had, indeed, been published and translated into English 
 before my work appeared; but Bishop Colenso's " Inquiry 
 into the Pentateuch," "EcceHomo," Benan's " Vie de J^sus" 
 and his Apostolic volumes, " The Jesus of History," by 
 Sir B. D. Hanson, Chief Justice of South Australia — a 
 work well worth perasal, as having in some degree a 
 special stand-point of its own, and showing the impres- 
 sion made by the evidence adducible on a trained legal 
 mind — ^and Arnold's " Literature and Dogma," are all of 
 much later date. 
 
 The marvellously painstaking, conscientious, and mi- 
 nute investigations of the Bishop of Natal, embodied in 
 his five volumes on the so-called books of Moses, have 
 succeeded in making those conclusions as to the character 
 and origin of the Pentateuch certain which I could only 
 state as probable, and have furnished fifty proofs of the 
 thesis here maintained^ where I was content with addu- 
 
 
BISHOP COLENSO. 
 
 11 
 
 cing three or four. It is, I think, all but impossible no^ 
 for any one who has really followed these researches, to 
 retain the common belief in the five first books of the 
 Old Testament as either accurate, strictly historical, or 
 Mosaic, — quite impossible after perusing " The Speaker's 
 Commentary " on these same books. It is with the same 
 curiously sad feeling of mingled sickness and despair in- 
 spired by the proceedings of the Pan-Anglican Synod 
 and the recent discussions in Convocation on the Athan- 
 asian Creed, that we read those wonderful comments 
 which the highest dignitaries of the Church — two Arch- 
 bishops and at least four Bishops — have permitted their 
 most learned theologians to lay before Christendom, in 
 their name and with their sanction, as the most adequate 
 replies they can furnish to the close and crushing argu- 
 ments of German and English scholarship combined. 
 They look like bows and arrows, or the sling of David, 
 against Armstrong guns. The impression they leave 
 mc^t clearly on the mind is of an utter incapacity on the 
 part of the writers to perceive either the strength of their 
 adversaries' position, or the scope and bearing of their 
 own admissions. On the one hand, the insuperable diffi- 
 culties in reference to the Biblical figures (chronological 
 and other) are neither candidly admitted nor clearly and 
 distinctly met; while the legends relating to the Creation 
 and to Noah's Ark — ^both of which are ostensibly assumed 
 to be veracious histories — are dealt with in a fashion al- 
 most incredible in its feeble puerility. On the other 
 hand, it appears to be admitted that, as the two versions 
 of the Ten Commandments delivered from Mount Sinai, 
 contained in Exodus xx. and Deuteronomy v., differ ma- 
 terially, both of them cannot contain the ipaissima verba 
 of the Most High, though both claim to do so, and that 
 in all probability neither of them can make good this 
 pretension ; — that, in fact, when Scripture writes, " God 
 spake these words," He did not in reality speak those 
 words, but only some of them; and that while the actual 
 dicta, " Thou shalt " and " Thou shalt not," came from 
 Him, the reasons and enlargements interwoven with 
 them in both versions are merely the explanatory com- 
 
n 
 
 12 
 
 INTRODUCTION 'O 'y^ ifi THIRD EDITION. 
 
 ments of the annotato) 
 .cult to read the notes 
 
 historian. At least it is difR 
 Part I., p. 336 and p. 822 
 intended to convey any other meaning. 
 
 as 
 
 Kenan's work appears to me to be in some respects of 
 extraordinary, and almost unique value. He proposed to 
 himself the task of reproducing the actual life and teach- 
 ing of Christ, out of such historical or semi-historical ma- 
 terials as liave reached us, by replacing himself in imagi- 
 nation amid the surroundings, — social, moral, intellectual, 
 and physical, — of eighteen centuries ago. He endeavours 
 to do this, first, by examining on the spot the scenery, 
 climate, and natural objects among which the early years 
 of Jesus w^ere passed, as well as the habits of life of the 
 primitive people among whom he dwelt ; thus imbibing, 
 as far as might be, the influences which must have oper- 
 ated so powerfully upon the character and tone of mind 
 Oi the Founder of our -faith. He then labours thoroughly 
 to imbue himself with the special peculiarities — £o diffi- 
 cult to us Westerns to realise — of the Oriental or Semi- 
 tic nature, — its mingled impassibility, mysticism, and 
 simplicity, its boundless capacity of enthusiasm and of 
 belief, its utter incapacity for cold, critical, scientific in- 
 vestigation. Finally, he studies with exhaustive patience 
 the state of thought and opinion pievalent in the times 
 and the countries of early Christianity, as well as the 
 several political conditions in the midst of which that 
 marvellous drama was acted out. He thus approaches 
 the problem of what Jesus truly was and did with an 
 intelligence and a fancy saturated, as it were, by mere 
 force of sympathy with the colouring and temperament 
 of the country and the age, and by this means is enabled 
 to lay before us a picture astonishingly lifelike and at- 
 tractive. Two points, more especially, he brings out with 
 unequalled vividness ; the first is the gradual alteration 
 which came over the language and conceptions of Christ 
 as he exchanged the sanguine and buoyant enthusiasm of 
 the earlier months of his career for the gravity and dis- 
 couragement of its later period, when the sympathetic 
 affections and cheerful sceneiy of Qalilee had been left 
 
BENAN'S " VIE DE Jlesus.' 
 
 16 
 
 behind for the arid and sombro landscape of Judea, and 
 the obstinate and incredulous hostility he there encoun- 
 tered, and when the full difficulty of his mission and its 
 inevitable ending had grown clear to his conception ; — 
 fl changes which convey a painful sense of inconsistency 
 and inharmoniousness to those who regard His ministry 
 as a single transaction arranged and thought out from the 
 beginning. The second specially valuable contribution 
 towards a true conception of Christ's history which we 
 owe to Renan, is his masterly description of the manner 
 in which miracles grow up, as it were, around the steps 
 of every great prophet and reformer in the East, apart 
 from his initiation, sometimes without even his conni- 
 vance, occasionally too, in spite of his reluctance and his 
 protests. 
 
 On the other hand, the value of the book, if I may 
 venture to pronounce such a judgment, is much impaired, 
 and the fidelity of the portrait jt presents singularly 
 marred, by one pervading and persistent error. The 
 wonderful reproductive imagination of the author has not 
 been steadily kept in check by his critical acumen. Al- 
 most in spite of himself and at issue with his intended 
 caution, he has been led to draw the materials of his 
 picture of the character and proceedings of Christ too 
 promiscuously from faithful traditions and authentic rec- 
 ords, and from sources either apocryphal or spurious. 
 When he originally wrote, he believed the fourth gospel 
 to be the production of the apostle whose name it bears, 
 and in consequence (as the narrative of an eye-witness, 
 though an aged one) to have an equal or superior author- 
 ity to that of the Synoptists. He therefore endeavoured 
 to reconstruct the Jesus of actual life from two sources 
 utterly discrepant — i.e,, to frame a breathing, living, pure, 
 self-consistent teacher from narrators whose respective 
 conceptions of that teacher were in most essential points 
 quite at variance, — in fact, to create one solid Reality 
 out of two incongruous Ideals. Naturally, the result was, 
 to a great extent, a failure, — a painful and, in the eyes of 
 many, an oft'ensive, failure; inasmuch as this funda- 
 mental error forced Renan to attribute to Christ preten- 
 
14 
 
 INTRODUCTION TC THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 sions, assumptions, and language irreconcilable with that 
 perfect sincerity and transparent truthfulness in act and 
 word, which it wounds the susceptibility of all his dis- 
 ciples not to believe was his unfailing characteristic. 
 
 In the 13th edition, the author recognised his error, 
 and endeavoured, but not quite successfully, to eliminate 
 its consequences. After long and searching investigation, 
 he arrived at the definite conclusion, that the fourth gos- 
 pel, however valuable in many points of view, was neither 
 the work of the apostle whose name it bears, nor in any 
 distinct sense historical. But the mischief was done ; the 
 study of that gospel had so influenced M. Kenan's concep- 
 tion of the great original, that he has been able only most 
 imperfectly to shake himself free from the bias therein 
 derived, and all his careful corrections have not quite 
 sufficed to shake his portrait free from incongruous and 
 disfiguring features. But this is not all. Several passages 
 in the other gospels, which M. Kenan's exegesis had 
 decided him to reject as spurious, or at least, as entirely 
 unauthentic, he yet has allowed to influence him in his 
 deiiner ♦^^ion of Christ's character and actions; while endea- 
 vouring (most ineffectually) to imdo the mischief by foot- 
 notes calling attention to the " feeble authority " or the 
 total ungenuineness of the materials with which he has 
 yet allowed himself to build. The unfortunate result is 
 shewn more especially in chapters xviii. and xix., though 
 reappearing frequently throughout the volume. But with 
 all these drawbacks, the impresion left upon my mind by a 
 second perusal, after an interval of several years, is that 
 M. Kenan's book is perhaps the most essential contribu- 
 tion to a faithful, and rational, and adequate conception 
 of what Christ was, and did, and taught, which the nine- 
 teenth century has given us. Like four or five other 
 works which orthodoxy eyes askance, or furiously de- 
 nounces as open or insidious attacks, it should be viewed 
 rather as proceeding from an independent auxiliary and a 
 cordial ally, than from a hostile critic of real Christianity.* 
 
 * The following passage will justify this estimate in the eyes of all oandid 
 readers, xxviii. pp. 462-3 : 
 " J6»\u a tix^ pour toujours la mani^re dnnt il faut ooncevoir le culte pur. 
 
**ECCE HOMO.** 
 
 n 
 
 '* Ecce Homo " is a book of very different stamp from 
 the Vie de J^aus, though composed with a similar purpose. 
 It is an attempt to reproduce the historical Christ, or 
 perhaps we should rather say, to create out of the moral 
 consciousness of the author and the sum total of the 
 traditional materials before him, a complete and consis- 
 tent picture of the ideal Christ, whom history has left so 
 dim and whom theology has so distorted. The plan is 
 worked out with singular power and beauty, with a lofty 
 imagination and a fine deep insight which, as far as our 
 reading goes, are almost unrivalled. Perhaps so rich and 
 noble, as well as so lovable, a conception of our great 
 example has scarcely been given to tlie world. Probably, 
 however, its accurate fidelity to the original reality is not 
 equal to the grandeur of the ensemble, — the constructive 
 fancy of the author being decidedly superior to his 
 critical instinct or acumen. There is scarcely a single 
 reference to chapter and verse throughout the volume; — 
 while Benan and Strauss almost overload their pages with 
 such justificatory citations. In the only two that we 
 have noticed (the cases of Zaccheus and Nicodemus) he 
 appears entirely to misrepresent the sense of the original. 
 
 Sa religion n'est point limits. L'Eglise a eu ses ^poques et Bes phases ; elle 
 s'est renferm^e dans des s^boles qui n'ont eu ou qui n'auront ^u'un 
 temps : — J^sus a fond^ la religion absolue, n'excluant rien, ne determinant 
 rien ai ce n'est le sentiment. Ses symboles ne sont pas de dogmes arr^t^ ; 
 ce sent des images susceptibles d'interpr^tationa ind^niea. On chercherait 
 vainement une proposition th^logique dans I'Evangile. Toute$ let profes- 
 siom defoi sont de» travettitsements de I'idie de Jiiut^ k pen pr^ conune la 
 Scolastique du moyen ftge, en proolamant Aristote .e maltro unique d'une 
 science achev^, faussait la pens^ d' Aristote. Aristote, s'il etlt assists aux 
 dt^bats de I'^ole, etlt r^pudi^ cette doctrine ^troite ; il elit ^t^ du parti 
 de la science progressive contre la routine qui se cpuvrait de son autorit^ : — 
 il edt applauoi k ses contradioteurs. De mdme, lu J^us revenait parmi 
 nous il reoonnaltrait pour disciples, non ceuz qui pr^tendent le renfermertout 
 entier dans quelques phrases de Cat^hisme, mais ceux qui travaillent k le 
 continuer. Ea gloire itemelle, dans tous les ordres de grandeurs, est d'avoir 
 pos^ la pr^mi^re pibrre. . Quelles que puissent dtre les transfor- 
 
 mations du dogme, Jesus restera en religion le cr^ateur du sentiment pur ; 
 le sermon sur la montagne ne sera pas d^asa^. Aucune revolution ne fera 
 que nous ne nous rattachions en religion a la grande famille intelleotuelle et 
 morale en tdte de laquelle brille le nom de J^sus. En ce sens nous sommes 
 Chretiens, m6me quand nous s^parons sur pret^^ue tous les points de la 
 tradition chretienne qui nous a precedes. 
 
 Et cette grande fond&tion fut bien I'cEuvre personelle de jesus. Pour 
 s'etre fait adorer k ce point, l faut qu'il ait ete adorable." Vi* deJi%u» 
 —p. 462. 
 
V 
 
 16 
 
 INTRODtrcnON TO THE THIBD EDITION. 
 
 II! 
 
 
 
 Indeed, on more than one occasion — as in his remarks on 
 forgiving offences " till seventy times seven," — he takes 
 strange liberties ^rith the text. The author of " Ecce 
 Homo " seems to have not so much studied and examined 
 the Gospels with the view of ascertaining what was 
 historical and what was legendary, as to have imbued his 
 mind with their entire contents, and then suffered the 
 whole to ferment patiently, till out of it arose before him 
 a conception in seipso totus, teres, at<^ we rotundua. As- 
 suming half unconsciously (rather than asserting dogmati- 
 cally) that the narratives are in the main genuine aud 
 faithful, — and believing unquestioningly (again without 
 thinking it necessary to affirm) that Qirist's character 
 and purpose must have been from the first and through- 
 out complete, self-consistent, and diviner— he lias built up 
 his interpretation and his portraiture confic^ently on these 
 two foundations — both of which we, in common with 
 Renan, F. W. Newman, and others, deem to be at least 
 problematic. The result is, that his reproduction, mag- 
 nificent and admirable, and in many respects singularly 
 Eenetrating as it is, fails (it seems to us) in this : — That 
 e attributes to Christ a deliberate scheme, plan, puipose, 
 and organization for the conquest and conversion of the 
 world, which, in its completeness at least, we belietre to 
 have been a conception of much later date, and to have 
 flitted only fitfully, if at all, through the mind of Jesus 
 himself. He seems unable to picture our Lord otherwise 
 than as founding a special society or " commonwealth," 
 and as acting from the beginning upon a carefully formed 
 and well-matured system of philosophy, indicative of the 
 profoundest study and experience of human nature. Thus, 
 while the idea of " E ..ce Homo " is the loftier, that of 
 Kenan seems to us histwically the truer and more prob- 
 able. We cannot understand the positiveness oi the 
 writer's assertion that Jesus considered himself above all 
 things a king, and his followers as subjects; that he 
 peremptorily insisted upon the rite of baptism as the con- 
 dition of being admitted among his followers ; and that 
 the Rulsrs, Pharisees, and Scribes put him to death, not 
 because he denounced them and led away the people from 
 
"BCGK HOMO." 
 
 17 
 
 them, but because h« would not fulfil their notions of 
 what a king should do. Apart from these objections, the 
 conception, as a whole, is full of truth and beauty — of 
 truth that has been often missed, of beauty that has been 
 deplorably disfigured. His idea of the " faith," spoken 
 of in the Gospels as the one indispensable condition of 
 membership in Christ's commonwealth, is new and stri- 
 king, and may be correct. *' He who, when goodness is 
 impressively put before him,exhibit8 an instinctive loyalty 
 to it, starts forward to take its side, trusts himself to it, 
 such a man has faith, and the root of the matter is 
 in him. He may have habits of vice, but the loyal 
 and faithful instinct will place him above many 
 who practise virtue." The distinction dravm by the 
 author between the religion of Jesus and the 'pldl- 
 osophies of the ancient moralists and reformers, is 
 valuable and well-defined, though not new. But the 
 more original suggestions of the book, those which 
 entitle it to be considered as a real and fresh contribution 
 to our understanding of what Christianity in truth is, or 
 was at the outset designed to be, appear to be these 
 four: — First, The contrast between the highest notion 
 of vi/rtue reached in the old world, as consisting in the 
 control and subju^tion of all bad passions and propen- 
 sities, and the holmeaa required by Christ, as consisting 
 in a state of mind in which aU these pacsions and 
 propensities are extinguished, burned up in the flame of a 
 stronger affection and desire — in a word, between temp- 
 tation resisted, and temptation n6n-existent ; so that 
 what Christ demands is far less a course of life strictly 
 and resolutely virtuous, than a frame of fooling to which 
 vice is simply impossible because repugnant. Second, 
 The contrast between the negative character of the 
 heathen conception of consummate excellence, and the 
 positim and expansive virtue required from the Christian 
 disciple — the one being commanded merely to abstain 
 from wrong, the other to devote himself to active good. 
 Third, That love for, and sympatMy with, all fellow-men 
 — growing out of, and embodied in an absorbing afec- 
 tion and admiration for Jesus himself as the representor 
 
18 
 
 IINTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 tive of aU that was lovable in mom, — ^which previous 
 times felt and prescribed only for fellow-citizens and 
 kindred. This the author calls "The Enthusiasm of 
 Humanity," and regards as the special creation und 
 triumph of Christ's life and teaching, and as affording a 
 clue to the real significance of that predominant and 
 constantly asserted " personality," which has given oc- 
 casion to such strange misconceptions in different direc- 
 tions. Fourth, The peculiar, high-strung, and almost 
 extravagant character of both the devotion and the 
 morality inculcated by Jesus — a pervading tone of 
 tension (so to speak) — of lofty enthusiasm which ^s 
 almost excitement, and has often fatally become such 
 among his followers. " No heart (he writes) is pure that is 
 not passionate. No virtue is safe that is not enthusiastic. 
 And such an enthusiastic virtue Christ was to int.roduce." 
 
 Mr. Arnold's " Literature and Dogma " is a. most 
 noteworthy and even startling production, ota several 
 accounts. In one respect it resembles " Ecce Homo," but 
 differs from it in many more. Like that work it is (in 
 the later portion at least) an attempt to conceive the 
 precise purpose and mission of Christ, as well as the 
 essentials of his character. But the conclusion arrived at 
 is singularly discrepant. According to Mr. Arnold, the 
 specific work of Christ was to restore that reign of 
 righteousness which the Hebrew Race was the diosen 
 instrument for establishing on earth ; and to do this by 
 bringing back the idea of personal holiness, which by 
 that time the Jews had almost wholly merged in the no- 
 tion of social and national obedience to positirve and rigid 
 law. His " method " was fieravoux, a chtuige in the inner man ; 
 his "secret" was self-renunciation. So far there is no 
 great discrepancy; but while "Ecce Homo" finds the 
 clearest and most predominant characteristic of Jesus to 
 consist in a fervent zeal, an undying enthusiasm, which 
 was quite passion, and almost fanaticism, — Mr. Arnold, 
 on the contrary, sees a " sweet reasonableness " (twuiKfia), 
 « "mild winning gentleness," to be the most marked 
 peculiarity of his nature. Such are the opposite results 
 
ABi ^'S " irrEBArUBB AND DOGMA." 
 
 19 
 
 which men arrive ai) from the same materials when their 
 morality is not a science but a taste. So partial and im- 
 peifect are at best the constructions of the keenest 
 insight and the richest culture when acting under the 
 orders of that " moral consciousness " which is in fact 
 each man's highest, but still individual, standard of the 
 good and true 
 
 It cannot for a moment be doubted by any one who 
 reads " Literature and Dogma" in an appreciative and 
 unprejudiced temper, that Mr. Arnold's rehgious instincts 
 and intuitions are often remarkably penetrating, and 
 nearly always beautiful and touching, even if habitually 
 too much coloured by his own inherent preferences ; and 
 where they are erroneous and fanciful, the error arises 
 not so much from any defect of intellectual — we might 
 almost say spiritual — perception, as from a sort of naive 
 and confident audacity which enables him to deal with 
 his materials rather as a creative poet than a conjecturing 
 and investigating critic. He does not so much guess or 
 infer, — he knows what each writer meant, even where 
 that writer's words do not exactly tally with his reason- 
 ing. The specially personal concrete, anthropomorphic 
 God of the Hebrews (whose name in his translation 
 becomes not Jehovah, but " The Eternal **) he volatilizes 
 into the " everlasting stream of tendency," — " a power, 
 not ourselves, which makes for righteousness." He takes 
 almost precisely the same view we ha '■e in this volume 
 endeavoured to make good, of the essence of religion and 
 Christianity as distinct from the accretions and corrup- 
 tions — or what he terms the " Aberglaube" or extra-belief 
 — with which popular imagination and tradition have 
 overlaid it. His pages arc full of rich and fine and 
 proliijc suggestions, and bring much invaluable aid to 
 I that reaction towards pure and simple Christianity, for 
 I which we have been pleading all along , but the aid is 
 less in the form of distinct argument or cogent demon- 
 I stration, than in the quiet confident assumption of an 
 intelligence of consummate culture, looking at these 
 j matters from those " regions mild of calm and serene air ** 
 where doubt and disturbance never aach, that such and 
 
20 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 such must be the conclusions of all competent and tnie- 
 minded inquirers. There is much in the tone of the book 
 which will give just and gratuitous offence to the prej- 
 udices of orthodox readers; some passages which will 
 grate upon the feelings of many, and the taste of nearly 
 all. There is a good deal that is fanciful, and not a little 
 that is flippant; but no one who reads it patiently through, 
 in spite of these drawbacks, can fail, we think, to find his 
 mind enriched as well as stiiTed by the perusal. 
 
 But still more remarkable than the book itself is the 
 fact that such a book should have been written by such 
 a man. If we \ashed to measure the progress made in 
 the 'ast few years by the general mind of England in 
 reference to this class of questions, we could not do better 
 than compare what Mr. Arnold has written in 1873 
 with what he wrote only ten years ago. In 1863 he 
 published in Macmillan's Magazine* two attacks singu- 
 larly unmeasured and unfair, upon the Bishop of Natal, 
 condemning that dignitary with the utmost harshness 
 and severity for having blurted out to the common world 
 his discoveries that the Pentateuch is often inaccurate, and, 
 therefore, as a whole, could not possibly be inspired ; that 
 much of it was obviously unhistorical, legendary, and al- 
 most certainly not Mosaic. He did not, indeed, affect to 
 question Dr. Colenso's conclusions, but he intimated that 
 such dangerous truths ought to be reserved for esoteric 
 circles, not laid bare before such babes and suckling-s as 
 the mass of men consists of. I ventured at the timef to 
 protest against the injustice of this assault upon a writer 
 who was merely endeavouring] n laborious humility toma/i^ 
 good that very right to treat the Bible as an uninspired, 
 and consequently criticable narrative, which his assailant 
 quietly, and without humility, assv/med as undeniable. The 
 keynote and motive of Mr. Arnold's criticism was plainly 
 indignation at the Bishop for having written what must 
 shake that faith in the Old Testament as the Word of 
 God, which he held to be so valuable and so comforting 
 
 * " The Bishop and the Philosopher." " Stanley's Lectures on the Jew- 
 iih Church." January and February, 1863. 
 t *' Literary and Social Judgments.'*— Truth versut Edification. 
 
AKNOLD P " L11£BATUBE AND DOGMA. 
 
 21 
 
 to the popular mind. And now the critic himself comes for- 
 ward to do precisely the same thing in a far more sweep ' ig 
 fashion, and in a far less tentative and modest temper. 
 He avows that the general belief in Scripture as a truth- 
 ful narrative and an inspired record — as anything, in 
 short, that can in any distinct sense be called " The Word 
 of God " — is quite erroneous, and can no longer be de- 
 fended ; that the old ground on which the Bible was so 
 cherished having been cut from under us, those who value 
 and reverence its teaching as Mr. Arnold does, must set 
 to work to build it up on some fresh foundation in the 
 minds of men. Colenso and others having so grubbed at 
 the basement that the edifice is aeriously endangered, 
 Mr. Arnold zealously and earnestly undertakes to under- 
 pin it. In 1863 he would fain have kept things as they 
 were, and fixed men's thoughts on what was " edifying " 
 in the Bible, on its grand devotion and its uncompromis- 
 ing inculcation of righteousness, maintaining a decorous 
 silence as to the hollow basis of the common creed. In 
 1873 bo can say "hush, hush!" no longer. The secret 
 has been indiscreetly revealed; the errant terrible of 
 Natal has lifted up the curtain ; and all the collabora- 
 ^teurs of the Si)eaker*s Commentary cannot now shut out 
 he light. So Mr. Arnold sets himself manfully to remedy 
 ithe mischief. It must be admitted that he does his work 
 ith a rare courage, and, in the latter portions at least of 
 he volume, with consummate skill. But the painstaking, 
 Imost timid inferences of the Episcopal heretic are but 
 he thin end of the wedge in comparison with the broad 
 ast assumptions of the ex-Professor of Poetry at Oxford. 
 'e argues seldom — he demonstrates little ; but he treats 
 11 the creeds of the orthodox and the established notions 
 f Christendom with a curiously calm indifierence, which 
 is almost contempt — a quiet lofty scorn admirably calcu- 
 ated to give spirit and confidence to less audacious free 
 hinkers. Prophecies, miracles, transcendental dogmas, 
 notaphysical propositions, " schemes of salvation, the 
 postles' creed (" the popular science of Christianity"), 
 he Nicene creed (" the learned science "), the Athanasian 
 i-eed (the learned science " with a strong dash of violent 
 
22 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 and vindictive temper"), all go down before his lance 
 under the comprehensive phrase of " Aberglaube ; " and it 
 is by no means clear that either a personal God or a future 
 life is left standing amid the heap of ruins. It is surely 
 a significant circumstance that one of the most popular 
 authors of the day — "the Apostle of Culture" — gifted 
 "with a sagacious tact as to all the intellectual currents of 
 the age — who at the beginning of the decade came, like 
 Balaam, to curse bold and searching Biblical criticism, 
 should, at the end of that decade, have remained to lead, 
 to bless, and to exemplify it so remarkably. It is, perhaps, 
 more significant still that it should bo impossible to re- 
 gard his work, trenchantly iconoclas tic though it indisputa- 
 bly is, as otherwise than conceived in the interest, and im- 
 bued with the spirit of sincere religion. Many will describe 
 Mr. Arnold as having run a ruthless and sacrilegious tilt 
 against the Bible. I should say rather that he had lifted 
 it off one pedestal to put it on another — with much rever- 
 ence, and perhaps a little condescension. 
 
 It was remarked by a friendly critic of my first edition 
 that in approaching the question of the resurrection of 
 Christ from the side of the Gospels, instead of from that 
 of the Epistles, I had thrown away the main strength of 
 the case. The criticism is just, and in deference to it, I 
 have since reconsidered the subject from the point of 
 views suggested. The Epistles were of prior date to the 
 Qospek , the earliest statement, therefore, that we pos- 
 sess of the fact of the resurrection, as well as the only 
 one whose author we know for certain, is that contained 
 in Paul's first Epistle to the Corinthians xv. 3-8. It is 
 likewise the only distinct apostolic aaaertion of the fact ; 
 for though Peter (i. 3 ; ii. 21,) alludes to and assumes it, 
 he does not afiirm it, and James and John do not even 
 n'entionit. Leaving out of view the Gospels, then, the 
 
 * The date of the Gospels is at best conjectural. No authority, however, 
 we believe, would place even the earliest of them before A.D. 60 or 65 ;— 
 many much Inter. Now, the Epistle to the Corinthians was written almoBt 
 certainly about a.d. 67, and the other Pauline writings between 62 and Gii. 
 — {See Uonybear« and Hcwaon.) 
 
RBSURRECTION OF JESUS. 
 
 28 
 
 evidence of the great foundation doctrine of the Chris- 
 tian Creed, consists in these two indisputable points, — that 
 all the apostles and disciples believed it — had no doubt 
 alx)ut it — held it with a conviction so absolute that it in- 
 spired them with zeal and courage to live as missionaries 
 and to die as martyrs ; — and that Paul, five and twenty 
 years after the event, wrote of it thus : — " For I delivered 
 unto you first of all that which I also received, how that 
 Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures ; and 
 that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day 
 according to the Scriptures,* and that he was seen of 
 Cephas, then of the twelve ; after that he was seen of 
 above five hundred brethren at once, of whom the greater 
 part -remain unto this present, but some are fallen asleep. 
 After that he was seen of James, then of all the apostles. 
 And last of all, he was seen of me also, as of one bom 
 out of due season." 
 
 Now, if this were aU — ^if we had no further testimony 
 to the resurrection of Jesus from the dead than that it 
 was believed by the whole original Christian Church ; 
 
 I that the apostles and personal followers of Christ, who 
 must be supposed to have had the best means of knowing 
 it, clung to the conviction enthusiastically, and witnessed 
 to it by their preaching and their death ; and that Paul, 
 not a personal follower, but in constant communication 
 with those who were, made the above assertions in a letter 
 addressed to one of the principal churches, and published 
 while most of the eye-witnessess to whom he appeals 
 
 I were still alive to confirm or to contradict his statements, — 
 if the case rested on this only, and terminated here, every 
 one, I think, would feel that our grounds for accepting 
 the resurrection as an historical fact in ita naked simpli- 
 city would be far stronger than they actually are. In 
 
 jtruth,they would appear to be nearly unassailable and ir- 
 
 • Our readers will not fail to notice the shadow of doubt which the ex- 
 Jpression " according to the Scriptures " throws over even this direct testi- 
 Imony. " According to the Scriptures " simply means, wherever it occurs, 
 I "in supposed fulfilment of the erroneous interpretation of the Old Testa- 
 Iment Psalms and Prophecies then current." Paul, moreover, it should be 
 lobserved, here merely speaks at second hand, and declares what he had been 
 hold by others— " that which I also received. " 
 
24 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 resistible, except bj those who can imagine some probable 
 mode in which such a positive and vivifying conviction 
 could have m-own up without the actual occurrence hav- 
 ing taken place to create it. Such explanation has been 
 offered by many writers — by Strauss, by Renan, by Ar- 
 nold, by Hanson, and others. I have considered them 
 all, I think dispassionately ; — and ingenious as they are 
 (especially the detailed one of M. Renan), I am bound to 
 say they do not satisfy my mind. They do not convince 
 me, I mean, that the belief arose as they suggest. They 
 are very skilful, they are even probable enough ; but they 
 do not make me feel that the iiTue solution of the mystery 
 has been reached. Nor can I with any confidence offer 
 one of my own, though I can conceive one more simple 
 and inherently likely than those propounded. 
 
 But the real difficulty lies in the gospel narratives. 
 The evangelists contradict the apostle. Nay more, — they 
 shew that the belief of the Cnristian Church was not 
 simple, uniform, and self-consistent, as Paul's statement 
 would lead us to suppose ; but that it was singularly 
 vague, various, and self-contradictory. Nay, worse still, 
 — ^they not only show in how many fluctuating shapes it 
 existed, but they suggest how the belief may have formed 
 itself by specifjdng a number of the circuxastantial details 
 around which it grew and solidified so rapidly. In the 
 Epistles and the Acts, we find simply the assertion of the 
 fact, and evidence to the universal conviction. In the 
 Gospels, we read the several traditions accepted in the 
 Christian community thirty or more years after the event, 
 as to the nature and surrounding context of that event. 
 Now here commences our serious embarrassment; and 
 the embarrassment consists in this, that the new witnesses 
 called — ^possibly very incompetent ones — make it impos- 
 sible to arrive at any clear or definite conclusion as to the 
 what or the how. That is to say, — we cannot fraTne any 
 theory whatever cw to the resurrection, which ie not di8- 
 tirwtly negatived hy one or other of the evangelical ac- 
 cov/nts. If the occurrence were to rest only on the gos- 
 pel narratives, rational belief would be almost out of the 
 question. If the belief in the early church had been 
 
 I H"' 
 
BESURRECTION OF JESUS. 
 
 25 
 
 based upon these narratives (which it was not), that belief 
 could carry with it only the faintest authority. Let us 
 follow out this view a little in detail. 
 
 Some have imagined that the reappearance of the 
 risen Jesus to his disciples was of the nature of those 
 apparitions of departed friends as to the occurrence of 
 which there exists such a mass of overwhelming testi- 
 mony ; and the related mode of his appearances and 
 disappearances gives some primd fade colouring to the 
 idea. He vanished out of the sight of the companions at 
 Emmaus ; he ceased to be seen of them. When the dis- 
 ciples were assembled at Jerusalem Jesus himself stood in 
 the midst of them (John adds in two passages, that the 
 doors were shut). " While he blessed them he was parted 
 from them, and carried up into heaven." In the Acts, 
 a cloud received him out of their sight. This view may 
 be said, moreover, to be countenanced by the language of 
 Paul himself, who classes the appearance of Jesus to 
 himself along with his appearances to others ; yet his we 
 know was an apparition (rather an audition, for he 
 speaks of hearing him, not of seeing him). But then this 
 theory is distinctly negatived by the assertions that Jesus 
 assured the affrighted disciples (who had imagined him to 
 be an apparition) that he was actually thus present in 
 flesh and bones, his real old self with hands and feet and 
 bodily organs, and able and desirous to eat. In fact Jesus 
 seems positively to have refused to be considered in the 
 light of the supernatural being his startled followers 
 would at once have made of him, and did make of him 
 shortly after. 
 
 Others, again, adopt the supposition that Jesus did 
 not actually die upon the cross, but merely swooned, and 
 revived naturally (or by the aid of Joseph of Arimathea), 
 when taken down and laid in a temporary sepulchre. 
 I And this theory has many considerations in its favour, 
 all which are discussed by Strauss and Renan. It ap- 
 pears — ^though the several accounts do not tally very 
 [closely — that he was not more than six hours, or 
 I perhaps not more than four upon the cross (how long in 
 [the grave we do not know — perhaps not an hour) ; and 
 c 
 
26 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 that, though so highly wrought and delicate an organi- 
 zation as that of Jesus must have been, might well have 
 succumbed to even that brief period of agony, yet that 
 such speedy death from crucifixion was most unusual, 
 and excited the surprise of Pilate. On this supposition 
 the subsequent appearances narrated in Luke and Mat- 
 thew are simple and natural enough ; nor need we trouble 
 ourselves to speculate on his after hiitory and final dis- 
 appearance from the scene. But, then, this theory 
 neutralizes entirely the religious value of the occurrence 
 — besides being irreconcilable with the "non-recogni- 
 tion " feature of the narratives, to which I now proceed. 
 This feature is, in truth, the terrible embarrassment 
 which the gospel narratives present to those who hold 
 the common creed on the subject of the resurrection. 
 Those narratives relate that many of the disciples who 
 saw him after he rose from the dead did not recognise 
 him. They relate this of three cr four of his most re- 
 markable appearances. Those who had lived with him 
 for years, and who had parted from him on the Friday, 
 did not know him again on the Sunday. If then, he 
 was so changed — so entirely not his former self — that 
 they could not recognise him, how covld they know, or 
 how can we know, that the person aaaumed to be Jesus was 
 actually their risen Lord ? Does not this non-recognition 
 almost irresistibly suggest the inferences, that the ex- 
 cited imaginations of his more suscepbi^ le disciples as- 
 sumed some stranger to be Jesus, when they learned that 
 his body had disappeared from the sepulchre and that 
 angels had affirmed that he was risen ; and that those 
 " whose eyes were hoJden," who " doubted," or "did not be- 
 lieve for joy and wonder," were the more prosaic and less 
 impressible of the beholders ? The diflBculty is obviously 
 tremendous : — let us look at the particulars. 
 
 Matthew relates two appearances, in very general 
 terms : — Of the second he says, " but some doubted." 
 Mark — the genuine gospel of Mark, which, as we know, 
 terminates with the 8th verse of the 16th chapter — says 
 nothing of any appearances ; but, in the spurious addi- 
 tion, repeats twice that those who asserted that they had 
 
BESUBBECnON OF JEBUB. 
 
 27 
 
 seen him, were disbelieved, and that Christ, when he ap- 
 peared himself to the eleven, " upbraided them with their 
 unbelief." Luke narrates two appearances, and inciden- 
 tally mentions that " the eleven " reported a third, " to 
 Simon." With reference to the first, he says of the two 
 disciples, Cleophas and a friend, who walked, talked, and 
 ate with Jesus at Emmaus for several hours, " their eyes 
 were holden that they should not know him." With ref- 
 erence to the second appearance (" to the eleven ") it is 
 said, first, " that they were afirighted, thinking they had 
 seen a spirit," and shortly afterwards, that " they yet be- 
 lieved not for joy, and wondered." But it is in the fourth 
 Qospel that the non-recognition feature becomes most 
 marked. Mary Magdalene, after Jesus had spoken to 
 her, and she had turned to look at him, still " supposed 
 him to be the gardener." His most intimate disciples, 
 when they saw him in Galilee, " knew not that it was 
 Jesus," even though he spoke to them; and even John him- 
 self oidy inferred the presence of his master in consequence 
 of the miraculous draught of fishes, and Peter only accepted 
 the inference on John's authority. " Therefore, that dis- 
 ciple whom Jesus loved saith unto Peter, ' It is the Lord.' 
 Now when Simon Peter heard that it was the Lord, he 
 girt on his fisher's coat and did cast himself into the sea." 
 One more difficulty — a very grave one — ^raised by the 
 traditional accounts transmitted to us in the Qospels, must 
 be indicated, but needs nothing beyond indication. These 
 accounts all insist in the strongest manner upon the de- 
 tailed demonstration, that it was Jesus in bodily shape, in 
 the same actual form, with the same hands and feet, and 
 the same digestive organs and human needs, whom 
 they had known three days before, and had seen nailed to 
 the cross, who now again came among them and conversed 
 with them. Jesus himself is made to assure them that 
 he was not a spirit, but fiesh and bones that could be 
 handled. In this well-known presence, with these bodily 
 organs and this earthly frame, he is said to have been 
 seen to ascend into heaven. Can flesh and blood inhei-' ^ 
 the spiritual kingdom ? or where was the body droppea i 
 and when was the transmutation carried out ? 
 
28 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 But, now, instead of takinfr the gospel narratives as 
 they stand promiscuously ana 'n a whole, let us discard 
 those portions which are certaii^iy or moct probably un- 
 genuine or spurious, and take into consideration only that 
 residue which may be fairly assumed to embody the ear- 
 liest traditions of the Christian community ; and we shall 
 find most of the difficulties we have thus mentioned either 
 vastly mitigated or quite dispersed. In fact — and I would 
 draw particular attention to this conclusion — we who 
 show that the Gk>8pels are rather traditional than strictly 
 historical narratives absolutely authoritative and correct, 
 are the persons who do special service to the doctrine of 
 the resurrection by removing obstacles to its credibility. 
 The whole of the accounts in the fourth Gospel then fall 
 away and cease to embarrass us at all. At most, they only 
 serve to indicate how tradition had been at work and 
 grown between the first and the second century — at least 
 one generation, possibly two. Mark, probably the earliest 
 writer of all, never presented any embarrassment at all— 
 unless, indeed, a negative one — for he says not a word of 
 post-sepulchral appearances, and merely mentions the ap- 
 pearance of " a young man " at the tomb, who tells the 
 disciples simply, and as a message, that Jesus is no longer 
 there, b t has gone before them into Galilee.* Matthew, 
 again, deals in general terms, and gives an account almost 
 identical with that of Paul, though even less full and 
 particular.-f" Luke, alone, remains to trouble us ; Luke, 
 who probably wrote when apparitional accounts had be- 
 gun to multiply and magnify ; whose perplexing narra- 
 tive about Enimaus is not even alluded to by any of the 
 other evangelists, and must almost certainly have been 
 unknown to them ; and who directly contradicts Matthew 
 as to the alleged command of Jesus, that they should go 
 into Galilee to meet him. Matthew says, " go into Galilee." 
 Luke says, " tarry in Jerusalem." Looking, then, at the 
 
 ^ "The word he uses, moreover, is significant : he says, r^^ytpSri, "he i« 
 risen,"— not ivaarhirti, he is risen from the dead. 
 
 t Moreover, it is the opinion of some very competent critics, that the con< 
 etniting portion of the last chai)ter of Matthew in not entitled to the sami 
 character of indiopntable genuineneBS as the rest of the gospel. 
 
EVIDENCE OF CHRISTIANITY. 
 
 29 
 
 Bays, i^ytpBt], " he is 
 
 matter in this light, we may not unfairly accept Paul's 
 statement as embodying the whole of the recognised and 
 authorized tradition of the early church on the subject of 
 the appearances of the crucified and risen Jesus. This 
 assertion, aiid the general and absolute conviction of the 
 apostolic community, remain as our warrant for believing 
 in the miraculous resurrection of our Lord. Are they ade- 
 quate ? This is practically the residual question calling for 
 decision. 
 
 It is perhaps far less important than is commonly fan- 
 cied. I have already (chap, xiv.) given my reasons for 
 holding that, except it be regarded as establishing, and as 
 needed to establish, the authority of the teaching of Christ, 
 his resurrection has no bearing — certainly no favourable 
 or confirmatory bearing — on the question of our future 
 life. 
 
 Just as the confident conviction of the earliest Chris- 
 tians and the mighty influence that conviction exercised 
 over their character and actions, constitute the chief evi- 
 dence of th3 Resurrection of Christ, — so the existence of 
 the Christian faith, its vast mark in history, and its 
 establishment over the most powerful, progressive, and 
 intellectual races of mankind, constitute the strongest 
 testimony we possess to its value and its truth. This 
 may, or may not, be sufficient to prove its divine origin 
 and its absolute correctness, but it is the best we have, 
 and is more cogent by far than any documentary evidence 
 could be. Christianity as it prevails over all Europe and 
 America, constituting the cherished creed, and at least the 
 professed and reverenced moral guide of probably two 
 hundred millions of the foremost nations upon earth, is a 
 marvellous fact which requires accounting for — a mighty 
 effect indicating a cause or causes of corresponding efficacy. 
 Whatever we may conclude as to its origin, that origin 
 must, in one way or other, have been adequate to the sub- 
 sequent growth. In some sense, in some form, the victory 
 of the Christian religion must be due to some inherent 
 energy, excellence, vitality, suitability to the wants and 
 character of man. Mere circumstances could not explain 
 
ao 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 this victory. We may safely go a step further, and say 
 that this vital force, this inherent excellence, this appro- 
 priateness, must have been something strange, subtle, 
 unexampled. Those who conclude it, in consequence, to 
 have been a special divine revelation, offer what we must 
 admit to '>e prlmd fade the simplest and easiest solution. 
 
 But the argument, as just stated, must not be pushed 
 too far. Three considerations serve to indicate with how 
 much caution, with what a large survey of history, with 
 what a wide grasp and deep analysis of the phenomena of 
 mind in various times and among various races, the prob- 
 lem must be approached. Christianity is not the most 
 widely spread of the religions of mankind. Buddhism is 
 of earlier date, and counts more millions among its vota- 
 ries. Islamism took its rise later, was diffused more 
 rapidly, and rules over a larger area of the earth's surface. 
 At one time it seemed as if Christianity would go down 
 before its triumphant career. Some readers of history may 
 even be disposed to argue that but for two men and two 
 battles, — possibly but for a special charge of cavalry, or it 
 may be a sudden inspiration of the leading generals, — it 
 might have done so. The spread of Buddhism, the spread 
 of Islamism, must have had an adequate cause, as well as 
 the spread of Christianity. 
 
 Again, the enthroned position and commanding influ- 
 ence of our religion testify, with power which we make 
 no pretence of resisting, to its truth and its surpassing 
 excellences. So much no sceptic, we fancy, would wish, 
 or would venture to deny. But this testimony is borne 
 to Christianity — not any dogma of the creed carelessly 
 called by that name ; to something inherent and essential 
 in the religion — not to any particular thing which this or 
 that sect chooses to specify as its essence. It does not 
 testify at all — at least the orthodox are not entitled to 
 assume that it does — to the divinity of our Lord, to his 
 miraculous resurrection, to his atoning blood, to the Trin- 
 itarian mystery, or to any one of the scholastic problems 
 into which the Athanasian Creed has endeavoured to 
 condense the faith of Christendom ; it may testify only, 
 we believe it does, to that apocalypse and exemplification 
 
"ARE WE YET CHRISTIANS?" 
 
 31 
 
 of the possibilities of holiness and lovableness latent in 
 humanity, which was embodied in the unique life and 
 character of Jesus. 
 
 And, thirdly, it must be admitted without recalcitra- 
 tion, though the admission cart-ies with it some vague and 
 startling alarm of danger, that Christianity, with all its 
 unapproached truth and beauty, owes its rapid progress 
 and, in some vast degree, its wide and firm dominion, at 
 least as distinctly if not as much, to the errors which were 
 early mingled with it, as to the central and faultless ideas 
 those errors overlaid. On one point, at least, all — even 
 the thinking minds among the most orthodox — will agree : 
 — that the mightiest and most inspiring conviction among 
 the earliest Christians, that which vivified their zeal, 
 warmed their eloquence, made death easy and fear impos- 
 sible, that which in fact more than any other influence 
 caused their victories, was their unhesitating belief in the 
 approaching end of the world, and the speedy coming of 
 their Lord in glory. That this was an entire delusion we 
 now all acknowledge. Many of us go much further. 
 Few will doubt that the doctrine of the Messiah ship of 
 Jesus aided most powerfully the triumph of his reli- 
 gion among the Jews, and that of his proper deity among 
 the Gentiles (not to mention other scholastic and pagan 
 accretion.u.j ; — and many now hold that these are as indis- 
 putable delusions as the other. In a word, truth has 
 floated down to us upon the wings of error, treasured up 
 and borne along in an ark built of perishable materials 
 and by human hands ; some devotees, ther^jfore, still 
 cling to the ark and the error as sacred agencies, worthy 
 of all reverence and worship, confounding what they have 
 done with what they are. But we do not read that Noah 
 thought it incumbent upon him to continue out of grati- 
 tude living in the ark when the waters had subsided. On 
 the contrary, as soon as there was dry, firm ground for the 
 sole of his feet, he came forth from his preserving prison- 
 house, and gave thanks and ofiered sacrifice to the Lord. 
 
 " Are we yet Christians ? " is the momentous question 
 of the day, which is being asked everywhere in a variety 
 
32 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 'i iH 
 
 of forms. It is the question asked, and answered in the neg- 
 ative, in the last remarkable and unsatisfactory volume of 
 Strauss, " Der alte und der neue Glaube." It is the question 
 asked, but not answered, in a striking monograph so en- 
 titled, which appeared in a recent number of the Fort- 
 nightly Review.* It is the question which is forcing 
 itself upon the minds of all students of the tone and 
 temper of the times, who cannot fail to recognise, with 
 anxious speculation as to the results,that a vast proportion 
 of the higher and stronger intellect of the age in nearly 
 all branches of science and thought — as well as large 
 bodies, if not the mass, of the most energetic section of the 
 working classes — is day by day more and more decidedly 
 and avowedly shaking itself free from every form and 
 variety of estiablished creeds. It is the question, finally, 
 which is implied, rather than openly asKed, in the various 
 uneasy and spasmodic, perhaps somewhat blind, attempts 
 on the part of the clergy, in the shape of " Speaker's 
 Commentaries," new churches, open-air preachings, Pan- 
 Anglican Synods, and the like, to meet a danger which 
 they perceive through the mist, but of which they have 
 scarcely yet measured the full significance and bearing. 
 
 Are we then ceasing to be Christians ? Is Christianity 
 as a religion in very truth dying out from among us amid 
 the conflicting or converging influences of this fermenting 
 age. Most observers, seeing Christianity only in the 
 popular shape and the recognised formularies, feel that 
 there can be little doubt about the matter. Strauss, ac- 
 cepting the " Apostles' Creed " as the received and correct 
 representation of the Christian faith is just as distinct in 
 his reply. 
 
 " If then we are to seek no subterfuges, if we are not tc 
 halt between two opinions, if our yea is to be yea, and 
 our nay, nay, — if we are to speak as honourable and 
 straightforward men — then we must recognise the fact 
 that we are no longer Christians ? " 
 
 I should give a diflferent reply, but only because 1 
 attach to the principal word a less conventional, but as- 
 
 * March, 1873. 
 
'* ABE WE YET CHRISTIANS ? " 
 
 33 
 
 suredly a more correct and etymological signification. I 
 entirely refuse to recognise the Apostles' Creed, or the 
 Nicene Creed, or the Westminster Confession, or the 
 Longer or Shorter Catechism, or the formularies of any 
 church, whether Catholic, Lutheran, Calvinistic, or United, 
 as faithful embodiments or authoritative representations 
 of Christianity.* Rightly regarded, the very shape, 
 character, purport, and title of these several docu- 
 ments negative their claims to be accepted as such. 
 Christianity was not, in its origin, a series of senten- 
 tious propositions, nor a code of laws, nor a system 
 of doctrine, nor a " scheme " of salvation,*!* but the 
 
 * The Ghiardian (a recognised orthodox authority, I believe), June 11, 
 1873, gives the following definition of what it conceives Christianity to be— 
 which would have astonished the Jesus of the Gospels : — 
 
 " Now, for the purposes of this critique, we shall employ the word belief, 
 as signifying belief in Christianity, and the word unbelief as signifying re- 
 jection of the same. And if, further, it be demanded what we mean by 
 Christianity, we say, as we have done before in similar cases, that we under- 
 stand by it uiat religion which teaches — that man is alienated from the 
 great Being who made him, in consequence of an original and hereditary 
 enfeeblement ; that he has thereby lost the power of fulfilling, and even ot 
 thoroughly knowing, his duty upon earth, and of preparing for the life 
 to come ; and that deliverance from this condition, a reopening of the 
 sources of pardon, of virtue, and of life, has been made by the advent of 
 God in human form to this lower world ; by the life and death, the resur- 
 rection and ascension, of Jesus Christ." 
 
 t The very phrase, " scheme of salvation," as applied to Christianitv 
 (like a somewhat analogous one often employed " making our peace with 
 God"), strikes us as offensive and, when considered in relation to the details 
 of the imagined scheme, almost monstrous. To those who have been brought 
 up to this scheme from infancy of coiirse it is not so (to such nothing would 
 be); but as describing the impression made upon those who come to it later 
 in life, and who look at it from the outside, the word is not too strong. A 
 scheme is a " contrivance " — a contrivance for attaining an object, or getting 
 out of a difficulty ; and in the popular orthodox view, the Christian dispen- 
 sation is in plain words— and putting it in plain words will perhaps be found 
 its best and sufficient refutation and dissolvent — a " contrivance " concocted 
 between God and His Son, between the first and second persons of the 
 Trinity (or as we should say between the Creator of all worlds and Jesus of 
 Nazareth, " a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief"), for enabling the 
 human race to escape from a doom and a curse which certain scholastic theo- 
 logians fancy (as an inference from particular texts of Scripture) to have 
 been in some way incurred, either from the offences of each individual or 
 from the offence of a remote ancestor. The ' ' scheme " first assumes that the 
 original sin of our first parents (to say nothing of our own) cannot be for- 
 given, nor the taint inherited by their innocent descendants wiped out, with- 
 out the rigid exaction of a penalty (" damnation," eternal fire, and the like) 
 altogether dispropoitioned to the offence,— that the attributes of the Deity 
 imply and involve this "cannot." Then, since this doom is too horrible, 
 ana the doctrine laid down in the above assumption too repdlant, alik* iUi* 
 
34 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 outcome and combination of a holy life, a noble death, 
 a wonderfully pure and perfect character and na- 
 ture, a teaching at once seli-proving and sublime — the 
 whole absolutely unique in their impressive lovableness. 
 I cannot but remember — what is so strangely though sc 
 habitually forgotten by all Christian sects — that this life 
 was lived, this death consummated, this character dis- 
 played, this devotion exemplified and inspired, this right- 
 eousness preached and embodied, and this im/pression 
 made — ^years before any convert or disciple conceived the 
 fatal idea of formalising it all into a " creed." Nay, more, 
 Icannot but remember that it was not till long after the 
 elevating, spiritualising, restraining influence of the ac- 
 tual presence and the daily example of Jesus was with- 
 drawn, that anything fairly to be called " dogma " began 
 to grow up among that apostolic society, whose best 
 leaders even, as is obvious from the gospel narrative, 
 stood on a moral and intellectual level so mr below their 
 Master's.* I recognise more and more — what I believe 
 
 its basis and its consequences, to be endured or accepted, the " scheme" than 
 imagines the only Son of Goa (one hour's pain of whom, as a partaker of the 
 divine nature, is an equivsJent to the eteraal sufferings of all human beings) 
 agreeing to bear this doom instead of the m^mads of the offending race. An 
 impossible debt is first invented, necessitating the invention of an incon- 
 ceivable coin in which to pay it. A GUxl is imagined bent on a design and 
 entertaining sentiments which it seems simple blasphemy and contradiction 
 to ascribe to the Father in heaven, whom Jesus of Nazareth came to reveal 
 to us,— and then he is represented as abandoning that design in considera- 
 tion of a sacrifice, in which it is impossible to reco^se one gleam of appro- 
 priateness or of hunuui equity. What looks very hke a legal fiction, purely 
 gratuitous, is got rid of by what looks very like a legal chicanery, purely 
 fanciful. To use a terse simile of Macaulay, the scheme "resembles nothing 
 so much as a forged bond, vdth a forged release endorsed on the back of it. 
 
 But the essential point to bear in mind is that not only do none of the 
 genuine, authentic, mdisputable words of Christ contain or countenance 
 this " scheme," but the entire tone and context of his teaching distinctly 
 ignore it, and are at variance with its fundamental conceptions. 
 
 * "Is the Apostles' Creed the original Christianity? we ask. Was it 
 the mission of tfesus to draw up a Confession and to give currency to a formu- 
 lated doctrine, rather than to wake up fresh religious life and to lay down 
 principles which must always hold good in matters of religion for every doc- 
 trinal sjrstem ? Was He, who dropped everything that was formal and 
 therefore unessential in religion and morality, and preached the fulfilment 
 of the moral element of the law and the prophets, and who, instead of laying 
 down rulet for the moral life of man, insisted upon principles and change of 
 heart. — was He who, of all that Israel considered holy in the Scriptures, 
 retained as essential no more than love to God and to one's neighbour, ana 
 preached as the rule of life, ' Whatsoever ye would that men should do unto 
 
"ARE WE YET CHRISTIANS?" 
 
 35 
 
 )ty, whose beat 
 
 will be generally admitted now — that the articles of faith, 
 the sententious dogmas, the '* scheme" of salvation, 
 which have usurped the name of " Christianity " and 
 " the Christian religion," originated almost wholly with 
 Paul ; and that not only did they not form the substance 
 of the teaching of Jesus, but that they are not to be found 
 in, nor can obtain anything beyond the most casual, ap- 
 parent, and questionable coimtenance from, his genuine 
 and authentic words. And, finally, I remember and wish 
 to recall to the reflection of my readers that this Paul, 
 who thus transformed the pure, grand religion of his cru- 
 cified Master, was distinguished by a character of intellect, 
 subtle, metaphysical, and cultured, and therefore singu- 
 larly discrepant from that of Jesus ; that, moreover, he 
 never knew Jesus upon earth, had never come under his 
 influence, or been sobered by his saintly spirit and his 
 clear, practical conceptions ; had never seen him in the 
 flesh, nor heard his voice save in trance, in noonday vi- 
 sions, and ecstatic desert communings. 
 
 It was the sincere and earnest, if somewhat ambitious 
 purpose of this book to disentangle and disencumber the 
 religion taught and lived by Jesus from the misconceptions 
 and accretions which have gathered round it, obscured it, 
 overlaid it, often actually transmuted it, and which began 
 to gather round it almost as soon as its Founder bad disap- 
 peared from the scene of his ministry. I shall have failed 
 if I have not vindicated our right, and shown it to be our 
 duty, to seek that pure original of devotional spirit and 
 righteous life in the authentic words and deeds of Christ, 
 and in these alone •, and, in the prosecution of this search, 
 to put aside respectfully but courageously, whenever we 
 
 you, do yon even so unto them, for this is the law and the prophets,' — was 
 Be a dogmatist, a propounder of articles ? Was He, who made the true 
 moral life of love as independent of Jewish doctrines as of the forms of the 
 .) ewish theocracy, who gave its tone to genuine humanity everywhere, even 
 in the Samaritan and the heathen, — nay, even placed the humane Samaritan 
 above the orthodox priest and Levite, — was He, who, without appealing to 
 any ecclesiastical authority of tradition or of Scripture, found his witnesses in 
 the common sense and in the conscience of mankind, and recognised the 
 true prophet by the moral power he displayed, — was ^e a dogmatist? Surely 
 CJhristianity in its original form was not a confession nor a sjrmbol ; and to 
 ])a88 judgment on it as such is logically inadmissible."— Soholtbm, Thfol. 
 Review, April, 1873, 
 
36 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 see warrant for it, whatever, whether in the Gospels or 
 the Epistles, confuses, obscures, blots, or conflicts with 
 this spirit and this life. I conceive that I have vindica- 
 ted this right, and established this obligation by showing 
 that even the immediate personal disciples of our Lord 
 misconceived him ; that the chief of the apostles never 
 was a companion or follower of Jesus in any sense, but 
 claimed and gloried in what he declared to be a special, 
 separate, and post mortem revelation ; and that even the 
 Gospels contain some things certainly, and several things 
 probably, which did not emanate from Christ. 
 
 I am disposed, therefore, to give an entirely opposite 
 answer to Strauss's question to that which Strauss him- 
 self has given, aud to believe that when we have really 
 penetrated to the actual teaching of Christ, and fairly dis- 
 interred that religion of Jesus which preceded all creeds 
 and schemes and formulas, and which we trust will sur- 
 vive them all, we shall find that, so far from this, the true 
 essence of Christianity, being renounced or outgrown by 
 the progressive intelligence of the age, its rescue, re-dis- 
 covery, purification, and re-enthronement as a guide of 
 life, a fountain of truth, an object of faith, a law written 
 on the heart, will be recognised as the grandest and most 
 beneficent achievement of that intelligence. It may well 
 prove its slowest as its hardest achievement ; for it is pro- 
 verbially more difficult to restore than to build up afresh. 
 To renovate without destroying is of all functions that 
 which requires the most delicate perceptions, the finest 
 intuition, the most reverent and subtle penetration into 
 the spirit of the original structure, as well as manipula- 
 tion at once the most skilful and the most courageous. 
 And the task imposed upon the thought and piety of the 
 coming time is to perform this function on the faith and 
 creed of centuries and nations , — and to perform it amid 
 the bewildering cries of interests and orders whom you 
 will have rooted out of their comfortable and venerable 
 nests ; of age, which you will have disturbed in its most 
 cherished prejudices ; of affections, which you will have 
 wounded in their tenderest points ; of massive multitudes 
 whom you will have disturbed in what they fancied were 
 
IS A CHRISTIAN LIFE FEASIBLE ? 
 
 37 
 
 convictions and ideas ; of worshippers whose Idol only 
 3'ou will have overthrown, but who will cry out that you 
 have desecrated and unshrined their God ; of craftsmen 
 of the Ephcsian type, who " know that by this craft they 
 have their wealth ; " and of cynical and faithless states- 
 men whose unpaid policemen and detectives (the more 
 efficient and more feared because unseen), and whose self- 
 supporting penal settlement elsewhere (the more dreaded 
 by malefactors because remotely placed, invisible, and un- 
 defined), you will be supposed to have abolished. 
 
 Another cognate question has been much discussed of 
 late, and may be answered, we think, nearly in the same 
 way. It is asked, not only, " Are we Christians ? " but 
 " Can a Christian life be lived out in modem days ? " "Can 
 we, and ought we to, regulate our personal and social life 
 according to the precepts of Christ ? " " Is Christianity, 
 in very deed and as nakedly preached and ordinarily 
 taught, applicable to modern society and extant civiliza- 
 tion ? " ** Is it possible, would it be permitted, can it be 
 wise or right, to obey and act out the Christian rule of 
 life in the British Isles and in 1873 ? " — No question can 
 be more vital, none more urgent, none more essential to 
 our peace of conscience. None, we may add, is more 
 sedulously and scandalously shirked. There is no courage 
 and no sincerity or downrightness among us in this mat- 
 ter. We half say one thing and half believe another. 
 We preach and profess what we do not think of practis- 
 ing ; what we should be scouted and probably punished 
 if we did practise ; what in our hearts and our dim, fled- 
 from thoughts, we suspect it would be wrong to practise. 
 Wherein lies the explanation of this demoralizing and dis- 
 reputable untruthfulness of spirit ? Are the principles 
 we profess mistaken ? Is the rule of life we hold up as a 
 guide erroneous, impracticable, or inapplicable to the 
 altered conditions of the age ; or is it our conduct that is 
 cowardly, feeble, self-indulgent, and disloyal ? Is it our 
 standard that is wrong, or merely our actions that are 
 culpable and rebellious ? Is Christianity a code to be 
 lived up to, or is it a delusion, a mockery, and a snare? 
 
88 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 The specialities for the conduct of life prescribed by 
 Christ's precepts and ttxample, as gath«red from the 
 Gospels and the proceedings of his first disciples^ which 
 current Civilisation does trammel and oppose, and which 
 current Thought does question and controvert, are five in 
 number : — non-resistance to violence, the duty of alms- 
 giving, the impropriety of providence and forethought, 
 the condenmation of riches, and the communism which 
 was supposed to be inculcated, and which certainly was 
 practised, by the earliest Christians. How far and under 
 what modifications were these special precepts wise and 
 sound at that time, and are they obligatory, permissible, 
 or noxious now ? 
 
 I. The precepts commanding non-resistance and sub- 
 mission to violence are too distinct and specific to allow 
 us to pare them away to anything at all reconcilable with 
 modem sentiments and practice, even by the most .^treme 
 use of the plea of oriental and hjrperbolic language.* They 
 go far beyond a prohibition of mere retaliation or blame 
 of hasty resentment or vindictive memory. They dis- 
 tinctly command unresisting endurance of violence and 
 wrong, whether directed against person or property. Now, 
 can this precept be carried out, and would it be well that 
 it should be ? 
 
 The first consideration that occurs to us is, that obedi- 
 ence to it has never been seriously attempted. The com- 
 mon sense or the common instinct of Christians in all 
 ages and in all lands, has quietly but peremptorily put it 
 aside as not meant for use. Indeed, Christians have habit- 
 
 * " I savunto yon, that ve resist not evil : but whosoever shall smite thee 
 
 on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if any man take 
 
 away thy coat, let him have thy cloak also. And whomsoever shall compel 
 thee to go a mile, go with him twain." " Put up thy sword, for all they tnat 
 take the sword shall perish by the swords" " Blessed are the Meek, for they 
 vhall inherit the Earth." 
 
 It la true that in one of the Evangelists, just before his arrest, Jesus is 
 reported to have said to the twelve : "He that hath no sword, let him aell 
 hia garment and buy one." But the passage is so unintelligible, and so 
 entirely ont of keeping with the context, that it is almost oerttSnly a case of 
 misreporting, or misconception, or wholly unwarranted tradition. A fev 
 hoars later. Jesus said " My langdom is not of this world : else would my 
 MTTtttS fight" 
 
IS A GHBI8TIAN UFE FEASIBLE? 
 
 9$ 
 
 ually fought from the earliest times just as savagely as 
 Pagans. They have seldom dreamed even of confining 
 themselves to self-defence — self-defence, indeed, being 
 condemned just as decidedlj^ as aggression. Nay, they 
 have habitually fought in the name, and, as they firmly 
 believed, in the cause of Christ, have gloried in the title of 
 " good soldiers of Christ," have died with priestly blessing 
 and absolution amid the rage of conflict, confident that 
 their reward was sure, and that angels would bear them 
 straightway to the bosom of the beloved Master whose 
 orders they had so strangely set at naught. One sect, 
 indeed, among Christians have professed to take this pre- 
 cept of Jesus Hterally — and what precept is to be so taken 
 if this is not ? — and have professed to obey it to the letter. 
 But in the first place, the Society of Friends never pre- 
 tended to cany out more than one-half of it. They never 
 went the length commanded in the text of facilitating 
 assault and coercion. They never, we believe, denied them- 
 selves the luxury of passive resistance in its most resolute 
 and ingenious devices. They did not return a blow ; but 
 they did not make the first so easy or so pleasant as to 
 invite a second. And they have nearly died out. In the 
 next place, they tried the experiment under circumstances 
 which practiatily made non-resistance comparatively safe 
 and easy, — namely, imder the aegis of police and law. It 
 is but seldom that any of us now have actually to ward 
 off a blow, or by force to resist an attempt at robbery, 
 because, theoretically and potentially at least, the assail- 
 ant knows and we know that the accredited guardians of 
 order are there to do it for us. In fact, the daily routine 
 of civilized life is organized on the assumption that the 
 necessity for self-defence and resistance to evil is taken off 
 our hands. Obedience to Christ's precept becomes won- 
 derfully simplified — or rather it is dexterously evaded — 
 when we have only to hand over our enemy to the nearest 
 constable. We, in fact, do resist, and resist like the merest 
 Pagan ; — only we resist by deputy— disobeying vicari- 
 
 °^^^' ^^^^ ^® ^^^. ^^^ condition to obey in person. 
 
 The truth is, that the whole of our criminal law and our 
 police anungemeuts are based upon a systematic repudi- 
 
4iO 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIBD EDITION. 
 
 ation of the precept in question ; and the order of modern 
 Society, and the security of modern life could not other- 
 wise exist. In savage communities and in disordered 
 times, every man must succumb to violence or must defend 
 himself. In such times obedience to the Christian precept 
 would simply mean the extermination or enslavement of 
 all Christians, the supremacy of the violent by the self- 
 suppression of the gentle. In our days, division of labour 
 is m the ascendant ; and we delegate the duties of resist- 
 ing violence and evil to a professional class. If bad mm 
 abound — ^and where would be the meaning of Christian 
 precepts and exhortations to a Christian life if they did 
 not ? — then, if the criminal class are not to prosper and to 
 reign, police and the repressive and punitive law must 
 exist and act, must restrain and retribute. Who among us 
 would for a moment advocate their abolition ? Who that 
 deems it right to maintain them can pretend that the 
 Christian precept of non-resistance is obeyable in these 
 days, or that he is endeavouring to obey it ? His mind 
 may be penetrated with the spirit of patience, humanity, 
 and consideration for his fellow men which led Jesus to 
 utter that command ; but the command itself he simply 
 repudiates and evades. 
 
 The impossibility ajid impropriety of regarding the pre- 
 cept of non-resistance to evil violence as sitant and oblig- 
 atory becomes obvious from another diss of considera- 
 tions. We may, as the Quakers do, deem it forbidden to 
 resist or resent such violence when directed against our- 
 f^elves, — ^though even they practically decline to recognise 
 t nat the same command which forbids us to return a blow 
 forbids us also to ward it off. But no one, however imbued 
 with the spirit of the Gospel (unless, indeed, false inter- 
 pretations have crushed all the manhood out of him), 
 would fail to resist the blows directed against our neigh- 
 bours, — against those whom we are taught to love, to assist, , 
 and to protect. A man may be so disciplined as to take 
 meekly the blow struck at himself, but would never dream 
 it his duty to endure in the same fashion the blow struck 
 at the woman leaning on his arm. One command of the 
 Gospel here distinctly clashes with another, and no one 
 
IS A CHRISTIAN Ll'lFE FEASIBLE ? 
 
 41 
 
 (Lnibts for an instant which ought to be obeyed. We are 
 then landed in the absurdity that of two persons walking 
 in the street together, violence aimed at A. is to be ac- 
 cepted with submission, and violence aimed at B. to be 
 resented ; or that A. and B. may each resist the other's 
 assailant, but not his own. 
 
 There is still another view of the subject to be taken. 
 The worst ill-service you can do to the violent, is to show 
 them that they may work their wicked will unpunished 
 and unchecked by the natural instincts of humanity. It 
 is to make them " masters of the situation," to encourage 
 them by success and impunity, to enthrone them as mon- 
 archs of the world. It is to put goodness under the foot 
 of evil, and so to diive back the progress of Humanity, 
 to retard the coming of " the Kingdom of Heaven." It 
 is, too, to harden the sinner in his wrong, the criminal in 
 his crime, the brute in his brutality ; to teach him to 
 proceed in outrages and iniquities that pay so well ; to 
 make him heap up wrath against the day of wrath. Hun- 
 j dreds, who would have been stopped at the outset of their 
 criminal career by prompt and timely resistance, are led 
 [on by the impunity which submission secures, till habits 
 of crime are formed and recovery becomes hopeless. Non- 
 I resistance, then, becomes connivance and complicity in 
 [wrong. 
 
 The orthodox reply to these common-sense representa- 
 Itions is well known, but has never been convincing. 
 [The wrong-doer, it is said, will be so amazed and melted 
 Iby the calm acquiescence of his victim, that his heart 
 [will be touched and his conscience awakened by the un- 
 expected issue. He will be taken unawares, as it were — 
 ipproached on an unguarded side ; and thus be disarmed 
 in place of being baffled, and converted instead of being 
 defeated. But, we apprehend, this anticipation assumes 
 me or two postulates fatal to its realization, and some- 
 jvvhat contradictory. It assumes that resistance and re- 
 taliation are the rule — else there would be nothing in 
 \>he attitude of meek endurance to surprise the violent 
 nan into reflecti'^n and repentance. It implies, more- 
 )ver, a susceptibility on the part of the violent which 
 
42 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 the habit of violence soon destroys. It seems, too, to 
 presuppose a moral atmosphere that could only be cre- 
 ated by a community of non-resisting Christians — or a 
 world at least in which the wrong-doers were so compar- 
 atively few that they did not suffice to form a public 
 opinion and class-sympathies of their own. It imagines 
 the criminal, the oppressor, and the self-seeker, recoiling 
 from the very facility and completeness of their success, 
 and at the very moment when the prospect of its joys 
 most radiantly dawns upon them. It expects them to be 
 " touched by grace " just when the career of wrong looks 
 most inviting and most fuU of promise. Such things may 
 be ; such things have been in isolated instances. But can 
 they ever become normal ? Can they be counted upon 
 so as to form a safe or rational guide for conduct ? 
 
 There is, however, one case in which the non-resistance 
 doctrine is so obviously inapplicable that no one, we be- 
 lieve, has ever dreamed of practising it ; namely, in the 
 case of quarrels between nations. For one country to 
 submit to outrage and wrong at the hands of anothcT, 
 when the means of resistance lay in its power, has never 
 been held right or obligatory. The question has never 
 seriously been brought under discussion ; it being per- 
 fectly clear that — the relative position of different nations 
 from the earliest times even to our own having always 
 been that of jealous rivalry, ceaseless controversy cither ' 
 smouldering or flagrant, and hostility latent or avo wed- 
 any people that habitually and notoriously submitted to 
 violence would simply be overrun, enslaved, or trampled [ 
 out. The doctrine of non-resistance would mean nothing 
 but the destruction of the gentler and finer races, and the 
 rampant tyranny of the stronger ; the reign of violence, 
 not of peace ; the triumph of Satan, not of Christ ; in aj 
 word, the suicide of all meek and truly Christian peoples. 
 
 It is plain then that wc have here one of three or foui 
 instances in which true Christianity must be held to re 
 quire a disregard of its own precepts in favour of its own 
 principles, in which Christ's exhortations are a guide tol 
 the spirit we must cherish, not to the conduct we miistl 
 
)ITION. 
 
 IS A CHRISTIAN LIFE FEASIBLE ? 
 
 43 
 
 , seems, too, to 
 1(1 only be cre- 
 /hristians — or a 
 were so coinpar- 
 
 form a public 
 -^n. It imagines 
 seeker, recoiling 
 of their success, 
 pect of its joys 
 pects them to be 
 ' of wrong looks 
 Such things may 
 tances. But can 
 16 counted upon 
 
 conduct ? 
 
 he non-resistance 
 ,t no one, we be- 
 ; namely, in the 
 ' one country to 
 ands of anoth«T, 
 power, has never 
 estion has never 
 a ; it being pei- 
 : different nations 
 1 having always 
 ontroversy ciLher 
 ;ent or avowed- 
 sly submitted to 
 ived, or trampled 
 lid mean nothing 
 aer races, and the 
 ■eign of violence, 
 of Christ; in a I 
 Christian peoples. 
 of three or fouij 
 st be held to re 
 favour of its ova I 
 ns are a guide to 
 sonduct we mm 
 
 pursue. We must cultivate the temper which will effec- 
 tually prevent us from being quick to resent or prone to 
 retaliate or severe to punish ; but without abnegating 
 those natural instincts which are sometimes our safest 
 o-uides, or ceasing to maintain that firm attitude of self- 
 protection which, under the governance of good feeling 
 and good sense, is the best antagonist to the prevalence of 
 violence upon earth. 
 
 II. Alms-giving* — Scarcely any precept in the Gos- 
 pel is more distinct or reiterated than this. No duty has 
 been more peremptorily insisted upon by the Church in 
 all times and in all countries. It was one of the chief 
 functions of the monastic institutions in the middle ages. 
 It was made a legal obligation in the days which succeeded 
 them. It is periodically inculcated from Protestant pul- 
 pits, and the Catholics are still more positive in enforcing 
 it on all the faithful. Our own country swarms with 
 I proofs how literally and widely, generation after genera- 
 tion, the obligation has been acknowledged and fulfilled. 
 [The Reports of the Charity Commission, in countless vol- 
 umes, bear testimony to the innumerable charities that 
 [exist, and explain a little what they have done. The rec- 
 lognition of the obligation of alms-giving is. to this day, 
 Inearly as prevalent and as influential as ever. It is of all 
 jChristian precepts that which is most strictly obeyed — 
 )bedience to it being easier than to any other. A pious 
 man and a tender-hearted woman do not feel comfortable 
 )r good, unless they habitually give to beggars, or spend 
 given portion of their income in succouring the poor — 
 )r those who seem such. 
 
 Yet nothing can be more certain than that all this is 
 t^ery wrong and does infinite mischief. The more lit- 
 erally the precept [" give to liim that asketh of thee "] is 
 )beyed, the more harm does it do. No conclusion has 
 
 " (Jive to him that asketh of thee, and from him that would borrow of 
 Jiee turn not thou away." " Sell that thou haat and give alma." "Let 
 June alms be in secret, and thy Father, who seeth thee in secret, himself shall 
 leward thee openly." " He that hath two coats, let him impart to him that 
 lath none." ^' Give alma uf such things as ye have ; and behold all things 
 Ire clean unto you," 
 
44 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 been more distinctly or definitely proved than that nearly 
 all charity, popularly so called — more especially all indis- 
 criminate alms-giving — is simply and singularly noxious. 
 It is noxious most of all to the objects of it — whom it 
 fosters in all mean and unchristian vices, in idleness, self- 
 indulgence, and falsehood. It is noxious in the next place 
 to the deserving and industrious poor, from whom it di- 
 verts sympathy. It is noxious, also, to the entire com- 
 munity, among whom it creates and cherishes a class of 
 most pernicious citizens. The form which charity has a 
 tendency to assume in societies so complicated as all civ- 
 ilized societies are growing now, is such as to drain the 
 practice dl nearly all its incidental good, and aggravate its 
 peculiar mischiefs. The alms-giver has not his kindly 
 feelings called forth by personal intercourse with the poor; 
 he subscribes, he does not give; and charitable endowments 
 and bequests are ingenious contrivances for diffusing the 
 mo^t wide-spread pauperism. Paupers become sneaks and 
 vagrants; and vagrants soon grow into criminals. It is need- 
 less to dwell on this : — the consentaneous voice of modern 
 benevolence and statesmanship alike is crying out against 
 alms-giving as a mischief and a sin — as anything but 
 philanthropy or charity — as a sentimental self-indulgence, 
 and the very reverse of a Christian virtue, — a distinct, and 
 now nearly always a conscious, complicity in imposture, 
 fraud, laziness, and sensuality. Every one conversant with 
 the question, all true lovers of their fellow-men, all earnest | 
 and practical labourers in the field of social improvement, 
 in the precise measure of their experience agree that, in I 
 all schemes and efforts for rectifying the terrible eviis of j 
 our crowded civilization, the most ubiquitous and insur- 
 mountable impediments arise out of the practice of indis- 
 criminate alms-giving and systematic charity. One of I 
 the most pernicious and objectionable of our daily habits is 
 in strict obedience to one of the clearest and most positive j 
 of Christian precepts. 
 
 Nor is it in England only that alms-giving is bad. It I 
 is bad everywhere ; it is bad even in the East ; it is very 
 bad in Italy ; it is worst of all perhaps in Spain. Every-' 
 where it creates a special cla^ss of the worthless and t 
 
IS A CHRISTIAN LIFE FEASIBLE? 
 
 45 
 
 vicious, who soon become the criminal. It is of its essence 
 to do this. The antagonism between the Christian pre- 
 cept and what ought to be the conduct of really Christian 
 men is direct, complete, undeniable, and all but universal. 
 The mischief has arisen out of the time-honoured 
 practice — a practice which surely now-a-days would be 
 more honoured in the breach than the observance — of 
 looking into the Gospel as a code of conduct instead of a 
 well spring of spiritual influence, and picking out texts 
 to act by and to judge by, as a French judge opens chap- 
 ter and verse of the Code Napoleon, — instead of imbuing 
 ourselves with " the same mind that was in Christ," and 
 letting our behaviour afterwards flow freely therefrom. 
 Christ directed us " to do good " to our fellow-men, espe- 
 cially to the poor and helpless among !iem. In our stu- 
 pid literalism^ we have taken this as -a command to do all 
 the harm we can. " He that hath two coats, let him 
 impart to him that hath none," — read as an exhortation 
 [to use our abundance and our advantages to succour the 
 needy and assist the less fortunate, is conceived in a beau- 
 Itiful and righteous spirit. But how when the second 
 Icoat has been provided to meet next year's exigencies at 
 jthe cost of much difficult self-denial, and when the coat 
 )f the coatless man has been pawned for drink, and when 
 [the one which I gave him is sure to follow its predecessor up 
 the spout ? Is thrift to be discouraged and sodden sensu- 
 ility to be fostered, in the name of Christian duty ? The 
 solution of the difficulty is very 'plain. Jesus put tha 
 ibstract principle in a parable or a concrete shape — as ho 
 ilways did : — He cdmmanded a benevolent frame of mind 
 fn the form of a precept to the simplest action to which 
 that frame of mind would instinctively lead in circum- 
 stances when reflection would suggest nothing to con- 
 trol the impulse. Probably he never reflected on the 
 langer of creating a whole tribe of begging impostors, 
 perhaps the danger did not exist in that day. In any 
 base, what he really designed and desired was to produce 
 spirit of boundless compassion and love which should 
 Inspire his disciples with anxiety to do all the good possi- 
 ^'" to render all the aid possible to those, who were in 
 
 )le. 
 
46 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 distress or want ; his aim was to elevate, not to degrade, 
 to foster the Christian virtues, not the selfish vices ; ajid 
 the very texts that we read as enjoining alms-giving are 
 really those which, interpreted aright, most distincUy 
 prohibit it. Here it is not that a Christian life is not feaiti- 
 bie in our days ; — it is only that it has become more dH8- 
 cult because less simple ; and that in or 5r to disentangL; 
 its dictates from its dicta, and to pierce tu its inner signif 
 icance, demands more intellectual effort and more Intel 
 lectual freedom than we are prone to exercise. Here, il 
 anywhere, it is " the letter that killeth, and the spirit thjii 
 giveth life." What we have to ask ourselves is, " Whji' 
 would Christ, with all the circumstances before hii' 
 have directed in these times ? " 
 
 III. Improvidence. — There is scarcely any exhortatic 
 in the line of social morality more incessantly or moi . 
 unanimously addressed to the people of this country tha i 
 that which urges them to provide for the future, " to lai 
 by for a rainy day ; " to store up something of their daili 
 earnings against the time when those earnings may fai 
 or be interrupted. Assuredly there is no exhortation ( ' 
 which they stand more in need, nor one which they moi i 
 habitually neglect. Manifestly there is no duty the sedii 
 lous discharge of which more vitally concerns their futuia 
 welfare and their present peace. It is their improvidence } 
 that condenms them to squalor, to indigence, to dependence, ' 
 to wretched habitations, to unwholesome surroundings, 
 and to all those moral evils and dangers which follow in 
 the wake of these things. Few things can be more cer- 
 tain . jan that if our working classes are ever to emerge 
 from their present most unsatisfactory condition, if they 
 are to become respectable citizens and true Christians, 
 they must learn to save for to-morrow's needs, and to 
 regard it as something very like a sin to leave to-moirow 
 to take care of itself. To spend all their gains when 
 those gains are ample, as they so habitually do, is ob- 
 viously not only a folly, but something very like a fraud,] 
 — inasmuch as it is wasting their own substance, in re- 
 liance that when it fails they will be fed out of the sub- 
 
IS A CHRISTIAN LIFE FEASIBLE? 
 
 47 
 
 wiAiice of others. It is the conduct s6 distinctly condemned 
 in the case of the foolish virgins — with an aggravation. 
 They do not forget to bring their oil , they deliberately 
 waste it, — knowing that they may say to their wiser 
 neighbours, " Give us of your oil, for our lamps are gone 
 out." The workman who in receipt of good wages saves 
 nothing out of those wages is wilfully improvident, rely- 
 ing on the providence of others ; for what is the property 
 from which charitable funds are derived and on which 
 Poor Rates are levied, but the accumulated savings of 
 the provident and thoughtful ? What is all invested 
 wealth, indeed, but the steadily augmented economies of 
 those who, generation after generation, have taken 
 thought for the morrow ? It is not too much to say that 
 if our artisan classes would for two generations — perhaps 
 even for one — be as frugal and as hoarding as the French 
 peasant is, and as the better portion of the Scotch and 
 Swiss once were, the whole face of the country would be 
 changed; — ^they would be men of property instead of 
 being Proletaires ; they could live in comfortable dwellings 
 in place of wretched hovels and crowded alleys; they might 
 be men of comparative leisure instead of mere toilers all day 
 and every day, from childhood to old age ; education would 
 be as much within their reach as it is within t^ a reach of 
 their betters now ; and the soil would be prepared in which 
 all the Christian virtues and most civilized enjoyments 
 could easily take root and flourish. With providence would 
 come sobriety, with property would come independence, 
 and all the facilities for a worthy and happy life would 
 grow up around them. In a word, providence, if not the 
 very first duty of the social man, ranks very high among 
 his duties, and is the sine qud non of any decided and 
 permanent improvement in either his social or his moral 
 state. About this there can be no doubt. As to this 
 [there is no difference of opinion. 
 
 Yet it is not to be denied that this prime duty, this im- 
 Iperative obligation, this indispensable condition of human 
 advancement, is not only deprecated but actually de- 
 nounced and prohibited in that Sermon on the Mount, 
 
48 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 which we are accustomed to look to as the embodiment of 
 the Christian rule of life.* 
 
 The words of Christ, and the exhortations of Cliristian 
 statesmen, economists, and moralists, are, then, directly at 
 variance — and the latter are undeniably in the right. 
 How is the difficulty to be met ? How must the discrep- 
 ancy be reconciled ? Why not meet the question honestly 
 and boldly, and avow that Jesus was addressing hearers 
 in a very different position and state of mind from the 
 labourers and artizans of England — hearers who were 
 wont to be not too careless, but too anxious, about the sor- 
 row; whose climate rendered comparatively little necessary, 
 and yielded that little to very moderate toil; the conditious 
 of whose civilization were incomparably simpler than ours, 
 and the obligations of whose labour less onerous.f It 
 may well be, then, that the exhortations which were soun 1 
 and appropriate to them are inapplicable to us. But \ie 
 may probably, with perfect safety and with no irreverenoj, 
 go a step further, and observe that Jesus, as was naturt J 
 and customary, not only spoke with that Oriental pictui- 
 esqueness of style which is almost inevitably exaggeration, 
 but fixed his own thought and directed that of his heare^u 
 upon the one side and phase of truth with which he wim 
 at the moment dealing, to the exclusion of all qualifyiij; 
 considerations which must be taken into account as so( n 
 as we begin to frame a code of conduct or a system of u- 
 tion out of one isolated discourse addressed to one fraction 
 
 t 
 
 * " Take no thought for your life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall 
 
 drink, nor yet for your body, what ye shall put on Behold the 
 
 fowls of the air, for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into 
 barns ; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not better than they? 
 . . . . And why take ye thought for raiment? Consider the lilies of 
 the field, how they grow ; they toil not, neither do they spin ; and yet I say 
 unto you, that Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these, 
 Wherefore if God so clothe the grass of the field . . • shall he not 
 much more clothe you, O ye of uttle faith? .... Take, therefore, no 
 thought, saying what shall we eat ? or what shall we drink ? or wherewithal 
 shall we be clothed ? But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteous- 
 ness, and all these things shall be added unto you Take, there- 
 fore, no thought for the morrow ; for the morrow shall take thought for the 
 things of itseu." 
 
 t See K^nan, Viede J ism, ch. x., for a vivid delineation of the entirely 
 different surroundings and features of the life of the Galilean fiaherraeu and 
 peasants to whom these exhortations were originally addressed^ 
 
EBITION. 
 
 IS A CHRISTIAN LIFE FEASIBLE ? 
 
 49 
 
 he embodiment of 
 
 iions of Christian 
 :, then, directly at 
 )ly in the right 
 must the discrep- 
 question honestly 
 ddressing hearers 
 f mind from the 
 carers who were 
 IS, about the;mor- 
 ly little necessary, 
 oil; the conditions 
 simpler than ours, 
 3SS onerous.f It 
 which were soun 1 
 le to us. But \» e 
 th no irreverenoj, 
 s, as was naturtil 
 t Oriental pictu- 
 bly exaggeration, 
 hat of his hearens 
 ith which he wim 
 L of all qualifyii(| 
 account as so( n 
 )r a system of &t- 
 jed to one fraction 
 
 1 eat, or what ye shall 
 
 . . . Behold the 
 
 reap, nor gather into 
 
 e not better than they! 
 
 Consider the lilies of 
 
 ey spin ; and yet I say 
 
 red like one of these, 
 
 . shall he not 
 
 Take, therefore, no 
 
 irink ? or wherewithal 
 
 God and his righteous- 
 
 - • • Take, there- 
 
 1 take thought for the 
 
 leation of the entirely 
 iralilean fiahermen and 
 tddressed^ 
 
 of a great problem.* Here, as elsewhere, the idea which 
 lies at the root of the teaching is undeniably correct, — 
 for that idea deprecates and assails the inordinate worldli- 
 ness which constituted one of the most insurmountable 
 obstacles to the reception of Christ's doctrine. The erro) 
 is ours, not Christ's — and consists in perversely applying 
 an exhortation addressed to a congregation among whom 
 a particular quality of mind and temper was in excess to 
 a congregation with whom it is almost lamentably defi- 
 cient. Had Jesus preached to English artizans, we may 
 feel certain that he would have chosen a different theme, 
 and used far other language. But this is by no means all 
 that needs to be said. Not a word of Christ's rebuke to 
 those who were eaten up by excessive care for the good 
 things of the world, and were led thereby to neglect treas- 
 ures immeasurably more precious, can be pleaded in justi- 
 fication of those who are so far from undervaluing these 
 good things that they insist upon their mstantaneous en- 
 joyment and their immediate exhaustion ; who lay by 
 nothing for to-morrow only because, like the brutes that 
 perish, they choose to eat up everything to-day ; — who, ii 
 they follow the letter of the law in laying up no treasure 
 upon earth, utteriy flout its spirit, inasmuch as they cer- 
 tainly lay up no treasure in heaven either. To eschew 
 over-anxiety for future comfort and weU-being, in order 
 that we may be the freer for the work of righteousness, 
 is the part of all true followers of Jesus : — " to take no 
 thought for the morrow " that we may indulge the more 
 unrestrainedly in the indolence and sensualities of to-day, 
 and to plead Gospel warrant for the sin, is to "wrest Scrip- 
 ture to our own destruction." It would be well that 
 divines should make this more clear. The form which 
 Christ's teaching would take were he to come on earth 
 now, without the least real change in its essential spirit, 
 would probably be : — Take thought for to-morrow, and 
 provide for its necessities, in order that, when to-morrow 
 
 ♦ It must be remembered, too, that all these exhortations to lar -ip treas- 
 ures m heaven, and not on earth, were delivered under the preVaiUng im- 
 pression that the Kingdom of Heaven, where all things would be differently 
 "idored, was close at hand. 
 
50 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 comes, you may be free enough from sordid wants and 
 gnawing cares to have some moments to spare for the 
 things that belong unto your peace. 
 
 IV. Denunciation of Wealth. — There is no line of con- 
 duct so emphatically condemned by Christ, and so eagerly 
 pursued by Christians, as the pursuit of riches. There is 
 no mistake about either fact. Throughout the Gospels 
 riches are spoken of not only as a peril and temptation to 
 the soul, but as something evil in themselves, something 
 to be atoned for, something to be singled out for condem- 
 nation. The young man who has kept all the command- 
 ments from his youth up, and asks what he must do fur- 
 ther to secure eternal life, is told to despoil himself of all 
 hia great possessions and give them to the poor. He is 
 reluctant to do so, and Jesus thereupon observes that "a 
 rich man shall hardly enter into the Kingdom of Heaven." 
 According to Luke he said, " Blessed are ye poor, for yours 
 is the Kingdom of God. Woe unto you that are rich, for 
 you have received your consolation." " Lay not up foj; 
 yourselves treasures upon earth." In the parable of Dives 
 and Lazarus, the rich man, without the faintest intima- 
 tion that he had any other fault than wealth, is relegated 
 to the place of torment ; while the beggar, without the 
 faintest intimation that he had any olJier merit but his 
 indigence and his sores, is carried by angels into Abra- 
 ham's bosom ; and the startling and sole reason- assigned 
 for the award is that now it is the turn of Lazarus to be 
 made comfortable. It is true that in one passage the 
 harshness of Christ's denunciation is modified into the 
 phrase, " How hard it is for them that trust in uncertain 
 riches to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven ; " and when 
 his disciples are horrified at hearing that hard sentence 
 about the needle's eye, and exclaim, " Who, then, can be 
 saved ? " he holds out a mysterious hope that in the infi- 
 nite resources of the Most High some way of escape from 
 the sweeping condemnation may be found. Still the pre- 
 vailing tone and teaching of the Gospel cannot be gain- 
 said or veiled. It is to the effect that the poor are the 
 more especial favourites of God ; that wealUi is a thing 
 
IS A CHRISTIAN LIFE FEASIBLE ? 
 
 51 
 
 to be shunned, not to be sought ; that it distinctly stands 
 in the way of salvation, and will probably have to be 
 atoned for hereafter by terrific compensation. 
 
 Yet in spite of this emphatic warning, riches have been 
 the most general pursuit of Christians in all ages and 
 among all classes, with rare exceptions in the monkish 
 ages ; among real and earnest, as well as among merely 
 professing Christians ; among the accredited teachers of 
 the Gospel (to a considerable extent), as well as among the 
 mere following Hock of lay disciples. Nay more, the most 
 really Christian nations have been, and still are, the most 
 devoted to the pursuit of gain ; the most rigidly and os- 
 tentatiously Christian sections of those nations — shall we 
 say the Quakers and the Scotch ? — have been among the 
 steadiest and most quietly successful in the search. No?- 
 do they even affect to fancy that they are wrong or dis- 
 obedient in thus eagerly striving for that wealth which 
 their Master so distinctly ordered them to eschew and 
 dread ; — they put aside or pass by his teaching with a sort 
 of staring unconsciousness, as if it in no way concerned 
 them ; — with a curious unanimity they vote his exhorta- 
 tions obsolete, abstract, or inapplicable; — the most respect- 
 able of the religious world give one day to their Saviour, 
 and six days to their ledger ; — the most pious banker, the 
 purest liver, the most benevolent nobleman, never dreams 
 of " despising riches," or of casting from him his super- 
 fluous possessions as a snare to his feet and a peril to his 
 soul. On the contrary, he is grateful to God for them ; 
 he returns thanks for the favour which has so blessed his 
 poor efforts to grow affluent ; he resolves that he will use 
 his wealth for the glory of God. 
 
 Now, which is wrong — Christ in denouncing riches, or 
 Christians in cherishing them ? Our Master in exhorting 
 us to shun them, or his disciples in seeking them so eager- 
 ly ? Will modern society permit us to despise thein ? 
 And would it be well for modern society that we should ? 
 — The answer, if we dare to state it plainly, does not seem 
 to be doubtful, or very recondite. We must imbue our- 
 selves with the spirit of Christ's teaching as enduring and 
 surviving, ever extant through all forms and all tiinee ; — 
 
52 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 and then we may safely ignore the letter as simply the 
 accidental and temporary garment in which he clotliod 
 his meaning. This is probably the unper verted imjuiLse 
 of every true man, if he be a reflective man as well. 
 Perhaps, indeed, the discrepancy between what Jesus 
 preached, and that which every good and wise man would 
 echo now, lies rather in the phraseology than in the essence 
 of the doctrine. Jesus — living among the poor, cognizant 
 of their " sacred patience " and their humble virtues, bent 
 upon startling his world out of the self-indulgent ease into 
 which it had sunk, and profoundly impressed with the; 
 terrible influence which the abundance and the love ot 
 earthly possessions exercise in enervating the soul, inca- 
 pacitating it for all high enterprise, all self-denying etfort, 
 all difficult achievement, seeing with a clearness which 
 excluded for the moment all modifying considerations, the 
 benumbing power of that fatal torpor and apathy which 
 creeps over even nobler natures when this life is too lux- 
 urious and too J03^ful, — saw that absolute renunciation 
 would be easier and safer than the righteous use of wealth. 
 We, on the other hand, who know — what was invisible 
 in those simpler days — how necessary is the accumulation 
 of capital to those great undertakings which carry on the 
 progress and the civilization of our complex modern com- 
 munities — naturally and rightly regard the employment 
 of affluence, and not its pursuit or its possession, as the 
 fit subject of our moral judgments. It was in the grave 
 of a rich disciple that Jesus was laid after the crucifixion ; 
 — and in the parable of the talents he praised and recom- 
 pensed the men who had doubled their capital by honest 
 trading, while condemning and despoiling the feckless and 
 unprofitaV)le idler. And the wise and right-minded of our 
 day would denounce as unmercifully as Christ himself the 
 rich man whose riches blind him to the far higher value 
 of spiritual aims and intellectual enjoyments ; whose lux- 
 ury and lavish expenditure make life difficult for all 
 ai-ound him ; whose ostentation is an evil and a tempta- 
 tion to those who take him as their model ; to whom 
 opulence is not a grand means, a solemn trust, and a grave 
 responsibility but merely a source of sensual indulgence 
 
IS A CilBISTlAN LIVE FEASIBLE? 
 
 5S 
 
 and of vacant worthlessnesH ; or piloses his youth and man- 
 hood in adding house to house and field to field, wasting 
 life without what alone rendera life worth having. We 
 see, too, perhaps more clearly than could be seen in earlier 
 times, that poverty has its own special and terrible tempta- 
 tions and obstacles to virtue, as well as wealth ; and that 
 with us at least, not affluence indeed, but assuredly com- 
 petence, smooths the way, for the weaker brethn ii, to a 
 crowd of Christian excellences. A.nd finally, we recognise 
 now, what was not known — perhaps was not the case — 
 then, that though a rich man may use his wealth right- 
 eously and well, it is scarcely possible for him to get rid of 
 it without doing mischief] and therefore doing wrong. 
 
 V. Corrnnunism. — It cannot be said that the Gospel 
 anywhere distinctly preaches a community of goods, 
 though it may be felt that the general tone of Christ's 
 exhortations tends in that direction. But there can be no 
 doubt that the earliest body of disciples, those who con- 
 stituted what is termed the " Church of Jerusalem," did so 
 interpret the teaching of their Master, and " had all things 
 in common, and sold their possessions and goods, and 
 parted them to all, as every man had need." The same 
 statement is repeated still more fully and distinctly in 
 the 4th chapter of the Acts : — " There was no one among 
 them that lacked ;" " lands and houses were sold, and the 
 produce laid at the apostles' feet for distribution ;" — 
 " neither said any man that ought of the things which he 
 possessed was his own, but they had all things common." 
 It is difficult to describe the sinking of all private prop- 
 erty in a common fund in plainer language ; and the 
 strange story of Ananias and Sapphira, though the words 
 are peculiar, can scarcely be held to invalidate the con- 
 clusion. 
 
 We can scarcely deny, then, that Communism is in some 
 sort a corollary of Christ's teaching, though not a posi- 
 tively commanded part of Christianity. It has been held 
 to be such by reforming sects and theorists in many ages, 
 and various are the attempts recorded in history to re- 
 duce it to practice. The notion has been constantly re- 
 
54 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 \W 
 
 appearing during the last century, now in France, now in 
 America. Many minds of no ordinary power have spo- 
 ken in favour of the conception. Even Mr. J. S. Mill-— 
 who would have been a great Christian if he had not been 
 a great Thinker — ^has saia that the idea at the root of it 
 was irrefragably sound : — " that every man should worl 
 according to his capacities, and should receive according 
 to his wants." Yet nothing is more certain than that 
 every endeavour to carry out the scheme in practice has 
 always failed, and as the eminent man just named has ad- 
 mitted, must always fail, — being constantly shipwrecked 
 on the same rock. The characteristics of human nature 
 forbid success. As men are constituted, if they receive 
 according to their wants, they never will work according 
 to their capacities. If they are fed and provided with all 
 they need, they will, as a rule, work as little as they can. 
 As regards masses of men, it is only their regard for self 
 that will compel them to do their duty by the community. 
 The institution of private property, the conviction that 
 " if any man will not work, neither shall he eat," alone 
 calls forth adequate exertions, alone controls indefinite 
 multiplication, alone counteracts inveterate laziness, alone 
 raises nations out of squalor and barbarism, alone lifts 
 man above the condition of the beasts that perish. Where 
 communism prevails, nine men out of every ten try to get 
 as much and to do as little as they can ; — and the system, 
 therefore, is found to be simply suicidal. It encounters, 
 too, whenever attempted, another fatal difficulty. It is 
 impossible for any external authority to determine what 
 are each man's capacities, or each man's needs. Practi- 
 cally, therefore, communism is fatal to civilization, fatal 
 to order, fatal to freedom, fatal to progress ; — and if 
 Christianity commands, favours, or indicates communism, 
 Christianity is fatal to all these good things. But the dim 
 idea, the sound nucleus, which lies latent in the communis- 
 tic creed — the conception, namely, that all our possessions, 
 as well as all our gifts, are to be held in trust for the 
 general good of all — is eminently and distinctively 
 Christian. 
 
 It will be answered that Christianity aims, and pro- 
 
IS A CHRISTIAN UFE FEASIBLE V 
 
 55 
 
 T aims, and pro- 
 
 fesses, so to remould men's natures, and to eliminate their 
 vices, and to neutralize their selfishness, as to make a 
 community of goods feasible, and not only compatible 
 with, but conducive to, the highest and surest advance of 
 the species. But vs^e are dealing with the practical ques- 
 tion : — " Is a Christian life livable in our day ? " And 
 if Commriism be only possible and safe when all men are 
 moulded in Christ's image, and permeated by his spirit, 
 and is noxious and fatal to the best interests of humanity 
 under all other conditions, — then, if a community of 
 goods be implied in a Christian life, that life indisputably 
 is not practicable now. It is found in actual fact, and 
 has been found in all lands and in aU times, that the in- 
 stitution of private property, with all the selfishness it 
 in\rolves, and all the selfishness it fosters, is alone 
 capable of drawing forth from our imperfect natures 
 that strenuous and enduring exertion from which 
 all progress springs. And this experience is the one 
 sufficing, an»-i perhaps the only unanswerable, justifica- 
 tion of that often assailed and questioned institution. 
 
 To sum up the results of our inquiry. It may be safely 
 pro)iounced that Non-resistance, Alms-giving, Improvi- 
 dence, and Communism, are not practicable in these days, 
 
 I and would be decidedly noxious, and therefore obviously 
 wrong; while contempt of riches, if stopping short of 
 that naked condemnation of them conveyed in the bald 
 letter of the Gospel teaching, would be feasible enough. 
 But the spirit and temper which Oriental imagination, 
 hasty generalization, unreflecting intelligence, unacquaint- 
 ance with the requirements of complex civilization, and 
 habitually hyperbolic phraseology, would naturally em- 
 body in those four exhortations, are as obligatory and as 
 feasible as ever. The thought — the nucleus of inner 
 meaning— is sacred still and of enduring truth. It is only 
 the casual and separable shell of words in which that 
 thought was once conveyed that we must regard as hav- 
 ing passed away, or possibly as never having been more 
 
 I than figuratively or exceptionally appropriate. 
 
 And we may use our freedom of penetrating to the true 
 
56 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 spirit and meaning of Christ's teaching through its casual 
 or disguising let^jor, with the more boldness that it is only 
 this spirit as to which we can feel absolutely certain. 
 Jesus spoke in Aramaic, while his sayings are recorded for 
 lis in Greek ; — and they must, therefore, have passed 
 through the process of translation from one language into 
 another ; and, moreover, from one language into another 
 whose genius is as singularly distinct as that of the Ger- 
 man from that of the French. The record, too, it is pretty 
 certain, did not take shape till at least half a century, or 
 about a generation and a half after the date of the events 
 recorded — ample time for those events (whether facts 
 or words) to have been moulded and modified by 
 the invariable practice of tradition into the con- 
 ceptions of the human intermediaries by whose agency 
 they were handed down ; — a time so ample that this pro- 
 cess of modification could not fail to have operated large- 
 ly. And, finally, the Gospels themselves abound in in- 
 dications that both the disciples who heard and repeated 
 Christ's sayings, and the Evangelists who recorded them 
 in a foreign language, did not always conceive them right- 
 ly or comprehend them fully. Thus, what our English 
 Testament practically contains is simply the form which 
 the precepts of aGreatProphet and Master,orally delivered, 
 have definitively assumed after having passed for a space 
 of fifty years or more, by the process of oral tradition, 
 through a succession of uncritical and imaginative minds, 
 none of which grasped or understood them in their fulness 
 or their pure simplicity ; and after being subsequently ex- 
 posed to the double risk of transfusion, first from a Se- 
 mitic into an Aryan, and then from a Classic into a Ten 
 tonic, tongue. It would seem, therefore, self-evident that 
 this is a case in which reliance on special phrases and ex- 
 pressions, as well as on particular narrative details, must 
 be singularly unsafe and unwise ; and, as a fact, we find 
 that even theologians, who most loudly deprecate and re- 
 pudiate this conclusion when formalised in words, do prac- 
 tically recognise its truth, by putting their own gloss and 
 interpretation on the bare language of Scripture wherever 
 they find it necessary to do so ; and thai the extent, to 
 
IS A CHRISTIAN LIFE FEASIBLE ? 
 
 67 
 
 which they use this liberty is merely a question of degree. 
 Only then, we may fairly conclude — indeed are forced to 
 conclude — only that "mind which was in Christ," that spirit, 
 temper, enduring and inspiring character — that Life, in 
 tine, which shone through all his actions and permeated all 
 his sayings, and which was so vital, so essential, so omnipres- 
 ent and so unmistakable,as to have survived through all the 
 channels and processes of transmission we have described, 
 and defied their perils, can safely be taken or followed as his 
 real teaching. Doubts and disputes among Christians have 
 been infinite as to the " doctrine " of Christ — as to the 
 " particulars " of what he said and did. None, we believe, 
 ever truly differed as to the tone and temper of his mind 
 or of his teaching — ^as to the essential features of his char- 
 acter — as to what he meant by " Me," when he said, 
 " Follow me," " Learn of me, for I am meek and lowly of 
 heart, £ nd ye shall find rest to your souls." 
 
 We may see now, too, how shallow and how groundless 
 are the fallacies of those who jump to the conclusion that 
 in order to realise and carry out a truly Christian life, it 
 is necessary to upset Society, to abolish the hierarchy of 
 ranks, and introduce a forced equality of position and 
 possessions. The Gospel, rightly read, gives no counten- 
 ance to those wild theories of ignorance, thoughtlessness, 
 and envy. The New Testament contains many precepts 
 as to our behaviour in those relations which spring out 
 of that very inequality of conditions which Christianity, 
 in the view of Communists, is supposed to discountenance. 
 Some of the more distinctively Christian virtues, such as 
 obedience and humility, would seem to be especially ap- 
 propriate to a social organization where rank, if not " caste," 
 holds sway. Certainly, as we have learned by experience, 
 I some of the most unchristian vices, such as envy, lie deep 
 at the root of the passion for equality, and have been seen 
 to flourish with malignant strength where that passion 
 has been most clamorous. Assuredly, too, we should say 
 that a system of Civilization in which Masters and Ser- 
 vants, Rulers and Subjects, rich and poor, the humble and 
 the great, are recognised and established, appears to offer 
 field and scope for a wider range and a greater variety o£ 
 
58 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE T3TTRD EDITION. 
 
 Christian excellences than a community in which a dead 
 level of uniformity should prevail. Nor can we conceive 
 any single form or manifestation of " the mind which was 
 in Christ," that may not thrive in fullest vitality in So- 
 ciety as now constituted, and find ample work in purging 
 its evils and developing its capabilities, without seeking 
 to disturb its foundations. If Christianity cannot flour- 
 ish under ary phase of social and political organiza- 
 tion, — if the seed of its more peculiar qualities can only 
 germinate and fructify in soil enriched with the ruins of 
 ancient orders and ancestral institutions, and flattened 
 down by the hard grinding steam-roller of Democracy,— 
 it can scarcely be the mighty or divine moral agency we 
 have hitherto conceived it. 
 
 Our conclusion, then, is, that we are and may remain 
 Christians, and that we can and onght to obey the Chris- 
 tian rule of life ; but that in order to do either we must 
 deal with the kernel, not the husk ; we must penetrate to 
 the true mind and temper of Jesus through the accretions 
 which have overlaid it, the literalism which has dis%iired 
 it, and (be it said with all reverence) the Orientalism and 
 the incompleteness, if not the imperfection, which min- 
 gled with and coloured it. Holding this, the utmost pos- 
 sible conquests of intelligence and learning are divested 
 of their terrors. It is not with Christianity that science 
 can ever be at issue; only \n.th. theology calling itself 
 Christian. 
 
 And now, having reached a time of life when most sub- 
 jects are grave, and when some have grown very solemn 
 — when the angry passions of the controversialist can find 
 no breath or aliment in the thin calm atmosphere of fading 
 years — when egotism has little left to gather round it— 
 and when few sentiments survive in pristine vividness 
 but the love of nature and the reverence for truth, — I may 
 be allowed one parting word, which, though personal, will 
 scarcely be deemed obtrusive. I not only disclaim any 
 position or feeling of antagonism w Christianity ; I claim 
 to have written this book on behalf, and in the cause, of 
 the religion of Jesus, rightly understood. I entirely re- 
 
CONCLUDINO WC^U)& 
 
 99 
 
 pudiate the pretensions of those whom I hold to have 
 specially misconceived and obscured that religion, to be 
 its exclusive or rightful representatives. I hold that 
 thousands of the truest servants of our Lord are to be 
 found among those who decline to wear what it is the 
 fashion to pronounce his livery, with the grotesque and 
 hideous facings of each successive age. I resent as an ar- 
 rogant assumption the habitual practice of refusing the 
 name of Christian to all who shrink away from or assail 
 the errors and corruptions with which its ofl&cial defen- 
 ders have overlaid the faith of Christ. And I can find no 
 words of adequate condemnation for the shallow insolence 
 of men who are not ashamed to fling the "name of atheist" 
 on all whose conceptions of the Deity are purer, loftier, 
 more Christian, than their own. Those who dare to dog- 
 matise about His nature or His purposes, prove by that 
 very daring their hopeless incapacity even to grasp the 
 skirts or comprehend the conditions of that mighty prob- 
 lem.* Even if the human intellect could reach the truth 
 about Him, human language would hardly be adequate to 
 give expression to the transcendent thought. Meanwhile, 
 recognising and realising this with an unfeigned humble- 
 ness which yet has nothing disheartening in its spirit, my 
 own conception — perhaps from early mental habit, per- 
 
 It must be that the light divine. 
 That on your soul is pleased to shine. 
 Is other than what falls on mine : 
 
 For you can fix and formalise 
 
 The Power on which you raise your eyes, 
 
 And trace him in his palaoe-skies. 
 
 You can perceive and almost touch 
 His attriDut«B, as such and such — 
 Almost familiar over much. 
 
 You can his thoughts and ends display. 
 
 In fair historical array, 
 
 From Adam to the judgment-day. 
 
 I cannot think Him here or there— 
 I think Him ever everjrwhere — 
 Unfading light, uijitifled air. 
 
 The Two Theologm : Palm Leava, 
 by Lord Hoiigbton. 
 
60 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 haps from incurable and very conscious metaphysical in- 
 aptitude — approaches far nearer to the old current image 
 of a personal God than to any of the sublimated substi- 
 tutes of modern thought. Strauss's " Universum," Comte's 
 "Humanity," even Mr. Arnold's " Stream of Tendency that 
 makes for Righteousness," excite in me no enthusiasin,com- 
 mand from me no worship. I cannot pray to the "Immen- 
 sities" and the "Eternities" of Carlyle. Theyprofterme 
 no help ; they vouchsafe no sympathy ; they suggest no 
 comfort. It may be that such a Personal God is a mere 
 anthropomorphic creation. It may be — as philosophers 
 with far finer instruments of thought than mine affirm— 
 that the conception of such a being, duly analysed, is 
 demonstrably a self-contradictory one. But at least in 
 resting in it, I rest in something I almost seem to realise ; 
 at least I share the view which Jesus indisputably held 
 of the Father whom he obeyed, communed with, and wor 
 shipped ; at least I escape the indecent familiarity and 
 the perilous rashness, stumbling now into the grotesque, 
 now into the blasphemous, of the infallible creed-concoc- 
 tors who stand confidently ready with their two-foot rule 
 to measure the Immeasurable, to define the Infinite, to 
 describe in precise scholastic phraseology the nature of 
 the Incomprehensible, and the substance of the great 
 Spirit of the universe. 
 
 I have but one word more to say — and that is an expres- 
 sion of unfeigned amazement— ao strong as almost to throw 
 into the shade every other sentiment, and increasing with 
 every year of reflection, and every renewed perusal of 
 the genuine woids and life of Jesus — that, out of anything 
 so simple, so beautiful, so just, so loving, and so grand, 
 could have grown up or been extracted anything so mar- 
 vellously unlike its original as the current creeds of 
 Christendom ; that so turbid a torrent could have flowed 
 from so pure a fountain, and yet persist in claiming that 
 fountain as its source ; that any combination of human 
 passion, perversity, and misconception could have reared 
 such a superstructure upon such foundations. Out of the 
 teaching of perhaps thtj most sternly anti-sacerdotal 
 
CONTRAST BETWEEN CHRIST AND CHRISTIANITY. 61 
 
 prophet who ever inaugurated a new religion, has been 
 built up (among the Catholics and their feeble imitators 
 here) about the most pretentious and oppressive priest- 
 hood that ever weighed down the enterprise and the 
 energy of the human mind. Out of the life and words of 
 a master, whose every act and accent breathed love and 
 mercy and confiding hope to the whole race of man, has 
 been distilled (among Calvinists and their cognates) a 
 creed of general damnation and of black despair. Christ 
 set at naught "observances," and trampled upon those 
 prescribed with a rudeness that bordered on contempt: 
 — Christian worship, in its most prevailing form, has been 
 made almost to consist in rites and ceremonies, in sacra- 
 ments and feasts and fasts and periodic prayers. Christ 
 preached personal righteousness, with its roots going 
 deep down into the inner nature, as the one thing need - 
 ful : — ^his accredited messengers and professed followers 
 say No ! purity and virtue are filthy rags ; salvation is 
 to be purchased only through vicarious merits and " im- 
 puted " holiness. Jesus taught his disciples to trust in, 
 and to worship a tender Father, long-suffering and plen- 
 teous in mercy : — those who speak in his name in these 
 later days, tell us rather of a relentless Judge, in whose 
 picture, as they draw it, it is hard to recognise either 
 justice or compassion. In Christ's grand and simple creed, 
 expressed in his plainest words, " eternal life " was the 
 assured inheritance of those who loved God with all their 
 hearts, who loved their neighbours as themselves, and who 
 walked purely, humbly, and beneficently while on earth : 
 — in the Christian sects and churches of to-day, in their 
 recognised formularies and their elaborate creeds, all this 
 is repudiated as infantine and obsolete ; the official means 
 and purchase-money of salvation are altogether changed 
 eternal life is reserved for those, ai^d for those only, who 
 accept or profess a string of metaphysical propositions 
 conceived in a scholastic brain and put into scholastic 
 phraseology ; and, to crown the whole, a Hell is conceived 
 so horrible as to make Heaven an impossibility, — for 
 what must be the temper of the Elect Few who could 
 taste an hour's felicity, while the immeasurable myriads 
 
62 
 
 INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION. 
 
 of their dearest fellow-bsings — their husbands and wives, 
 their mothers, their children — were writhing in eternal 
 torments within sight and hearing of their paradise ? 
 Theologians transmogrify the pure precepts and devotion 
 of Jesus into a religion as nearly as possible their opposite, 
 and then decree that, whoever will not adopt their travesty 
 " without doubt shall perish everlastingly." It is the old 
 spectacle which so disturbed Jeremiah, reproduced in our 
 own days : — " A wonderful and a horrible thing is com- 
 mitted in the land ; the prophets prophesy falsely, and 
 the priests bear rule through their means ; and the people 
 love to have it so : and what will he the end thereof'} " 
 
 Pabk Lodob, 
 
 StpUmhir, 673, 
 
 I 
 
PEEFAOE 
 
 lO THl 
 
 FIRST EDITION. 
 
 This work was commenced in the year 1845, and was 
 tinished in 1848. This much it is necessary to state, that 
 I may not be supposed to have borrowed without ac- 
 knowledgment from works which have preceded mine in 
 order of publication. 
 
 It is now given to the world after long hesitation, with 
 much diffidence, and with some misgiving. For some 
 time I was in doubt as to the propriety of publishing a 
 work which, if it might correct and elevate tlie views of 
 some, might also unsettle and destroy the faith of many. 
 But three considerations have finally decided me. 
 
 First. I reflected that, if I were right in believing that 
 I had discerned some fragments or gleams of truth which 
 had been missed by others, I should be acting a criminal 
 and selfish part if I allowed personal considerations to 
 withhold me from promulgating them ; — that I was not 
 entitled to take upon myself the privilege of judging 
 what amount of new light the world could bear, nor 
 what would be the effect of that light upon individual 
 minds ; — ^that sound views are formed and established by 
 the contribution, generation after generation, of widows' 
 mites ; — that if m;y small quota were of any value it 
 would spread and fructify, and if worthless, would come 
 to naught. 
 
 Secondly. Much observation of the conversation and 
 controversy of the religious world have wrought the con- 
 viction that the evil resulting from the received notions 
 
64 
 
 PREFACE. 
 
 as +o Scriptural authority has been immensely under- 
 estimated. I was compelled to see that there is scarcely a 
 low and dishonouring conception of God cuiTent among 
 men, scarcely a narrow and malignant passion of the hu- 
 man heart, scarcely a moral obliquity, scarcely a political 
 error or misdeed, which Biblical texts are not, and may 
 not be without any violence to their obvious signification, 
 adduced to countenance and justify. On the other hand, 
 I was compelled to see how many clear, honest, and as- 
 piring minds have been hampered and baffled in their 
 struggles after truth and light, how many tender, pure, 
 and loving hearts have been hardened, perverted, and forced 
 to a denial of their nobler nature and their better in- 
 stincts, by the ruthless influence of some passages of 
 Scripture which seemed in the clearest language to con- 
 demn the good and to denounce the true. No work con- 
 tributed more than Mr. Newman's Phases of Faith, to 
 force upon me the conviction that little progress can be 
 hoped either .?or religious science or charitable feeling till 
 the question of Biblical authority shall have been placed 
 upon a soundfjr footing, and viewed in a very different 
 light. 
 
 Thirdly. I called to mind the probability that there 
 were many other minds like my own pursuing the same 
 inquiries, and groping towards the same light ; and that 
 to all such the knowledge that they have f ellow-labourera 
 where they least expected it, must be a cheering and sus- 
 taining influence. 
 
 It was also clear to me that this work must be per- 
 formed by laymen. Clergymen of all denominations are, 
 from the very nature of their position, incapacited from 
 pursuing this subject with a perfect freedom from all ul- 
 tejdor considerations. They are restrained and shackled 
 at once by their previous confession of Faith, and by the 
 consequences to them of possible conclusions. It re- 
 mained, therefore, to see what could be done by an un- 
 fettered layman,endowed with no learning, but bringing to 
 the investigation the ordinary education of an English 
 gentleman, and a logical faculty exercised in other walks. 
 
 The three conclusions which I have chiefly endeavoured 
 
PREFACE. 
 
 65 
 
 to make clear are these : — that the tenet of the Inspira- 
 tion of the Scriptures is baseless and untenable under 
 any form or modification which leaves to it a dogmatic 
 value ; — that the Gospels are not textually faithful rec- 
 ords of the sayings and actions of Jesus, but occasionally 
 at least, ascribe to him words which he never uttered, and 
 deeds which he never did ; — and that the apostles only 
 partially comprehended, and imperfectly transmitted, the 
 teaching of their Great Master. The establishment of 
 these points is the contribution to the progress of reli- 
 gious science which I have attempted to render. 
 I I trust it will not be supposed that I regard this work 
 i in any other light than as a pioneering one. A treatise 
 on religion that is chiefly negative and critical can never 
 be other than incomplete, partial, and preparatory. But 
 the clearing of the ground is a necessary preliminary to 
 I the sowing of the seed ; the removal of superincumbent 
 I rubbish is indispensable to the discovery and extraction 
 ot the buried and intermingled ore ; and the liberation 
 of the mind from forestalling misconceptions, misguiding 
 prejudices, and hampering and distracting fears, must pre- 
 cede its setting forth, with any chance of success, in the 
 pursuit of Truth. 
 
 Nor, I earnestly hope, will the book be regarded as 
 
 antagonistic to the Faith of Christ. It is with a strong 
 
 conviction that popular Christianity is not the religion 
 
 I of Jesus that I have resolved to publish my views. 
 
 I What Jesus really did and taught, and whether his 
 
 doctrines were perfect or superhuman, are questions 
 
 which afford ample matter for an independent work. 
 
 I There is probably no position more safe and certain 
 
 Ithan that our religious views must of necessity be easen- 
 
 \tially imperfect and incorrect ; — that at best they can 
 
 lonly form a remote approximation to the truth, while 
 
 Ithe amount of error they contain must be large and 
 
 Ivarying, and may be almost unlimited. And this must 
 
 jbe alike, though not equally, the case, whether these 
 
 lyiews are taught us by reason or by revelation ;— that 
 
 |s, whether we arrive at them by the diligent and honest 
 
 "se of those faculties with which God has endowed us, 
 
66 
 
 rBETACE. 
 
 or by listening to those prophets whom He may have 
 ordained to teach us. The difference cannot be more 
 than this : that in the latter case our views will contain 
 that fragment, or that human disguise, of positive truth 
 which God knows our minds are alone capable of re- 
 ceiving, or which He sees to be fitted for their guidance; 
 — while in the former case they will contain that form 
 or fragment of the same positive truth which He framed 
 our minds with the capability of achie\ing. In the one 
 case they will contain as much truth as we can take in 
 — in the other, as much as we can discover ; — ^but in botl. 
 cases this truth must necessarily not only be greatly 
 limited, but greatly alloyed, to bring it within the com- 
 petence of finite human intelligences. Being finite, we 
 can form no correct or adequate idea of the Infinite :— 
 being material, we can form no clear conception of the 
 Spiritual. The question of a Revelation can in no way 
 affect this conclusion ; since even the Omnipotence of God 
 cannot infuse infinite conceptions into finite minds,— 
 cannot, without an entire change of the conditions of onr 
 being, pour a just and full knowledge of His nature into 
 the bounded capacity of a mortal's soul. Human in- 
 telligence could not grasp it ; human language could not 
 express it. 
 
 " The consciousness of the individual (says Fichte) 
 reveals itself alone ; — his knowledge cannot pass beyond 
 the limits of his own being. His conceptions of other 
 things and other beings are only his conceptions ; — they 
 are not those things or beings themselves. The living 
 principle of a living Universe must oe infinite, while all 
 our ideas and conceptions are finite, and applicable only 
 to finite beings. The Deity is thus not an object of 
 knowledge, but of faith ; — not to be approached by the 
 understanding, but by the moral sense ; — not to be con- 
 ceived, but to be felt. All attempts to embrace the in- 
 finite in the conception of the finite are, and nast be, 
 only accommodations to the frailty of man 
 
 " Atheism is a charge which the common understanding 
 has repeatedly brought against the finer speculations of 
 philosophy, when, in endeavouring to solve the riddle of 
 
PREFACE. 
 
 67 
 
 existence, they have approached, albeit with reverence 
 and humility, the source from which all existence pro- 
 ceeds. Shrouded from human comprehension in an ob- 
 scurity from which chastened imagination is awod back 
 and thought retreats in conscious weakness, the Divine 
 nature is surely a theme on which man is little entitled 
 to dogmatize. Accordingly it is here that the philosophic 
 intellect becomes most painfully aware of its own in- 
 sufficiency But the common understanding has 
 
 no such humility ; its God is an Incarnate Divinity ; — 
 imperfection imposes its own limitations on the Illimi- 
 table, and clothes the inconceivable Spirit of the Universe 
 in sensuous and intelligible forms derived from finite 
 nature !" 
 
 This conviction once gained, the whole rational basis 
 for intolerance is cui- away. We are all of us (though 
 not all equally) mistaken ; and the cherished dogmas of 
 each of us are not, as we had fondly supposed, the pure 
 truth of God, but simply our own special form of error — 
 the fragmentary and refracted ray of light which has 
 fallen on our own minds.* 
 
 But are we therefore to relax in our pursuit of truth, 
 or to acquiesce contentedly in error ? — By no means. The 
 obligation still lies upon us as much as ever to press for- 
 ward in the search ; for though absolute truth be unattain- 
 able, yet the amount of error in our views is capable of 
 progressive and perpetual diminution ; and it is not to 
 be supposed that all errors are equally innocuous. To 
 rest satisfied with a lower degree of truth than our facul- 
 ties are capable of attaining, — to acquiesce in errors which 
 we might eliminate, — to lie down consciously and con- 
 tentedly in unworthy conceptions of the Nature and Prov- 
 idence of God, — is treason alike to Him and to our own 
 Soul. It is true that all our ideas concerning the Eternal 
 Spirit must, considered objectively, be erroneous; and 
 
 • " Our little systems have their day ; 
 
 They have their day, and ceawe to be ; 
 Th^ are but broken lights of Th^e, 
 And Thou. O Lord, art more than t ley." 
 
 In Memo 
 
6S 
 
 PREFACE. 
 
 that no revelation can make them otherwise ; — all, there- 
 fore, that we require, or can obtain, is such an image or 
 idea of Him as shall satisfy our souls, and meet our needs 
 — as shall (we may say) be to us subjectively true. But 
 this conception, in order to become to us such satisfjring 
 and subjective truth, must of course be the highest and 
 noblest that our minds are capable of forming* ; — every 
 man's conception of God must consequently vary with 
 his mental cultivation and mental powers. If he con- 
 tent himself with any lower image than his intellect can 
 grasp, he contents himself with that which is faUe to him,. 
 as well as false in fact, — one which, being lower than he 
 could reach, he must ipso facto feel to be false. The 
 Peasant's idea of God — true to him — would be false to 
 me, because I should feel it to be unworthy and inade- 
 quate. If the nineteenth century after Christ adopts the 
 conceptions of the nineteenth century before him,— if 
 cultivated and chastened Christians adopt the conceptions 
 of the ignorant, narrow, and vindictive Israelite, — they 
 are guilty of thinking worse of God, of taking a lower, 
 meaner, more-limited view of His Nature, than the facul- 
 ties He has bestowed are capable of inspiring ; — and as 
 the highest view we are capable of forming must neces- 
 sarily be the nearest to the tmth, they are wilfully 
 acquiescing in a lie. They are guilty of what Bacon calls 
 " the Apotheosis of error " — stereotyping and canonising 
 one particular stage of the blunders through which 
 thought passes on its way to truth. 
 
 Now to think (or speak) ill of God is to incur the guilt 
 of blasphemy. It is surprising that this view of the 
 matter should so rarely have struck the orthodox. But 
 they are so intently occupied with the peril on one side, 
 ohat they have become blind or careless to the lc least 
 equal peril that lies on the other. If, as they deem, er- 
 roneous belief be dangerous and criminal, it must be so 
 whether it err on the side of deficiency or of excess. 
 They are sensitively and morbidly alive to the peril and 
 
 * Religious truth is therefoke necesaarily progressive, because our power* 
 Are progreRsive,— a position fatal to positive dogma. 
 
 men, leai 
 
PBSFACE. 
 
 69 
 
 the sin of not believing everything which Revelation has 
 announced, yet they are utterly blind to what should be 
 regarded as the deeper peril and the darker guilt of be- 
 lieving that Revelation has announced doctrines dis- 
 honouring to the pure majesty of God. If it be wrong 
 and dangerous to doubt what God has told us of Himself, 
 it must surely be equally so, or more so, to believe, on 
 inadequate evidence or on no evidence at all, that He ever 
 taught doctrines so derogatory to His attributes as many 
 which orthodox theology ascribes to Him. To believe 
 that He is cruel, short-sighted, capricious, and unjust, is 
 an affront, an indignity, which (on the orthodox supposi- 
 tion that God takes judicial cognizance of such errors) 
 must be immeasurably more guilty and more perilous, than 
 to believe that the Jews were mistaken in imagining that 
 He spoke through Moses, or the Christians in imagining 
 that He spoke through Paul. He is affirmed to be a 
 jealous God, an angry God, a capricious God, — punishing 
 the innocent for the sins of the guilty, — ^punishing with in- 
 finite and endless torture men whom He had created weak, 
 finite, and ephemeral, — ^nay, whom He had foreordained to 
 sin, — a God who came down from Heaven, walked among 
 "easted at their tables, endured their insults, died by 
 
 me 
 
 9, because our powero 
 
 their hands. Is there no peril in all this ? — no sin in 
 believing all these unworthy puerilities of a Creator who 
 has given us Reason and Nature to teach us better things ? 
 — Yet countless Christians accept them all with hasty and 
 trembling dismay, as if afraid that God will punish them 
 for being slow t* / believe evil of Him. 
 
 We have seen that the highest views of religion which 
 we can attain here must, from the imperfection of our 
 faculties, be neceasarily inaccurate and impure. But we 
 may go further than this. It is more than probable that 
 Religion, in order to obtain currency and influence with 
 the great mass of mankind, must be alloyed with an 
 amount of error which places it far below the standard 
 attainable by human capacities. A pure religion — by 
 which we mean one as pure as the loftiest and most cul- 
 tivated earthly reason can discern — would probably not 
 
70 
 
 PREFACE. 
 
 be comprehended by, or eSective over, the less-educated 
 portion of mankind. What is truth to the Phil()sui)her 
 would not be truth, nor have the effect of truth, to the 
 Peasant. The Religion of the many must necessarily be 
 more incorrect than that of the refined and reflective few, 
 — not so much in its essence, as in its forms — not so 
 much in the spiritual idea which lies latent at the bottom 
 of it, as in the symbols and dogmas in which that idea is 
 embodied. In many points true religion would not be 
 comprehensible by the ignorant, nor consolatory to them, 
 nor guiding and supporting for them. Nay, true reli- 
 gion would not he true to them : — that is, the effect it 
 would produce on their mind would not he the right one, 
 — would not be the same it would produce on the mind 
 of one fitted to receive it, and competent to grasp it. To 
 undisciplined minds, as to children, it is probable that 
 coarser images and broader views are necessary to excite 
 and sustain the efforts of virtue. The belief in an iriviiu- 
 diate Heaven of sensible delight and glory will enable an 
 uneducated man to dare the stake in the cause of faith 
 or freedom ; — the idea of Heaven as a distant scene of 
 slow, patient, and perpetual progress in intellectual and 
 spiritual being, would be inadequate to fire his imagina- 
 tion, or to steel his nerves. Again : to be grasped by, and 
 suitable to, such minds, the views presented them of God 
 must be anthropomorphic, not spiritual ; — and in propor- 
 tion as they are so they are false : — the views of His Gov- 
 ernment must be special, not universal ; — and in propor- 
 tion as they are so thej'' will be false.* The sanctions 
 which a faith derives from being announced from Heaven 
 amid clouds and thunder, and attested by physical prod- 
 igies, are of a nature to attract and impress the rudest 
 and most ignorant minds — perhaps in proportion to their 
 rudeness and their ignorance : the sanctions derived from 
 accordance with the breathings of Nature and the dictates 
 
 were ea 
 
 * There are, we are disposed to think, several indications in Scripture 
 that the doctrines which Christ desired to teach were put forth by him, not 
 in the language of strict verity (even us he conceived it), but in that clothing 
 which would most surely convev to his hearers the practical essentialH of the 
 doctrine— the important part of the idea.— (See Bush's Anastaais, p. 143.) 
 
PREFACE. 
 
 71 
 
 of the soul, are appreciable in their full strength by the 
 trained and nurtured intelligence alone.* 
 
 The rapid spread and general reception of any religion 
 may unquestionably be accepted as proof that it contains 
 some vital truth ; — it may be regarded also as an equally 
 certain proof that it contains a large admixture of error, 
 — of error, that is, cognizable and detectable by the higher 
 human minds of the age. A perfectly pure faith would 
 find too little preparation for it in the common mind and 
 heart to admit of prompt reception. The Christian reli- 
 gion would hardly have spread as rapidly as it did, had it 
 remained as pure as it came from the lips of Jesus. It 
 owes its success probably at least as much to the corrup- 
 tions which speedily encrusted it, and to the errors which 
 were early incorporated with it, as to the ingredient of 
 pure and sublime truth which it contained. Its progress 
 among the Jews was owing to the doctrine of the Mes- 
 siahship, which they erroneously believed to be fulfilled 
 in Jesus. Its rapid progress among the Pagans was 
 greatly attributable to its metaphysical accretions and its 
 heathen corruptions. Had it retained Hs original purity 
 and simplicity — had it been kept free from all extraneous 
 admixtures, a system of noble Theism and lofty morality 
 as Christ delivered it, — where would it now have been ? 
 Would it have reached our times as a substantive religion ? 
 —Would truth have floated down to us without borrow- 
 ing the wings of error ? These are interesting, though 
 purely speculative, questions. 
 
 One word in conclusion. Let it not be supposed that 
 the conclusions sought to be established in this book have 
 been arrived at eagerly, or without pain and reluctance. 
 The pursuit of truth is easy to a man who has no human 
 j sympathies, whose vision is impaired by no fond partiali- 
 
 * All who hu^ '0016 much into contact with the minds of children or of 
 the uneducated cluases, are fully aware how unfitted to their mental condi- 
 tion are the more wide, catholic, and comprehensive views of religion, 
 j which yet we hold to be the true ones, and how essential it is to them to 
 I have a well-definedj positive, somewhat dogmatic, and above all a divinely- 
 I attested and atUhitrttative creed, deriving its sanctions from without. Such 
 I are best dealt with by rather narrow, decided, and undoubting minds. 
 
72 
 
 PBEFACE. 
 
 t 
 
 ties, whose neart is torn by no divided allegiance. To 
 him the renunciation of error presents few difficulticb; 
 for the moment it is recognised as error, its charm ceases! 
 But the case is very different with the Searcher whose 
 affections are strong, whose associations are quick, whose 
 hold upon the Past is clinging and tenacious. He may 
 love Truth with an earnest and paramount devotion: 
 but he loves much else also. He loves errors, which were 
 once the cherished convictions of his soul. He loves dog- 
 mas, which were once full of strength and beauty to his 
 thoughts, though i.ow perceived to be baseless or falla- 
 cious. He loves the Church where he worshipped in his 
 happy childhood ; where his friends and his family wor- 
 ship still ; where his grey-haired parents await the resur- 
 rection of the Just : but where he can worship and await 
 no more. He loves the simple old creed, which was the 
 creed of his earlier and brighter days ; which is the creed 
 of his wife and children still , but which inquiry has 
 compelled him to abandon. The Past and the Familiar 
 have chains and talismans which hold him back iii his 
 career, till every fresh step forward becomes an effort hnd 
 an agony ; every fresh error discovered is a fresh bond 
 snapped asunder ; every new glimpse of light is liki a 
 fresh flood of pain poured in upon the soul. To sach a 
 man the pursuit of Truth is a daily martyrdom — how 
 hard and bitter let the martyr tell. Shame to those who 
 make it doubly so : honour to those who encounter it 
 saddened, weeping, trembling, but unflinching still. " Illi 
 in vos saeviant qui nesciunt cum quo labore verum inven- 
 ietur ; qui nesciunt cum quanta difficultate sanetur oculus 
 interioris hominis."* 
 
 To this martyrdom, however, we believe there is an 
 end : for this unswerving integrity there is a rich and 
 sure reward. Those who flinch from inquiry because 
 they dread the possible conclusion ; who turn aside from 
 the path as soon as they catch a glimpse of an unwelcome 
 goal ; who hold their dearest hopes only on the tenure 
 of a closed eye and a repudiating mind, — will, sooner or 
 
 St. Augustine. 
 
PREFACE. 
 
 73 
 
 later, liave to encounter that inevitable hour when doubt 
 will not be silenced, and inquiry can no longer be put by; 
 when the spectres of old misgivings which have been 
 rudely repulsed, and of questionings which have been 
 sent empty away, will return " to haunt, to startle, to 
 waylay ; " — and will then find their faith crumbling 
 aw^ay at the moment of greatest need, not because it is 
 false, but because they, haK wilfully, half fearfully, 
 «rrounded it on false foundations. But the man whose 
 faith in God and futurity has survived an inquiry pur- 
 sued with that " single eye " to which alone light is 
 promised, has attained a serenity of soul possible only to 
 the fearless and the just. For him the progress of science 
 is fraught with no dark possibilities of ruin ; no dreaded 
 discoveries lie in wait for him round the comer ; since he 
 is indebted for his short and simple creed, not to shelter- 
 ing darkness, but to conquered lights 
 
 The Crato, 
 
 i>£c. 4, 185a 
 
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 CREED OF CHRISTENDOM 
 
 CHAPTER I. 
 
 INSPIRATION OF THE SCRIPTURES. 
 
 When an Inquirer, brought up in the popular Theology of 
 England, questions his teachers as to the foundations and 
 evidence of the doctrines he has imbibed, he is referred at 
 on e to the Bible as the source and proof of all : " The 
 Bible and the Bible only, is the religion of Protestants." 
 The Bible, he is told, is a sacred book of supreme and un- 
 questionable authority, being the production of writers 
 directly inspired by God to teach us truth — being in the 
 ordinary phrase, The Word of God. This view of the 
 Bible he finds to be universal among all religious sects, 
 and nearly all religious teachers ; all at least, of whom, in 
 this country, he is likely to hear. This belief in the In- 
 spiration of the Scriptures (©eoTrvcvoria) is, indeed, stated 
 with some slight variations, by modem Divines ; some 
 affirming, that every statement and word was immediately 
 dictated from on high ; these are the advocates of Plenary 
 or Verbal Inspiration ; — others holding merely that the 
 Scriptural writers were divinely informed and authorized 
 Teachers of truth and narrators of fact, thoroughly im- 
 bued with, and guided by, the Spirit of God, but that the 
 words, the earthly form in which they clothed the ideas, 
 were their own. These are the believers in the Essential 
 Inspiration of the Bible. 
 
 It is obvious that the above are only two modes of 
 stating the same doctrine — a doctrine incapable of being 
 
76 
 
 THE CREED 
 
 Bi^lSTENDOM. 
 
 defined or expressed with phi.; jphi^^' Drecision, from our 
 ignorance of the modus operandi of div-ne influences on 
 the mind of man. Both propositions mean, if they have 
 any distinct meaning at all, this affirmation : — that every 
 statement of fact contained in the Scriptures is true, as 
 being information communicated by the Holy Spirit- 
 that every dogma of Religion, every idea of Duty, every 
 conception of Deity, therein asserted, came from Ood, in 
 the natural and unequivocal sense of that expression. 
 That this is the acknowledged and accepted doctrine of 
 Protestant Christendom at least is proved by the circum- 
 stance that all controversies among Christian sects turn 
 upon the interpretation, not the authority of the Scrip- 
 tures ; insomuch that we constantly hear disputants make 
 use of this language : " Only show me such or such a 
 doctrine in the Bible and I am silenced." — It is proved, 
 too, by the pains taken, the humiliating subterfuges so 
 often resorted too, by men of science, to show that their 
 discoveries are not at variance with any text of Scrip- 
 ture ; — ^pains and subterfuges now happily discarded by 
 nearly all, as unworthy alike of the dignity of Science 
 and the rights of controversy, and as no longer required 
 amid the increasing enlightenment of the age. — It is proved 
 by the observation, so constantly forced upon us, of theo- 
 logians who have been compelled to abandon the theory 
 of Scriptural Inspiration or to modify it into a negation 
 still retaining, as tenaciously as ever, the consequences 
 and corollaries of the doctrine ; phrases which sprung out 
 of it, and have no meaning apart from it ; and deductions 
 which could flow from it alone. — It is proved, moreover, 
 by the indiscriminate and peremptory manner in which 
 texts are habitually quoted from every part of the Bible, 
 to enforce a precept, to settle a doctrine, or to silence an 
 antagonist. — It is proved, finally, by the infinite efforts 
 made by commentators and divines to explain discrep- 
 ancies and reconcile contradictions which, independently 
 of this doctrine, could have no importance or significance 
 whatever. 
 
 This, accordingly, is the first doctrine for which our 
 Inquirer demands evidence and proof. It does not occur 
 
INSPIRATION OF THE SCRIPTURES. 
 
 77 
 
 to him to doubt the correctness of so prevalent a belief : 
 lu) is only anxious to discover its genesis and its found- 
 ation. He immediately perceives that the Sacred Scrip- 
 tures consist of two separate series of writings, wholly 
 distinct in their character, chronology, and language — 
 the one containing the sacred books of the Jews, the other 
 those of the Christians. We will commence with the 
 former. 
 
 Most of our readers who share the popular belief in the 
 divine origin and authority of the Jewish Scriptures, 
 would probably be much perplexed when called upon to 
 assign grounds to justify the conviction which they en- 
 tertain from habit. All that they could discover may be 
 classed under the following heads : 
 
 I. That these books were received as sacred, authori- 
 tative, and inspired Writings by the Jews themselves. 
 
 II. That they repeatedly and habitually represent 
 themselves as dictated by God, and containing His ipsis- 
 sima verba. 
 
 III. That their contents proclaim their origin and 
 parentage, as displaying a purer morality, a loftier re- 
 ligion, and altogether a holier tone, than the unassisted, 
 uninspired human faculties could, at that period, have 
 attained. 
 
 IV. That the authority of the Writers, as directly com- 
 inisioned from on High, was in many cases attested by 
 miraculous powers, either of act or prophecy. 
 
 V. That Christ and His Apostles decided their sacred 
 character, by referring to them, quoting them, and as- 
 suming or affirming them to be inspired. 
 
 Let us examine each of these grounds separately. 
 
 I. It is unquestionably true that the Jews received the 
 Hebrew Canon, or what we call the Old Testament, as a 
 collection of divinely-inspired writings, and that Christ- 
 ians, on their authority, have generally adopted the same 
 belief.— Now, even if the Jews had held the same views 
 of inspiration that now prevail, and attached the modern 
 meaning to the word ; even if they had known accurately 
 who were the Authors of the saci cd booT , and on what 
 
78 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 authority such and such writings were admitted into the 
 Canon, and such others rejected ; — we do not see whv 
 their opinion should be regarded as a sufficient guide and 
 basis for ours ; especially when we remember that they 
 rejected as an Impostor the Prophet whom we conceive tu 
 have been inspired beyond all others. What rational or 
 consistent ground can we assign for disregarding the 
 decision of the Jews in the case of Jesus, and accepting it 
 submissively in the case of Moses, David, and Isaiah ? 
 
 But, on a closer examination, it is discovered that the 
 Jews cannot tell us when, nor by whom, nor on what 
 principle of selection, this collection of books was formed. 
 All these questions are matters of pure conjecture, or of 
 difficult and doubtful historic inference ; — and the ablest 
 critics agree only in the opinion that no safe opinion can 
 be pronounced. One ancient Jewish legend attributes 
 the formation of the Canon to the Great Synagogue, an 
 imagined " company of scribes," arvvayaryr} ypa/A/Aarcwv, pre» 
 sided over by Ezra. — Another legend, equally destitute 
 of authority, relates that the collection aleady existed, 
 but had become much corrupted, and that Ezra was in- 
 spired for the purpose of correcting and purifying it ;— 
 that is, was inspired for the purpose of ascertaining, cor- 
 recting, and affirming the inspiration of his Predecessors. 
 A third legend mentions Nehemiah as the Author of the 
 Canon. The opinion of De Wette — probably the first 
 authority on these subjects — an opinion founded on mi- 
 nute historical and critical investigations, is, that the 
 different portions of the Old Testament were collected or 
 brought into their present form, at various periods, and 
 that the whole body of it " came gradually into existence, 
 and, as it were, of itself and by force of custom and public 
 use, acquired a sort of sanction." He conceives the Pen- 
 tateuch to have been completed about the time of Josiah, 
 the collection of Prophets soon after Nehemiah, and the 
 devotional writings not till the age of the Maccabees.* 
 His view of the grounds which led to the reception of 
 
 * Introduction to the Critical Study of the Old Testament (by Parker), 
 i. 26-35. 
 
INSPIRATION OF THE SCRIPTURES. 
 
 79 
 
 tament (by Parker), 
 
 the various books into the sacred Canon, is as follows : — 
 " The writings attributed to Moses, David, and the Proph- 
 ets, were considered inspired on account of the personal 
 character of their authors. But the other writings, which 
 rre in part anonymous, derive their title to inspiration 
 sometimes from their contents, and sometimes from the 
 cloud of antiquity which rests on them. Some of the 
 writings which were composed after the exile — such, for 
 example, as the Song of Solomon, Ecclesiastes, and Daniel 
 — were put on this list on account of the ancient authors 
 to whom they were ascribed; — others — for example. 
 Chronicles and Esther — on account of their contents; 
 and others again, as Ezra and Nehemiah, on account of 
 the distinguished merit of their authors in restoring the 
 Law and worship of God."* 
 
 Again : the books of the Hebrew Canon were custom- 
 arily classed among the Jews into three several divisions 
 — the Books of the Law, the Prophets, and the other 
 sacred writings, or Hagiographa, as they are termed — and 
 it is especially worthy of remark that Philo, Josephus, 
 and all the Jewish authorities ascribed different degrees 
 of inspiration to each class, and moreover did not con- 
 ceive such inspiration to be exclusively confined to the 
 Canonical writers, but to be shared, though in a scantier 
 degree, by others ; Philo extending it even to the Greek 
 translators of the Old Testament ; Josephus hinting that 
 he was not wholly destitute of it himself; and both 
 maintaining that even in their day the gifts of prophecy 
 and inspiration were not extinct, though limited to few.f 
 The Talmudists held the same opinion ; and went so far 
 as to say that a man might derive a certain kind or 
 degree of inspiration from the study of the Law and the 
 Prophets. In the Gospel of John xi. 51, we have an inti- 
 mation that the High Priest had a kind of ex o^io in- 
 spiration or prophetic power. — It seems clear, therefore, 
 
 * De Wette, i. 40. 
 
 t pe Wette, i. 39-43. A marked confirmation of the idea of graduated 
 inspiration is to be found in Numbers xii. G-8. Maimonides (De Wette, ii. 
 361) distinguishes eleven degrees of inspiration, besides that which was 
 granted to Moses. Abarlmnel (De Wette i. 14) makes a similar distinction. 
 
80 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 that the Jews, on whose authority we accept tlie Old 
 Testament as inspired, attached a very different uieaning 
 to the word from that in which our Theologians employ 
 it ; in their conception it approaches (except in the case 
 of Moses) much more nearly to the divine afflatus which 
 the Greeks attributed to their Poets. — " Between the 
 Mosaic and the Prophetic Inspiration, the Jewish Church 
 asserted such a difference as amounts to a diversity . . , 
 To Moses and to Moses alone — to Moses, in the recording 
 no less than in the receiving of the law — and to every 
 part of the five books called the books of Moses, the 
 Jewish Doctors of the generation before and coeval with 
 the Ap0)tles, assigned that unmodified and absolute 
 BeoTTvevarTLa, which our divines, in words at least, attribute 
 to the Canon collectively."* The Samaritans, we know, 
 carried this distinction so far that they received the Pen- 
 tateuch alone as of divine authority, and did not believe 
 the other books to be inspired at all. 
 
 It will then be readily conceded that the divine author- 
 ity, or proper inspiration (using the word in our modem, 
 plain, ordinary, theological sense), of a series of writings 
 of which we know neither the date, nor the authors, nor 
 the collectors, nor the principle of selection — cannot de- 
 rive much support or probability from the mere opinion 
 of the Jews ; especially when the same- Jews did not 
 confine the quality of inspiration to these writings exclu- 
 sively ; — when a large section of them ascribed this 
 attribute to five books only out of thirty-nine ; — and 
 when they assigned to different portions of the collection 
 different degrees of inspiration — an idea quite inconsistent 
 with the modern one of infallibility. — " In infallibility 
 there can be no degrees."*!* 
 
 * Coleridge. Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit, p^ 19. As I shall have 
 to refer to this eminent writer more tnan once, I wisn it to be borne in mind 
 that, though not always speculatively orthodox, he was a dogmatic Clnist- 
 ian, and an intolerant Trinitarian ; at least he always held the language of 
 one. 
 
 ■\ Coleridge, p. 18. [Moreover, if we may trust a very remarkable and 
 learned article on the Talmud, which appeared in the July number, 1873, 
 of the Edinburgh Review, much of the Old Testament which Christian 
 divines, in their ignorance of Jewish lore, have insisted on receiving and 
 interpreting literally, the better informed Rabbins never dreamed of regard- 
 
INSPIRATION or THE SCRIPTURES. 
 
 81 
 
 II. The second ground alleged for the popular belief in 
 the Inspiration of the Jewish Scriptures, appears to in- 
 volve both a confusion of reasoning, and a misconception 
 of fact. These writings, I believe I am correct in stating, 
 nowhere affirm their own inspiration, divine origin, or 
 infallible authority. They frequently, indeed, use the 
 expressions, " Thus saith Jehovah,** and " the Word of 
 the Lord came to Moses," &c., which seem to imply 
 that in these instances they consider themselves as re- 
 cording the very words of the Most High ; but they do 
 not declare that they are as a whole dictated by God, nor 
 even that in these instances they are enabled to record 
 His v.'ords with infallible accuracy. But even if these 
 writings did contain the most solemn and explicit asser- 
 tion of their own inspiration, that assertion ought not to 
 have, and in the eye of reason could not have, any weight 
 whatever, till that inspiration is proved from indepen- 
 dent sources — after which it becomes superfluous. It is 
 simply the testimony* of a witness to himself, — a testi- 
 mony which the falsest witness can bear as well as the 
 truest. To take for granted the attributes of a writer 
 from his own declaration of those attributes, is, one would 
 imagine, too coarse and too obvious a 1 ;^cal blunder not 
 to be abandoned as soon as it is stated m plain language. 
 Yet, in the singular work which I have already quoted — 
 singular and sadly remarkable, as displaying the strange 
 inconsistencies into which a craven terror of heresy (or 
 the imputation of it) can betray even the acutest think- 
 ers — Coleridge says, first, " that he cannot find any such 
 claim (to supernatural inspiration) made by the writers in 
 question, explicitly or by implication " (p. 16) ; — secondly, 
 that where the passages asserting such a claim are sup- 
 posed to be found, " the conclusion drawn from them in- 
 volves obviously a petitio principii, namely, the superna- 
 tural dictation, word by word, of the book in which the 
 
 ing as anything but allegorical. The " literalists " they called fools. The 
 account of the Creation was one of the portions which the unlearned vrt\n 
 specially forbidden to meddle with.] 
 
 * • ' If I bear witness of myself, my witness is not true " {%.e., ifl not to be 
 regarded), John v. 31. 
 
82 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 assertion is found ; for until this is established, the ut- 
 most such a text can prove, is the current belief of the 
 Writer's age and country " (p. 17) ; and, thirdly, that, 
 " whatever is referred by the sacred penman to a direct 
 communication from God ; and whenever it is recorded 
 that the subject of the history had asserted himself io 
 have received this or that command, information, or as- 
 surance, from a superhuman intelligence ; or where the 
 Writer, in his own person, and in the character of an his- 
 torian, relates that the word of God came to Priest 
 Prophet; Chieftain, or other Individual ; / receive the same 
 with full belief, and admit its inappellable authority" 
 (p. 27). — What is this, but to say, at p. 27, that he re- 
 ceives as " inappellable " that which, at p. 17, he declares 
 to involve an obvious petitio principii ? — ^that any self- 
 assertet: infallibility — any distinct affirmation of divirie 
 communication or command, however improbable, contra- 
 dictory, or revolting — made in any one of a collection of 
 books, " the dates, selectors, and compilers of which " lie 
 avers to be " unknown, or recorded by known fabulists" 
 (p. 18), — must be received as of supreme authority, wit'i- 
 out question, and without appeal ? — What would such a 
 reas ler as Coleridge think of such reasoning as th?- , (m 
 any other than a Biblical question ? 
 
 III. The argument for the inspiration of the Old Tes- 
 tament Scriptures derived from the character of their 
 contents, will bear no examination. It is true that many 
 parts of them contain views of Duty, of God, and of 
 Man's relation to Him, which are among the purest and 
 loftiest that the human intellect can grasp ; — but it is no 
 less tiue that other passages, at least as numerous and 
 characteristic, depict feelings and opinions on these topics, 
 as low, meagre, and unworthy, as ever took their rise in 
 savage and uncultured mmds. These passages, as is well 
 known, have long been the opprobium of orthodoxy and 
 the dcjpair of Theologians ; and so far are they from be- 
 ing confirmatory of the doctrine of scriptural inspiration, 
 that nothing but the inconsiderate and absolute reception 
 of this doctrine has withheld men from regarding and 
 representing them in their true light. The contents of 
 
INSPIRATION OP THE SCRIPTURES. 
 
 83 
 
 the Hebrew Canon as a whole, form the most fatal and 
 convincing argument against its inspiration as a whole. 
 By the popular creed as it now stands, the nobler portions 
 are compelled to bear the mighty burden of the lower 
 and less worthy ; — and often sink under their weight. 
 
 IV. The argument for the Inspiration of the Old Tes- 
 tament Writers, drawn from the supposed miraculous or 
 prophetic powers confen-ed upon the writers, admits of a 
 very brief refutation. In the first place, as we do not 
 know who the Writers were, nor at what date the books 
 were written, we cannot possibly decide whether they 
 were endowed with any such powers, or not. — Secotidly, 
 as tiie only evidence we have for the reality of the mira- 
 cles rests upon the divine authority, and consequent un- 
 failing accuracy, of the books in which they are recorded, 
 they cannot, without a violation of all principles of rea- 
 soning, be adduced to prove that authority and accuracy. 
 — Thirdly, in those days, as is well known, superhuman 
 powers were not supposed to be confined to the direct 
 and infallible organs of the divine commands, nor neces- 
 sarily to imply the possession of the delegated authority 
 of God; — as we learn from the Magicians of Pharaoh, 
 who could perform many, though not all, of the miracles 
 of Moses ; from the case of Aaron, who, though miracu- 
 lously gifted, and God's chosen High Priest, yet helped 
 the Israelites to desert Jehovah, and bow down before 
 the Golden Calf ; — and from the history of Balaam, who, 
 though in daily communication with God, and specially 
 inspired by Him, yet accepted a bribe from His enemies 
 to curse His people, and pertinaciously endeavoured to 
 perform his part of the contract. — And, finally, as the 
 dogmatic or credential value of prophecy depends on our 
 being able to ascertain the date at which it was uttered, 
 and the precise events which it was intended to predict, 
 and the impossibility of foreseeing such events by mere 
 human sagacity, and, moreover, upon the original lan- 
 guage in which the prophecy was uttered not having been 
 altered by any subsequent recorder or transcriber to 
 match f be fulfilment more exactly ; — and as in the case of 
 the prophetical books of the Hebrew Canon (as will be 
 
V\\\ 
 
 84 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 seen in a subsequent chapter), great doubt rests upon al- 
 most all these points ; and as, moreover, for one predic- 
 tion which was justified, it is easy to point to two which 
 were falsified, by the event ; — the prophecies, even if oc- 
 casionally fulfilled, can assuredly, in the present stage of 
 our inquiry, afiford us no adequate foundation on which 
 to build the inspiration of the library (for such it is) of 
 which they form a part. 
 
 V. But the great majority of Christians would, if 
 questioned, rest their belief in the Inspiration of the Old 
 Testament Scriptures, upon the supposed sanction or 
 aflirmation of this view by Christ and his Apostles. 
 — Now, as Coleridge has well argued in a passage already 
 cited, until we know that the words of Christ conve)ring 
 this doctrine have been faithfully recorded, so that we 
 are actually in possession of his view — and that the 
 apostolic writings conveying this doctrine were the pro- 
 duction of inspired men — the utmost such texts can 
 prove is the current belief of the Writer's age and 
 country concerning the character of the book then 
 called the Scriptures." — The inspiration of the Old 
 Testament, in this point of 'dew, therefore, rests upon the 
 inspiration of the New — a matter to be presently con- 
 sidered. But let us here ascertain what is the actual 
 amount of divine authority attiibuted to the Old, by the 
 writers of the New Testament. 
 
 It is unquestionable that these Scriptures are constantly 
 referred to and quoted, by the Apostles and Evangel- 
 ists, as authentic and veracious histories. It is unques- 
 tionable, also, that the prophetic writings were considered 
 by them to be prophecies — to contain predictions of 
 future events, and especially of events relating to Christ. 
 They received them submissively ; but misquoted, mis- 
 understood, and misapplied them, as will hereafter be 
 shewn. Further ; however incorrectly we may believe 
 the words of Christ to have been reported, his references 
 to the Scriptures are too numerous, too consistent, and too 
 probable, not to bring us to the conclusion that he quoted 
 them as having, and deserving to have, unquestioned 
 authority over the Jewish mind. On this point, however, 
 
 the opj 
 re marl 
 the on| 
 am cor 
 come 
 you, ' 
 shall ii 
 He qu^ 
 that 
 affirms I 
 the pri 
 prophej 
 sialiy, 
 "the S 
 a.' decii 
 " Mosej 
 
 On 
 gated 
 
INSPIRATION OF THE SCRIPTURES. 
 
 85 
 
 the opinions of Christ, as recorded in the Gospel, present 
 remarkable decrepancies, and even contradictions. On 
 the one hand, we read of His saying, " Think not that I 
 am come to destroy the Law, or the Prophets : I am not 
 come to destroy, but to fulfil. For verily I say unto 
 you, Till Heaven and Earth pass, one jot or one tittle 
 shall in no wise pass from the Law, till all be fuliilled."* 
 He quotes the Decalogue as " from God ," and he says 
 that " God spake to Moses."*!- It is true that he nowhere 
 affirms the inspiration of the Scriptures, but he quotes 
 the prophecies, and even is said to represent them as 
 prophesying of him.J He quotes the Psalms controver- 
 sially, to put down antagonists, and adds the remark, 
 " the Scriptures cannot be broken."§ He is represented 
 a." declaring, once positively and once incidentally,! I that 
 " Moses -vvTote of him."ir 
 
 On the other hand, he contradicted Moses, and abro- 
 gated his ordinances in an authoritative and peremptory- 
 manner, which precludes the idea that he supposed him- 
 self dealing w'lih. the direct commands of God.** This is 
 done in many points specified in Matth. v. 34-44 ; — in the 
 ease of divorce, in the most positive and naked manner 
 (Matth. V. 31-32; xix. 8 ; Luke xvi. 18; Mark x. 4-12) ;— in 
 the case of the woman taken in adultery, who would have 
 been punished with a cruel death by the Mosaic law, but 
 whom Jesus dismissed with — "Neitheir do I condemn thee: 
 go, and sin no more" (John viii. 5-1 1) ; — in the case of clean 
 anduncleanmeats, as to which the Mosaic law is rigorous in 
 the extreme, but which Christ puts aside as trivial, afiirm- 
 
 * Matth. V. 17, 18. Luke xvi. 17. 
 
 t Matth. XV. 4-6 ; xxii. 31. Mark vii. 9-13 ; xii. 26. 
 
 t Matth. XV. 7 ; xxiv, 16. Luke iv. 17-21 ; xxiv. 27. 
 
 § John X. 35. 
 
 II John V. 46. Luke xxiv. 44. 
 
 H It seems more than doubtful whether any passages in the Pentateuch 
 can fairly be considered as having reference to Chnst. But passin^^ ove' 
 this, if it shall appetr that what we now call " The Bookr of Moses " wt - 
 nt'i ntten by Aloses, it will foUow, either that Christ referred to Mosaic 
 writings which we do not posaesa ; or that, like the contemporary Jews and 
 modern Christiana, he erroneously ascribed to Moses books which Moses 
 (lid not write. 
 
 ** " Ye have heard th.' t Ih has been said of old time ; "— " Moses, for the 
 hardness of your heaHa, suffered you t • put away your wives," &c., &o. 
 
86 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 ing that unclean meats cannot defile a man, though 
 Moses declared that it " made them abominable." (Matth. 
 XV. 11; Mark vii. 15.) Christ even supersedes in the 
 same manner one of the commands of the Decalogue— 
 that as to the observance of the Sabbath, his views and 
 teaching as to which no ingenuity can reconcile with the 
 Mosaic law.* 
 
 Finally, we have the assertion ii. Paul's Second Epistle 
 to Timothy (iii. 16), which, though certaini;y translatable 
 two ways,-|* either a^rms the inspiration of the Hebrew 
 Canon as a whole, or assumes the inspiration of certain 
 portions of it. On the whole, there can, I think, be little 
 doubt that Christ and his Apostles received the Jewish 
 Scriptures, as they then were, aa sacred and authoritative. 
 But till their divine authority is established, it is evident 
 that this, the Jifth, ground for believing the inspiration of 
 the Old Testament merges in the first, i.e., tV -^ belief of 
 the Jews. 
 
 So far, then, it appears that the only evidt^iice for the 
 Inspiration of the Hebrew Canon is the fact that the Jews 
 believed in it. — But we know that they also believed in 
 the Inspiration of other writings ; — that their meaning of 
 the word " Inspiration " differed essentially from that 
 which now prevails ; — that their theocratic polity had so 
 interwoven itself with all their ideas, and modified their 
 whole mode of thinking, that almost every mental sugges- 
 tion, and every act of power, was referred by them directly 
 to a superhuman origin.^ — " If " (says Mr. Coleridge) " we 
 take ir. o account the habit, universal with the Hebrew 
 Doctors, tf referring ;.ll excellent or extraordinary things 
 
 to the 
 mate 
 which I 
 
 * See t>.is 'hole qi option most ably treatefl in the notea to Norton, Genu- 
 ineneBs oi the Gosnels. It. § 7. 
 
 t The English, ' 'i k ti . awl othi v versionB vender it, " All Scripture ia given 
 by inspiration of Go'I, ?nuii profitable hn ueaoiiing," &c., &c. (vm. obviously 
 incorrect reiider'T.T, uOessit can be shown that ypapri is always used by Paul 
 in reference to the^^ao.tii T .ish Canon exclusively). The Vulgate, Luther, 
 Calnaet, the Spanish a V Arabic versions, and most of the Fathers, trans- 
 late it thus : " All >^r-'~i '■' inspired writings are also profitable fov teaching," 
 ^c. This is little muie t' in a tr.iiam. But Paul probably meant, " Do not 
 despise the Old Testatoent, because yoix have the Spirit ; since you know it 
 Mas inspired, yon ought to be able to make it i)rotitable/' &c. 
 
 t De Wotte, i. 39. 
 
DOM. 
 
 INSPIRATION OF THE SCBIPTURES. 
 
 8? 
 
 le a man, though 
 tninable." (Matth. 
 supersedes in the 3 
 f the Decalogue— 
 Eith, his views and 
 reconcile with the 
 
 il's Second Epistle 
 ;ainly translatable 
 on of the Hebrew 
 >iration of certain 
 1, 1 think, be little 
 ceived the Jewish 
 and authoritative, 
 shed, it is evident 
 the inspiration of 
 , i.e., tV- belief of 
 
 7 evidtxtce for the 
 fact that the Jews 
 V also believed in 
 their meaning of 
 itially from that 
 j-tic polity had so 
 id modified their 
 ry mental sugfiies- 
 by them directly 
 r. Coleridge) " we 
 vith the Hebrew 
 aordinary things 
 
 otes to Norton, Genu- 
 
 '' All Scripture is given 
 kc. , &c. (an obviously 
 3 always used by Paul 
 The Vulgate, Luther, 
 )f the Fathers, trans- 
 ofitable fov teaching," 
 ably meant, "Do not 
 ;it ; since you know it 
 
 to the Great First Cause, without mention of the proxi- 
 mate and instrumental causes — a striking illustration of 
 which may be obtained by comparing the narratives of the 
 same event in the Psalms and the Historical Books ; — and 
 if we further reflect that the distinction of the Provi- 
 dential und the Miraculous did not enter into their forms 
 of thinking — at all events not into their mode of convey- 
 ing theii thoughts ; — the language of the Jews respecting 
 the Hagio;.:rapna will be found to differ little, if at all, from 
 that of religious persons among ourselves, when speaking 
 of an author abounding in gifts, stirred up by the Holy 
 Spirit, writing under the influence of special grace, and the 
 like."* — We know, moreover, that the Mahometans believe 
 in the direct inspiration of the Koran as firmly as ever did 
 the Hebrews in that of their sacred books ; and that in 
 matters of such mighty import the belief of a special na- 
 tion can be no safe or adequate foundation for our own. — 
 The result of this investigation, therefore, is, that the 
 popular doctrine of the inspiration, divine origin, and con- 
 sequent unimpeachable accuracy and infallible authority 
 of the Old Testament Scriptures, rests on no foundation 
 whatever — unless it shall subsequently appear that Christ 
 and his Apostles afiirmed it, and had means of knowing it 
 and judging of it, superior to and independent of those 
 possessed by the Jews of their time. ' 
 
 I have purposely abstained in this place from noticing 
 those considerations which directly negative the doctrine 
 in question ; both because many of these will be more 
 suitably introduced in subsequent chapters, and because, 
 if a doctrine is shown to be without foundation or un- 
 proved, disproof is superfluous. — In conclusion, let us care- 
 full}'^ note that this inquiry has related solely to the divine 
 origin and infallible authority of the Sacred Writings, and 
 is entirely distinct from the question as to the substantial 
 truth of the narratives and the jorrectness of the doctrine 
 they contain — a question to be decided by a difl*erent 
 method of inquiry. Though wholly uninspired, they may 
 transmit n .rratives, faithful in the main, of God's dealings 
 
 * Letters Ton Inspiration, p, 21. 
 
88 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM, 
 
 with man, and may be records of a real and authentic 
 revelation. — All we have yet made out is this : that the 
 mere fact of finding any statement or dogma in the 
 Hebrew Scriptures is no sufficient proof or adequate war- 
 ranty that it came from God. 
 
 It is not easy to discover the grounds on which the 
 popular belief in the inspiration, or divine origin, of the 
 New Testament Oanon, as a whole, is based. Probably, 
 when analysed, they will be found to be the following. 
 
 I. That the Canonical Books were selected from the un- 
 canonical cr apocryplial, by the early Christiaxx Fathers, 
 who ifiiustbe supposed to have had ample means of judg- 
 ing ; and that the inspiration of these writings is aflBlrmed 
 by them. 
 
 II. That it is natural to imagine that God, in sending 
 into the World a Revelation intended for all times and 
 all lands, should provide fov its faithful record and trans- 
 mission by inspiring the transmitters and recorders. 
 
 III. That the Apostles, whose unquestioned writings 
 form a large portion of the Canon, distinctly affirm their 
 cwn inspiration ; and tli-it this inspiration was distinctly 
 fiomised them by Christ. 
 
 IV. That the coLte^ats ol' Is New Testament are their 
 own credentials, and by ihoir cublime tone and character, 
 proclaim their superLuman rrign. 
 
 V. That the inspiration of xDott of the writers may be 
 considered as attested by the miracles they wrought, or 
 had the power of working. 
 
 I. The writin^N ^vhich. compose the volume called by us 
 the New Testament, had assumed their present collective 
 form, and wtre generally received throughout the Christian 
 Churches, about the end of the second century. They 
 were selected out of a number of others; but by whom they 
 were selected, or what principle guided the selection, his- 
 tory leaves in doubt. We have reason to believe that in 
 several instances, writings were selected or rejected, not 
 from a consideration of the external or traditional evi- 
 dence of their genuineness or antiquity, but from the sup- 
 
 M i 
 
OM. 
 
 INSPIRATION OF THE SCRIPTURES. 
 
 89 
 
 Ell and authentic 
 
 is this : that the 
 
 r dogma in the 
 
 or adequate war- 
 
 is on -which the 
 ine origin, of the 
 Dased. Probably, 
 the following, 
 jcted from the un- 
 ]!hristia^ Fathers, 
 le means of judg- 
 ritings is afl&rmed 
 
 t God, in sending 
 for all times and 
 record and trans- 
 id recorders, 
 estioned writings 
 nctly afl^m their 
 on was distinctly 
 
 stament are their 
 ne and character, 
 
 e -writers may be 
 ihey wrought, or 
 
 pme called by us 
 
 >resent collective 
 
 )ut the Christian 
 
 century. They 
 
 lilt by whom they 
 
 |he selection, his- 
 
 believe that in 
 
 or rejected, not 
 
 traditional evi- 
 
 lut from the sup- 
 
 posed heresy or orthodoxy of the doctrines they contained. 
 We find, moreover, that the early Fathers disagreed among 
 themselves in their estimate of the genuineness and 
 authority of many of the books ;* that some of them re- 
 ceived books which we exclude, and excluded others which 
 we admit ; — while we have good reason to believe that 
 some of the rejected writings, as the Gospel of the He- 
 brews, and that for the Egyptians, and the Epistles of 
 Clement and Barnabas, have at least as much title to be 
 placed in the sacred Canon as some already there — the 
 Epistle to the Hebrews, the second of Peter and that of 
 Jude, for example. 
 
 It is true that several of the Christian Fathers who 
 lived about the end of the second century, Irenseus, Ter- 
 tullian, and Clement of Alexandria, distinctly affirm the 
 inspiration of the Sacred Writings, as those writings were 
 leceived, and as that word was understood, by them.f 
 But we find that they were in the habit of referring to 
 and quoting indiscriminately the Apocrjrphal, as well as 
 the Canonical Scriptures. Instances of this kind occur in 
 Clement of Rome (a.d. 100), Clement of Alexandria (a.d. 
 200), and, according to Jerome, in Ignatius also, who lived 
 about A.D. 107. J Their testimony, therefore, if valid to 
 prove the inspiration of the Canonical Scriptures, proves 
 the inspiration of the rejected Scriptures likewise; and by 
 necessary sequence proves the error and incompetency of 
 the compilers of the Canon, who rejected them. No one, 
 however, well acquainted -with the -writings of the Fathers, 
 will be of opinion that their judgment m these matters, 
 or in any matters, ought to guide our own.§ 
 
 II. The second argument certainly carries with it, at 
 [first sight, an appearance of much weight ; and is, we be- 
 
 * See the celebrated account of the Canon given bjr Eusebius, where five 
 Df our epistles are " disputed ; " — the Apocalypse, which we receive, is by 
 bany considered " spurious ; " and the Gospel of the Hebrews, which we re- 
 ject, is stated to have been by many, especially of the Palestinian Christians, 
 •placed among the "acknowledged writings." De Wette, L 76. 
 
 t De Wette, i., 63-66. 
 
 X Ibid. p. 54, ftc. 
 
 § See Ancient Christianity, by Isaac Taylor, passim— for an exposition of 
 ehat these Fathers could write and believe. [See also " Literature and 
 )(>t,'ma," by Mr. Arnold, p. 283, for a few curious specimens.] 
 
 Q 
 

 '\ 
 
 90 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 lieve, wiwi most minds, however unconsciously, the argu- 
 ment which (as Paiej expres.«os it) " does the business." 
 The idea of Gospel inspiration is received, not from any 
 proof that it is so, but from an opinion or feeiino- that it 
 ought to he so. The doctrine arose, not because it was 
 provable, but because it was wanted. Divines can pro- 
 duce no stronger reason for believing in the inspiration of 
 the Gospel naiTatives, than their own opinion that it is 
 not likely God should have left so important a series of 
 facts to the ordinary chances of history. But on a little 
 reflection it will be obvious thai we have no ground what- 
 ever for piesuming that God will act in this or in that 
 manner under any given circumstances, beyond what 
 previous analogies may furnish ; and in this case no anal- 
 ogy exists. Wi cannot even form a probable guess d 
 priori of His moQj of operation ; but we find that gener- 
 ally, and indeed in all cases of which we have any certain 
 knowledge, He leaves things to the ordinary action of 
 natural laws ; and if, therefore, it is " natural " to presume 
 anything at all in this instance, that presumption should 
 be that God did not inspire the New Testament writers, 
 but left them to convey what they saw, heard, or believed, 
 as their intellectual powers and moral qualities enabled 
 them. 
 
 The Gospels, as professed records of Christ's deeds and 
 words, will be allowed to form the most important portion 
 of the New Testament collection. Now, the idea of God 
 having inspired four different men to write a history of 
 the same transactions — or rather of many different men 
 having undertaken to write such a history, of whom God 
 inspired /oit?' only to write correctly, leaving the others to 
 their own unaided resources, and giving us no test by 
 which to distinguish the inspired from the uninspired,— 
 certainly appears self -confuting, and anything but " natu- 
 ral." If the accounts of the same transactions agree, 
 where was the necessity for more than one ? If they 
 differ (as they notoriously do), it is certain that only one 
 can be inspired ; — and which is that one ? In all other 
 religions ciaiming a divine origin, this incongruity is 
 avoided. 
 
INSPIRATION OF \'HE SCRIPTURES. 
 
 91 
 
 Further, the Gospels nowaere affirm, or even intimate, 
 their own inspiiation* — a <ilaim to credence which, had 
 they possessed it, they assuredly would not have failed to 
 put forth. Luke, it is clear from his exordium, had no 
 notion of his own inspiration, but founds his title to take 
 liis place among the annalists, and to be listened to as at 
 least equally competent with any of his competitors, on 
 his having been from the first cognizant of the transactions 
 he was about to relate. Nor do the Apostolic writings 
 bear any such testimony to them ; nor could they well do 
 so, having (with the exception of the Epistles of John) 
 been composed previous to them. 
 
 III. Wh^ n we come to the consideration of the Apos- 
 tolic writings the case is different. There are, scattered 
 through these, apparent claims to superhuman guidance 
 and teaching, though no direct assertion of inspiration. 
 It is, however, worthy of remark that none of these occur 
 in the writings of any of the Apostles who were contem- 
 porary with Jesus, and who attended his ministry; — in 
 whom, if in any, might inspiration be expected; to 
 whom, if to any, was inspiration promised. It is true 
 that we find in John^f" much dogmatic assertion of being 
 the sole teacher of truth, and much denunciation of all 
 who did not lis^ten submissively to him; but neither in his 
 epistles, nor in those of Peter, James^ nor Jude, do we 
 find any claim to special knowledge of truth, or guarantee 
 from error by direct spiritual aid. All assertions of in- 
 spiration are, we believe, confined to the epistles of Paul,. 
 and may be found in 1 Cor. ii. 10-16 ; Gal. i. 11, 12 ; 1 
 Thess. iv. 8 ; 1 Tim. ii. 7. 
 
 Now, on these passages we have to remark, ^rsf, that 
 " having the Holy Spirit," in the parlance of that day, by 
 no means implied our modern idea of inspiration, or any- 
 thing approaching to it ; for Paul often affirms that it was 
 
 * Dr. Arnold, Christian Life, &c. , p. 487,—** I must acknowledge that the 
 Scriptural narratives do not claim this inspiration for themselves." Cole- 
 ridye, Confessions, &c., p. 16,—" I cannot find any such claim made by these 
 writers, either explicitly or by implication. " 
 
 [t 1st Epistle iv. 6. ''' We are of God : he that knoweth God heareth us j 
 he that is not of God heareth not us. Hereby know we the spirit of truth- 
 and the spirit of error."] 
 
92 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 given to many, nay, to most, of the believers, and in 
 different degrees* Moreover, it is probable that a man 
 who believed he was inspired by God would have been 
 more dogmatic and less argumentative. He would scarcely 
 have run the risk of weakening his revelation by a pre- 
 sumptuous endeavour to prove it ; still less by adducing 
 in its behalf arguments which are often far from being 
 irrefragable."!* 
 
 Secondly. In two or three passages he makes a marked 
 distinction between what he delivers as his own opinion, 
 and what he speaks by authority : — " The Lord says, not 
 I ; " — " I, not the Lord ; " — " This I give by permission, 
 not commandment," &c , &c. Hence, Dr. Arnold infers,^ 
 that we are to consider Paul as speaking from inspiiation 
 where' jr he does not warn us that he " speaks as a man." 
 But unfortunately for this argument the Apostle expressly 
 declares himself to be "speaking by the word of the 
 Lord," in at least one case where he is manifestly and 
 admittedly in error, viz., in 1 Thess. iv. 15 ;§ of which we 
 shall speak further in the following chapter. 
 
 Thirdly. The Apostles, all of whom are supposed to be 
 alike inspired, differed among themselves, contradicted, 
 depreciated, and *' withstood " one another.!! 
 
 Fourthly. As we showed before in the case of the Old 
 Testament writers, the Apostles' assertion of their own in- 
 spiration, even were it ten times more clear and explicit 
 than it is, being their testimony to themselves, could have 
 no weight or validity as evidence. 
 
 But, it will be urged, the Gospels record that Christ 
 promised inspiration to his Apostles. In the first place, 
 Paul was not included in this promise. In the next place, 
 we have already seen that the divine origin of these books 
 is a doctrine for which no ground can be shown ; and their 
 correctness, as records of Christ's words, is still to be es- 
 tablished. When, however, we shall have clearly made 
 
 * 1 Cor. xii. 8, and xiv. passim. 
 
 t Gal. iii. 16 for example. [See Arnold's " Literature and Dogma," i). 140.] 
 t Christian Course and Character, pp. 488-9. 
 [§ See also 1 Cor. vii. 29. Philip, iv. 5.] 
 
 li 6al. ii. 11-14. 2 Peter iii. 16. Acts xv. 6-39. Compare Bom, iii., and 
 GaL ii. and iii., with James ii. 
 
INSPIRATION OF THE SCRirTURES. 
 
 93 
 
 |e and Dogma," p. 140.] 
 ompare Bom. iii., and 
 
 out that the words promising inspiration were really ut- 
 tered by Christ and meant what w interpret them to 
 mean, we shall have brought ourselves into the singular 
 and embarrassing position of maintaining f^a^CAris^^rom- 
 iscd them that which in result they did not possess ; since 
 there can be no degrees of inspiration, in the ordinary and 
 dogmatic sense of the word ; and since the Apostles clear- 
 ly were not altogether inspired, inasmuch as they fell 
 into mistakes,* disputed, and disagreed among themselves. 
 
 The only one of the New Testament writings which 
 contains a clear affirmation of its own inspiration, is the one 
 which in all ages has been regarded as of the most doubt- 
 ful authenticity — viz., the Apocalypse. It was rejected 
 by many of the earliest Christian authorities. It is re- 
 jected by most of the ablest Biblical critics of to-day. 
 Luther, in the preface to his translation, inserted a protest 
 against the inspiration of the Apocalypse, which protest 
 he solemnly charged every one to prefix, who chose to 
 publish the translation. In this protest one of his chief 
 grounds for the rejection is, the suspicious fact that this 
 writer alone blazons forth his own inspiration. 
 
 IV. The common impression seems to be that the con- 
 tents of the New Testament are their own credentials — 
 that their superhuman excellence attests their divine 
 origin. This may be perfectly true in substance without 
 affecting the present question ; since it is evident that the 
 excellence of particular passages, or even of the great 
 mass of passages in a book, can prove nothing for 
 the divine origin of the whole — unless it can be shown 
 that all the portions of it are indissolubly connected. 
 This or that portion of its contents may attest by its nature 
 that this or that spe<!ial portion came from God, but not 
 that the book itself, including everything in it, had a divine 
 source. A truth, or a doctrine, may be divinely revealed, 
 but humanly recorded, or transmitted by tradition ; and 
 may be mixed up with other things that are erroneous ; 
 
 * The error of Paul about the approaching end of the world was shared by 
 all the Aiwstles. James v. 8. 1 Peter iv. 7. 2 Pater iii. 12. 1 John ii. 
 18, Jude, verse 18. 
 

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94 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 lelse the passages of scriptural truth conta,ined in a modem 
 sermon would prove the whole sermon inspired and infal- 
 lible. 
 
 V. The argument for Inspiration, drawn from the mir- 
 aculous gifts of alleged recipients of inspiration — a matter 
 to which we shall refer when treating ot miracles — is thu 
 conclusively met by a recent author : " Shall we say thai 
 miracles are an evidence of inspiration in the person who 
 performs them ? And must we accept as infallible every 
 combination of ideas which may exist in his mind ? If 
 we look at this question abstractedly, it is not easy to 
 perceive the necessary connection between superhuman 
 power and superhuman wisdom. . . . And when 
 we look more closely to the fact, did not the minds of the 
 Apostles retain some errors, long after they had been gift- 
 ed with supernatural power ? Did they not believe in 
 demons occupying the bodies of men and swine ? Did 
 they not expect Christ to assume a worldly sway ? Did 
 not their master strongly rebuke the moral notions and 
 feelings of two of them, who were for calling down fire 
 from Heaven on an offending village ? It is often said 
 that where a man's asseveration of his infallibility is com- 
 bined with the support of miracles, his inspiration is sat- 
 isfactorily proved ; and this statement is made on the as- 
 sumption that God would never confer supernatural power 
 on one who could be guilty of a falsehood. What, then, are 
 we to say respecting Judas and Peter, both of whom had 
 been furnished with the gifts of miracle, and employed 
 them during a mission planned by Christ, and of whom, 
 nevertheless, one became the traitor of the garden, and 
 the other uttered against his Lord three falsehoods in one 
 hour?"* 
 
 So far, then, our inquiry has brought us to this nega- 
 tive conclusion ; that we can discover no ground for be- 
 lieving that the Scriptures — i.e., either the Hebrew or the 
 
 * Rationale of Religious Inquiry, p. .30. [Moreover the law of MoRes 
 lirecta that a false nrophet, even tliongli he work miracles in attentation, 
 ihall be put to dentn,— and St. Paul Hays that if " an angel from Heaven" 
 preaohea any doctrine that conflicts with hit, " let him be aocuraed." Deut. 
 diL Qalatiaiu i. 8.J 
 
 
»f. 
 
 INSPIRATION OF THE SCRIPTURES. 
 
 95 
 
 ried in a modem 
 pired and infal- 
 
 i from the mir- 
 ition — a matter 
 iracles — is thu 
 ball we say thai 
 the person who 
 infallible every 
 his mind ? If 
 is not easy to 
 m superhuman 
 And when 
 he minds of the 
 y had been gift- 
 not believe in 
 i swine? Did 
 [j sway ? Did 
 ral notions and 
 iling down fire 
 I is often said 
 llibility is eom- 
 piration is sat- 
 aade on the as- 
 »rnatural power 
 What, then, are 
 1 of whom had 
 and employed 
 and of whom, 
 le garden, and 
 Isehoods in one 
 
 Christian Canonical Writings — are inspired, taking th&t 
 word in its ordinary acceptation — viz., that they '* came 
 from God ; " were dictated or sufjgestsd by Him ; were 
 supematurally preserved from error, both as to fact and 
 doctrine , and must therefore be received in all their parts 
 as authoritative and infallible. This conclusion is per- 
 fectly compatible with the belief that they cmitain a 
 human record, and in substance, a faithful record, of a 
 divine revelation — a human history, and, in the main, a 
 true history, of the dealings of God with man. But they 
 have become to us, by this conclusion, records, vot revela- 
 tions; — histories to be investigated like other histories ; — 
 documents of which the date, the authorship, the genu- 
 ineness, the accuracy of the text, are to be ascertained by 
 the same principles v f investigation as we apply to other 
 documents. In a word we are to examine them and re- 
 gard them, not as the Mahometans regard the Koran, but 
 as Niebuhr regarded Livy, and as Arnold regarded 
 Thucydides — documents out of which the good, the true, 
 the sound, is to be educed. 
 
 i to this nega- 
 ^ound for be- 
 Hebrew or the 
 
 the law of Moses 
 :le8 in atteutntion, 
 igel from Heaven " 
 I aocuned." Deut. 
 
CHAPTER IL 
 
 MODERN MODinCATIONS OF THE DOCTRINE OF INSPIRA- 
 TION. 
 
 The question examined in the last chapter was not " Bo 
 the sacred writings contain the words of inspired truth ?" 
 but, " Are the writings themselves so inspired as to con- 
 tain nothing else ? Are they supematurally guaranteed 
 from error ?" It is clear that these questions are perfectly 
 distinct. God may send an inspired message to man, but 
 it does not necessarily follow that the record or tradition 
 of that message is inspired also. 
 
 We must here make a remark, which, if carefully borne 
 in mind through the discussion, will save much misappre- 
 hension and much misrepresentation. The word Inspira- 
 tion is used, and may, so far as etymology is concerned, 
 be fairly used, in two very different senses. It may be 
 used to signify that elevation of all the spiritual faculties 
 by the action of Qod upon the heart, which is shared by 
 aU devout minds, thougn in different degrees, and which 
 is consistent with infinite error. This is the sense in 
 which it appears to have been used by both the Jews and 
 Pagans of old. This is the sense in which it is now used 
 by those who, abandoning the doctrine of Biblical Inspi- 
 ration as ordinarily held, are yet unwilling to renounce 
 the use of a wo^d defensible in itself, and hallowed to 
 them by old associations. Or it may be used to signify 
 that direct revelation, or infusion of ideas and informa- 
 tion into the understanding of man by the Spirit of God, 
 which involves and implies infallible correctness. This is 
 the sense in which the word is now used in the ordinary 
 
 farlance of Christians, whenever the doctrine of Biblical 
 nspiration is spoken of; — and it is clear that in this 
 signification only can it possess any dogmatic value, i.e., 
 can form the basis of dogmas which are to be received as 
 authoritative, because taught in or fairly deduced from 
 
 the Scri 
 the wor 
 speak 
 " Word 
 Inspirat 
 to empl 
 sense, is 
 as disinj 
 Now 
 first, am 
 Inspirat 
 it is sur 
 second 
 must be 
 Theo 
 out Chr 
 tained ii 
 every id 
 the ordi] 
 was dire 
 man wh 
 we have 
 untenab 
 basis on 
 popular 
 so indei 
 that — u 
 they ha 
 variety 
 this cha 
 modificj 
 they an 
 in fact, 
 nial of 
 charact 
 qualify, 
 Two 
 idge an 
 the moi 
 mitting 
 
OF INSPIRA- 
 
 was not " Do 
 pired truth ?" 
 red as to con- 
 [y guaranteed 
 3 are perfectly 
 e to man, but 
 d or tradition 
 
 iref ully borne 
 
 ich misappre- 
 
 s^ord Inspira- 
 
 is concerned, 
 
 It may be 
 
 tual faculties 
 
 is shared by 
 
 8, and which 
 
 the sense in 
 
 ;he Jews and 
 
 is now used 
 
 ibiical Inspi- 
 
 to renounce 
 
 hallowed to 
 
 3d to signify 
 
 tnd informa- 
 
 piritof God, 
 
 ess. This is 
 
 ;he ordinary 
 
 i of Biblical 
 
 <hat in this 
 
 c value, i.e., 
 
 I received as 
 
 jduced from 
 
 MODIFICATIONS OF THE DOCTRINE. 
 
 97 
 
 the Scriptures. It is only by establishing this sense of 
 the word as the correct one, that divines are entitled to 
 speak of the Bible, or to use it in controversy, as the 
 " Word of God." To establish the doctrine of " Biblical 
 Inspiration," by vMrig the word in its first sense, and then 
 to employ that doctrine, using the word in its secoiid 
 sense, is an unworthy shift, common among theologians, 
 as disingenuous as it is shallow. 
 
 Now we entirely subscribe to the idea involved in the 
 first, and what we will call the poetical, sense of the word 
 Inspiration ; but we object to the use of the word, because 
 it is sure to be understood by the world of readers in the 
 second and vernacular sense ; and confusion and fallacy 
 must be the inevitable result. 
 
 The ordinary theory of inspiration prevalent through- 
 out Christendom — viz., that every statement of fact con- 
 tained in the rjcriptures is true ; that every view of duty, 
 every idea of God, therein asserted, " came from God," in 
 the ordinary and unequivocal sense of that expression, i.e., 
 was directly and supematuraUy taught by God to the 
 man who is said to have received the communication — 
 we have discovered to be groundless, and we believe to be 
 untenable. Though still the ostensible doctrine, and the 
 basis on which some of the most difficult portions of the 
 popular theology are reared, it has, however, been found 
 so indefensible by acute reasoners and honest divines, 
 that — unwilling to abandon it, yet unable to retain it — 
 they have modified and subtilized it into every shade and 
 variety of meaning — and no meaning. We propose, in 
 this chapter, to examine one or two of the most plausible 
 modifications which have been suggested ; to show that 
 they are all as untenable as the original one ; and that, 
 in fact, any modification of the doctrine amounts to a de- 
 nial of it. " It is indeed," says Coleridge, " the peculiar 
 character of this doctrine, that you cannot diminish or 
 qualify, but you reverse it." 
 
 Two of the most remarkable men of our times, Coler- 
 idge and Arnold—one the most subtle thinker, the other 
 the most honest theologian of the age-^have, while ad- 
 mitting the untenableness of the common theory of Inspi- 
 
98 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 ration, left us a statement of that which their own minds 
 substituted for it, and which, in our opinion, is equivalent 
 to a negation of it. The attempt, though made in the one 
 case with great fairness, and in the other with great acute- 
 ness, thus at once to affirm and deny a proposition, has 
 naturally communicated a vagueness and inconsistency 
 to their language, which makes it very difficult to grasp 
 their meaning with precision. We will, however, quote 
 their own words. 
 
 Dr. Arnold writes thus* : — " Most truly do I believe 
 the Scriptures to be inspired ; the proofs of their inspira- 
 tion gi'ow with the study of them. The Scriptural narra- 
 tives are not only about divine things, but are themselves 
 divinely framed and superintended. I cannot conceive 
 my conviction of this truth being otherwise than sure." 
 (Here, surely, is as distinct an affirmation of the popular 
 doctrine as could be desired.) He continues : — " Consider 
 the Epistles of the blessed Apostle Paul, who had the 
 Spirit of God so abundantly that never, we may suppose, 
 did eaiy merely human being enjoy a largei share of it 
 Endowed with the Spirit as a Christian, and daily receiv- 
 ing grace more largely as he became more and more ripe 
 for glory, .... favoured also with an abundance of 
 revelations disclosing to him things ineffable and incon- 
 ceivable — are not his writings most truly to be called in- 
 spired ? Can we doubt that in what he has told us of 
 things not seen, or not seen as yet, . . he spoke 
 
 what he had heard from God ; and that to refuse to be- 
 lieve his testimony is really to disbelieve Gk>d ?" Can any 
 statement of the popular doctrine be more decided or un- 
 shrinking than this ? Yet he immediately afterwards 
 says, in reference to one of St. Paul's most certain and 
 often-repeated statements (regarding the approaching end 
 of the world), " we may safelj'^ and reverently say that 
 St. Paul, in this instance, entertained and expressed a 
 belief which the event did not justify. "i* Now put these 
 
 * Christian Course and Character pp. 48C-i''0. 
 
 t It is particularly worthy of r>imark \tknA aeems io have been most unao- 
 countably and entirely overlooked by Dr. Arnold throughout hia argument), 
 that, in the assertion of this <^n:onertUB belief, St. Pp^m expressly declares 
 bimaelf to be speaking " by tLe word of the Lord." — 1 These, iv 15. 
 
heir own minds 
 n, is equivalent 
 Qade in the one 
 ith great acute- 
 Droposition, has 
 i inconsistency 
 ifficult to grasp 
 lowever, quote 
 
 y do I believe 
 )f their inspira- 
 jriptural narra- 
 \ are themselves 
 sannot conceive 
 ise than sure." 
 of the popular 
 js : — " Consider 
 , who had the 
 e may suppose, 
 ^Bi share of it 
 ttd daily receiv- 
 and more ripe 
 a abundance of 
 kble and incon- 
 to be called in- 
 has told us of 
 . he spoke 
 o refuse to be- 
 ted ?" Can any 
 decided or un- 
 i\y afterwards 
 >st certain and 
 )proaching end 
 ently say that 
 id expressed a 
 Now put these 
 
 ve been most unao- 
 lout his argument), 
 expressly declares 
 lieas. iv 15. 
 
 MODIFICATIONS OF THE DOCTRINE. 
 
 99 
 
 statements together, and we shall see that Dr. Arnold 
 fitHrms, as a matter not to be doubted by any reasonable 
 mind, that when St. Paul speaks of certain things (of 
 ( rod, of Christ, and of the last day),* he is telling us what 
 Hi heard from God, and that to doubt him is to disbelieve 
 God : yet when he is speaking of other things {one oj 
 these thingn being that very " last great day " of which he 
 had " heard from God ") he may safely be admitted to be 
 mistaken. What is this but to say, not only that por- 
 tions of the Scripture are from God, and other portions 
 are from man — that some parts are inspired, and others 
 are not — but that, of the very same letter by the very 
 same Apostle, some portions are inspired, and others are 
 not — and that Dr. Arnold and every man must judge for 
 himself which are which — must separate by his own skill 
 the divine from the human assertions in the Bible ? Now 
 a book cannot, in any decent or intelligible sense, be said 
 to be inspired, or carry with it the authority of being — 
 scarcely even of containing — God's word, if only portions 
 come from Him, and there exists no plain and infallible 
 sign to indicate which these portions are — if the same 
 writer, in the same tone, may give us in one verse a reve- 
 lation from the Most High, and m the next a blunder ol 
 his own. How can we be certain that the very texts 
 upon which we most rest our views, our doctrines, our 
 ]iopes,f are not the human and uninspired portion ? What 
 c'vih he the meaning or nature of an inspiration to teach 
 Truth, which does not guarantee its recipient from teach- 
 ing error ? Yet Dr. Arnold tells us that " the Scriptures 
 are not only inspired, but divinely framed and superin- 
 tended ! " 
 Dr Arnold then proceeds to give his sanction to what 
 
 His precise words are these : — " < 
 
 i hi 
 
 ' Can any reasonable mind doubt that in 
 what he has told us of . . . . Him who pre-existed in the form of God 
 before He was manifested in the form of man— of that great day when we 
 Hhall arise uncorruptible, and meet our Lord in the air— he spoke what he 
 had heard from God," Ac, &c, Notes, p. 488. 
 
 t It is certain that many of tho early Christians, readers of St. Paul's 
 enlHtles, did rest ro ,ny of their hopes, and much of the courage which carried 
 tneni through martyrdom, on the erroneous notions as to the immediate 
 coming of Christ, conveyed in such texts as 1 Thess. iv. 15, and then gener- 
 ally prevalent. 
 
100 
 
 THE CBEFJ) OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 we must consider as the singular fallacy contained in the 
 Jewish notion, about different degrees of inspiration.* "It 
 is an unwarrantable interpretation of the word," he thinks, 
 " to mean by an inspired work, a work to which God has 
 communicated his own perfections, so that the slightest 
 
 error or defect of any kind in it is inconceivable 
 
 Surely many of our words and many of our actions are 
 spoken and done by the inspiration of God's spirit, with- 
 out whom we can do nothing acceptable to God. Yet does 
 the Holy Spirit so inspire ns as to communicate to us his 
 own perfections ? Are our best words or works utterly 
 free from error or from sin ? All inspiration does not then 
 destroy the human and fallible part in the nature which 
 it inspires ; it does not change man into God. — With one 
 man, indeed, it was otherwise ; but He wi..s both God 
 and man. To Him the Spirit was given without measure; 
 and as his life was without sin, so his words were with- 
 out error. But to all others the Spirit has been given by 
 measure ; in almost infinitely different measure it is true: 
 — the difference between the inspiration of the common 
 and perhaps unworthy Christian who merely said that 
 " Jesus was the Lord," and that of Moses, or St. Paul, or 
 St. John, is almost to our eyes beyond measuiing. Still 
 the position remains that the highest degree of inspiration 
 given to man has still suffered to exist along with it a 
 portion of human fallibility and corruption." 
 
 Now, if Dr. Arnold chooses to assume, as he appears to 
 do, that every man who acknowledges Jesus to be the Christ, 
 is inspired, after a fashion, and means, by the above pas- 
 sage, simply to affirm that Paul and tfohn were inspired, 
 just as all gi-eat and good minds are inspired, only in a 
 superior degree, proportioned to their superior greatness 
 and goodness — then neither we, nor any one, wiU think it 
 worm their while to differ with him. But then to glide, 
 as he does, into the ordinary and vernacular use of the 
 word inspiration, is a misuse of language, aiid involves 
 the deception and logical fallacy, against whiih we have 
 already warned our readers, of obtaining assent to a doc* 
 
 ♦ Notes, pp. 486, 487 
 
 soningi 
 
 reconcili 
 
 spiratio: 
 
 "Thed( 
 
 be foun 
 
 idea of 
 
 tend to 
 
 teuch is 
 
 letters i 
 
 munica 
 
 vinely > 
 
 ' Old ai 
 
 doctrin 
 
 And ye 
 
 and th( 
 
 assert i 
 
 than I 
 
 blende 
 
 •Lett 
 
MODIFJCATIONS OF THE DOCTRINE. 
 
 101 
 
 trine by employing a word in its philosophical or etymo- 
 logical sense, and then applying that assent to a doctrine 
 involving the use of the word in its vernacular sense. A 
 statement or dogma came from God, or it did not. If it 
 came from God it must be infallible ; — if it did not, it 
 must be fallible, and may be false. It cannot be both at 
 the same time. We cannot conceive of a statement com- 
 ing from God in different degrees — being a little inspired 
 by Him — being more or less iTispired by Him. Unques- 
 tionably He has given to men different degrees of insight 
 into truth, by giving them different degrees of capacity, 
 and placing them in circumstances favourable in different 
 degrees to the development of those capacities ; but by 
 the inspiration of a book or proposition we mean some- 
 thing very distinct from this ; and to fritter away the 
 popular doctrine to this, is tantamount to a direct nega- 
 tion of it, and should not be disguised by the subtilties 
 of language. 
 
 Coleridge's view of Bible Inspiration is almost as diffi- 
 cult to comprehend as Dr. Arnold's, for though his rea- 
 soning is more exact, his contradictions seem to us as ir- 
 reconcilable. His denial of the doctrine of plenary in- 
 spiration is as direct as can be expressed in language. 
 " The doctrine of the Jewish Cabbalists," says he,* *' will 
 be found to contain the only intelligible and consistent 
 idea of that plenary inspiration which later Divines ex- 
 tend to all the canonical books ; as thus : — * The Penta- 
 teuch is but one word, even the Word of Gk)d ; and the 
 letters and articulate sounds by which this word is com- 
 municated to our human apprehensions, are likewise di- 
 vinely communicated.' Now for ' Pentateuch,' substitute 
 ' Old and New Tesiament/ and then I say that this is the 
 doctrine which I reject as superstitious and unscriptuml. 
 And yet as long as the conceptions of the Revealing Word 
 and the Inspiring Spirit are identified and confounded, I 
 assert that whatever says less than this, says little more 
 than nothing. For hew can absolute infallibility be 
 blended with laJibility ? Where is the infallible criterion ? 
 
 * Letters on Inspiration, p. 19. 
 
102 
 
 THE GREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 And how can infallible truth be infallibly conveyed in 
 defective and fallible expressions ? " 
 
 This is the very argument we have used above, and 
 which the writer we are quoting repeats elsewhere in that 
 clear and terse language which conveys irresistible con- 
 viction :* — " The Doctrine in question requires me to be- 
 lieve, that not only what finds me, but that all that exists 
 in the sacred volume, and which I am bound to find 
 therein, was not only inspired by, that is, composed by 
 men under the actuating influence of the Holy Spirit, but 
 likewise dictated by an Infallible Intelligence ; — that the 
 Writers, each and all, were divinely informed as well as 
 inspired. Now, here all evasion, all excuse is cut otf . . 
 In Infallibility there can be no degrees." ' 
 
 It is not easy to conceive under what modification, or 
 by what subtile misuse of language, Mr. Coleridge can 
 hold a doctrine which, in its broad and positive expression, 
 he declares to be " ensnaring, thorny, superstitious, and 
 unscriptural," and which, i.i any less broad and positive 
 expression, he declares, " says little more than nothing.' 
 We shall see, however, that his notion of Biblical Inspir- 
 stion resolves itself into this : — that whatever in the Bible 
 he thinks suitable, whatever he finds congenial, what- 
 ever coalesces and harmonizes with the inner and the 
 prior Light, that he conceives to be inspired — and that 
 alone. In other words, his idea is, that portions of the 
 Bible, and portions only, are inspired, and those portions 
 are such as approve themselves to his reason. The test 
 of inspiration to Mr. Coleridge is, accordance with his 
 own feelings and conceptions. We do not object to this 
 test — further than that it is arbitrary, varying, individual, 
 and idiosyncratic : — ^We merely affirm that it involves a 
 use of the word " Inspiration," which to common under- 
 standings is a deception and a mockery. His remarks 
 are thesef : — 
 
 " There is a Light higher than all, even the Word that 
 was in the beginning ; — the Light, of which light itself is 
 
 * Letters on Inspiration, pp. 13, 18. 
 t Ibid., pp. 9, 10, 13. 
 
MODIFICATIONS OF THE DOCTRINE. 
 
 103 
 
 but the sh/edivnah and cloudy tabernacle ; — the Word that 
 is light for every man, and life for as many as give heed 
 
 to it Need I say that, in peinising the Old 
 
 and New Testaments, I have met everywhere more or less 
 copious sources of truth, power, and purifying impulses ; 
 — that I have found words for my inmost thoughts, songs 
 for my joy, utterances for my hidden griefs, and pleadings 
 for my shame and feebleness ? In short, whatever Jinds 
 me bears witness for itself that it has proceeded from a 
 Holy Spirit, even from the same Spirit ' which, remaining 
 in itself, yet regenerateth all other powers, and in all ages 
 entering into holy souls, maketh them friends of God and 
 Prophets.' {Wisdom vii.) ... In the Bible there is 
 more that finds me than I have experienced in all other 
 books together ; the words of the Bible find me at greater 
 depths of my being ; and whatever finds me brings with 
 it irresistible evidence of having proceeded from the Holy 
 Spmt."* 
 
 Need we pause to point out what a discreditable tam- 
 pering with the truthful use of language is here ? Of 
 how many hundred books may the same not be said, 
 though in a less degree ? In Milton, in Shakespeare, in 
 Plato, in ^schylus, in Mad. de Stael, ay, even in Byron 
 and Rousseau, who is there that has not found " words 
 for his inmost thoughts, songs for his joy, utterance for 
 his griefs, and pleadings for his shame ?" Yet, would Mr. 
 Coleridge excuse us for calling these authors inspii'ed ? 
 And if he would, does he not know that the alleged in- 
 spiration of the Scriptures means something not only very 
 superior to, but totally different from, this. 
 
 It is necessary to recall to our readers, what Coleridge 
 seems entirely to have lost sight of — that the real, present, 
 practical question to be solved is, not " Are we to admit 
 that all which suits us, ' finds us,' ' agrees with our pre- 
 established convictions,' came from God, and is to be re- 
 ceived as revealed truth ? " hut, " Are we to receive all 
 we find in the Bible as authoritative and inspired, though 
 
 * See also, p. 61, where he says (addressing a sceptic), " Whatever you 
 find therein coincident with yoiir pre-established convictions, you will, of 
 course, reoognize as the Revealed Word " (I) 
 
104 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 it should shock our feelings, confound our understandings, 
 contradict our previous convictions, and violate our moral 
 sense ? " This is the proposition held by the popular and 
 orthodox Theology. This is the only Biblical question ; 
 the other is commensurate with all literature, and all life. 
 
 Mr. Coleridge rests his justification for what seems to 
 us a slippery, if not a positively disingenuous, use of Ian- 
 guage, on a distinction which he twice lays down in his 
 " Confessions," between " Revelation by the Eternal Word, 
 and Actuation by the Holy Spirit." Now, if by the 
 " Holy Spirit," Mr. Coleridge means a Spirit teaching 
 truth, or supernaturally conferring the power of perceiv- 
 ing it, his distinction is one which no logician can for a 
 moment admit. If by the " Holy Spirit," he means a 
 moral, not an intellectual, influence ; if he uses the word 
 to signify godliness, piety, the elevation of the spiritual 
 faculties by the action of God upon the heart ; — then he 
 is amusing himself, and deluding his readers by " palter- 
 ing with them in a double sense ; "—for this influence has 
 not the remotest reference to what the popular theology 
 means by " inspiration." The most devout, holy, pious 
 men are, as we know, constantly and grievously in error. 
 The question asked by inquirers, and answered affirma- 
 tively by the current theology of Christendom, is, " Did 
 God 80 confer his Spirit upon the Biblical Writers as to 
 teach them truth, and save them from error ? " If He 
 did, theirs is the teaching of God ; — ^if not, it is the teach- 
 ing of man. There can be no medium, and no evasion. 
 It cannot be partly the one, and partly the other. 
 
 The conclusion of our exarriination, so far as conducted, 
 is of infinite importance. It may be stated thus : — 
 
 The Inspiration of the Scriptures appears to be a doc- 
 trine not only untenable, but without foundation, if we 
 understand the term " Inspiration " in its ordinary accep- 
 tation ; and in no other acceptation has it, when applied 
 to writings, any intelligible signification at all. The mere 
 circumstance, therefore, of finding a statement or doctrine 
 in the Bible, is no proof that it came from God, nor any 
 sufficient warrant for our implicit and obedient reception 
 of it. Admitting, as a matter yet undecided, because un- 
 
MODIFICATIONS OF THE DOsJTRINE. 
 
 105 
 
 investigated, that the Bible contains much that came from 
 (j()(l, we have still to separate the divine from the human 
 portions of it. 
 
 The present position of this question in the public 
 mind of Christendom is singularly anomalous, fluctuating, 
 and unsound. The doctrine of Biblical Inspiration still 
 obtains general .credence, as part and parcel of the popular 
 theology ; and is retained as a sort of tacit assumption, 
 by the great mass of the religious world, though aban- 
 doned as untenable by their leading thinkers and learned 
 men ; — many of whom, however, retain it in name, while 
 surrendering it in substance ; and do not scruple, while 
 admitting it to be an error, to continue the use of lan- 
 guage justifiable only on the supposition of its truth. 
 Nay, further ; — with a deplorable and mischievous incon- 
 sistency, they abandon the doctrine, but retain the deduc- 
 tions and corollaries which flowed from it, and from it 
 alone. They insist upon making the superstructure sur- 
 vive the foundation. They refuse to give up possession 
 of the property, though the title by which they hold it 
 has been proved and is admitted to be invalid. 
 

 CHAPTER III. 
 
 AUTHORSHIP AND AUTHOllITY OF THE PENTATEUCH AND 
 THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON GENERALLY. 
 
 The next comprehensive proposition which our Inquirer 
 finds at the root of the popular theology, commanding 
 a tacit and almost unquestioned assent, is chis : — That 
 the Old Testament narratives contain an authentic and 
 faithful History of the actual dealings of God with man; 
 — ^tliat the events which they relate took place as therein 
 related, and were recorded by well-informed and veracious 
 writers ; — that wherever God is represented as visiting 
 and speaking to Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, Samuel, 
 and others, he did really so appear and communicate his 
 will to them ; — that the ark, as built by Noah, was con- 
 structed under the detailed directions of the Architect 
 of all Worlds ; — that the Law, as contained in the Penta- 
 teuch, was delivered to Moses and written down by 
 him under the immediate dictation of Jehovah, and 
 the proceedings of the Israelites minutely and specifi- 
 cally directed by Him ; — that, in a word, the Old Testa- 
 ment is a literal and veracious history, not merely a na- 
 tional legend or tradition. This fundamental branch of 
 the popular theology also includes the belief that the 
 Books of Moses were written by Moses, the book of Joshua 
 by Joshua, and so on ; and further that the Prophetical 
 Books, and the predictions contained in the Historical 
 Books, are bon^ fide Prophecies — genuine oracles from 
 the mouth of God, uttered through the medium of His 
 servants, whom at various times He instructed to make 
 known His will and institutions to His chosen People. 
 
 That this is the popular belief in which we are all 
 brought up, and on the assumption of which the ordinary 
 language of Divines and the whole tone of current litera- 
 ture proceeds, no one will entertain a doubt ; and that it 
 has not been often broadly laid down or much defended. 
 
AUTHOKSfflP OF THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON. 107 
 
 is attributable to the circumstance, that, among Christians, 
 it has rarely till of late been directly questioned or openly 
 attacked. The proposition seems to have been assumed 
 on the one side, and conceded on the other, with equally 
 inconsiderate ease. 
 
 Now, be it observed that if the Hebrew Narratives 
 bore, on the face of them, an historical rather than a 
 legendary character, and were in themselves probable, 
 natural, and consistent, we might accept them as substan- 
 tiaUy true without much extraneous testimony, on the 
 ground of their antiquity alone. And if the conceptions 
 of the Deity therein developed were pure, worthy, and 
 consistent with what we learn of Him from reason and 
 experience, we might not feel disposed to doubt the reality 
 of the words and acts attributed to Him. But so far is 
 this from being the case, that the narratives, eminently 
 legendary in their tone, are full of the most astounding, 
 improbable, and perplexing statements ; and the repre- 
 sentations of God which the Books contain, are often 
 monstrous, and utterly at variance with the teachings of 
 Nature and of Christianity. Under these circumstances, 
 we, of course, require some sufficient reason for acceding 
 to such difficult propositions, and receiving the Hebrew 
 Nan-atives as authentic and veracious Histories ; and the 
 onlv reason offered to us is that the Jews believed them* 
 
 But we remember that the Greeks believed the Legends 
 in Herodotus, and the Romans the figments in Livy — 
 and that the Jews were at least as credulous and as na- 
 tionally vain as either. We need, therefore, some better 
 sponsors for our creed. 
 
 * Even this, however, must be taken cum grano. The Jews do not seem 
 to have invariably accepted the historical narratives in the same precise and 
 literal sense as we do. Josephus, or the traditions which were current 
 among his countrymen, took strange liberties with the Mosaic accounts. 
 There is a remarkable difference between his account of Abraham's disBimu- 
 lation with regard to his wife, and the same transaction in Genesis xx. — 
 Moreover, he explains the iiassage of the Red Sea as a natural, not a mir- 
 aculous event ; and many nimilar discrepancies might be mentioned. See 
 De Wette, ii. 42. 
 
 Observe, also, the liberty TP-hioh Ezekiel considers himself warranted in 
 taking with the Mosaic dootrire that God will visit the sins of the fathem 
 upon the children ^i'. xviii. passim), a liberty scarcely compatible with »beUal 
 un his nart that such doctnne waa, as alleged, divinely aimoanoed. 
 
108 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 If, indeed, we were only required to accept the authority 
 of the Jews for the belief that they sprung from Abra- 
 ham, were captives in Egypt, received a complete code ot 
 Laws and system of theocratic polity from Moses, con- 
 quered Canaan, and committed manifold follies, frauds, 
 and cruelties in their national career — we might accede 
 to the demand without much recalcitration. But we are 
 called on to admit something very different from this. 
 We are required to believe that Jehovah, the Ruler of all 
 Worlds, the Pure, Spiritual, Supreme, Ineffable, Creator 
 of the Universe — Our Father who is in Heaven— so 
 blundered in the creation of man, as to repent and grieve 
 and find it necessary to destroy His ovvm work — selected 
 one favoured people from the rest of His children — sanc- 
 tioned fraud — commanded cruelty — contended, and for a 
 while in vain, with the magic of other Gods — wrestled 
 bodily with one patriarch — ate cakes and veal with an- 
 other — sympathized with and shared in human passions 
 — and manifested " scarcely one untainted moral excel- 
 lence " ; — and we are required to do this painful violence 
 to our feelings and our understandings, simply because 
 these coarse conceptions prevailed some thousand years 
 ago among a People whose history, as written by them- 
 selves, is certainly not of a nature to inspire us with any 
 extraordinary confidence in their virtues or their intellect. 
 They were the conceptions prevalent among the Scribes and 
 Pharisees, whom Jesus denounced as dishonourers of re- 
 ligion and corrupters of the Law, and who crucified him 
 for endeavouring to elevate them to a purer faith. 
 
 It is obvious, then, that we must seek for some other 
 ground for accepting the earlier Scriptural narratives as 
 j^enuine histories ; — and we are met in our search by the 
 assertion that the Books containing the statements which 
 have staggered us, and the theism which has shocked us, 
 were written by the great Lawgiver of the Jews — by the 
 very man whom God commissioned to liberate and or- 
 ganize His peculiar People. If indeed the Pentateuch 
 was written by the same Moses whose doings it records, 
 the case is materially altered ; — it is no longer a tradi- 
 tional or leg^"»^dary narrative, but a history by an actor 
 
AUTHORSHIP OF THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON. 109 
 
 and a contemporary, that we have before us. Even this 
 statement, however, were it made out, would not cast its 
 {e^ris over the Book of Genesis, which records ev(mts from 
 four to twenty-five centuries before the time of Moses. 
 
 But when we proceed to the investigation of this point, 
 we discover, certainly much to our surprise, not only that 
 there is no independent evidence for the assertion that 
 Moses wrote the books which bear his name — but that 
 we have nearly all the proof which the case admits of, 
 that he did not write them,* and that they were not 
 composed — at ;.vll events did not attain their present form 
 — till some hundreds of years after his death. It n ex- 
 tremely difficult to lay the grounds of this proposition be- 
 fore general readers — especially English readers — in a 
 form at once concise and clear ; as they depend upon the 
 results of a species of scientific criticism, with which, 
 though it proceeds on established and certain principles, 
 very few in this country, even of our educated classes, 
 are at all acquainted. In the conclusions arrived at by 
 this scientific process, unlearned students must acquiesce 
 as they do in those of Astronomy, or Philology, or 
 Geology ; — and all that can be done is to give them a 
 very brief glimpse of the mode of inquiry adopted, and 
 the kind of proof adduced : this we shall do as concisely 
 and as intelligibly as we can ; and we will endeavour to 
 state nothing which is not considered as established, by 
 men of the highest eminence in this very difficult branch 
 of intellectual research. 
 
 The discovery in the Temple of the Book of the Law, 
 in the reign of King Josiah, about B.C. 624, as related in 
 
 • " After coming to these results," says De Wette, ii. 160, " we find no 
 ground and no evidence to show that the books of the Pentateuch were com- 
 posed by Moses, Some consider him their author, merely from traditionary 
 custom, because the Jews were of this opinion ; though it is not certain that 
 the more ancient Jews shared it ; for tbu expressions ' the Book of '. he Law 
 of Moses,' * the Book of the Law of Jehovan by the hand of Moses,' only 
 designate him as the author or mediator of the Law, not as the author of the 
 Book.— Th^. Law is ascribed to 'the Prophets ' in 2 Kings xvii. 13, and in 
 Ezra ix. 11. The opinion thai Moses composed these books is not only op- 
 posed by all the signs of a later date which occur in the Book itself, but 
 also by the entire analogy of the his lory of the Hebrew literature and lan- 
 guage. " 
 
110 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 2 Kings xxii., is the first certain trace of the existence of 
 the Pentateuch in its present form.* That if this, the 
 Book of the Law of Moses, existed before this time, it 
 was generally unknown, or had been quite forgotten, ap- 
 pears from the extraordinary sensation the discovery ex- 
 cited, and from the sudden and tremendous reformation 
 immediately commenced by the pious and alarmed Mon- 
 arch, with a V iew of canying into effect the ordinances 
 of this law. — Now we find wiat when the Temple was 
 built and consecrated by Solomon, and the Ark placed 
 therein (about B. c. 1000), this " Book of the Law " was 
 not there — for it ig said (1 Kings viii. 9), " There was 
 nothing in tho ark save the two tables of stone, which 
 Moses put there at Horeb."i* Yet on turning to Deuter- 
 onomy xxxi. 24-26, we are told that when Moses had 
 made an end of writing the words of the Law in a book, 
 he said to the Levites, " Take this book of the law, and 
 put in the side of the ark of the covenant of the Lord 
 your God, that it may be there for a witness against thee,' 
 &;c., &;c. 
 
 This " Book of the Law " which was found in the Tem- 
 ple in the reign of Josiah (b. c. 624), which was not thre 
 in the time of Solomon (b, c. 1000), and which is stated 
 to have been written and placed in the Ark by Moses 
 (b. c. 1450), is almost certainly the one ever afterwards 
 referred to and received as the " Law of God," the " Law 
 of Moses," and quoted as such by Ezra and Nehemiah.{ 
 And the only evidence we have that Moses was the author 
 of the books found by Josiah, appears to be the passage 
 in Deuteronomy xxxi., above cited. 
 
 But how did it happen that a book of such immeasur- 
 able value to the Israelites, on their obedience to which 
 depended all their temporal blessings, which was placed 
 in the sanctuary by Moses, and found there by tfosiah, 
 was not there in the time of Solomon ? — Must it not have 
 been found there by Solomon, if really placed there by 
 
 • De Wett«, ii. 163. 
 
 t The same positive statement is repeated 2 Chron. v. 10. 
 
 % Subsetxuent references seem especially to refer to Deuteronomy. 
 
AUTHORSHIP OF THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON. Ill 
 
 Moses ? for Solomon was as anxious as Josiah to honour 
 Jehovah and enforce His Law.* In a word, have we 
 any reason for believing that Moses really wrote the 
 Book of Deuteronomy, and placed it in the Ark, as stated 
 therein ? — Critical science answers in the Negative. 
 
 In the first place, Hebrew scholars assure us that the 
 style and language of the Book forbid us to entertain the 
 idea that it was written either by Moses, or near his 
 time ; as they resemble too closely those of the later 
 writers of the Old Testament to admit the supposition 
 that the former belonged to the 1 5th, and the latter to 
 the 5th century before Christ. I'o imagine that the 
 Hebrew language underwent no change, or a very slight 
 one, during a period of a thousand years — in which the 
 nation underwent vast political, social, and moral changes, 
 with a very great admixture of foreign blood — is an idea 
 antecedently improbable, and is contradicted by all 
 analogy. The same remark appli 3, though with some- 
 what less force, to the other four books of the Penta- 
 teuch.f 
 
 Secondly. It is certain that Moses cannot have been 
 the author of the whole oi the Book of Deuteronomy, 
 because it records his own death, c. xxxiv. It is obvious 
 also that the last chapter must have been written not 
 only after the death of Moses, but a long period after, 
 as appears from verse 10. "And there arose not a 
 prophet since in Israel like unto Moses, whom the Lord 
 !vnew face to face." Now, there are no critical signs of 
 style or language which would justify the assumption 
 that the last chapter was the production of a diflferent 
 pen, or a later age, than the rest of the Book. 
 
 Thirdly. There are several passages scattered through 
 
 * Conclusive evidence on this point may, we think, be gathered from 
 Deut. xxxi. 10, where it is commanded that the Law shall be publicly read 
 every seventh year to the ijeople assembled at the Feast of Tabernacles: 
 iind from xvii. 18, where it is ordained that each king on his accession shall 
 write out a copy of the Law. It is impossible to believe that this conunand, 
 Imd it existed, would have been neglected by all the pions and good kings 
 who Hat on the throne of Palestine. It is clear that they had never heard of 
 auch 11 command. 
 
 + Da Wette. u. IGl. 
 
112 
 
 THB CBEED OF CHBISTENDOIC. 
 
 the book which speak in the past teTise of events which 
 occurred after the Israelites obtained possession of the 
 land of Canaan, and which must therefore have been 
 written subsequently — probably long subsequently— to 
 that period. For example : " The Horims also dwelt in 
 Seir beforetime ; but the children of Esau succeeded them, 
 when they had destroyed them from before them, and 
 dwelt in their stead ; as Israel did unto the land of kk 
 possession, which the Lord gave vmto them." Deut. ii. 12. 
 Many other anachronisms oc-^ur, as throughout c. iii., 
 especially verse 14 ; xix. 14 ; xx. v. 1-3 ; ii. 20-23. 
 
 Finally, as we have seen, at xxxi. 26, is a command to 
 place the Book of the 1-aw in the Ark, and a statement 
 that it was so placed. Now as it was not in the Aik at 
 the time when the Temple was consecrated, this passage 
 must have been written subsequent to that event. See 
 also verses 9-13. 
 
 Now either all these passages must have been subse- 
 quent interpolations, or they decide the date of the whole 
 book. But they are too closely interwoven, and too har- 
 moniously coalesce, with the rest, to justify the former 
 supposition. We are therefore driven to adopt the con- 
 clusion of De Wette and other critics, that the Book of 
 Deuteronomy was written about the time of Josiah, shortly 
 before, and with a view to, the discovery of thePentateudb 
 in the Temple.* 
 
 With regard to the other four books attributed to 
 Moses, scientific investigation has succeeded in making it 
 quite clear, not only that they were written long after 
 his time, but that they are a compilation from, or rather 
 an imperfect fusion of, two principal original documents, 
 easily distinguishable throughout by those accustomed to 
 this species of research, and appearing to have been a sort 
 of legendary or traditionary histories, current among the 
 earlier Hebrews. These two documents (or classes of 
 documents) are called the Elohistic, and Jehovistic, from 
 
 * It is worthy of remark that the Book of Joahua (x. 13) quotes the Book 
 of Jashar, which must have been written as late as the time of David (2 
 SaHiuel i. 18). See De Wette, ii. 187. 
 
AUTHORSHIP OF THK OLD TESTAMENT CANON. 113 
 
 the different Hebrew names they employ in speaking 
 of the Supreme Being; — the one using habitually the 
 word Elohim, which our translation renders God, but 
 which, being plural in the original, would be more cor- 
 rectly rendered The Gods ; — the other using the word 
 Jehovah, or Jehovah Elohim, The God of Gods — ren- 
 dered in our translation The Lord God* 
 
 The existence of two such documents, or of two dis- 
 tinct and often conflicting narratives, running side by side, 
 will be obvious on a very cursory perusal of the Penta- 
 teuch, more especially of the Book of Genesis ; and the 
 constant recurrence of these duplicate and discrepant state- 
 ments renders it astonishing that the books in question 
 could ever have been regarded as one original history, pro- 
 ceeding from one pen. At the very commencement we 
 have separate and varying accounts of the Creation: — 
 the Elohistic one, extending from Gen. i.-ii. 3, magnificent, 
 simple, and sublime, describing the formation of the ani- 
 mate and inanimate world by the fiat of the Almighty, and 
 the making of man, male and female, in the image of God 
 — but preserving a total silence respecting the serpent, 
 the apple, and the expulsion from the Garden of Eden; — 
 the other, or Jehovistie, extending from Gen. ii. 4 to iii. 
 24, giving a different account for the formation of man 
 and woman— dc scribing the Garden of Eden with its four 
 rivers, one flowing into the Persian Gulf, and another sur- 
 roimding Ethiopiai* — ^narrating the temptation, the sin, 
 and the curse, and adding a number of minute and puerile 
 details, bespeaking the conceptions of a rude and early 
 age, such as God teaching Adam and Eve to make coats of 
 skins in lieu of the garments of fig leaves they had con- 
 trived for themselves. 
 
 The next comparison of the two documents presents dis- 
 crepancies almost equally great. The document Elohim, 
 Gen. V. 1-32, gives simply the Genealogy from Adam to 
 Noah, giving Seth as the name of Adam's firstborn son ; — 
 
 * There are, hov tver, other distinctive marks. 
 Theol. des Alt. Tcdt. c. ii. § 1. 
 + Cush, or " the land of swarthy men." 
 
 De Wette, ii. 77. Bauer, 
 
114 
 
 TEE CREED OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 whereas the document Jehovah, Gen. iv. 1-26, gives Cain 
 as the name of Adam's firstborn, and Seth as that of his 
 last.* Shortly after we have two slightly-varying ac- 
 countsf of the flood ; one being contained in vi. 9-22; vii. 
 11-16, 18-22 ; viii. 1-19 ; the other comprising vi. 1-8; vii. 
 7-10, 17, 23. 
 
 We will specify only one more instance of the same 
 event twice related with obvious and irreconcilable dis- 
 crepancies, viz. the seizure of Sarah in consequence of 
 Abraham's timid falsehood. The document Elohim (Gen, 
 XX.) places the occurrence in Gerar, and makes Abimelech 
 the offender — the document Jehovah (xii. 10-19) places 
 it in Egypt, and makes Pharaoh the ojffender ; whilst the 
 same document again (xxvi 1-11) narrates the same oc- 
 currence, representing Abimelech as the offender and Gerar 
 as the locality, but changing the persons of the deceivers 
 from Abraham and Sarah, to Isaac and Rebekah. 
 
 Examples of this kind might be multiplied without end; 
 which clearly prove the existence of at least two historical 
 documents blended, or rather bound together, in the Pe i- 
 tateuch. We will now proceed to point out a few of the 
 passages and considerations which negative the ilea of 
 either of thqm having been composed in the age or by t'ae 
 hand of Moses.j 
 
 The reader may draw 
 his own inferences from 
 this, or see those of Butt- 
 mann, in hisMythologus, 
 1. c. vii. p. 171. 
 
 * " ThbiO ia," says Theodore Parker, " a striking similarity between the 
 names of the alleged descendants of Adam and EnoB (according; to the 
 Elohim document the grandson of Adam). It is to be remembered that both 
 names signify Man. 
 
 I. TI. 
 
 1. Adam. 1. Enos. 
 
 2. Cain. 2. Cainan. 
 
 3. Enoch. 3. Mahalaleel. 
 
 4. Irad. 4. Jared. 
 6. Mehujatl. 5. Enoch. 
 
 6. Methusael. 6. Methusaleh. 
 
 7. Lamech. (G«n. Iv. 17-19.) 7. Lamech. (Gen. v. &-25.)" 
 See also on this matter, Kenrick on Primeval Historv, p. 59. 
 
 {t One account aifirms that seven specimens of clean beasts went into tlie 
 cHihe other that only ttoo so entered.] 
 
 t The formula " unto this day," is frequently found, under circumstances 
 indicating that the wrifdr livfd long subsequent to the events he relates, 
 (Gen. xix. 38 ; xxvi. 33 ; xxxLi. 32.) We find frequent archffiological •-expla- 
 nations, as Ex. xvi. 36. "Now an omer (an ancient measure) is the tenth 
 part of an ephah" (a mouem measure).— Explanations of old names, and 
 additions of the modem ones which had superseded them, repeatedly occur, 
 M At a«i. jdv. 2, 7, 8, 17; xxiii. 2 ; xxxv. 19. 
 
AUTHOBSHIP OF THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON. 115 
 
 The Elohim document must have been written after the 
 expidsion of tfie Canaanitea, and the settlement of the 
 Israelites in the Promised Land, as appears from the fol- 
 lowing passages : — inter alia, — 
 
 " Defile not ye yourselves in any of these things .... 
 that the land vomit not you out also, as it vomited forth 
 the nations which were before you." (Lev, xviii. 24, 27. 
 
 28.) 
 
 " For I was stolen away out of the land of the Eehrews.'' 
 (Gen. xl. 15.) Palestine would not be called the land of 
 the Hebrew '•s till after the settlement of the Hebrews 
 therein. 
 
 " And Sarah died in Kirjath-arba ; the same is Hebron 
 in the land of Ganxian!^ (Gten. xxiii. 2.) '* And Rachel 
 died, and was buried in the way to Ephrath, which is 
 BethleJiem' (xxxv. 19). "And Jacob came unto the 
 city of Arbah, which is Hebron." (xxxv. 27.) These 
 passages indicate a time subsequent to the erection of 
 the Israelitish cities. 
 
 The document must have been written in the tvme of 
 the Kings ; for it says. Gen. xxxvi. 31, " These are the 
 kings that reigned in the land of Edom, before there 
 reigned any kvng over the children of Israel." Yet it 
 must have been written before the end of the reign of 
 David, since Edom, which David subdued, is represented 
 in eh. xxxvi. as still independent. The conclusion, there- 
 fore, which critical Science has drawn from these and 
 other points of evidence is, that the Elohim documents 
 were composed in the time of Saul, or about B.c. 1055, 
 four hundred years after Moses. 
 
 The Jehovistic documents are considered to have had 
 a still later origin, and to date from about the reign of 
 Solomon, B.C. 1000. For they were written after the ex- 
 imlsion of the Canaanites, as is shown from Gen. xii. 6, 
 and xiii. 7. " The Canaanite was then in the land." 
 " The Canaanite and Perizzite dwelt then in the land." 
 They appear to have been written after the time of the 
 Judges, since the exploits of Jair the Gileadite, one of 
 the Judges (x. 4), are mentioned in Numb, xxxii. 41; 
 
116 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 after SauVa victory over Agog, King of the Amalekites, 
 who is mentioned there — " and his king shall be higher 
 than Agag " (Numb. xxiv. 7) ; and if, as De Witfce thinks, 
 the Temple of Jerusalem is signified by the two expres- 
 sions (Exod. xxiii. 19; xv. 13), "The house of Jehovah," 
 and the " habitation of thy holiness," — they must have 
 been composed after the erection of that edifice. This, 
 however, we consider as inconclusive. On the other hand, 
 it is thought that they must have been written before the 
 time of Hezekiak, because (in Numb, xxi, 6-9) they record 
 the wonders wrought by the Brazen Serpent, which that 
 King destroyed as a provocative to Idolacrj. (2 Kings 
 xviii. 4.) We are aware that many persom. endeavour to 
 avoid these conclusions by assuming that thv' passages in 
 question are later interpolations. But — not to comment 
 upon the wide door which would thus be opened to other 
 and less scrupulous interpreters — ^this assumption is en- 
 tirely unwarranted by evidence, and proceeds on the 
 previous assumption— equally destitute of proof — that 
 the books in question were written in the time of Moses 
 — ^the very point under discussion. To prove the Books 
 to be written by Moses, by rejecting as interpolations all 
 passages which show that they could not have been 
 written by him — is a very clerical, but a very inadmis- 
 sible, mode of reasoning. 
 
 It results from this inquiry that the Pentateuch as- 
 sumed its present form about the reign of Eling Josiah, 
 B.C. 624, eight hundred years after Moses; — ^that the 
 Book of Deuteronomy was probably composed about the 
 same date ; — ^that the other feur books, or rather the 
 separate documents of which they consist, were written 
 between the time of Samuel and Solomon, or from four 
 to five hundred years after Moses ; — that they recoi d the 
 traditions respecting the early history ni the Israelites 
 and the Law delivered by Moses then current among the 
 Priesthood and the People, with such material additions 
 as it seemed good to the Priests of that period to intro- 
 duce ; — and that there is not the slightest reason to con- 
 clude that the historical narratives they contain were any- 
 
AUTHORSHIP OF THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON. 117 
 
 thing more than a collection of the national traditions 
 then in vogue.* 
 
 It should be specially noted that nothing in the above 
 argument in the least degree invalidates the opinion either 
 that Moses was the great Organizer of the Hebrew Polity, 
 or that he framed it by divine direction, and with divine 
 aid ; — our reasoning merely goes to overthrow the notion 
 that the Pentateuch contains either the Mosaic or a con- 
 temporary a^cov/at of the origin of that Polity, or the 
 early history of that People. 
 
 With regard, however, to the first eleven chapters of 
 Genesis, which contain an account of the ante-Abrahamic 
 period, a new theory has recently been broached by a 
 scholar whose competency to pronounce on such a ques- 
 tion cannot be doubted. Mr. Kenrick, in his Essay on 
 Primeval History, gives very cogent reasons for believing 
 that the contents of these chapters are to be considered, 
 not as traditions handed down from the earliest times, 
 concerning the primitive condition of the human race 
 and the immediate ancestors rf the Jewish nation, but 
 simply as speculations, originally framed to account for 
 existing facts and appearances, and by the lapse of time 
 gradually hardened into narrative — in a word, eis sup- 
 positions converted into statements by the process of 
 transmission, and the authority by which they are pro- 
 pounded. The call of Abraham he conceives to be " the 
 true origin of the Jewish people, and therefore the point 
 at which, if contemporaneous written records did not be- 
 gin to supply the materials of history, at least a body of 
 historical tradition may have formed itself ."•!• We will 
 not do Mr. Kenrick the injustice of attempting to con- 
 
 * De Wette and other critics are of opinion that both the Elohistic and 
 •Tehovistic authors of the Pentateuch had access to more ancient documents 
 extant In their times, and think it |>robable that some of these materials 
 may have been Mosaic. De Wette, ii. p. 159. 
 
 It seems right to state that this chapter was written before the appearance 
 of Mr. Newman's Hebrew Monarchy, where the whole question is aiscussed 
 much more fully, and the decision stated in the text is placed upon what 
 appears to us an irrefragable foundation. Mr. Newman's work, pp. 328- 
 338, should be studied by every one who wishes to satisfy his mind on this 
 important point. 
 
 T Essay on Piime^al History p. IL 
 
118 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 dense his train of reasoning, which he has himself given 
 in as terse a form as is compatible with perfect clearness. 
 He argues, and in our opinion with great success, that 
 the Jewish accounts of the Creation, the Deluge, the 
 confusion of tongues, &c., were the results of attempts, 
 such as we find among all nations, to explain phenomena 
 which could not fail to arouse attention, wonder, and 
 questioning in the very dawn of mental civilization : but 
 simple and beautiful as many of them are, they betray 
 unmistakable signs of the partial observation and im- 
 perffcot knowledge of the times in which they originated. 
 
 Not only, then, can the so-called Mosaic histories claim 
 no higher authority than other works of equal antiquity 
 and reasonableness, but the whole of the earlier portion 
 of the narrative preceding the call of Abraham, must be 
 regarded as a combination of popular tradition, poetical 
 fiction, and crude philosophical speculation — the first ele- 
 ment being the least developed of the three. 
 
 Now, what results from this conclusion ' It will be 
 seen, on slight reflection, that our gain is immense; reh- 
 gion is safer ; science is freer ; the temptation to dishonest 
 subterfuge, so strong that few could resist it, is at once 
 removed ; and it becomes possible for divines to retain 
 their faith, their knowledge, and their integrity together. 
 It is no longer necessary to harmonize Scripture and Sci- 
 ence by fettering the one, or tampering with the other; 
 nor for men of Science and men of Theology either to 
 stand in the position of antagonists, or to avoid doing so 
 by resorting to hollow subtleties and transparent evasions 
 which cannot but degrade them in their own eyes and de- 
 grade their respective professions in the eyes of the ob- 
 serving world. In order to judge of the sad un worthiness 
 from which our conclusion exempts us, let us see to what 
 subterfuges men of high intellect and reputation have 
 habitualfy found themselves compelled to stoop. 
 
 The divine origin and authority of the Pentateuch 
 having been assumed, the cosmogony, chronology,* and 
 
 antedi 
 as uni 
 sway 
 of thei 
 
 *'l'be Impoosibility of accepting the Biblical chronology of the ante- 
 Almi^hamio timeB m authentic, arises from three considerations i—Hr^sU its 
 
AUTHORSHIP OF THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON. 119 
 
 antediluvian narrative of Genesis were, of course, received 
 as unimpeachably accurate, and long held unquestioned 
 sway over the mind of Europe. The first serious suspicion 
 of their accuracy — for the progress of astronomical science 
 was rendered formidable only by the absurd decision of 
 the Court of Rome — was caused by the discoveries of 
 modern Geology, which, at first doubtful and conflicting, 
 gradually assumed consistency and substance, and finally 
 emancipated themselves from the character of mere theo- 
 ries, and settled down into the solid form of exact and 
 ascertained science. They showed that the earth reached 
 its present condition through a series of changes prolonged 
 through ages which might almost be termed infinite ; each 
 step of the series being marked by the existence of crea- 
 tures different from each other and from those contem- 
 porary with man : and that the appearance of the human 
 race upon the scene was an event, in comparison, only of 
 yesterday. This was obviously and utterly at variance 
 with Mosaic cosmogony : and how to treat the discrepancy 
 became the question. Three modes of proceeding were 
 open : — To declare Moses to be right, and the geologists 
 to be in error, in spite of fact and demonstration, and thus 
 forbid science to exercise itself upon any subject on which 
 Holy Writ has delivered its oracles — and this was the 
 consistent course of the Church of Rome : To bow before 
 the discoveries of science, and admit that the cosmogony of 
 Moses was the conception of an unlearned man and of a rude 
 age — which is our Adew of the case : or. To assume that the 
 author of the Book of Genesis must have known the truth, 
 and have meant to declare the truth, and that his narrative 
 
 irreconcilability with that of the most cultirated nationfl of primitive an- 
 tiquity, and especially with that of the Egyptians, whose records and monu- 
 ments carry us back nearly 700 years beyond the Deluge — (Kenrick, 57) ; — 
 secondly, the fact that the length of life attributed to the antediluvian Patei- 
 archs, sometimes reaching nearly to 1000 years, precludes the idea of their 
 belonging to the same race as ourselves, without a violation of all analogy, 
 and tne supposition of a constant miracle ; — thirdly, the circumstance that 
 the Hebrew numbers represent the East as divided into regal communities, 
 populous and flourishing, and Pharaoh reigning over the monarchy of Egypt, 
 at the time of Abraham's migration, only 427 years after the human race was 
 reduced to a single family, and the whole earth desolated by a flood. — Mr. 
 Kearick argues all these points with great 'orce aud learning.- Essay on 
 Pruneval History. 
 
120 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 
 1 
 ] 
 
 
 ■^ 
 
 - 
 
 i 
 
 
 ^ 
 
 
 
 ■ it! 
 
 
 
 1' 
 
 
 t: 
 
 :9'; 
 
 
 aii 
 
 '■ 
 
 ] 
 
 1 
 
 i 
 
 L 
 
 must therefore, if rightly interpreted, agree with the certain 
 discoveries of modem science. This unhappily, has been 
 the alternative most usually resorted to by our Divines and 
 men of science ; and in furtherance of it they adopt, or at 
 least counsel, a new interpretation of Holy Writ, to meet 
 each new discovery, and force upon Moses a meaning which 
 clearly was not in his mind, and which his words — upon 
 any fair and comprehensible system of interpretation- 
 will not bear,* Instead of endeavouring to discover, by 
 the principles invariably applied in all analogous cases, 
 what Moses meant from what Moses said, they infer his 
 meaning, in spite of his language, from the acknowledged 
 facts of science, with which they gratuitously and vio- 
 lently assume that he must be in harmony. 
 
 Instances of this irreverent and disingenuous treatment 
 of the Scriptures are numerous among English Divines— 
 to whom, indeed, they are now chietiy confined : and to 
 show how fairly we have stated their mode of proceed- 
 ing, we will adduce a few passages from two men of great 
 eminence in the scientific world, both holding high sta- 
 tions in the Universities and in the Church. 
 
 Professor Whewell, in his chapter on the " Relation of 
 Tradition to Pa-laetiology" (Phil. Ind. Sc. ii. c. iv.) (which 
 is really a discussion of the most advisable mode of 
 reconciling Geology and Palaeontology with Scripture), 
 speaks repeatedly of the necessity of bringing forward 
 new interpretations of Scripture, to meet the discoveries 
 of science. " When," he asks, " should old interpretations 
 
 *'*It happens," observes Mr. Kenrick, "that the portion of Scripture 
 which relates to cosmogony and primeval historjr is remarkably free from 
 philological difficulties. The meaning of the writer, the only thing which 
 the interpreter has to discover and set forth, is everywhere sufficiently ob- 
 vious ; there is hardly iii these eleven chapters, a doubtful construction, era 
 various reading of any importance, and the English reader has, in the or 
 dinary version, a full and fair representation of the sense of the original. 
 The (fifficultiea which exist fflriae from endeavouring to harmonize the Writer't 
 information with that derived from other sources, or to refine upon his simple 
 language. Common speech was then, as it is now, the representative of the 
 common understanding. This common understanding may be confused and 
 perplexed by metaphysical cross-examinatiim, resi>ecting tne action of spirit 
 upon matter, or of Being upon nonentity, till it seems at last to have no 
 idea what Creation means ; out these subtleties belong no more to the He- 
 brew word than to the English." — Essay, &o.. Preface, xv. 
 
AUTHORSmP OF THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON. 121 
 
 be given up ; what is the proper season for a religious 
 iind enlightened commentator to make a change in the 
 current intei'pretation of sabred Scripture ? {\) At what 
 period ought the established exposition of a passage to 
 be given up, and a neiu mode of understanding the pas- 
 mge, svbch as is, or seems to be, required by neiv discoveries 
 respecting the laws of nature, accepted in its place ?" (!) 
 He elsewhere speaks of " the language ^f Scripture being 
 invested with a new meaning," quoting with approbation 
 the sentiment of Bellarmine, that " when demonstration 
 shall establish the earth's motion, it will be proper to in- 
 terpret the Scriptures otherwise than they have hitherto 
 been interpreted, in those passages where mention is made 
 of the stability of the earth, and movement of the 
 Heavens." " It is difficult," sa^s Mr. Kenrick, " to under- 
 stand this otherwise than as sanctioning the principle 
 that the commentator is to bend the meaning of Scripture 
 into conformity with the discoveries of science. Such a 
 proceeding, however, would be utterly inconsistent with 
 all real reverence for Scripture, and calculated to bring 
 both it and its interpreter into suspicion and contempt." 
 Dr. Buckland's chapter (in his Bridgewater Treatise) 
 on the " Consistency of Geological Discoveries with the 
 Mosaic Cosmogony," is another melancholy specimen of 
 the low arts to which the ablest intellects find it neces- 
 sary to condescend, when they insist upon reconciling 
 admitted truths with obvious and flagrant error. In this 
 point of view the passage is well worth reading as a 
 lesson at once painful and instructive. — After commencing 
 with the safe but irrelevant proposition, that if nature is 
 God's work, and the Bible God's word, there can be no 
 real discrepancy between them, he proceeds thus : — " I 
 trust it may be shown, not only that there is no incon- 
 sistency between our interpretation of the phenomena of 
 nature and of the Mosaic narrative, but that the results 
 of geological inquiry throw important lights on parts of 
 this history, which are otherwise involved in much ob- 
 scurity. If the suggestions I shall venture to propose 
 require some modification of the most commonly-received 
 and poi)ular interpretation of the Mosaic narrative, this 
 
122 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 admissA n neither involves any impeachment of the au- 
 thenticity of the text, nor of the judgment of those who 
 had formerly interpreted it otherwise in the aosev^e of in- 
 formation as to facts which have been hut recently brought 
 to light ; (!) and if, in this respect, geology shall seem to 
 require some little concession from the literal interpreta- 
 tion of Scripture, it may fairly be held to afford ample 
 compensation (!) for this demand, by the large additions 
 it has made to the evidences of natural religion, in a de- 
 partment where revelation was not designed to give in- 
 formation." — (I. 14.) Then, although he " shrinks from 
 the impiety of bending the language of God's book to 
 any other than its obvious meaning " (p. 25), this theo- 
 logical man of Science — this Pleader who has accepted a 
 retainer from both the litigants — proceeds to patch up a 
 hollow harmony between Moses on the one side, and 
 Sedgwick, Murchison, and Lyell on the other, by a series 
 of suppositions, artificial and strained interpretations, and 
 unwarranted glosses, through which we cannot follow 
 him. Instead of doing so, we will put into a few plain 
 words the real statement in Genesis which he undertakes 
 to show to be in harmony with our actual knowledge of 
 astronomy and geology. 
 
 The statement in Genesis is this : — That in six days 
 God made the Heavens and the Earth — (and that days, 
 and not any other period of time, were intended by the 
 writer, is made manifest by the reference to the evening 
 and morning, as also by the Jewish Sabbath) ; — that on 
 the first day of Creation — (after the general calling into 
 existence of the Heaven and Earth, according to Dr. Buck- 
 land*) — God created Light, and divided the day from the 
 night ; — that on the second day he created a firmament 
 (or strong vault) to divide the waters under the Earth 
 from the waters above the Earth — (a statement indicating 
 a conception of the nature of the Universe, which it is 
 
 * Dr. B. imagines that the first verse relates to the original creation of all 
 things, and that, between that verse and the second, elapsed an intervnl of 
 countless ages, during which all geological changes preceding the human 
 era must be supposed to have taken place — in contirmation of which he men- 
 tions that some old copies of the Bible have a break or gap at the end of the firA 
 verge, and that Luther marked verse 3, as verse 1. 
 
AUTHORSHIP OF THE OLD TESTAMBNT CANON.v 128 
 
 diflficult for us, with our clearer knowledge, even to ima- 
 gine) ; — that on the third day, He divided the land from 
 the water, and called the vegetable world into existence ; 
 — that on the fourth day, He made the Sun, Moon, and 
 Stars — (in other words, that He created on the first daj' 
 the efect, but postponed till the fourth day the creation 
 of that which we now know to be the cause) ; — that on the 
 fifth day, fish and fowl, and on the sixth, terrestrial ani- 
 mals and man, were called into being. — And this is the 
 singular system of Creation which Dr. Buckland adopts 
 as conformable to the discoveries of that Science which 
 he has so materially contributed to advance ; — in spite of 
 the facts, which he knows and fully admits, that the idea 
 of " waters above the firmament " could only have arisen 
 from a total misconception, and is to us a meaningless 
 delusion ; — that day and night, depending on the relation 
 between earth and sun, could not have preceded the crea- 
 tion of the latter ; — that as the fossil animals existing 
 ages before Man — (and, as he imagines, ages before the 
 commencement of the " first day " of Creation) — had eyes, 
 light must have existed in their time — ^long, therefore, 
 before Moses tell us it was created, and still longer before 
 its source (our sun) was called into being ; — and, finally, 
 that many tribes of these fossil animals which he refers 
 to the vast supposititious interval between the first and 
 second verses of Genesis, are identical with the species con- 
 temporaneous with Man, and not created therefore till 
 the 21st or 24th verse. 
 
 It will not do for Geologists and Astronomers, who wish 
 to retain some rags of orthodoxy, however soiled and torn, 
 to argue, as most do, " that the Bible was not intended as 
 a revelation of Physical science, but only of moral and 
 religious truth." This does not meet the difficulty ; for 
 the Bible does not merely use the common language, and 
 so assvmie the common errors, on these points — it gives a 
 distinct account of the Creation, in the same style, in the 
 same narrative, in the same book, in which it narrates 
 the Fall of Man, the Deluge, the Revelation to Abraham, 
 the history of Jacob and Joseph. The writer evidently 
 had no conception that when he related the Creation of 
 
124 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 I 
 
 the Earth, the Sea, and the Sun, he was inventing or per- 
 petuating a monstrous error ; and that when he related 
 the Fall, he was revealing a mighty and mysterious truth ; 
 and ^"hen he narrated the promise to Abraham, ho was 
 recording a wondrous prophecy. The Bible professes to 
 give infoimiation on all these points alike : and we have 
 precisely the same Scriptural ground for believing that 
 God first made the Earth, and then the Sun for the espe- 
 cial benefit of the Earth ; that the globe was submerged 
 by rain which lasted forty days, and that everything 
 was destroyed, except the Animals which Noah packed 
 into his Ark — as we have for believing that Adam and 
 Eve were driven out of Paradise for a transgression ; that 
 God promised Abraham to redeem the world through his 
 progeny ; and that Jacob and Moses were the subjects of 
 the divine communications recorded as being made to 
 them. All the statements are made in the same affirma- 
 tive style, and on the same authority. The Bible equally 
 professes to teach us fact on all these matters. There is no 
 escape by any quibble from the grasp of this conclusion. 
 In unworthy attempts such as those which Dr. Buck- 
 land has perpetrated, and Dr. Whewell has advised, the 
 grand and sublime conception at the basis of the Biblical 
 Cosmogony has J)een obscured and forgotten, — mz. That, 
 contrary alike to the dreams of Pagan and of Oriental 
 philosophy. Heaven and Earth were not self -existent and 
 eteviial but created — that the Sun and Moon were not 
 Gods, but the works of God — Creatures, not Creators. 
 
 But another point of almost equal importance is gained 
 by accepting the Historical books of the Old Testament 
 as a collection of merely human narratives, traditions, and 
 speculations. We can now read them with unimpaired 
 pleasure and profit, instead of shrinking from them with 
 feelings of pain and repulsion which we cannot conquer, 
 and yet dare not acknowledge. We need no longer do 
 violence to our moral sense, or our cultivated taste, or our 
 purer conceptions of a Holy and Spiritual God, by strug- 
 gling to bend them into conformity with those of a rude 
 people and a barbarous age. We no longer feel ourselves 
 
DM. 
 
 inventing or per- 
 when he lulated 
 aysterious truth ; 
 Lbraham, he was 
 ible professes to 
 :e : and we liave 
 or believing that 
 5un for the espe- 
 I was submerged 
 that everything 
 sh Noah packed 
 
 that Adam and 
 msgression ; that 
 orld through his 
 e the subjects of 
 \ being made to 
 ;he same affirma- 
 rhe Bible equally 
 tters. There is no 
 
 this coiiclusion. 
 which Dr. Buck- 
 has advised, the 
 is of the Biblical 
 tten, — T iz. That, 
 and of Oriental 
 self -existent and 
 
 Moon were not 
 not Creators. 
 
 AUTHORSHIP OF THE OLD TESTAMENT CANON. 123 
 
 compelled to believe that which is incredible, or to admire 
 that which is revolting.* And when we again turn to 
 these Scriptures with the mental tranquillity due to our 
 new-bom freedom, and read them by the light of our 
 r3C0vered reason, it. will be strange if we do not find in 
 thorn marvellous beauties which before escaped us — rich 
 and fertilizing truths which before lay smothered beneath 
 a heap of contextual rubbish — experiences which appeal 
 to the inmost recesses of our consciousness — holy and 
 magnificent conceptions, at once simple and sublime, which 
 hitherto could not penetrate through the mass of error 
 which obscured and overlaid them, but which now burst 
 foi-th and germinate into light and freedom. In the beau- 
 tiful language of an often-quoted author (Coleridge, p. 59), 
 "The Scriptures will from this time continue to rise 
 higher in our esteem and affection the better understood, 
 the more dear — and at every fresh meeting we shall have 
 to tell of some new passage, formerly viewed as a dry 
 stick on a rotten branch, which has hudded, and, like the 
 rod of Aaron, brought forth buds, and bloomed blossoms, 
 and yielded alTnonda." 
 
 * See in Dr. Arnold's Sermons on the Interpretation < ' Scripture to what 
 straitrf the orthodox doctrine reduces the best and most ; inest men. 
 
 )rtance is gained 
 Old Testament 
 s, traditions, and 
 rith unimpaired 
 from them with 
 cannot conquer, 
 id no longer do 
 ted taste, or our 
 I God, by strug- 
 those of a rude 
 er feel ourselves 
 
CHAPTER IV. 
 
 THE PROPHECIES.- 
 
 A PROPHECY, in the ordinary acceptation of the term, 
 signifies a prediction of future events which could not 
 have been foreseen by human sagacity, and the knowledge 
 of which was supematurally communicated to the 
 prophet. It is clear, therefore, that in order to establish 
 the claim of any anticipatory statement, promise, or de- 
 nunciation, to the rank and title of a prophecy, four 
 points must be ascertained with precision — ^viz., what the 
 event was to which the alleged prediction was intended 
 to refer ; that the prediction was uttered in specific, not 
 vague, language before the event ; that the event took 
 place specifically, not loosely, as predicted ; and that it 
 could not have been foreseen by human sagacity. 
 
 Now, there is no portion of the sacred writings over 
 which hangs a veil of such dim obscurity, or regarding 
 the meaning of which such hopeless discrepancies have 
 prevailed among Christian divines, as the Prophetical 
 Books of the Hebrew Canon. The difficulties to which 
 the English reader is exposed by the extreme defects of 
 the received translation, its confused order, and erroneous 
 divisions, are at present nearly insuperable. No chronol- 
 ogy is observed ; the earlier and the later, the genuine 
 and the spurious, are mixed together ; and sometimes the 
 prophecies of two individuals of different epochs are given 
 us under the same name. In the case of some of the 
 more important of them we are in doubt as to the date, 
 the author, and the interpretation ; and on the question 
 whether the predictions related exclusively to Jewish or 
 to general history, to Cyrus or to Jesus, to Zerubbabel or 
 to Christ,* to Antiochus Epiphanes, to Titus, or to Napo- 
 
 • The prophecy of Zechariah, which Archbishop Newcome. in conforniitv 
 with its obviouB meaning, interprets with reference to Zeruobabel, David- 
 oou luUiMitatingly refers to Christ alone (Disc, on Froph. 340, 2na ed.j.— 
 
THE PROPHECIES. 
 
 127 
 
 leon ; to events long past, or to events still in the remote 
 future — the most conflicting opinions have been held 
 with equal learning. It would carry us too far, and prove 
 too unprofitable an occupation, to enumerate these con- 
 tradictory interpretations : we shall in preference content 
 ourselves with a brief statement of some considerations 
 which will show how far removed we are on this subject 
 from the possession of that clear certainty, or even that 
 moderate verisimilitude of knowledge, on which alone 
 any reasonings, such as have been based on Hebrew 
 prophecy, can securely rest. There is no department of 
 theology in which divines have so universally assumed 
 theii> conclusions and modified their premises to suit 
 them, as in this. 
 
 1. In the first place, it is not uninstructive to remind 
 ourselves of a few of the indications scattered throughout 
 the Scriptures, of what the conduct and state of mind of 
 the Prophets often were. They seem, like the utterers of 
 Pagan oracles, to have been worked up before giving 
 forth their prophecies into a species of religious phrenzy, 
 produced or aided by various means, especially by music 
 and dancing.* Philo says, " The mark of true prophecy is 
 the rapture of its utterance : in order to attain divine 
 wisdom, the soul must go out of itself, and become drunk 
 with divine phrenzy ."f The same word in Hebrew (and 
 Plato thought in Greek also) signifies " to prophecy" and 
 " to be mad ;"| and even among themselves the prophets 
 were often regarded as madmen§ — an idea to which 
 their frequent habit of going ab ut naked,|| and the per- 
 
 The prediction of Daniel respecting the pollution of the temple, which 
 critics in geneVal have no hesitation in referring to Antiochud, many mod- 
 em divines conceive, on the supposed authority of the Evangelists, to relate 
 to the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus. A Fellow of 0;5ord, in a most 
 ingenious work (which had reached a third edition in 1826, and may have 
 Hince gone through many more), maintains that the last chapters of Daniel 
 were fulfilled in the person of Napoleon, and in him alone. (The Crisis, by 
 Rev. E. Cooper.) 
 
 « 1 Sam. xviii. 10 ; x. 5. 2 Kinn's iii. 15, 16. 
 
 t Quoted in Mackay's Progress of the Intellect, 11. 192, 
 
 X Newman, Heb. Mon. p. M. Plato derived fijivrts from natvttrieu. 
 
 § 2 Kings ix. 11. Jeremiah xxix. 26. 
 
 li 2 Sam. vi. 16, 20 ; 1 Sam. xix. 24 ; Is. xx. 3 ; Ezek. iv. 4, 6, 8, 12, 16 j 
 1 Kings XX. 3,5-38. 
 
128 
 
 THE CBIED OF CHBISTENDOM. 
 
 formance occasionally of still more disgusting ceremonies, 
 greatly contributed. That many of them were splendid 
 poets and noble-minded men there can be no doubt ; but 
 we see in conduct like this little earnest of sobriety or 
 divine inspiration, and far too much that reminds us of 
 the fanatics of eastern countries and of ancient times. 
 
 II. Many, probably most, of the so-called prophecies 
 were not intended as predictions in the proper meaning of 
 the word, but were simply promises of prosperity or 
 denunciations of vengeance, contingent upon certain lines 
 of conduct. The principle oi the Hebrew theocracy was 
 that of temporal rewards or punishment consequent upon 
 obedience to or deviation from the divine ordinances ; and 
 in the great proportion of cases the prophetic language 
 seems to have been nothing more than a reminder or fresh 
 enunciation of the principle. This is clearly shown by 
 the circumstances that several of the prophecies, though 
 originally given, not in the contingent but in the positive 
 form, were rescinded or contradicted by later prophetical 
 enunciations, as in the case of Eli, David, Hezekiah, and 
 Jonah. The rescinding of prophecy in I Sam. ii. 30, is 
 very remarkable, and shows how little these enunciations 
 were regarded by the Israelites from our modern point of 
 view. Compare 2 Sam. vii. 10, where the Israelites are 
 promised that they shall not be moved out of Canaan nor 
 afflicted any more, with the subsequent denunciations of 
 defeat and captivity in a strange land. Compare also 2 
 Sam. vii. 12-16, where the permanent possession of the 
 throne is promised to David, and that a lineal descendant 
 shall not fail him to sit upon the throne of Judah, with 
 the curse pronounced on his last royal descendant, 
 Coniah : " Thus saith the Lord, Write ye this man child- 
 less, a man that shall not prosper in his days : for no man 
 of his seed shall prosper, sitting upon the throne of David, 
 and ruling any more in Judah" (Jer, xxii. 30; xxxvi, 
 30). See, also, the curious argument as to the liability of 
 prophecy to he rescinded, in the same book (Jer. xxxiii. 
 17-26). The rescinding of the prediction or denunciation 
 in the case of Hezekiah, is recorded in Isaiah xxxviii. 1-5, 
 
THE PROPHECIES. 
 
 129 
 
 and that of Jonah in the Book which bears his name, iii. 
 4-10. 
 
 III. It is now clearly ascertained, and generally ad- 
 mitted among critics,^that several of the most remarkable 
 and specific prophecies were never fulfilled at all, or only 
 very partially and loosely fulfilled. Among these may be 
 specified the denunciation of Jeremiah (xxii. 18, 19; xxxvi. 
 30) against Jehoiakim, as may be seen by comparing 2 
 Kings xxiv. 6 ; and the denunciation of Amos against 
 Jeroboam II. (vii. 11), as may be seen by comparing 2 
 Kings xiv, 23-29. The remarkable, distinct, and positive 
 prophecies in Ezekiel (xxvi., xxvii.), relating to the con- 
 quest, plunder, and destruction of Tyre by Nebuchad- 
 nezzar, we can now state on the highest authorities,* were 
 not fulfilled. Indeed in ch. xxix. 18, is a confession that 
 he failed, at least so far as spoil went. The same maybe 
 be said of the equally clear and positive prophecies of the 
 conquest and desolation of Egypt by Nebuchadnezzar 
 (Jer. xliii. 10-13; Ezek. xxix.; xxx. 1-19), as Dr. Arnold, 
 in his Sermons on Prophecy (p. 48), fully admits.-f* Jere- 
 miah's prophecy of the captivity of seventy years, and the 
 subsequent destruction of Babylon (xxv.), have generally 
 been appealed to as instances of clear prophecy exactly 
 and indisputably fulfilled. , But in the first place, at the 
 time this prediction was delivered, the success of Nebu- 
 chadnezzar against Jerusalem was scarcely doubtful ; in 
 the second place, the captivity cannot, by any fair calcu- 
 lation, be lengthened out to seventy years -^ and in the 
 third place, the desolation of Babylon (" perpetual desola- 
 tions " is the emphatic phrase), which was to take place 
 at the end of the seventy years, as a punishment for the 
 pride of Nebuchadnezzar, did not take place till long after. 
 Babylon was still a flourishing city under Alexander the 
 
 * Heeren's BesearcheB, ii. 11. Grote, iii. 439. 
 
 t Grrote,w6i«Mpm.— Hebrew Monarchy, p. 363. 
 
 t The chronologies of Kings and CJironicles do not quite tally ; but taking 
 that of Jeremiah himself, the desolation b^an in the seventh year of Nebu- 
 chadnezzar, B.C. 599, was continued in B.o. .588, and concluded in Bjo. 583. — 
 The exile ended some say 538, some 536. The longest datethat can be made 
 out is 66 years, and the shortest only 43. To ma^e out 70 years fairly, w© 
 must date from 9.0. 606, tko first year of Nebuchadnezzar. 
 
130 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 ir 
 
 Great ; and, as Mr. Newman observed, " it is absurd to 
 present the emptiness of Tnodern Babylon as a punishment 
 for the pride of Nebuchadnezzar," or as a fultilnient of 
 Jeremiah's prophecy. Gen. xlix. 10, must also be consid- 
 ered to present a specimen of prophecy signally fjxLsified 
 by the event, and being composed in the palmiest days of 
 Judah, was probably little more than a hyperbolical ex- 
 pression of the writer's confidence in the permanence of 
 her grandeur. Finally, in Hosea, we have a remarkable 
 instance of self-contradiction, or virtual acknowledgment 
 of the non-fulfilment of prophecy. In viii. 13 and ix. 3, 
 it is affirmed, " Ephraim shall return to Egypt ;" while in 
 xi. 5, it is said, " Ephraim shall not return to Egypt." 
 Isaiah (xvii. 1) pronounces on Damascus a threat of ruin 
 as emphatic as any that was pronounced against Tyre, 
 Egypt, or Babylon. " It is taken away from being a city, 
 and it shall be a ruinous heap." Yet Damascus is to this 
 day the most flourishing city in those countries, 
 
 IV. We find from numberless passages, both m the 
 prophetical and the historical books, that for a consider- 
 able period the Hebrew nation was inundated with false 
 prophets,* whom it was difficult and often impossible to 
 distinguish from the true, although we have both pro- 
 phetical and sacerdotal tests given for this express purpose, 
 It even appears that some of those whom we consider as 
 true prophets were by their contemporaries charged with 
 being, and even punished for being, the contrary In 
 Deut. xviii. 20-22, the decision of the prophet's character 
 is made to depend upon the fulfilment or non-fulfilment 
 of his prophecy. In Deut. xiii. 1-5, this test is rejected, 
 and the decision is made to rest upon the doctrine which 
 he teaches. If this be false he is to be stoned, whatever 
 miraculous proofs of his mission he may give.-f From 
 Jer. xxix. [26,27], it appears that the High Priest assumed 
 the right of judging whether a man was a false or a true 
 /prophet ; though Jereiniah himself does not seem to have 
 been willing to abide by this authority, but to have 
 
 ♦ Jeremiah v. 31 ; xxiii. 16-34. Ezekiel xiv. 9-11. 
 t See also the whole remarkable chapter, Jer. xxviii. 
 
THE PROPHECIES, 
 
 131 
 
 denounced priests and the prophets who supported them 
 (Jer. V. 31). Pashur, the priest, we learn (xx. 1-7), put 
 Jeremiah in the stocks for his false prophecies ; and Shera- 
 aiah reproves the priest Jehoiada for not having repeated 
 the punishment, and is violently denounced by the 
 prophet in consequence (xxix. 24-32). 
 
 V. In the case of nearly all the prophets we have little 
 external or independent evidence as to the date at which 
 their prophesies were uttered, and none as to the 'period 
 at which, they were written dovm ;* while the internal 
 evidence on these points is dubious, conflicting, and, in 
 the opinions of the best critics, generally unfavourable to 
 the popular conceptions. — The Books of Kings and 
 Chronicles, in which many of these prophecies are men- 
 tioned, and the events to which they are supposed to re- 
 fei', are related, were written, or compiled in their present 
 form, the former near the termination of the Babylonian 
 Exile, or somewhere about the year B.C. 530, i.e. from 50 
 to 200 yearsf after the period at which the prophecies 
 were supposed to have been delivered ; — while the latter 
 appear to have been a much later compilation, some critics 
 dating them about 260, and others about 400 before 
 Christ.| 
 
 It is probably not too much to aflSrm that we have no 
 instance in the prophetical Books of the Old Testament 
 of a prediction, in the cas§ of which we possess, at once 
 and combined, clear and unsuspicious proof of the date, 
 the precise event predicted, the exact circumstances of 
 that event, and the inability of human sagacity to foresee 
 it. There is no case in which we can say with certainty 
 — even where it is reasonable to suppose thaW)he predic- 
 tion was uttered before the event — that the narrative has 
 not been tampered with to suit the prediction, or the pre- 
 diction modified to correspond with the event.§ The fol- 
 
 * Hebrew Monarchy, p. 352 (note). 
 
 t Amos and Hosea flourished probably about 790 B. 0. Jeremiah about 
 600. Zacliariah about 520. De Wette, ii. 436. 
 
 + Such at least is the most probable result at which critical science has 
 yet arrived. De Wette, ii. 248, 265. 
 
 § De Wette and other eminent theologians consider that in many cases 
 where the prophecy is unusually definite, this has certainly been done. ii. 
 357, 363. 
 
182 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 lowing remarks will show how little certai'n is onr know- 
 ledge, even in the case of the principal prophets. 
 
 Isaiah, as we learn in the first and the sixth chapters of 
 his Book, appeared as a Prophet in the last year of the 
 reign of King Uzziah (b. c. 759), and prophesied till the 
 fourteenth year of Hezekiah (b. C. 710). We hear of 
 him in the 2nd Book of Kings and Chronicles, but not till 
 the reign of Hezekiah ; except that he is referred to in 
 2 Chron. xxvi. 22, as having written a history of Uzziah. 
 The prophecies which have come down to us bearing his 
 name, extend to sixty-six chapters, of tJie date of which 
 (either of their composition or compilation) we ham no 
 certain knowledge ; but of which the last twenty-seven 
 are confidently decided by competent judges to l)e the 
 production of a different Writer, and a later age ; and 
 were doubtless composed during the Babylonish Cap- 
 tivity, later therefore tht.a the year B. C. 600, or about 
 150 years after Isaiah, The grounds of this decision are 
 given at length in De Wette.* They are found partly in 
 the marked difference of style between the two portions 
 of thei Book, but still more in the obvious and pervading 
 fact that the Writer of the latter portion takes his stand 
 in the period of the Captivity, speaks of the Captivity as 
 an existing circumstance or condition, and coroforts his 
 captive countrymen with hopes of deliverance at the 
 hand of Cyrus. Many of the earlier chapters are also 
 considered spurious for similar reasons, particularly xiii. 
 1, xiv, 23, xxiv., xxvii., and several others. It appears as 
 the general summary result of critical research, that our 
 present collection consists of a number of promises, de- 
 nunciation* and exhortations, actually uttered by Isaiah, 
 and brought together by command, probably, of Hezekiah, 
 greatly enlarged and interpolated by writings upwards 
 of a century later than his time, which the ignorance or 
 unfair intentions of subsequent collectors and commenta- 
 tors have not scrupled to consecrate by affixing to them 
 his venerable name. 
 
 Jeremiah appears to have prophesied from about B.C. 
 
 * De Wette, ii. 3fi4-.S90. 
 
 1:1 
 
THE PROPHECIES. 
 
 183 
 
 from about B. c. 
 
 G30-580, or before and at the commencement of the Cap- 
 tivity at Babylon, and the chief portion of his writings 
 refer to that event, which in his time was rapidly and 
 manifestly approaching. The prophecies appear to have 
 been written down by Baruch, a scribe, from the dictation 
 of Jeremiah (xxxvi.), and to have been collected soon after 
 the return from exile,* but by whom and at what precise 
 Itime is unknown; — and commentators discover several 
 passages in which the original text appears to have been 
 interpolated, or worked over again. Still the text seems 
 to be far more pure, and the real much nearer to the pro- 
 liessed date, than in the case of Isaiah. 
 
 The genuineness of the Book of Ezekiel is less doubt- 
 I ful than that of any other of the Prophets. His prophe- 
 j cies relate chiefly to the destruction of Jerusalem, which 
 happened during his time. He appears to have been car- 
 ried into exile by the victorious Chaldajans about eleven 
 I years before they finally consummated the ruin of the 
 I Jewish Nation by the destruction of their Capital. His 
 prophecies appear to have continued many years after the 
 Captivity — sixteen, according to De Wette.-f- 
 
 Of all the prophetical writings, the Book of Daniel has 
 been the subject of the fiercest contest. Divines have 
 considered it of paramount importance, both on ac- 
 count of the definiteness and precision of its predictions, 
 j and the supposed reference of many of them to Christ. 
 Critics, on the other hand, have considered the genuine- 
 ness of the book to be peculiarly questionable ; and few 
 j now, of any note or name, venture to defend it. In all 
 probability we have no remains of the real prophecies of 
 I the actual Daniel — for that such a person, famed for his 
 wisdom and virtue, did exist, appears from Ezek. xiv. and 
 xxxviii. He must have lived about 570 years before 
 Christ, whereas the Book which bears his name was al- 
 most certainly written in the time of Antiochus Epiplv 
 anes, 110 years B. c. Some English Commentators]: and 
 
 * De Wette, ii. 416 and 396. • 
 
 t De Wette, ii. 426. 
 
 X " I have long thought that the greater part of the book of Daniel w 
 moat certainly a very lata work, of the time of the Maccabees ; and the [ to-- 
 
184 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 Divines have endeavoured to escape from the obvious and 
 manifold difficulties of the Book, by conceiving part of it 
 to be genuine and part spurious. But De Wette has 
 shown* that we have no reason for believing it not to be 
 the work of one hand. It is full of historical inac- 
 curacies and fanciful legends; and the opening statement 
 is an ob\ious error, showing that the Writer was imper- 
 fectly acquainted with the chronology or details of the 
 period in which he takes his stand. The first chapter be- 
 gins by informing us that in the third year of King 
 Jehoiakim, Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, besieged 
 and took Jerusalem, and carried the King (and Daniel) 
 away captive. Whei'eas, we learn from Jeremiah that 
 Nebuchadnezzar was not King of Babylon till the fourth, 
 year of Jehoiakim, and did not take Jerusalem till seven 
 years later. "f* It would be out of place to adduce all the 
 marks which betray the late origin of this book ; they 
 may be seen at length in De Wette. It is here sufficient 
 that we have no 'proof whatever of its early date, and that 
 the most eminent critics have abandoned the opinion of 
 its genuineness as indefensible. ' 
 
 III. Thirdly, We have already had ample proof that 
 the Jewish Writers not onl^' did not scruple to naiTate 
 past events as if predictin; future ones — to present His- 
 tory in the form of Prophecy — but that they habitually 
 did so. The original documents from which the Books 
 of Moses were compiled, must have been written, as we 
 have seen, in the time of the earhest Kings, while the 
 Book of Deuteronomy was not composed, and the whole 
 Pentateuch did not assume its present form tiU, probably, 
 the reign of Josiah ; — yet they abound in such anticipa- 
 tory narrative — in predictions of events long past. The 
 
 tended prophecy about the Kings of Greece and Persia, and of the North 
 and South, is mere history, like the poetical prophecies in Virgil and else- 
 where. In fact, you can trace distinctly the date when it was written, be- 
 cause the events up to that date are given with historical minuteness, to- 
 tally unlike the character of real prophecy ; and beyond that date all in 
 imi»sinary." — Ayain, ho thinks that criticism " proves the non-authenticitj 
 ri great part of Daniel : that there may be genuine fragments in it in veiy 
 Ukely."— Arnold's Life and Cor. U. 188. 
 
 • D« Wette. ii. 499. 
 
 i Bet the whole atyumeut in D« Wette, ii. 484 (note). 
 
K)M. 
 
 THE PROPHECIES. 
 
 135 
 
 tt the obvious and 
 iceiving part of it 
 it De Wette has 
 eving it not to be 
 : historical inac- 
 pening statement 
 Writer was imper- 
 or details of the 
 e first chapter be- 
 rd year of King 
 Jabylon, besieged 
 'Aug (and Daniel) 
 □a Jeremiah that 
 ion till the fourth, 
 rusalem till seven 
 to adduce all the 
 this book ; they 
 ; is here sufficient 
 Hy date, and that 
 id the opinion of 
 
 ample proof that 
 cruple to narrate 
 — to present His- 
 b they habitually 
 
 which the Books 
 n written, as we 
 
 Kings, while the 
 3d, and the whole 
 orm till, probably, 
 
 in such anticipa- 
 ! long past. The 
 
 srsia, and of the North 
 cies in Virgil and else- 
 vhen it was written, be- 
 torioal minuteness, to- 
 aeyond that date all it> 
 es the non-authenticity 
 fragmentB in it ii\ vety 
 
 instances are far too numerous to quote ; — we will specify 
 only a few of the most remarkable : — Gen. xxv. 23; xxvii. 
 28, 29, 39, 40 ; xlix. passim ; Numb. xxiv. ; Deut. iv. 27 ; 
 xxviii. 25, 36, 37, 64. 
 
 We anticipate that these remarks will be met by the 
 reply — "Whatever may be established as to the un- 
 certainty which hangs over the date of those prophecies 
 which refer to the temporal fortunes of the Hebrew Na- 
 tion, no doubt can exist that all the prophecies relating 
 to the Messiah were extant in their present form long 
 previous to the advent of Him in whose person the 
 Christian world agrees to acknowledge their fulfilment." 
 This is true, and the argument would have all the force 
 which is attributed to it, were the objectors able to lay 
 their finger on a single Old Testament Prediction clearly 
 referring to Jesus Christ, intended hy the utterers of tt to 
 relate to hiw, prefiguring his character and career, and 
 manifestly fulfilled in his appearance on earth. This they 
 cannot do. Most of the passages usually adduced as 
 complying with these conditions, referred, and were clear- 
 ly intended to refer,* to eminent individuals in Israelitish 
 History ; — many are not prophecies at all '^f — the Messiah, 
 the Anointed Deliverer, expected by the Jews, hoped for 
 and called for by their Poets and Prophets, was of a 
 character so difierent, and a career so opposite, to those of 
 the meek, lowly, long-suffering Jesus, that the passages 
 describing the one never could have been applied to the 
 
 ote). 
 
 * "We find throughout the New Testament," says Dr. Arnold, "refer- 
 ences made to various passages in the Old Testament, which are alleged as 
 prophetic of Christ, or of some particulars of the Christian dispensation. 
 Now, if we turn to the context of tnese passages, and so endeavour to discover 
 their meaning, according to the only soimd principles of interpretation, it 
 will often appear that they do not relate to the Messiah, or to Christian 
 times, but are either expressions of religious affections generally, such as sub- 
 mission, love, hope, &c. , or else refer to some particular circumBtances in the 
 life and condition of the writer, or of the Jewish nation, and do not at all 
 show that anything more remote, or any events of a more universal and 
 spiritual character, were designed to be prophesied." — Sermons on the Inter- 
 pretation of Prophecy. Preface, p. 1. 
 t [" The great prophecios of Isaiah and Jeremiah are, critics can now see, 
 
 lot strictly predictions at all ; and predictions which are strictly meant as 
 uuch, like those in the IRaok of Daniel, are an embarrassment to the Bible 
 rather than a main element of it."— Literature and Dogma, p. 114, by 
 Matthew Arnold.] 
 
136 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 other, without a perversion of ingenuity, and a disloyal 
 treatment of their obvious signification, which, if employed 
 in any other field than that of Theology, would have 
 met with the prompt discredit and derision they de- 
 serve.* There are no doubt, scattered verses in the Pro- 
 
 * This disingenuousness is obvicua in one point especially : the Messianic 
 Prophecies are interpreted literally or figuratively, as may best suit their 
 adaptation to the received history of Jesus. Thus that '* the wolf shall lie 
 down with the lamb, and the lion eat grass like an ox," is taken figuratively; 
 that the Messiah should ride into Jerusplem on an ass, is taken literally, 
 [The following passage, written five and twenty years subsequent to the text 
 of this volume, may be quoted in confirmation. " And what were called the 
 •signal predictions ' concerning the Christ of popular theology, as they stand 
 in our Bibles, had and have undoubtedly a look of supernatural prescience. 
 The employment of capital letters, and other aids, such as the constant use 
 of the futiu-e tense, naturally and innocently adopted by interpreters who 
 were profoundly convinced that Christianity needed these express prediction* 
 and that they must be in the Bible, enhanced, certainly, this look ; but the 
 look, even without these aids, was sufficiently striking. That Jacob ou his 
 death-bed should two thousand years before Christ have 'been enabled,' as the 
 
 Shrase is, to foretell to his son Judah that ' the sceptre shall not depart from 
 udah until Skiloh (or the Messiah) come, and to him shall the gathering of 
 the people be,' doeii seem, when the explanation is put with it that the Jewish 
 kingdom lasted till the Christian era and then perished, a miracle of predic- 
 tion in favour of our current Christian theology. That Jeremiah should have 
 * been enabled ' to foretell, in the name of Jehovah : ' The days come when 
 I will raise to David a righteous Branch ; in his days Judah shall be saved, 
 and Israel shall dwell safely ; and this is the name whereby he shall be 
 ci^ed, THE LORD OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS 1' — does seem a wonder of prediction in 
 favour of that tenet of the Godhead of the Eternal Son, for which the 
 Bishops of Winchester and Gloucester are so anxious to do something. For 
 tmquestionably Jehovah is often spoken of as the swviour of Judah and Israel: 
 ' All flesh shaU know that I the Eternal am thy saviour and thy redeemer, 
 the mighty one of Jacob ; ' and in the prophecy given above as Jeremiah's, 
 the Branch of David is clearly identified with Jehovah. Again, that Davia 
 should say : ' The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit then on my right hand until 
 I make thy foes thy footstool,' — does seem a p.-odigy of prediction to the 
 same effect. That he should say : * Kiss the Son, lest he be angry and so ye 
 perish,' does seem a supernaturally ^>rescient assertion of the Eternal Son- 
 ship. And so long as these proohecies stand as they are here given, they no 
 doubt bring to Christianity all the support (and with the mass of mankind 
 this is by no means inconsiderable) which it can derive from the display of 
 supernatural prescience. But who mil dispute that it more and more becomes 
 known that these prophecies cannot stand as we have here given them ? Mani- 
 festly, it more and more becomes known that the passage from Genesis, with 
 its mysterious Shiloh and the gathering of the people to him, is rightly to be 
 rendered as follows : * The pre-eminence shall not depart from Judah so long 
 as the people resort to Shiloh (the national sanctuary before Jerusalem was 
 won) ; and the nations (the heathen Canaanites) shall obey him,' We here 
 purposely leavi; out of sight any such consideration as that our actual books 
 of tne Old Testament came first together through the piety of the house of 
 Judah, and when the destiny of Judah was already traced '; and that to say 
 roundly : 'Jacob was enabled to foretell ,' ' The sceptif. shall not depart from 
 Judah,' as if we were speaking of a prophvcy preached and publiehed by Dr« 
 
THE PROPHECIES. 
 
 137 
 
 phetic and Poetical Books of the Hebrew Canon, which, 
 as quotations, are apt and applicable enough to particular 
 points in Christ's character and story; — but of what 
 equally voluminous collection of poems or rhetorical com- 
 positions may the same not be said ?* Of the references 
 made by the Evangelists to such passages, we shall speak 
 hereafter. 
 
 The state of the case appears to be this : — That all the 
 Old Testament Prophecies have been assumed to be 
 genuine, inspired predictions ; and when falsified in their 
 obvious meaning and received interpretation by the 
 event, have received immediately a new interpretation, 
 and been supposed to refer to some other event. When 
 the result has disappointed expectation, the conclusion 
 has been, not that the prophecy was false, but that the 
 interpretation was erroneous. It is obvious that a mode 
 of reasoning like this is peculiar to Theological Inquirers. 
 
 From this habit of assuming that Prophecy was Pre- 
 
 Cumming, is wholly inadmissible. For this consideration is of force, indeed, 
 but it is a consideration drawn from the rules of literary history and criticism, 
 and not likely to have weight with the mass of mankind. Palpable error 
 and mistranslation are what will have weight with them. And what, then, 
 will they say as they come to know (and do not and must not more and more 
 of them come to know it every day ?) that Jeremiah's supposed signal identi- 
 fication of Christ with the God of Israel : ' I will raise to David a righteous 
 Branch, and this is the name whereby he shall be called, the lokd our 
 RIGHTEOUSNESS,' runs really : ' I will raise to David a righteous branch ; in his 
 days Judah shall be saved and Israel shall dwell safely ; and this is the name 
 whereby they shall call themselves : The EUitial is our righteoutneis I ' The 
 
 Erophecy thus becomes simply one of the many promises of a successor to 
 >avid under whom the Hebrew people should trust in the Eternal and fol- 
 low righteousness ; just as the |>rophecy from Genesis is one of the many 
 prophecies of the enduring continuance of the greatness of Judah; ' The 
 Lord said unto my Lord,' m like manner — will not people be startled when 
 they find that it ought to run instead : ' The Eternal said unto my lord the 
 king,'— a simple promise of victory to a prince of God's chosen people ?— 
 and that : 'Kiss the Son,' is in reality. Be warned,' or ' be instructed ; ' 
 ' lay hold,' according to the Septuagint, ' on instruction ?' '' — Literature and 
 Dogma, pp. 110-113. See also pp. 91-106.] 
 
 * Perhaps none of the Old Testamentprophecies are more clearly Messianic 
 than the following passage from Plato : — Othw SiUKtifityos 6 Almuos 
 iuurTiy(i(rtTai,aTpefi\i&atTai, Setoff crai, iKHav^oerai t w^dKttM^rthtvrmvriiTa 
 KMii vaBi>p lLvaaKiv9u\(v9^<Ttrai. Plato, de Republic^, 1. ii. p. 361, E. 
 
 Speaking of this Teacher of Mankind whom he expected, he says, " This 
 just man will scarcely be endured by them— but prooably will be scoiurged. 
 racked, tormented, have his eyes burnt out, and at last, having suffered all 
 
 manner of evils, shall be impalMl" — or as the original term will lignify. 
 *'cruciM." -o ,, 
 
ms 
 
 THE CBEED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 
 diction, and must have its fulfilment — ^which was perhaps 
 as prevalent among the Jews as among modern Divines- 
 appears to have arisen the national expectation of a 
 Messiah. A Deliverer wafi hoped for, expected, proph- 
 esied, in the time of Jewish misery (and Cynis was 
 perhaps the first referred to) ; but as no one appeared 
 who did what the Messiah, according to Prophecy, should 
 do, they went on degrading each successive Conqueror 
 and Hero from the Messianic dignity, and are stiU ex- 
 pecting the true Deliverer. Hebrew and Christian 
 Divines both start from the same assumed un proven 
 premises, viz. : — ^that a Messiah having been foretold 
 must appear; — ^but there they diverge, and the Jews 
 show themselves to be the sounder logicians of the two : 
 the Christians, assuming that Jesus was the Messiah 
 intended (though not the one expected), wrest the obvious 
 meaning of the Prophecies to show that they were ful- 
 filled in him ; — ^while the Jews, assuming the obvious 
 meaning of the Prophecies to be their real meaning, 
 argue that they were not fulfilled in Christ, and there- 
 fore that the Messiah is yet to come. , 
 
 One of the most remarkable attempts to retain the 
 sacredness and authority of Hebrew Prophecy, while 
 admitting the non-fulfilment or the inadequate fulfilment 
 of many of its predictions, has been made by Dr. Arnold. 
 The native truthfulness of his intellect led him to a fair 
 appreciation of the difficulties attendant on the ordinary 
 mode of interpreting Prophecy, while the tenacity of his 
 faith (or, to speak more correctly, his affection for what 
 he had been taught to believe and revsrence) made him 
 unwilling to renounce views which hold so prominent a 
 position in the orthodox system of doctrine. His method 
 of meeting the perplexity was this : He conceived that 
 all prophecy had a double meaning — an historical and 
 obvious, and a spiritual or recondite signification — and 
 that the latter only could receive a complete and 
 adequate fulfilment. Nay, he went still further, and 
 maintained that Prophecy muatf from the necessity of 
 the case, embody these two senses — the sense of the God 
 who inspired it, and the sense of the man who uttei'ed it. 
 
 We will 
 extracte( 
 "Now 
 Propheci 
 .. . . ] 
 sense of 
 
 ] 
 
 and ever 
 as it car 
 with ge 
 nations, 
 up to a 
 them . . 
 us respe( 
 which ii 
 between 
 within a 
 of the hi 
 the answ 
 last ; anc 
 triumph 
 that no 
 the caus 
 no peopl 
 of Proph 
 unmixec 
 Prophec 
 pened, t 
 torical : 
 regard t 
 satisfact 
 For the 
 be litera 
 it was n 
 the im[ 
 because 
 which 1 
 speak, 
 not and 
 cases in 
 
THE PBOPHSCISS. 
 
 189 
 
 ch was perhaps 
 tiern Divines— 
 )ectaticii of a 
 pected, proph- 
 ,nd Cynis was 
 
 one appeared 
 ophecy, should 
 live Conqueror 
 .d are still ex- 
 and Christian 
 med un proven 
 
 been foretold 
 and the Jews 
 ,ns of the two : 
 s the Messiah 
 'est the obvious 
 they were ful- 
 ag the obvious 
 real meaning, 
 'ist, and there- 
 
 I to retain the 
 rophecy, while 
 [uate fulfilment 
 by Dr. Arnold. 
 d him to a fair 
 )n the ordinary 
 
 tenacity of his 
 jction for what 
 nee) made him 
 80 prominent a 
 B. His method 
 conceived that 
 
 historical and 
 nitication — and 
 
 complete and 
 
 II further, and 
 le necessity of 
 mse of the God 
 who uttered it. 
 
 We will give this singular theory in his own words, 
 extracted from his Sermons on Prophecy. 
 
 "Now, first of all, it is a very misleading notion of 
 Prophecy, if we regard it as an anticipation of History. 
 .... It is anticipated History, not in our common 
 sense of the word, but in another and far higher sense. 
 .... History is busied with particular nations, persons, 
 and events ; and from the study of these, extracts, as well 
 as it can, some general principles. Prophecy is busied 
 with general principles; and inasmuch as particular 
 nations, persons, and events, represent these principles 
 up to a certain point, so far it is concerned also with 
 them .... Prophecy, then, is God's voice speaking to 
 us respecting the issue in all time of that great struggle 
 which is the real interest of human life, the struggle 
 between good and tvil. Beset as we are with evil, 
 within and without, it is the natural and earnest question 
 of the human mind, what shall be the end at last ? And 
 the answer is given by Prophecy, that it shall be well at 
 last ; and there shall be a time when good shall perfectly 
 triumph. . . . And this being so, as it is most certain 
 that no people on earth has ever either perfectly served 
 the cause of good, or utterly opposed it, so it follows that 
 no people can, if I may so speak, fully satisfy the mind 
 of Prophecy, because no people purely represents those 
 unmixed principles of good and evil, with which alone 
 Prophecy is properly concerned. And thus it has hap- 
 pened, that those who have attempted to trace an his- 
 torical fulfilment of the language of Prophecy with 
 regard to various i\ations, have never done their work 
 satisfactorily, nor on their system was it possible to do it. 
 For the language of Prophecy on these subjects could not 
 be literally accomplished for two reasons : first, because 
 it was not properly applicable to any earthly nation, from 
 the imperfection of all human things; and, secondly, 
 because even that character of imperfect good or evil, 
 which made certain nations the representatives so to 
 speak, of the principles of good and evil themselves, was 
 not and could not be perpetual . . . Thus there may be 
 cases in which no histonoal fulfilment of national pro- 
 
140 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 phecies is to be found at all ; but in all cases the fulfilment 
 would fall short of the full strength of the language, 
 because, to say it once again, the language in its proper 
 scope and force was aimed at a more unmixed good and 
 evil than have ever been exhibited in the character of any 
 
 earthly people Generally the language of Proj)!!- 
 
 ecy will be found to be vperbolical, as far as regards 
 its historical subjects, anu only corresponding with the 
 truth exactly, if we substitute for the historical suhjmi 
 the idea of which it is the representative''^. . . But if it 
 be asked, why then was the language of Prophecy so 
 strong, if it was meant to be literally fulfilled ? I answer, 
 that the real subject of the Prophecy in its highest sense 
 is not the historical, but the spiritual Babylon ; and that 
 no expressions of ruin and destniction can be too strong 
 when applied to the world which is to dissolve and 
 utterly to perish. And it will be found, I think, a gen- 
 eral rule in all the prophecies of Scripture, that they 
 contain expressions which will only be adequately 
 fulfilled in their last and spiritual fulfilment ; and that, 
 as applied to the lower fulfilments which precede this, 
 they are and must be hyperbolical/'f 
 
 It is diflicult to grapple with a mode of interpretation 
 such as this; — equally difficult to comprehend how an 
 earnest and practical understanding like Dr. Arnold's, could 
 for a moment rest satisfied with such a cloudy phantom. 
 Our homely conceptions can make nothing of an oracle 
 wliich says one thing, but means something very diflferent 
 and more noble ; — which in denouncing, with minute de- 
 tails, destruction against Egypt, Babylon, and Tyre, merely 
 threatens final defeat to the powers of Evil ; — which in 
 depicting, in precisest terms, the material prosperity re- 
 served for the Israelites, only intended to promise bless- 
 
 ♦ • Dr. Arnold conceives the different states and cities towards whicli are 
 directed the promises and denunciations of Holy Writ, to represent in the 
 prophetic mind certain ideal virtues and vices, &c. Thus Israel means not 
 the Jews, so much as " God's People " in the abstract, the virtuous of the 
 earth in all times : Babylon signifies the world in its wickedness ; EgyT)t the 
 world merely in its worldliness ; while the prophetic idea of Edom is the sin 
 of those who oifend one of Christ's little ones. 
 + Sarjtwtw on th« Iijteirpretation of Prophecy. Vw. loo. 
 
THE PROPHECIES. 
 
 141 
 
 in<^ to the virtuous and devout of every age and clime ; 
 — and which in describing ancient historical personages, 
 did so always with an arrUre pens^ towards Christ. If 
 Dr. Arnold means to say that the Old Testament Prophe- 
 cies signified primarily, chiefly, and most specifically, the 
 ultimate triumph of good over evil^-of God and Virtue 
 over the World, the Flesh, and the Devil — (and this cer- 
 tainly appears to be his meaning) ; — we can only reply 
 that, in that case, they are Poetry, and not Prediction ; — 
 that this was not the signification attached to them either 
 by the Prophets who uttered them, or by the People who 
 listened to them, and that it is precluded by the frequent 
 particularity and precision of their language. To conceive, 
 therefore, this to be the meaning of the God who is alleged 
 to have inspired them, is to imagine that He used incom- 
 petent and deceptive instruments for his communications ; 
 —and it is certain that had the Prophecies been perfectly 
 and unquestionably fulfilled in their obvious sense, this 
 secondary and recondite signification would never ha^ 
 been heard of. We are surprised that Dr. Arnold did not 
 perceive that to allow of a " double sense " is to give all 
 false prophecy a guarantee against being disproved by 
 the event. 
 
 In justification of this idea o' a double sense, he con- 
 tinues — " The notion of a double sense in Prophecy has 
 been treated by some persons with contempt. Yet it may 
 be said, that it is almost necessarily involved in the verj?^ 
 idea of Prophecy. Every prophecy has, according to the 
 very definition of the word, a double source ; it has, if I 
 may venture so to speak, two authors, the one human, the 
 
 other divine If uttered by the tongue of man, 
 
 it must also, unless we suppose him to be a mere instru- 
 ment (in the same sense as a flute or a harp), be coloured 
 by his own mind. The prophet expresses in words certain 
 truths conveyed to his mind ; but his mind does not fully 
 embrace them, nor can it ; for how can man fully compre- 
 hend the mind of God ? Every man lives in time ; the 
 present must be to him clearer than the future. . . . But 
 with God there is no past, nor future ; every truth is pres- 
 ent to Him in all its extent ; so that His expression of it, 
 
142 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 if I may so speak, differs essentially from that which can 
 be coTn/prehended hy the wAiid, or uttered by the tongue 
 of man. Thus every prophecy as uttered by man (that 
 is, by an intelligent and not a mere mechanical instru- 
 ment), and at the same time as inspired by God, must, as 
 far as appears, have a double sense : one, the sense enter- 
 tained hy the human mind of the Writer ; the other, ^ 
 sense infused into it hy God."* 
 
 We must confess our amazement at the obvious and ex- 
 treme unsoundness of this whole passage. Not only does 
 it painfully remind us of the double meaning so often 
 and so justly charged upon the Pagan oracles — but it 
 assumes the strange and contradictory improbabilities; 
 first, that God was unable to convey His meaning to the 
 Prophet ; secondly, that He infused this meaning into the 
 words which were uttered, although He could not infuse it 
 into the mind of the man who uttered them; and, thirdly, 
 that we can see further into the mind and meaning of God 
 t]ian those to whom He spoke ; — that they, in expressing 
 the ideas which He had put into their minds, mistook or 
 imperfectly conceived those ideas — but that to us is given 
 to discover a thought which those words contained, but 
 did not express, or which, if they did express it, they were 
 not understood by the Writer to express. Now, either 
 the ideas which God wished to communicate were con- 
 veyed to the mind of the Prophet, or they were not : — if 
 they were so conveyed, then the Prophet must have com- 
 prehended them, and intended to express them correctly, 
 and of course did express them correctly — for it is mon- 
 strous to suppose that God would infuse ideas into a man's 
 mind for the purpose of being communicated to the pub- 
 lic, which ideas He yet did not enable him so to com- 
 municate : — and then all the above confused subtleties fall 
 to the ground. If, on the other hand, these ideas were not 
 so conveyed to the Prophet's mind, then it must have 
 been the words and not the ideas which were inspired, 
 
 * Sermons on Prophecy, p. 51. A little further on he says :— '* We may 
 even suppose the prophet to be totally ignorant of the divine meaning of his 
 words, and to intend to express t^ meaning of his own quit^ unlike God's 
 meaning t " 
 
ts. 
 
 THE PROPHECIES. 
 
 143 
 
 that which can 
 by the tongue 
 i by man (that 
 :hanical instru- 
 y God, must, as 
 the sense enter- 
 ; the other, <^ 
 
 obvious and ex- 
 Not only does 
 laning so often 
 
 oracles — but it 
 improbabilities : 
 
 meaning to the 
 leaning into the 
 aid not infuse it 
 m; and, thirdly, 
 meaning of God 
 y, in expressing 
 lids, mistook or 
 at to us is given 
 
 contained, but 
 ess it, they were 
 3. Now, either 
 icate were con- 
 y were not : — if 
 must have com- 
 them correctly, 
 —for it is mon- 
 eas into a man's 
 ^ted to the puh- 
 lim so to com- 
 jd subtleties fall 
 e ideas were not 
 1 it must have 
 
 were inspired, 
 
 e says:— "We may 
 ivine meaning of his 
 [ quite unlike God's 
 
 and God used the Prophet simply as a flute (a supposition 
 scouted by Dr. Arnold) ; — and we are thus driven to the 
 equally monstrous supposition that God used words which 
 did not convey His meaning, even to the very favoured 
 individual to whom and through whom He spoke. If 
 God's sense was " infused " into the Prophetic language, 
 how could that sense have been missed by the Prophet 
 and caught only by others in these latter times ? and 
 what was the use of language which could not be rightly 
 comprehended except centuries after it was spoken, and 
 by a different People from those to whom it was spoken ? 
 If God's sense was not infused into the words, through the 
 incompetency of the utterer, how can Dr. Arnold discover 
 it therein ? It may be, however, that Dr. Arnold's con- 
 ception of the case was this, though it is not what we 
 should gather from his language: — that beneath the 
 obvious meaning of the words of the Prophecy, as uttered 
 by the Prophet, and understood by him and his hearers, 
 lay a latent signification, as it were written with invisible 
 ink, which could only be discovered in later ages, and by 
 the light which historical experience and advancing en- 
 lightenment throw upon it. No doubt this is possible ; 
 but it is unproved, and requires much proof before it can 
 be admitted ; — and it is especially worthy of remark, that 
 the supposition, unquestionably a violent one, is rendered 
 necessary only by the asstumption that the prophecies 
 were predictions, coupled with the fact that they have 
 not been fulfilled in their literal meaning ; — and it in- 
 volves the admission, that they were in a manner decep- 
 tive, since they were misunderstood, and, by the supposi- 
 tion, must have been misunderstood, by the People to 
 whom they were addressed. 
 
 Yet all these unnatural explanations are resorted to, all 
 these fatal dilemmas encountered, all this appearance of 
 irreverence and disingenuousness incurred, simply to 
 avoid the conclusion that the Prophets were wise, gifted, 
 earnest men, deeply conversant with the Past — looking 
 far into the Future — shocked with the unrighteousness 
 around them — sagacious to foresee impending evil — bold 
 to denounce spiritual wickednes .; in high places — imbued, 
 
144 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 above all, with an unfailing faith, peculiarly strong among 
 their people, that national delinquency and national virtue 
 would alike meet with a temporal and inevitable retribu- 
 tion — and gifted " with the glorious faculty of poetic hope, 
 exerted on human prospects, and presenting its results 
 with the vividness of prophecy ; " — but Prophets in no 
 stricter sense than this. 
 
 t ■ / 
 
 THEIS 
 
 It is an as 
 
 universal 
 
 nation 'W 
 
 carry doA 
 
 true God 
 
 —that M 
 
 fundame: 
 
 was, in f 
 
 Hebrew 
 
 by one oi 
 
 in Polyti] 
 
 divines i 
 
 history, i 
 
 tion, anc 
 
 Theologi 
 
 book of 
 
 "Und 
 
 the Mo8£ 
 
 ity, I co; 
 
 cause fo: 
 
 tution ; 
 
 Jews ad 
 
 slid int 
 
 childrer 
 
 arts of 
 
 their se 
 
 Milm 
 
 in a sin 
 
 "Th( 
 
 In the 
 
 worshi] 
 
 « Pa 
 
strong among 
 ational virtue 
 table retribu- 
 )f poetic hope, 
 ig its results 
 ■"ophets in no 
 
 CHAPTER V. 
 
 THEISM OF THE JEWS IMPURE AND PROGRESSIVE. . 
 
 It is an assumption of the popular theology, and an almost 
 universal belief in the popular mind, that the Jewish 
 nation was selected by the Almighty to preserve and 
 carry down to later ages a knowledge of the One and 
 true God ; — that the Patriarchs possessed this knowledge ; 
 — that Moses delivered and enforced this doctrine as the 
 fundamental tenet of the national creed ; — and that it 
 was, in fact, the received and distinctive dogma of the 
 Hebrew People. This alleged possession of the true faith 
 by one only people, while all surrounding tribes were lost 
 in Polytheism, or something worse, has been adduced by 
 divines in general as a proof of the truth of the sacred 
 history, and of the divine origin of the Mosaic dispensa- 
 tion, and forms, indeed, one of the standard arguments of 
 Theologians in the present day. Paley, the actual text- 
 book of one of our Universities, writes of it thus : — 
 
 " Undoubtedly our Saviour assumes the divine origin of 
 the Mosaic Institution ; and, independently of his author- 
 ity, I conceive it to be very difficult to assign any other 
 cause for the commencement or existence of that Insti- 
 tution ; especially for the singular circumstance of the 
 Jews adhering to the Unity, when every other people 
 slid into polytheism; for their being men in religion, 
 children in everything else ; behind other nations in the 
 arts of peace and war, superior to the most improved in 
 their sentiments and doctrines relating to the Deity."* 
 
 Milman"f speaks of the pure monotheism of the Jews 
 in a similar strain : 
 
 " The religious history of this people is no less singular. 
 In the narrow slip of land inhabited by their tribes the 
 worship of one Almighty Creator of the Univei-se subsists, 
 
 * Faley'B iElvidences of Christianity, f History of the Jews. i. 4. 
 
146 
 
 THE eREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 as in its only sanctuaiy. In every stage of Society, under 
 the pastoral tent of Abraham, and in the sumptiwus 
 Temple of Solomon, the same creed maintains its inviol- 
 able simplicity. . . . Nor is this merely a sublime 
 speculative tenet ; it is the basis of their civil constitu- 
 tion, and of their national character. As there is but one 
 Almighty God, so there is but one People under his special 
 protection, the descendants of Abraham." 
 
 [Now the passage we have italicised is surely an extra- 
 ordinary over-statement of the case. Without going so 
 far as Bauer (Theol. des Alt. Test. 1. 4.) who thinks that 
 the Jews as a nation scarcely became true monotheists 
 till after the Captivity, it seems difficult not to recognise 
 that they did not believe in the exclusive existence of one 
 sole God in the earlier times — perhaps not till a compara- 
 tively] late period of their history; — that their early and 
 popular notions of the Deity were eminently coarse, low, 
 and unworthy; — ^that among them, as among all other 
 nations, the conceptions of God formed by individuals 
 varied according to their intellectual and spiritual capa- 
 cities, being poor and anthropomorphic among the ignor- 
 ant and coarse-minded, pure and lofty among the virtuous 
 and richly-gifted; — and, finally, that these conceptions 
 gradually improved, and became purified and ennobled, as 
 the Hebrews advanced in civilization — being generally 
 speaking, lowest in the Historical Books, amended in the 
 Prophetical Writings, and reaching their highest eleva- 
 tion among the Poets of the Nation. 
 
 In its progress from Fetichism to pure Theism, the 
 human mind generally passes through three stages — or, 
 to speak more correctly, man's idea of God passes through 
 three forms of development. We have Him represented 
 first as the God of the. individual or family ; then as the 
 Ood of the nation ; lastly, as the God of the human race. 
 Now we find all these three views of Deity in the Old 
 Testament — sometimes, it is true, strangely jumbled to- 
 gether, as might be expected in books written by diff*er- 
 ent persons at diflferent times — but on the whole bearing 
 pretty distinct marks of the periods at which they re- 
 spectively prevailed. 
 
Society, under 
 ^•hc sumjHiious 
 lina its inviol- 
 rely a sublime 
 civil constitu- 
 here is but one 
 ider his special 
 
 irely an extra- 
 ihout going 80 
 ho thinks that 
 le monotheists 
 ot to recognise 
 xist^nce of one 
 till a compara- 
 'heir early and 
 tly coarse, low, 
 aong all other 
 by individuals 
 spiritual eapa- 
 ong the ignor- 
 ig the virtuous 
 3e conceptions 
 id ennobled, as 
 aing generally 
 mended in the 
 highest eleva- 
 
 B Theism, the 
 Be stages — or, 
 passes through 
 tn represented 
 f ; then as the 
 > hwman race. 
 ity in the Old 
 (^jumbled to- 
 }ten by differ- 
 w^hole bearing 
 hich they re- 
 
 THEISM OF TEE JEWS IMPURE AND PROGRESSIVE. 147 
 
 The representations of God in the history of Abraham 
 a})pear to imply that the God whom he worshipped was 
 a family God, selected, probably, by him for some reason 
 unknown to us, out of a number of others who were wor- 
 shipped by his fathers and his tribe. We are expressly 
 told that the father and grandfather of Abraham " wor- 
 shipped other Gods ; " — and the representations given of 
 the God of Abraham, and of his pi oceedings during the 
 lives of the three Patriarchs, are so mean and material 
 that it is difficult to conceive how a knowledge of the One 
 true God, Maker of Heaven and Earth, could have been 
 ascribed to them. God appears to Abraham with two 
 angels in the form of men — (they are spoken of as " three 
 men") — bits at the door of his tent — partakes of his re- 
 past — is angry at the laughter of Sarah, and an alterca- 
 tion takes place between them ; after which He discusses 
 with him the case of Sodom and Gomorrah, and informs 
 him that He is going down thither to see whether the re- 
 ports which have reached him are correct.* " Your fathers 
 dwelt on the other side of the flood in old time, even 
 Terah, the father of Abraham, and the father of Nachor : 
 and tliey served other gods." (Joshua xxiv. 2.) " The God 
 of Abraham, and the God of Nachor, the God of their 
 father, judge betwixt us." (Gen. xxxi. 53.) There are not 
 wanting traces of Polytheism in the earlier portions of 
 Hebrew History. The expression Jehovah Elohitn, " The 
 God of Gods," may, perhaps, be taken as an indication. 
 Bauer thinks that " the Elohim, who were probably at 
 one time worshipped as equal Gods, are in Genesis recog- 
 nised as subordinate deities, with whom Jehovah, the 
 highest Eloah, enters into Council." (Theol. des Alt. Test, 
 i. 3.) It will be remembered that l^aban, a near relative 
 of Abraham, whose sister he had expressly selected as his 
 son Isaac's wife, pursued Jacob for having " stolen his 
 
 * Bauer observes that the Samaritan and Arabian translators, "from an 
 anxious apprehension lest a corporeal existence should be attributed to the 
 Deity, fre(|uently substituted the expression angel of God, for the names 
 Jehovah and Elohim." Thus they have " Ye shall be as the angels of God," 
 instead of " Ye shall be as gods" (Gen. iii. 6) ; "In the likeness of the angel 
 of God made he him" (Gen. v. 1) ; "The angel of God went up from Abra- 
 bam" (Gen. jcvii, 22), tvnd so on. 
 
148 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 Gods." (Gen. xxxi. 30.) He, therefore, worshipped fetiches. 
 In Gen. xxxv. 2-4, we find Jacob collecting the strange 
 Gods worshipped by his household, and hiding them under 
 an oak. It is certainly remarkable that both Abraham and 
 Isaac should insist upon their sons marrpng into an idol- 
 atrous family, if they had really believed their own God 
 to be the only one. 
 
 Jacob's ideas of God are, as might be expected from h . 
 mean and tricky character, even lower than those oi 
 Abraham. He makes a condition, on which he will select 
 Jehovah to be his God, and will give Him a tithe of all 
 his possessions (Gen. xxviii. 20.) ; — he represents Him as 
 his confidant in cheating Laban, and wrestles with Him 
 bodily to extort a blessing. Who, after reading such pas- 
 sages, can for a moment accept the belief that Jacob and 
 Job worshipped the same God-? 
 
 In process of time the descendants of Abraham multi- 
 plied and became a numerous people, and naturally con- 
 tinued the worship of that God who had done so much 
 for their forefathers. Thus the fo/mily God of Abraham, 
 Isaac, and Jacob, gradually enlarged into the natio'nai 
 God of the Israelites, to whose worship they adhered with 
 greater or less tenacity, with greater or less exclusiveness, 
 during their residence in Egypt. As the history proceeds 
 the conceptions of this God seem to become purer and 
 loftier, till, in the mind of Moses, an intellectual and 
 highly-educated man, versed in all the learning of the 
 Egyptians, they often (as far as we can guess what came 
 from him) reached to a sublime simplicity of expression 
 rarely surpassed. Still, there is no distinct proof that 
 Moses disbelieved in the existence of other Gods : — the 
 God whom he server is still " the God of Abraham, Isaac, 
 and Jacob ; " — He is not asserted to be the onlt/ God ; the 
 existence and power of rival Deities is not denied, but is 
 even admitted by implication. All that Moses claims for 
 Jehovah is, not that He is the Sole God, but that He is 
 superior to all others. " Who is like unto Thee, Jehovah, 
 among the gods ?" (Ex. xv. 11.*) And he represents him 
 
 • Jethro says : " Now I know that Jehovah is greater than all gods : for 
 Jn the thing wharein they dealt proudly he was above thejn. — (Exod. 
 XviiL 11.) 
 
 THEISM 
 
 to Phara 
 the Hebr 
 Earth, 
 great f oi 
 God but 
 which br 
 shall hai 
 whole 
 view : h 
 not as th 
 Atheists, 
 so great 
 him to a 
 Jewish 1 
 their ha 
 the gold 
 ural on " 
 mount i 
 lieved h 
 is alway 
 As ci 
 arooC an 
 throponc 
 the peo] 
 and the 
 object c 
 into a p 
 many tl 
 After tl 
 showed 
 even to 
 find re 
 Jehova 
 among 
 the wis 
 Priests 
 ment o 
 compai 
 God of 
 Deity 
 
THEISM OP THE JEWS IMPURE ANDPROGBESSIVE. 149 
 
 
 to Pharaoh, by Jehovah's own command, as the " God of 
 the Hebrews,' not as tlie Supreme Lord of Heaven and 
 Earth. Even in the delivery of the Commandments, the 
 great foundation of the Law, it is not said, " There is no 
 God but Jehovah," but only " I am the Lord thy God, 
 which brought thee out of the House of Bondage ; Thou 
 shalt have no other Gods beside me (or before me)." The 
 whole of the xxivth chapter of Joshua confirms this 
 he there urges the Israelites to choose Jehovah, 
 
 view 
 
 not as the only God, whom to desert would be to become 
 Atheists, but as a God whose bounties to them had been 
 so great that it would be black ingratitude not to prefer 
 him to all others. The whole history of the lapses of the 
 Jewish Nation into idolatry aiiso discourages the idea of 
 their having been really monotheists. The worship of 
 the golden calf and the Canaanitish Gods was quite nat- 
 ural on the supposition of Jehovah being merely a para- 
 mount and preferred God : — monstrous, if they had be- 
 lieved him to be the only one. Moreover, their idolatry 
 is always spoken of as infidelity, not as atheism. ' 
 
 As civilization advanced, prophets, sages, and poets 
 arose among the Hebrews, to whom the lunited and an- 
 thropomorphic conceptions of the Deity, prevalent among 
 the people, were painfully inadequate and revolting ;— 
 and they endeavoured by nobler representations of the 
 object of their worship to convert the national religion 
 into a pure theism ; in which, however, it is thought by 
 many that they did not succeed till after the Captivity. 
 After this idea had once taken root, the nation never 
 showed any disposition to relapse into idolatry. And 
 even to the latest period of the Canonical writings we 
 find representations both of the nature and attributes of 
 Jehovah so utterly discrepant as to leave no doubt that 
 among the Jews, as among all other nations, the God of 
 the wise and the God of the ignorant — the God of the 
 Priests and the God of the Prophets — were the embodi- 
 ment of two very different classes of ideas. Let any one 
 compare the partial, unstable, revengeful, and deceitful 
 God of Exodus and Numbers, with the sublime and unique 
 Deity of Job, and the nobler Psalms, or even the Godf o^ 
 
150 
 
 THE CREED OF OHIOSTENDOM. 
 
 Isaiah with the God of Ezekiel and Daniel — and he can 
 scarcely fail to admit that the conception of the One living 
 and true God was a plant of slow and gradual growth in 
 the Hebrew mind, and was due far less to Moses, the 
 Patriarchs, or the Priests, than to the superiority of indi- 
 vidual minds at various periods of their history. Com- 
 pare the following representations which we have arranged 
 in parallel columns. 
 
 And Jehovah spake to Moses, say* 
 ing — Let them make me a sanctuary : 
 that I may dwell among them — And 
 thou shalt put the mercy-seat above 
 u^n the ark, . . . and there I 
 will meet with thee, and I will com- 
 mune with the*.— Exod. xxv. 8,21-22. 
 
 And it came to pass, as Moses 
 entered into the tabernacle, the 
 cloudy pillar descended, and stood 
 at the door of the tabernacle ; and 
 Jehovah talked with Moses. — And 
 Jehovah spake unto Moses face to 
 face, as a man speaketh unto his 
 friend. — ^Exod. xxxiii. 9, 11. 
 
 For they have heard that thou 
 Jehovah art among this People, that 
 thou Jehovah art seen face to face. 
 — ^Numbers xiv. 14. 
 
 And Jehovah said. Behold, there 
 is a place by me, and thou shall 
 stand upon a rock : And it shall 
 come to pass, while my glory pass- 
 eth by, that I will put thee in a clift 
 of the rock, and will cover thee with 
 my hand while I pass bv : And I 
 will take away mine hand, and thou 
 shalt see my back parts : but my face 
 shall not be seen. — Exod.xxxiii.21-24. 
 
 And Moaes returned imtothe Lord 
 and said, Lord, wherefore hast thou 
 so evil entreated this people ? Why 
 is it that thou hast sent me? For 
 since I came to Fharoah to speak in 
 thy name, he hath done evil to this 
 people ; neither hast thou delivered 
 thy people at all.— Exod. v. 22, 23. 
 
 And Jehovah said unto Moses I 
 have seen this people, aad, behold, 
 it is a stiff-necked people ; now 
 therefore let me alone, that ni 
 wnth may wax hot against them. 
 
 But will God in very deed dwell 
 on the eprth ? Behold, the Heaven, 
 and the Heaven of Heavens, cannot 
 contain Thee ; how much less this 
 house that I have buildedl — 1 
 Kings viii. 27. 
 
 Whither shall I go from thy 
 spirit ? or whither shall I flee from 
 thy presence ? — Ps. cxxxix. 7-10. 
 
 Lo, he goeth by me, and T set 
 him not ; he passeth on also, )ut I 
 perceive him not — Job ix. 11. 
 
 Behold, I go forward, but he is not 
 there ; and backward, but I cannot 
 perceive him : On the left hand, 
 where he doth work, but I cannot 
 behold him : he hideth himself on 
 the right hand, that I cannot see him. 
 —Job xxiii. 8, 9. 
 
 O Jehovah my God, thou art very 
 great ; thou art clothed with honour 
 and majesty. Who coverest thyself 
 with light as with a garment : who 
 stretchest out the heavens like a 
 curtain : Who layeth the beams of 
 his chambers in the waters : who 
 maketh the clouds his chariot : who 
 walketh upon the wings of the wind. 
 —Psalm CIV. 1-3. 
 
 Then Job answered and said, I 
 know it is so of a tn^th : but how 
 should man be just with God ? If he 
 will contend with him, he cannot 
 answer him one of a thousand. 
 
 For he is not a man, as I am, that 
 1 should answer him, and we should 
 come together in judgment.— Job ix. 
 1, 2. 3. 32. 
 
 Shall mortal man be more just 
 than God 7 Shall a man be more 
 pure than his maker T— Job. iv. 17. 
 
 THEISM 
 
 and that In 
 I will make < 
 
 And Hose 
 God, and sa 
 wrath wax 1 
 which thou 1 
 the land of 
 and with a n 
 
 Wherefon 
 speak, and i 
 bring them 
 mountains, t 
 the face of 
 thy fierce w 
 evil against 
 Abraham, 
 servants, to 
 thine own s 
 I will multi 
 of heaven, 
 have spokei 
 seed, and 
 ever. And 
 evil which 1 
 people. — Ej 
 
 And the 
 Speak now 
 and let e\ 
 neighbour, 
 neighbour, 
 jewels of g* 
 the people 1 
 Egyptians. 
 
 And the 
 
 cording to 
 
 they bom 
 
 jewels of e 
 
 and raime 
 
 the people 
 
 Egyptians, 
 
 them. And 
 
 - Exod. iii 
 
 And Jel 
 
 Ruade Aha 
 
 fall at Bi 
 
 said on t 
 
 said on t 
 
 came fortl 
 
 the Lord, 
 
 him. An 
 
 Wherevnit 
 
 forth, and 
 
 the mouti 
 
 he said, ' 
 
 and previ 
 
 Bo,~lKi 
 
1 — and he can 
 
 the One living 
 ual growth in 
 to Moses, the 
 iority of indi- 
 listory. Com- 
 have arranged 
 
 -very deed dwell 
 iold, the Heaven, 
 >f Heavens, cannot 
 )w much less this 
 lave buildedl — 1 
 
 I go from t\y 
 • shall I flee from 
 s. cxxxix. 7-10. 
 
 by me, and I see 
 jeth on also, )ut I 
 -Job ix. 11. 
 Pward, but he is not 
 kard, but I cannot 
 pn the left hand, 
 |ork, but I cannot 
 hideth himself on 
 it I cannot see him. 
 
 jrod, thou art very 
 othed with honour 
 lio coverest thyself 
 
 a garment : who 
 heavens like a 
 eth the beams of 
 the waters : who 
 
 his chariot ; who 
 winga of the wind. 
 
 ered and said, I 
 a tmth : but how 
 with God? If he 
 him, he cannot 
 a thousand, 
 nan, as I am, that 
 m, and we sh(nild 
 idgment.— Job ix. 
 
 Eui be more just 
 a man be more 
 r?— Job. Iv. 17. 
 
 THEISM OF THE JEWS ZMPUBE AND PROOBESSIVE. 151 
 
 and that I may consume them : and 
 I will make of thee a great nation. ^ 
 And Moses besought Jehovah his 
 (Sod, and said. Lord, why doth thy 
 wrath wax hot against thy people, 
 which thou hast brought forth out of 
 the land of Egypt with great power, 
 and with a mighty hand? 
 
 Wherefore should the Egyptians 
 speak, and say. For mischief did he 
 bring them out, to slay them in the 
 mountains, and to consimie them from 
 the face of the earth? Turn from 
 thy fierce wrath, and repent of this 
 evil against thy people. Remember 
 Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, thy 
 servants, to whom thou swarest by 
 thine own self, and saidst unto them, 
 I will multiply your seed as the stars 
 of heaven, and all this lai.d that I 
 have spoken of will I give unto your 
 seed, and they shall inherit it for 
 ever. And the Lord repented of the 
 evil which he thought to do unto his 
 people. — Exod. xzxii. 9-14. 
 
 And the Lord said unto Moses, 
 Speak now in the ears of the people, 
 and let every man borrow of his 
 neighbour, and every woman of her 
 neighbour, jewels of silver, and 
 jewels of gold. And the Lord gave 
 the people favour in the sight of the 
 Egyptians. 
 
 And the children of Israel did ac- 
 cording to the word of Moses ; and 
 they borrowed of the Egyptians 
 jewels of silver, and je.wels of gold, 
 and raiment : And Jehovah gave 
 the people favour in the sight of the 
 Egyptians, so that they lent unto 
 them. And theyspoiled the Egyptians. 
 - Exod. iii. 21, 22 ; xi. 1-3 ; xii. 35, 36. 
 
 And Jehovah said. Who shall per* 
 Huade Ahab, that he may go up and 
 fall at Bamoth-Gilead ? And one 
 said on this manner, and another 
 said on that manner. And there 
 came forth a spirit, and stood before 
 the Lord, and said. I will persuade 
 him. And Jehovah said unto him, 
 Wherewith? And he said, I will go 
 forth, and I will be a lying spirit m 
 the mouth of all his prophets. And 
 he taid. Thou shalt persuade him, 
 and prevail also : go forth, and do 
 •o,--! Kings xxii. 20-22. 
 
 The counsel of Jehovah standeth 
 for ever, the thoughts of his heart 
 unto all generations. — Psalm xxxiii. 
 U. 
 
 I know that,\.~hatso«ver God doeth, 
 it shall be for ever : nothing can be 
 put to it, nor an3^hing taken from 
 it — Eccles. iii. 14. 
 
 The Strength of Israel will not lie 
 nor repent : for he is not n "^an, 
 that he should repent. — ^1 Sau v. 
 29. 
 
 Lord, who shall abide in thy tab- 
 emacle? who shall dwell in thy 
 holy hill? He that waJketh upright- 
 ly, and worketh righteousness, and 
 Seaketh the truth in his heart. — 
 lalm XV. 1, 2. 
 
 For the word of the Lord is right ; 
 and all his works are done in tnith. 
 He loved righteousness and judg- 
 ment.— Psalm xxxiii. 4^ 6. 
 
 Lying lips are abomination to the 
 Lord : but they that deal truly are 
 his delight. — Prov. xii. 22. 
 
152 
 
 THE CBF.ED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 And they yrent in unto Noah into 
 the ark, and the Lard shut him in. — 
 Gen. vii. 15, 16. 
 
 And Jehovah came down to see the 
 city and the tower, which the chil- 
 dren of men builded. — Gen. xi. 5. 
 
 And Noah builded &n altar unto the 
 Lord ; and offered burnt offerings on 
 the altar. And the Lord smelled a 
 •5we«t BAVour ; and the Lord said in 
 Mb ha&rc, I will not again curse the 
 ground any more for man's sake. — 
 Gen. viii. 20, 21. 
 
 But ye shall offer the burnt-offer- 
 ing for a sweet savour unto the Lord. 
 — ^Num. xxviii. 27. 
 
 And ye shall offer a burnt-offering, 
 a saciinoe made by fire, of a sweet 
 savour unto the Lord; thirteen young 
 bullocks,tworams, and fourteen lambs 
 of the first year ; they shall be with- 
 out blemish.— Num. xxix. 13, 36. 
 
 The eyes of th«; Itord are in every 
 place, beholuing the evil and the 
 good. — Prov. XV. 3. 
 
 Jehovah looketh from heaven; 
 he beholdeth all the sons of men.— 
 Psalm xxxiiL 13. 
 
 I will take no bullock out of thy 
 house, nor he goats out of thy folds. 
 For every beast of the forest la mine, 
 and the cattle upon a thousand hills. 
 If I were hungry, I would not teU 
 thee ; for the world is mine, and the 
 fulness thereof. Will I eat the flesh 
 of bulls, or drink the blood of goats? 
 Offer unto God thanksgiving. —Pg. 
 1. 9-14. 
 
 For thou desirest not sacrifice; else 
 would I give it : thou delightest not 
 in bumt-offering. — Ps. li. 16. 
 
 To what purpose is the multitude 
 of your sacrifices unto me ? saith the 
 Lord : I am full of the bumt-oifer 
 ings of rams, and the fat of fed 
 beasts ; and I delight not in the 
 blood of bullocks, or of lambs, or of 
 he-goats. — Isaiah i. 11. 
 
 Wherewith shall I come before 
 Jehovah, and bow myself before the 
 high God 7 Shall I come before him 
 with bumt-offerin»i, with calves of 
 a jrear old ? Will the Lord be pleased 
 with thousands of rams, or with ten 
 thousands of rivers of oil ? Shall I give 
 my first-bom for my transgression, 
 the finiit of my body for the sin of 
 my soul f He hath showed thee, 
 man, what is good ; and what doth 
 Jehovah require of the&, but to do 
 
 Justlv, to love mercy, and to walk 
 lumbly with thy God?— Micahvi 
 6-8. 
 
i iord are in every 
 the evil and the 
 
 3, 
 
 th from heaven ; 
 the sons of nien.~ 
 
 bullock out of thy 
 ts out of thy folds. 
 f the forest is mine, 
 m a thousand hills. 
 , I would not tell 
 d is mine, and the 
 Will I eat the flesh 
 the blood of goats? 
 thanksgiving. — Ps. 
 
 Bt not sacrifice; else 
 ihou delightest not 
 -Ps. U. 16. 
 ie is the multitude 
 unto me ? saith the 
 of the bumt-offe^ 
 id the fat of fed 
 elight not in the 
 , or of lambs, or of 
 i. 11. 
 
 dl I come before 
 
 f myself before the 
 
 I come before him 
 
 igs, with calves of 
 
 the Lord be pleased 
 f rams, or with ten 
 8 of oil? Shall I give 
 my transgression, 
 >ody for the sin of 
 th showed thee, 
 >d ; and what doth 
 of the&, but to do 
 lercy, and to walk 
 • trod?— Micah vi. 
 
 CHAPTER VI. 
 
 ORIGIN OF THE GOSPELS. 
 
 The current idea respecting the nature of the Gospel 
 History is, that the four Evangelists were eye-witnesses 
 (or the amanuenses of eye-witnesses) of the events which 
 they relate ; and that we have, in fact, embodied in their 
 narratives, four independent and corroborative testimonies 
 to the words and deeds of Christ. Their substantial 
 agreement is appealed to in proof of their fidelity, and 
 their numerous and circumstantial discrepancies are ac- 
 cepted as proof of their independence.* Let as examine 
 what foundation can be discovered for this current opinion. 
 Have we any reason to believe that all the Evangelists, 
 or that any of them, were companions of Christ — eye and 
 ear-witnesses of his career ? And if not, what does 
 critical Science teach us of the probable origin of the 
 four Gospels ? 
 
 The first gospel has come down to us under the title of 
 the gospel of, or according to, St. Matthew : and the tra- 
 dition of the Church is that it was written (probably 
 about A.D. 68) by Matthew, the publican, one of the twelve 
 apostles, the same who was called by Jesus w hile " sitting 
 at the receipt of custom." This is distinctly stated by 
 several of the early fathers, as the received opinion or 
 
 * Thus Paley says, " The usual charac;.er of human testimony is sub- 
 stantial truth under circumstantial variety. When accounts of a transac- 
 tion come from the mouths of different witnesses, it is seldom that it is not 
 possible to point out apparent or real inconsistencies between them. These 
 inconsistencies are studiously displayed by an adverse pleader, but often- 
 times with little impression upon the minds of the judges. On the contrary, 
 a close and minute agreement induces the suspicion of confederacy or fraud." 
 — Faley's Evidences, p. 414. 
 
 Again, Ijardner says, ' ' I have all my days read and admired the first three 
 evangelists, as independent witnesses, and I know not how to forbear rank- 
 ing the other opinion among those bold as well as groundless assertions in 
 whicli critics too often indalge without considering the consequences," — Dr. 
 Lardner, like many other divines, required to be reminded that critics have 
 nothing to do with consequences, but only with truths, and that (to use the 
 language of Algernon Sydney), "a conseijueace cannot destroy a truth." 
 
 K 
 
154 
 
 THE CBEED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 tradition — as by Papias.(A. D. 116), Irenaeus (a, d. 178), 
 Origen (a. d. 230), Epiphanius (a. d. 368), and Jerome (a. 
 D. 392).* All these fathers, however, without exception, 
 expressly affirm that Matthew wrote his Gospel in the 
 Hebrew language, whereas, the Gospel which we receive 
 as Matthew's is written in Greek ; and not only have we 
 no account of its having been translated, and no guarantee 
 of such translation being a faithful one, but learned men 
 are satisfied from internal evidence that it is not a tram- 
 lation at all, but must have been originally written in 
 Groek.-f- Our present Gospel, therefore, cannot be the 
 Gospel to which the fathers above cited refer. It would 
 appear simply that Matthew did write a history, or rather 
 memorabilia, of Christ (for the expression tu, Xoyia says 
 no more), but that this was something quite different 
 from our Gospel. J This notion is confirmed by the fact 
 that the Ebionites and Nazarenes, two Christian sects, 
 possessed a Hebrew Gospel, which they considered to be 
 the only genuine one, and which they called the Gospel 
 according to Matthew.§ It appears, however, to have been 
 so materially different from our first gospel as entirely to 
 negative the suppoaition of the latter being a translation 
 from it. 
 
 * Fapias, whose information on this aa on other matters seems to have 
 been derived from John, who is called "the Presbyter," an elder of the 
 Church at Ephesua, simply sayn, "Matthew wrote the divine oracles 
 (ra Xoyia) in tlte Hefyrew tongue, and every man interpreted them as he was 
 able." — Irenaeus says, " Matthew, then, among the Jews, wrote a Gospel w 
 their own language, while Peter and Paul were preaching the Gospel at 
 Rome." — Origen and Jerome both state that (according to the tradition cone 
 down to them) the first Gospel was written by Matthew, the Publican, in 
 Hebrew. 
 
 t Hug, in a most luminous and learned essay, has succeded in rendering 
 this, if not certain, at least in the highest degree probable ; and his views 
 are supported by Erasmus, Webster. Paulus, and De Wette. — The only 
 critic 01 equal eminenje who adopts the opposite opinion, is Eichhom. 
 
 t It seems to us very probable, however, as Hennell suggests, " that 
 some one after Matthew wrote the Greek Gospel which has come down to 
 us, incorporating these Hebrew koyia (and perhaps mainly framed out of 
 them) ; whence it was called the Gospel according to Matthew, and in the 
 second century came to be considered as the work of th« Apostle."— Hen- 
 nell's Origin of Christianity, p. 124. 
 
 § Hug, Introd. part ii. § 7, pp. 317, 320, 392.— Jerome allows that many 
 considered it to have been the genuine original Gospel of Matthew. — Thirl- 
 wall's Introd. to Schleiermacher, 48-50, and notes. 
 
 Since writing the above, I have read Norton's dissertation on this subject, 
 
 The onl 
 that Matt 
 same time 
 thew wro 
 reason to 
 
 in the notes t 
 that our Gos] 
 fact the same 
 Nazarenes, m 
 polations, w 
 not into our 
 deed many oi 
 Norton, i, 19 
 lated it into G 
 some " accoi 
 tlie tame as ox 
 sary to transl 
 tion of degre 
 and to assurai 
 right, and thi 
 is clearly an 
 rest : it is no1 
 early Church 
 reason for su} 
 lation, we an 
 what degree 
 Let us sun 
 tant one. 
 
 I. The ger 
 Epiphanius, 
 Matthew wr 
 tians. The 
 Papias (a.d. 
 is preserved 
 piece of infoi 
 of the Chun 
 
 II. A Hel 
 sometimes tl 
 according to 
 ites, and was 
 
 III. Ifth 
 extant so t 
 numerous n( 
 believing ou' 
 fair and fait 
 
 IV. But 1 
 Gmrch to b 
 Would this 
 Gospel ? 
 
 v. Again 
 pel, and trai 
 tent to jud 
 first Gospel 
 autumant, j 
 
OBIOIN OF THE QOSPELS. 
 
 155 
 
 The only external testimony, then, which exists to show 
 that Matthew the apostle wrote a gospel, shows at the 
 same time that our first gospel is not the one which Mat- 
 thew wi-ote. External evidence, therefore, gives us no 
 reason to believe that it was the production of an eye- 
 in the notes to his " Genuineness of the Gospels." He holds to the opinion 
 that our Gospel of Matthew was originally written in Hebrew, and was in 
 fact the same as the Gospel of the Hebrews current among the Ebionites and 
 Nazarenes, with the exception of certain omissions, corruptions, and inter- 
 polations, which he conceives to hav« crept into the Ebionite Gospel, 
 not into our Greek Gospel. I cannot think nis arguments conclusive ; in- 
 deed many of them are mere assumptions. Jerome says (see Hug, p. 323. 
 Norton, i, 199) that he obtained a copy of the Ebionite Gospel, and trans- 
 lated it into Greek; that some called it the Gospel " according to the Apostles," 
 some " according to Matthew ; " it could scarcely, therefore, have been 
 tlie same as our Greek Gospel, or Jerome would not have thought it neces- 
 sary to translate it again ;— the discrepancies between the two are a ques- 
 tion of degree, about which we have no adequate materials for judging ; 
 and to assume, as Norton does, that in these discrepancies, the Greek Gospel is 
 right, and the Hebrew wrong, is gratuitous, to say the least. If our Gospel 
 is clearly an original, and not a translation, the question is of course set at 
 rest ; it is not the Gospel of Matthew ; or if it is, the general tradition of the 
 early Church that Matthew wrote in Hebrew {which tradition is our only 
 reason for supposing that Matthew wrote at all) is erroneous. If it be a trans- 
 lation, we are still in ignorance when it was translated, by whom, and with 
 what degree of fidelity. 
 
 Let us sum up briefly what is known on this subject, for it is an impor- 
 tant one. 
 
 I. The general tradition of the Church as given by Irenseus, Origen, 
 Epiphanius, Jerome, and Chrysostom (from 178-398 A.D.), relates that 
 Matthew wrote a Gospel in Heorew, for the benefit of the Jewish Chris- 
 tians. The origin of this tradition appears to be solely the assertion of 
 Papias (a.d. 116), whose works are lost, but whose statement to this effect 
 is preserved by Eusebius (a.d. 315), and who is supposed to have had this 
 piece of information, as he affirms that he had others, from John, an elder 
 of the Church of Ephesus. 
 
 II. A Hebrew Gospel, called sometimes the " Gospel of the Hebrews," 
 sometimes the ** Gospel according to the Apostles," sometimes the " Gospel 
 according to Matthew," was preserved by the Jewish Christians, or Ebion- 
 ites, and was by them maintamed to be the only true Gospel. 
 
 III. If therefore this Gospel agreed with our Greek Gospel, or wasnow 
 extant so that we could ascertain that the discrepancies were neither 
 numerous nor material, there would be very strong external testimony for 
 believing our Greek Gospel to have been a. translation (and a sufficiently 
 fair and faithful one) from Matthew's Hebrew work. 
 
 IV. But these Ebionites, or Jewish Christians, were held by the early 
 Cliurch to be heretics, and their Gospal to be uncanonical. (Norton, i. 199.) 
 Would this have been the case had it really been the same as our first 
 Gospel ? 
 
 V. Again, Jerome (about A. D. 392) obtained a copy of this Hebrew Gos- 
 pel, and translated it into both Greek and Latin. He was therefore compe- 
 tent to judge, but he nowhere affirms it to have been the same as our 
 first Gospel, but describes it as " secundum apostolos, sive, ut pleriqut 
 
 ftti on on this subject I a^ttimant, juxta MatthaBum."— Hug (322) says, " It would appear fr«m 
 
 US (A. D. 178), 
 and Jerome (a, 
 out exception, 
 
 Gospel in the 
 ch we receive 
 
 only have we 
 d no guarantee 
 it learned men 
 is not a trans- 
 Uy written in 
 cannot be tk 
 ifer. It would 
 story, or rather 
 ?n TO, Xoyia says 
 juite different 
 led by the fact 
 Christian sects, 
 msidered to be 
 led the Gospel 
 Br, to have been 
 j1 as entirely to 
 ig a translation 
 
 atters seems to have 
 er," an elder of the 
 the divine oracles 
 sted them as he was 
 ^8, wrote a Gospel tn 
 ihing the Gospel at 
 to the tradition cone 
 w, the Publican, in 
 
 ucceded in rendering 
 bable ; and his views 
 i Wette.— The only 
 Dn, is Eichhom. 
 lell suggests, "that 
 ;h has come down to 
 ainly framed out oi 
 Matthew, and in the 
 the Apostle."— Hen- 
 
 ne allows that many 
 3f Matthew.— Thirl- 
 
156 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 witness ; and it is worthy of remark that the anther no- 
 where names himself nor claims the authority of an eye- 
 witness. Internal evidence goes further, and we think 
 effectually negatives the notion. 
 
 1. In the first place, many events are recorded at which 
 we know from the record that Matthew was not present; 
 — some, indeed, at which none of the disciples were pres- 
 ent ; and yet all these are narrated in the same tone, and 
 with the same particularity as the other portions of the 
 narrative — sometimes even with more minute circumstan- 
 tiality. Such are the Incarnation (c.i.), the story of the 
 Magi (ii.), the Temptation (iv.), the Transfiguration (xvii.), 
 the Agony and the prayer in Gethsemane (xxvi.), the de- 
 nial of Peter (xxvi.), the dream of Pilate's wife (xxvii.), 
 the conversation between Judas and the Priests, and that 
 between Pilate and the Priests (xxvii.), and, finally, that 
 between the Priests and the Soldiers about the missing 
 body of Jesus (xxviii.). 
 
 It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that if the writer 
 
 the fragments which yet exist in Jerome, th-it it was neither very like, nor 
 very unlike, our first Gospel." "In the remotest period in which the ex- 
 istence of the Jewish Gospel is capable of being proved, it appears to have 
 been so different from our Mattl}*w, as to afford no ground for supiiosiny 
 the original ideatity of the two writings. The evidences of its existence in 
 Origen and Clement are as many proofs of its dissimilarity to our first Gos- 
 pel." — Norton, on the other hand (i. 203), thiiiks these differences no more 
 than are perfectly compatible with original identity. 
 
 VI. Moreover, wo have no account of the Gospel having been translated 
 at all, nor when, nor by whom ; and many of the most learned critics have 
 decided that it is no translation, but an original. 
 
 The differences of opinion are wide enough to show how small is our ac- 
 tual knowledge in the matter. Some, as Hug, consider our Greek Gospel 
 to be by Matthew, to be quite different from the Hebrew Gospel, and to 
 have been originally written in Greek. Others, as Norton, believe our Gos- 
 
 Eel to be by Matthew, to be the same as the Hebrew Gospel, and to have 
 een originally written in Hebrew, and faithfully translated. Others again, 
 as several German critics, to whose opinion we incline, believe it not to be 
 by Matthew, but by some subseouent compiler, and to have been originally 
 written in Greek : the original Gospel of Matthew, if any such existed, 
 being the one possessed by the Ebionites, and excluded by the orthodox as 
 uncanonical. 
 
 It appears pretty certain (see Hug, 341) that if the Ebionite or Nazarene 
 Gospel was not the original Hebrew Gospel of Matthew, no such original 
 Hebrew Gospel existed. From this Hug argues that Matthew did not 
 write in Hebrew ;— Norton, that this Ebionite Gospel was the original He- 
 brew of Matthew. 
 
 [Schleiennecber (Norton, i, 76) holds that ouv GospeUi are not those spoken 
 of by Fapiae, aa proceeding from Matthew and Mark.] 
 
 was not p 
 Priests ab 
 was he pr 
 calming oi 
 
 2. Seco 
 fragments 
 sence of b 
 the f requ( 
 from a coi 
 of Paul's 
 writer wa 
 
 3. The 
 that his 
 indicate t 
 fragments 
 ness of p 
 dwell mu 
 
 4. If, I 
 and Lukt 
 wrote th 
 regarded 
 authoritj 
 deviate fi 
 to Luke's 
 be regarc 
 any of i 
 disciples 
 although 
 of them 
 
 5. The 
 have bee 
 try exce 
 
 The s 
 name ; b 
 
 * Henne 
 
 t Ex. gr. 
 
 —the accuf 
 
 % Papias 
 
 Hieropolis 
 
 Apostles, I 
 
ORIGIN OF THE GOSPELS. 
 
 167 
 
 the author no- 
 'ity of an eye- 
 and we think 
 
 orded at which 
 
 as not present; 
 
 ilea were pres- 
 
 same tone, and 
 
 (ortions of the 
 
 te circumstan- 
 
 le story of the 
 
 juration (xvii.), 
 
 (xx\d.), the de- 
 
 3 wife (xxvii.), 
 
 riests, and that 
 
 id, finally, that 
 
 ut the missing 
 
 a-t if the writer 
 
 sither very like, nor 
 iod in which the ex- 
 it it appears to havo 
 iundfor supi)osinj; 
 }s of its existence in 
 ity to our first Gog- 
 iifferences no more 
 
 ing been translated 
 samed critics have 
 
 low small is our ao- 
 our Greek Gospel 
 ew Gospel, and to 
 )n, believe our Gos- 
 ospel, and to have 
 ted. Others again, 
 believe it not to be 
 ave been originallv 
 any such existed, 
 by the orthodox as 
 
 ionite or Nazarene 
 , no such original 
 Matthew did not 
 IS the original He- 
 
 bre not those spoken 
 
 was not present at the colloquy of Pilate with the Chief 
 Priests about the security of the grave of Jesus, neither 
 was he present at the feeding of the five thousand, or the 
 calming of the waves. 
 
 2. Secondly, the abruptness of the transitions, the 
 fragmentary style of the narrative, and the entire ab- 
 sence of all those details as to the mode and object of 
 the frequent journeys indicated,* which we should expect 
 from a companion, and which we find in Luke's account 
 of Paul's travels — all point to the conclusion that the 
 writer was a compiler, not an eye-witness. 
 
 3. The same conclusion is drawn from the circumstance 
 that his frequent double narratives of the same events 
 indicate the confusion of a man who was compiling from 
 fragmentary materials, rather than the fulness and clear- 
 ness of personal recollection.-f* De Wette and Credner 
 dwell much upon this argument. 
 
 4. If, as the great majority of critics imagine, Mark 
 and Luke had Matthew's Gospel before them when they 
 wrote their own, it is certain that they could not have 
 regarded him as either an eye-witness or a very accurate 
 authority, as they do not hesitate both to retrench, to 
 deviate from, and to contradict him. Moreover, the proem 
 to Luke's Gospel must, we think, by all unbiassed minds 
 be regarded as fatal to the hjrpothesis of the authors of 
 any of the gospels then in existence having been eifher 
 disciples or eye-witnesses. It is clear from that, that 
 although many histories of Christ were then extant, none 
 of them had any peculiar or paramount authority. 
 
 5. The author of the first gospel scarcely appears to 
 have been acquainted with any portion of Christ's Minis- 
 try except that of which Galilee was the scene. 
 
 The second gospel, like the first, • bears no author's 
 name ; but by Papias, and IrenseuSjJ and (following them) 
 
 * Hennell, p. 121. 
 
 t £x. gr. , the cure of the blind men — the feedings— the demand of a sign 
 —the accusation regai-ding Beelzebub. 
 
 t Papias, our earliest source of information on the matter, was Bishop of 
 Hieropolis, and must have been intimate with many contemporaries of the 
 Apostles, and perhaps had converaod with the Apostle Joha. Hia works 
 
168 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 by the universal tradition of the Church, is attributed to 
 Mark, a friend and fellow-traveller of Peter, Barnabas, 
 and Paul, who is several times mentioned in the New 
 Testament.* Papias says expressly that he was neither 
 a hearer nor a follower of Christ, but compiled his gospel 
 from information obtained from Peter, whose " interpre- 
 ter "f he is said to have been. Papias gives " the Pres- 
 byter John," supposed to have been an elder of the Ephe- 
 sian Church, as his authority. Mark, then, it is certain, 
 was not an eye-witness. Nor have we any reason, beyond 
 the similarity of name, to believe that the writer of the 
 second Gospel was the same Mark who is mentioned in 
 
 are now lost, with the exception of a few fragments preserved by Eusebius. 
 '* Nothing (says Dr. Middleton) more eflfectually demonstrates the uncer. 
 tainty of all tradition, than what is delivered to us by antiquity concerning 
 this very Papias. Irenseus declares him to have been the companion of 
 Polycarp, and tho disciple of St. John the Apostle. But Eusebius tells ug 
 that he was not a disciple of St. John the Apostle, but of John the Presby- 
 ter, who was a compamon only of the Apostle, but whom Ireneeus mistook 
 for the Apostle." Now from Papias, through Irenseus, came most of the 
 early traditions, some of them relating to the millennium, of the most mon. 
 strous character, which Irenseus does not scruple to ascribe to our Saviour, 
 and which fully dispose tis to credit the account of Eusebius, who says, 
 " Papias was a weak man, of very shallow understanding, as appears from 
 his writings ; and by mistaking the meaning of the Apostles, imposed 
 these silly traditions upon Ireneeus and the greatest part of the ecclesias- 
 tical writers who, reflecting on the age of the man, and his near approach 
 to the Apostles, were drawn by him into the same opinions." In another 
 passage, indeed, Eusebius speaks of Papias in a much more respectful man- 
 ner, as remarkaole for eloquence and scriptural knowledge ; but this passage 
 is not found in the older copies, and is supposed to oe spurious. It is 
 obvious, therefore^ that little reliance can be placed on any traditions which 
 are traced to Papias. Irenaeus, our next earliest authority, derives weight 
 from his antiquity alone. His extreme childishness goes far to discredit 
 many of his statements, and no reliance can be placed upon such of them as 
 are at variance with the conclusions of citical science. His traditions of 
 what John had related to the elders regarding the millenium are worse than 
 anything in the Koran, yet he gives them as " testified by Papias." The fol- 
 lowing passage will induce us to receive with great caution any evidence he 
 ffives regarding the origin and authenticity of the Gospels : — '* As there are 
 tour quarters of the world in which we live, and four chief winds, and the 
 Churcn is spread over all the earth, but the pillar and support of the 
 Church is the Gospel and its breath of life, plainly the Church must have four 
 columnSf and from them must come forth four blasts," &c., &c. — Ad. Bares. 
 c. iii. It would be melancholy to reflect that through such sources our only 
 surviving testimony on these matters is derived, had these matters the 
 supreme importanee usually ascribed to them. 
 
 * Acte xii, 12, 25 ; xiii. 6-13 ; xv. 37. Col. iv. 10. Phil. 24. 1 Peter 
 V. W. 
 
 tWh*t this could mean, as apr>Hdd to a nun who " spoke with tongues," 
 for thf Ohuroh to explain. 
 
 the Acts 
 Peter, by 
 1 Peter v. 
 est of 1^0 
 the ident 
 papias m( 
 Neithej 
 witness, 
 that whi( 
 is the fir 
 author oi 
 that he ^ 
 ties, and 
 ages. H 
 mou, 24 ; 
 
 Theai 
 ject of r 
 / Theologii 
 ternal te 
 who say 
 the Lord 
 lished a 
 last cha] 
 having.^ 
 attestati 
 
 self ,t an 
 its auth 
 believed 
 the san 
 genuine 
 
 * Credn 
 
 our Gospt 
 
 opposite { 
 
 of whom 
 
 that it wi 
 
 evidently 
 
 scrupled 
 
 tDe\ 
 
 evidence 
 
 t Thei 
 
 ■-^eeDi 
 
f. 
 
 s attributed to 
 eter, Barnabas 
 >d in the New 
 he was neither 
 iiled his gospel 
 lose " interpre- 
 ves " the Pres- 
 ir of the Ephe- 
 li, it is certain, 
 reason, beyond 
 ' writer of the 
 I mentioned in 
 
 erved by Eusebiug. 
 ostrates the uncer. 
 itiquity concerning 
 1 the companion of 
 t Eusebius tells ug 
 f John the Presby- 
 n Irenaeus mistook 
 came most of the 
 U of the most mon. 
 ibe to our Saviour, 
 usebius, who says, 
 gi as appears from 
 Apostles, imposed 
 rt of the ecclesias. 
 his near approach 
 ons." In another 
 re respectful man- 
 s; but this passage 
 e spurious. It is 
 y traditions which 
 ;y, derives weight 
 « far to discredit 
 in such of them as 
 His traditions of 
 im are worse than 
 *apias." Thefol. 
 1 an^ evidence he 
 :— * As there are 
 it winds, and the 
 1 support of the 
 xh tnu3t /lave four 
 &c. — Ad. Bares. 
 sources our only 
 lese matters the 
 
 Wl. 24. 1 Peter 
 
 9 with tongues," 
 
 ORIGIN OF THE GOSPELS. 
 
 169 
 
 the Acts as the companion of Paul and Barnabas (not of 
 Peter, by the way), nor the same who is mentioned in 
 1 Peter v. 13, as his son. Mark was one of the common- 
 est of Roman names ; and it is probable that the idea of 
 the identity of the three Marks was an imagination of 
 Papias merely.* 
 
 Neither was the author of the third Gospel an eye- 
 witness. His proem merely claims to set forth faithfully 
 that which he had heard from eye-witnesses. Irensous 
 is the fii'st person who distinctly mentions Luke as the 
 author of this Gospel ; but little doubt appears to exist 
 that he wrote both the Gospel and the Acts of the Apos- 
 tles, and was the companion of Paul in many of his voy- 
 ages. He is mentioned Col. iv. 14; 2 Tim. iv 11 ; Phile- 
 mon, 24 ; and is supposed to be the same as Silas. 
 
 The authorship of the fourth Gospel has been the sub- 
 ject of much learned and anxious controversy among 
 Theologians. The earliest, and only very important, ex- 
 ternal testimony we have is that of Irenaeus (a.d. 178), 
 who says, that after Luke wrote, " John, the disciple of 
 the Lord, who also leaned upon his breast, likewise pub- 
 lished a gospel while he dwelt at Ephesus in Asia." The 
 last chapter of the gospel contains an attestation of its 
 having, been written by John (verse 24) ; but as this 
 attestation obviously does not proceed from John him- 
 self ,t and as we do not know from whom it does proceed, 
 its authority can have little weight. It is generally 
 believed, that the gospel and the first epistle proceed from 
 the same pen ; but if the second and third epistles are 
 genuine,! it is very questionable whether this pen was 
 
 * Credner, indeed, decides, but we think on very insufficient grounds, that 
 our Gospel in its present form cannot be that of Mark. He notices the 
 opposite accounts given by Irenaeus and Clemens Alexandrinus, the former 
 of whom says that it was written after the death of Peter, and the latter 
 that it was submitted to him for his approval. This statement, however, is 
 evidently one of those improvements upon fact which the fathers never 
 scrupled to indulge in.— Credner, Einl. § 56. 
 
 t De Wette doubts the genuineness of the whole chapter, and internal 
 evidence is certainly against it. 
 
 X Their genuineness, however, is doubted both by Eusebius and Origen. 
 -See De Wette, i. § 23, 24. 
 
160 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 that of John the Apostle ; for, though in the first chapter 
 of the first epistle, the writer declares himself to have been 
 personally acquainted with Jesus, yet in the second and 
 third epistles he calls himself " the Elder." Now there 
 was a John at Ephesus (from whom Papias derived all 
 his information, and who, he says, was also a disciple of 
 Jesus), to whom the title of " Elder " (Trpevfivrepos) was 
 given, to d'istinguish him from the Apostle John. 
 
 The balancing of the internal eviderce for and against 
 the supposition that the Apostle John was the author of 
 the Gospel, is a matter of extreme difficulty. The reasons 
 adduced in behalf of each opinion are very strong. Hug 
 entertams no doubt that the decision should be in the 
 affirmative ; — Bretschneider almost proves the negative ; 
 — De Wette finds it impossible to decide ; — while Strauss, 
 who in his earlier editions had expressed himself satisfied 
 that the gospel was not genuine, writes thus in the pref- 
 ace to the third edition : " With De Wette and Neander 
 in my hand, I have recommenced the examination of the ' 
 fourth Gospel, and this renewed investigation has shaken 
 the doubts I had conceived against its authenticity and 
 credibility ; — not that I am convinced that it is authentic, 
 but neither am I convinced that it is not." [In his " New 
 Life of Jesus," however, written thirty years after his first 
 great book, he finally and confidently decides against its 
 authenticity. Renan, in the first edition of his Vie de 
 J^sus, accepted the fourth Gospel as genuine, and largely 
 maimed the completeness and beauty of his estimate of 
 Christ by doing so. In the thirteenth edition (1867) he 
 entirely discards his previous assumption, and decides 
 after long investigation that it was not the work of the 
 Apostle John. In the same year was published Mr. J. J. 
 Tayler's " Character of tJte Fourth Gospel^' in which the 
 writer, after an exhaustive examirxcition of the whole ques- 
 tion, indisputably, as it seems to us,, establishes the same 
 negative conclusion.] 
 
 One argument against the supposition of John having 
 been the author of the fourth Gospel has impressed my 
 mind very forcibly. It is this : that several of thQ most 
 remarkable events recorded by the other evangelists, at 
 
ORIGIN OP THE GOSPELS, 
 
 161 
 
 which we are told by them that only Peter, James, and 
 John were present, and of which, therefore, John alone of 
 all the evangelists could have spoken with the distinctness 
 and authority of an eye-witness, are entirely omitted — wo 
 may say, ignored — by him. Such are the raising of 
 Jairus's daughter, the Transfiguration, the agony in Geth- 
 semane. Now, on the assumption that John was the au- 
 thor of the fourth Gospel, — either he had not seen the 
 works of the other evangelists, in which case he would 
 certainly not have omitted to record narratives of such 
 interest and beauty, especially that of the transfiguration ; 
 or he had seen them, and omitted all notice of them be- 
 cause hecouldnot confirm the statements; for we cannotima- 
 gine that he did not record them in consequence of find- 
 ing them already recorded, and seeing nothing to alter in 
 the relation ; — as an eye-witness, he would certainly, had 
 they been true, have given them at least a parsing word 
 of confirmation, and we find that he does, on more than 
 one occasion, relate events of less moment already recorded 
 in the other gospels, as the feeding of the five thousand, 
 the anointing of Jesus's feet, &c. But all the events said 
 to have been witnessed by John alone, are omitted hy 
 John alone ! This fact seems fatal either to the reality 
 of the events in question, or to the genuineness of the 
 fourth Gospel. — Thus much, however, seems certain, and 
 admitted ; — that, if the Gospel in question were the gen- 
 uine composition of the Apostle John, it must have been 
 written when he was at least ninety years of age — when 
 his recollections of events and conversations which had 
 passed sixty years before had become faint and fluctua- 
 ting — when ill-digested Grecian learning had overlaid the 
 simplicity of his fisherman's charactei, and his Judaic 
 education — ^and the scenes and associations of Ionia had 
 overpowered and obscured the recollections of Palestine.* 
 It therefore becomes, as we shall see hereafter, an inquiry 
 of only secondary moment. [An almost identical conclu- 
 sion has been expressed many years later by two critics 
 
 * In this case, also, as in th,\t of Matthew, we may remark that the evan- 
 gelist relates events lonp past, md at wiiich he was not present, as minutely 
 aad dramatically as if xh»y ha 1 occurred yesterday and m his presence. 
 
162 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM 
 
 incomparably more competent than I can pretend to be. 
 Renan says : — " L'esprit de Jdsus n'est pas 1^ ; et si le fils 
 de Z^b^die a vraiment trac^ ces pages, il avait certes bien 
 oublid en les ^crivant le lac de G^ndsareth et les char- 
 mants entretiens qu'il avait entendus sur ses bords."-^ 
 Vie de JSaus, Introd. xxxi. 
 
 Mr. Tayler writes (Fourth Gosfel, p. 154) — "To me 
 there is something far less objectionable and offensive iu 
 the supposition that we have in this gospel the free and 
 genuine utterances of one who gives us his own deep per- 
 sonal conception of the truth which he had imbibed in the 
 heart of the Johannine church, than in admitting — which 
 we must do if the Apostle John were the author — that 
 one who had leaned on Jesus' bosom, and caught the very 
 accents that fell from his lips, instead of treasuring them 
 up with reverent exactitude,, has unscrupulously trans- 
 formed them into his own language, and invested them 
 with a form and colour which did not originally belong to 
 them."] 
 
 Of the first three (or, as they are commonly termed, the 
 Sjnioptical) Gk)spels, we know that two, and we believe 
 that all three, were not the productions of eye-witnesses. 
 The question then arises, in what manner, and from what 
 materials, were they composed ? This subject has for a 
 long period exercised the minds of the most acute and 
 learned divines of Germany, as Eichhorn, Credner, Bret- 
 Schneider, De Wette, Hug, Schleiermacher, and Strauss ; 
 and the results of their investigations may be thus briefly 
 summed up. 
 
 The numerous and irreconcilable discrepancies obser- 
 vable in the three Evangelists preclude the supposition of 
 their having all drawn their information from one and the 
 same source — while the still more remarkable points of simi- 
 larity and agreement, often extending to the most minute 
 verbal peculiarities, entirely forbid the idea of their hav- 
 ing derived their materials from independent, and there- 
 fore mutually confirmatory sources.* 
 
 * " Those who. to explain the harmony which we observe in these works, 
 ua taxapiy w the identity of tbs au.bjeot, and, for the oAua« of tbeir 
 
 Three di 
 
 petent judg 
 
 of the first 
 
 him, Dr. M 
 
 ment, now 
 
 language (i 
 
 from whicl 
 
 with addit 
 
 With manj 
 
 one ; — but, 
 
 fact that \ 
 
 tenee of su< 
 
 so many ] 
 
 its credit > 
 
 Eichhorn, 
 
 modificatic 
 
 The hypo 
 
 demolishec 
 
 Schleiermt 
 
 theory by 
 
 original, i 
 
 in the ad 
 
 cxvi.). TJ 
 
 but effecti 
 
 quainted 
 
 authoritat 
 
 The sec 
 
 dwcrepanciee 
 
 tion of the p 
 
 which constr 
 
 accounts of 1 
 
 wituesses, cc 
 
 and withoul 
 
 common sec 
 
 Schleiermac 
 
 * He ead( 
 
 languages, a 
 
 t " For np 
 
 from concei 
 
 I am to tig\] 
 
 rolls or bool 
 
 into anothe 
 
 German stv 
 
 tianity."— 5 
 
ORIGIN OF I'HE GOSPELS. 
 
 163 
 
 •etend to be. 
 ; ; et si le fils 
 it certes bien 
 et les char> 
 ies bords."-^ 
 
 4)~"To me 
 
 offensive iu 
 
 the free and 
 
 vn deep per- 
 
 ibibed in the 
 
 ting — which 
 
 luthor— that 
 
 ght the very 
 
 isuring them 
 
 lously trans- 
 
 ivested them 
 
 'lly belong to 
 
 >■ termed, the 
 d we believe 
 ^e- witnesses. 
 d from what 
 ct has for a 
 it acute and 
 -edner, Bret- 
 ^nd Strauss; 
 thus briefly 
 
 ncies obser- 
 pposition of 
 
 one and the 
 aintsofsimi- 
 nost minute 
 f their hav- 
 
 and there- 
 
 in these works, 
 oau8« of Utt^ii' 
 
 Three different hypotheses have been formed by com- 
 petent judges to account for these marked characteristics 
 of the first three Evangelists. Eichhorn (and, following 
 him, Dr. Marsh) adopted the idea of an original docu- 
 ment, now lost, written in the Hebrew or Syro-Chaldaic 
 language (the Aramaic Gospel, as it is called by some), 
 from which all three Evangelists copied their accounts, 
 with additions and omissions peculiar to themselves. 
 With many divines this hypothesis is still the favourite 
 one ; — but, in addition to the difficulty arising from the 
 fact that we can nowhere find any allusion to the exis- 
 tence of such a document, more minute criticism discovered 
 so many peculiarities inexplicable on this theory that 
 its credit was much shaken, and its principal supporter, 
 Eichhorn, was driven, in order to maintain it, to admit 
 modifications which have made it almost unintelligible.* 
 The hypothesis appears to us to have been completely 
 demolished by the reasonings of Hug, Thirlwall, and 
 Schleiermacher. f An ingenious modification of this 
 theory by Giesler, wJio substitutes an oral for a written 
 original, is explained and controverted by Dr. Thirlwall, 
 in the admirable treatise we have already quoted (p. 
 cxvi.). The proem to Luke's Gospel, moreover, tacitly 
 but effectually, negatives the supposition that he was ac- 
 quainted with any such original and paramountly 
 authoritative document. 
 
 The second hypothesis is the prevalent one — that one 
 
 ducrepancieB, to the peculiarities of the writers, insteaa of offering a solu- 
 tion of the problem, only betray either their inattention to the phenomena 
 which constitute it, or their incapacity to comprehend its nature. Three 
 accounts of the same series of transactions, delivered by independent eye- 
 witnesses, covd-i never, through whatever hands they might pass, naturally 
 and without intentional assimilation, assume the shape exhibited by the 
 common sections of the three first evangelists." — Thirlwall, Introd. to 
 Schleiermacher, cxxii, 
 
 * He ended by imagining four different editions or copies, in different 
 languages, and with many variations, of this original gospel. 
 
 t "For mjr part (says this latter) I find it quite enough to prevent me 
 from conceiving the origin of the gospel according to Eichhorn's theory, that 
 I am to figure to myself our good evangelists surrounded by five or six opeli 
 rolls or books, and that too in ditferont languages, looking by turns froin ono 
 into another, and writing a oomoilation from them. I fancy myself in T\ 
 German stuay of the 19th century^ rather than in the primitive age of ChriB< 
 tianity." — Sotdeiermaoher, Orit. Essay on Luke, Intr. p. 6. 
 
164 
 
 THE CBEED OF C3HRISTEND0M 
 
 of the Evangelists wrote first, and that the others copied 
 him, with alterations, additions, and omissions, dictated 
 by their own judgment or by extraneous sources of in- 
 formation. Matthew is generally considered to have been 
 the earliest writer ; but critics differ in the relative order 
 they assign to Mark and Luke — some, as Mill, Hug, and 
 Wetstein, conceiving that Luke copied both from Mark 
 and Matthew ; and others, as De Wette and Griesbach, 
 arguing that Mark was the latest in order of time, and 
 made use of both his predecessors. Mr. Kenrick, in a 
 masterly analysis (Prosp. Rev. xxi.), has, however, we 
 think, succeeded in making it more than probable that 
 Mark's Gospel was both first in order of time, and in 
 fidelity of narration. 
 
 This theory has been much and minutely examined, and 
 to our minds it appears unsatisfactory. It accounts for 
 the agreements, but not for the discrepancies, of the Gos- 
 pels ; and Dr. Thirlwall, in his translation of Schleier- 
 macher, has succeeded in showing that it is highly im- 
 probable, if not wholly inadmissible.* 
 
 The third hypothesis, which was first propounded by 
 Lessing, and has since been revived and elaborated by 
 Schleiermacher (one of the highest theological authorities 
 of Germany), seems to us to have both critical evidence 
 and a priori likelihood in its favour. These writers pre- 
 sume the existence of a number of fragirnentary narratives, 
 some oral, some written, of the actions and sayings of 
 Christ, such as would naturally be preserved and trans- 
 mitted by persons who had witnessed those wonderful 
 words and deeds. Sometimes there would be two or more 
 narratives of the same event, proceeding from different 
 witnesses ; sometimes the same original narrative in its 
 transmission would receive intentional or accidental vari- 
 ations, and thus come slightly modified into the hands of 
 different evangelists. Sometimes detached sayings wou ' 
 
 • Those who wish to obtain a gttneral knowledge of this interesting con- 
 troversy, should peruse the admirable summarv of it given by Bishop Thirl- 
 wall in his introduction to Schleiermacher. We have purposely avoided en- 
 tering into the arguitient, for it would b« unfair to copy, and impossible 
 to ftbridge or amend, his liicid statement. 
 
 be preserved 
 
 would locate 
 
 priate, or pn 
 
 are numberL 
 
 would be fr 
 
 transmit tha 
 
 hira most fo 
 
 same expres 
 
 witness heai 
 
 action only, 
 
 as he best n 
 
 hands of all 
 
 one, or of t^ 
 
 the same e\ 
 
 the hands o 
 
 for their dis 
 
 Evangelist, 
 
 hisjudgmei 
 
 or would c( 
 
 case, the e 
 
 from a seri 
 
 pleteness. 
 
 the gospels 
 
 ly asserted 
 
 in hand to 
 
 qjohich are ', 
 
 livered the', 
 
 witnesses, < 
 
 "The fir 
 
 tian Histo: 
 
 ♦ " The vei 
 of Christ thai 
 often given in 
 are differentl; 
 t The habi 
 common then 
 learning of tl 
 generation to 
 of narratives 
 were almost ( 
 
 + Thus the 
 chiefly in Ga 
 
 § Crlt. on 
 
ORIGIN ('F THE GOSPELS. 
 
 165 
 
 be preserved without the context, and the evangelists 
 would locate them where they thought them most appro- 
 priate, or provide a context for them, instances of which 
 are numberless in the Gospels.* But all these materials 
 would be fragmentary. Each witness would retain and 
 transmit that portion of a discourse which had impressed 
 hira most forcibly, and two witnesses would retain the 
 same expressions with varying degrees of accuracy .-f" One 
 witness heard one discourse, or was present at one trans- 
 action only, and recorded that one by writing or verbally, 
 as he best might. Of these fragments some fell into the 
 hands of all the Evangelists — some only into the hands of 
 one, or of two :J and in some cases different narratives of 
 the same event, expression, or discourse, would fall into 
 the hands of different Evangelists, which would account 
 for their discrepancies — sometimes into the hands of one 
 Evangelist, in which case he would select that one which 
 his judgment (or information from other sources) prompted, 
 or would compile an account from them jointly. In any 
 case, the evangelical narratives would be compilations 
 frcmi a series of fragments of varying accuracy and com- 
 pleteness. The correctness of this theory of the origin of 
 the gospels seems to be not so much confirmed as distinct- 
 ly asserted by Luke. " Forasmuch as many have taken 
 in hand to set forth in order a declaration of those things 
 lOhich are mx>st surely believed among us, even as they de- 
 livered them unto us, which from the beginning were eye- 
 witnesses, and ministers of the word" 
 
 " The first step (says Schleiermacher)§ towards a Chris- 
 tian History was a natural and reasonable desire on the 
 
 * "The verbal agreement is generally greater in reports of the discourses 
 of Christ than in relations of events ; and the speeches of other persons are 
 often given in the same terms, though the circiunstances which led to them 
 are differently described." — Thirlwall, cxvi. 
 
 t The habit of retaining and transmitting discourses orally was much more 
 common then than now, and the practice carried to great perfection. The 
 learning of the Jews was transmitted exclusively by oral tradition from one 
 generation to another, and we entertain little doubt that the fragments both 
 of narratives and discourses which formed the materials of our evangelists 
 were almost entirely oral.— (See Thirlwall, cxviii. Norton, i. 287. ) 
 
 X Thus the materialn of the first three Evangelists were evidently collected 
 chiefly in Galilee ; those of the fourth came principally from Judea. 
 
 § Crit. on Essay on Luke, Introd. 1'2-14. 
 
166 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 A^ 
 
 part of those who had believed on Jesus, without having 
 a knowledge of his person. These individuals would un- 
 doubtedly be glad to learn some particulars of his life, in 
 order to place themselves as nearly as possible on an 
 equality with their elder and more fortunate breth- 
 ren. In the public assemblies of the Christians this 
 desire was of course only incidentally and sparingly grat- 
 ified, when a teacher happened to refer to memorable 
 sayings of Christ, which could only be related together 
 with the occasion which had called them forth : more copi- 
 ous and detailed accounts they could only procure in fa- 
 miliar intercourse upon express inquiry. And in this way 
 many particulars were told and heard, most of them, prob- 
 ably, without being committed to writing; but, assuredly, 
 much was very soon written down, partly by the narra- 
 tors themselves, as each of them happened to be pressed 
 by a multiplicity of questions on a particular occurrence, 
 respecting which he was peculiarly qualified to give in- 
 formation. Still more, however, must have been commit- 
 ted to writing by the inquirers, especially by s ich as did 
 not remain constantly in the neighbourhood of v,he narra- 
 tors, and were glad to communicate tie narrative again 
 to many others, who, perhaps, wert never a.ble to consult 
 an eye-witness. In this way detacned incidents and dis- 
 courses were noted down. Notes of this kind were at 
 first no doubt less frequently met with among the Chris- 
 tians settled in Palestine, and passed immediately into 
 more distant parts, to which the pure oral tradition flowed 
 more scantily. They, however, appeared everywhere 
 more frequently, and were more anxiously sought for, 
 when the great body of the original companions and friends 
 of Christ was dispersed by persecutions, and still more 
 when that first generation began to die away. It would, 
 however, have been singular if, even before this, the in- 
 quirers who took those notes had possessed only detached 
 passages ; on the contrary, they, and still more their im- 
 mediate copiers, had undoubtedly become collectors also, 
 each according to his peculiar turn of mind ; and thus one, 
 perhaps, collected only accounts of miracles ; another only 
 discourae^ j a third, perhaps, attached exclusive importance 
 
 to the last d£ 
 urrection. 
 lection, colle( 
 thority." 
 
 The work 
 
 masterly am 
 
 the correctn( 
 
 of the evang 
 
 complete. 1 
 
 " The mai 
 
 neither an i: 
 
 from works 
 
 life of Jesus 
 
 the compile 
 
 in existence 
 
 his hands. 
 
 arrangemen 
 
 The theo 
 
 does not m 
 
 from Schlei 
 
 think grat 
 
 formed the 
 
 tories, to 1 
 
 However, 1 
 
 conscious s 
 
 tions and 
 
 course of tl 
 
 as would b 
 
 * Genuinen 
 lutely applied 
 
ORIGIN OF THE GOSPELS. 
 
 167 
 
 to the last days of Christ, or even to the scenes of his res- 
 urrection. Others, without any such particular predi- 
 lection, collected all that fell in their way from good au- 
 thority." 
 
 The work from which the above is a quo' .tion, is a 
 masterly analysis of Luke's Gospel, with a view to test 
 the correctness of the author's hypothesis as to the origin 
 of the evangelical histories ; and the success is, we think, 
 complete. His conclusion is as follows (p. 313) : — 
 
 " The main position is firmly established, that Luke is 
 neither an independent writer, nor has made a compilation 
 from works which extended over the whole course of the 
 life of Jesus. He is from beginning to end no more than 
 the compiler and arranger of documents, which he found 
 in existence, and which he allows to pass unaltered through 
 his hands. His merit in this capacity is twofold — that of 
 arrangement and of judicious selection." 
 
 The theory of Norton * as to the origin of the Gospels, 
 does not materially differ from the one we have adopted 
 from Schleiermacher, with this exception — that he, as we 
 think gratuitously, assumes the oral narratives, which 
 formed the foundation or materials of the evangelical his- 
 tories, to have proceeded from the Apostles exclusively. 
 However, this may have been the case ; and then the un- 
 conscious sources of error will be confined to such accre- 
 tions and lapses of memory as might be natural in the 
 course of thirty years' narration, and to such discrepancies 
 as would be inevitable among twelve men. 
 
 * Genuineness of the Gospels, i. 284-890 — a work full of learning reso* 
 lately applied to the establishment of a foregone conclusion. 
 
It: i 
 
 CHAPTER VH 
 
 FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. — NATUBE AND 
 
 LIMITS. 
 
 Having in our lasb -chapter arrived at the conclusion that 
 the Gospels — (the three first at least, for with regard to 
 the fourth we pronounce no confident opinion) — are com- 
 pilations from a variety of fragmentary narratives, and 
 reports of discourses and conversations, oral or written, 
 which were current in Palestine from thirty to forty years 
 after the death of Jesus — we now come to the very inter- 
 esting and momentous inquiry, how far these narratives 
 and discourses can be accepted as accurate and faithful rec- 
 ords of what was actually said and done ? — whether 
 they can be regarded as thoroughly and minutely cor- 
 rect ? — and, if not, in what respects and t what ex- 
 tent do they deviate from that thorough and minute cor 
 rectness ? 
 
 It is clear at first view that the same absolute reliance 
 cannot be placed upon a narrative compounded from tra- 
 ditionary fragments, as upon a consecutive history related 
 by an eye-witness. Conceding to both faithful intention 
 and good, though imperfect, powers of memory, there are 
 obvious elements of inaccuracy in the one case which do 
 not appertain to the other. To tire corruptions, lapses, 
 and alterations inseparable from transmission, especially 
 when oral, is added the uncertainty arising from the num- 
 ber of the original sources of the tradition, whose character, 
 capacity, and opportunities of knowledge are unknown to 
 U8. n Luke had recorded only what ho had seen, or Mark 
 only what he had heard from Peter, we should have com- 
 paratively ample means of forming a decision as to the 
 amount of reliance to be placed upon their narrations ; 
 but when they record what they learned from perhaps a 
 dozen diflcrent narrators — some original, others only sec- 
 ond-hand, and all wholly unknown — it becomes obvious 
 
FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. 
 
 169 
 
 UBE AND 
 
 that causes of inaccuracy are introduced, the extent of the 
 actual operation of which on the histories that have comf.' 
 down to U3, it is both ex remely important and singulad}^ 
 dirticult to estimate. 
 
 This inquiry we consider as of paramount interest to 
 every other question of criticism ; for on the conclusion to 
 which it leads us depends the whole — not of Christianity, 
 which, as we view it, is unassailable, but — oi textual or 
 dogmatic Christianity ; i.e., the Christianity of nine-tenths 
 of nominal Christendom. We proceed, therefore, to ask 
 what evidence we possess for assuming or impugning th( 
 minute fidelity of the Gospel history. 
 
 There are certain portions of the Synoptical Gospels, 
 the genuineness of which has been much disputed, viz., 
 the two first chapters of Matthew — ^the two firat of Luke 
 — and the last twelve verses of the 16th chapter of 
 Mark * Into this discussion we cannot enter, but must 
 refer such of our readers as wish to know the grounds of 
 decision, to Norton, Hug, De Wette, Eichhorn, and Gries- 
 bach. The reaadt of critical inquiry seems to be, that the 
 only solid ground for supposing the questioned portions 
 of Luke and Matthew not to be by the same hand as the 
 rest of their respective gospels, is the obviously insuffi- 
 cient one of the extraordinary character of their con- 
 tents ;f — ^while the spuriousness of the last twelve verses 
 of Mark is established beyond question ; — the real Gospel 
 of Mark (all of it, at least that has come down to us) ends 
 with the 8th verse of the 1 6th chapter. In our subse- 
 quent remarks we shall therefore treat the whole of the 
 acknowledged text of these gospels as genuine, with the 
 exception of the conclusion of Mark ; — and we now pro- 
 ceed to inquire into the nature and Umits of the fidelity 
 of Matthew's record. 
 
 In the first place, while admitting to the fullest extent 
 the general clearness and fulness with which the charac- 
 ter of Jesus is depicted in the first Gospel, it is important 
 
 • See Norton, i. 16, 17. 
 
 t Strauss, i. 117, 142. Hug, 469-479. See also Schleiermaoher. ^ Norton, 
 however, givee some reosuns to the contrary, which deserve consideratiou, 
 
 i. 209. 
 
170 
 
 i CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 F] 
 
 to bear in ). r i, u.a^ — as Hug has clearly shewn* — it was 
 written with a specj . we might almost say a polemical 
 object. It was composed, less to give a continuous and 
 complete history of Jesus, than to prove that he was the 
 expected Messiah ; and those passages were therefore 
 selected out of the author's materials which appeared 
 most strongly to bear upon and enforce this conclusion. 
 The remembrance of this object of Matthew's will aid us 
 in forming our judgment as to his fidelity. 
 
 According to the universal expectation, the Messiah 
 was to be bom of the seed of Abraham, and the lineage 
 and tribe of David. Accordingly, the Gospel opens with 
 an elaborate genealogy of Jesus, tracing him through 
 David to Abraham. Now, in the Ji/rst place, this geneal- 
 ogy is not correct : — secondly, if the remainder of the 
 chapter is to be received as true, it is in no sense the 
 genealogy of Jesus ; and, thirdly, it is wholly and irrec- 
 oncilably at variance with that given by Luke. 
 
 1. In verse 17, Matthew sums up the genealogy thus;— 
 " So all the generations from Abraham to David are four- 
 teen generations ; and from David until the carrying 
 away into Babylon are fourteen generations ; and from 
 the carrying away into Babylon unto Christ are fourteen 
 generations." — Now (passing over as unnecessarily minute 
 and harsh the criticism of Strauss, that by no way of 
 counting can we make out fourteen generations in the 
 last series, without disturbing the count of the others), 
 we must call attention to the fact that the number four- 
 teen in the second series is only obtained by the deliberate 
 omission of four generations, viz., three between Joram 
 andOzias,and one between Josiah and Jeconiah — as maybe 
 seen by referring to 1 Chron. iii. There is also (at verses 
 
 * " All Matthew's reflections are of one kind. He shows us, as to even- 
 thing that Jesus did and taught, that it was characteristio of fuxi MeseiuL 
 On occasion of remarkable events, or a recital of parts of the discourses of 
 Jesus, he refers us to the ancient Scriptures of the Jews, in which this com- 
 ing Saviour is delineated, and shows in detail that the great ideal which 
 flitted before the minds of the Prophets was realized in Jesus. " — Hug, In- 
 trod. .S12. These references are twelve in Matthew, two in Mark, and three 
 in Luke. Again, he says (p. 384),, " Matthew is an historical deduction; 
 Mark is hiitory." 
 
 4!-6) anothe 
 Only four ge 
 lived in the 
 hundred yea 
 
 2. The gei 
 genealogy oi 
 father (or au 
 are assured ( 
 before she a 
 of the Incari 
 variance ; ai 
 applied, can 
 —and when 
 the 1st and 
 for an unpre 
 author of th 
 pels) was igi 
 the carelessi 
 — a careless] 
 by an interi 
 pilation. 
 
 3. The ge 
 different fro 
 efforts of d 
 semblance ( 
 give 26 ger 
 Luke has 4 
 tirely differ 
 the father 
 Luke, Hell 
 whom Jose 
 than. Then 
 the known 
 obscure co 
 Salathiel a 
 the father 
 
 * Luke iii. ! 
 .''on of Joseph, 
 f Allowing gen< 
 16tb verse of ! 
 
FIDEUTY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. 
 
 171 
 
 »ewn*— itwM 
 y a polemical 
 >ntinuous and 
 at he wa3 the 
 vere therefore 
 lich appeared 
 lis conclusion, 
 iv's will aid us 
 
 the Messiah 
 d the lineage 
 3el opens with 
 him through 
 ;e, this geneal- 
 lainder of the 
 . no sense the 
 oily and irrec- 
 iuke. 
 ealogy thus:— 
 )avid are f our- 
 i the carrying 
 ons; and from 
 st are fourteen 
 essarily minute 
 by no way of 
 jrations in the 
 of the others), 
 B number f our- 
 >y the deliheraU 
 between Joram 
 iah — as maybe 
 also (at verses 
 
 ows us, as to every- 
 stic of tbd MessiaL 
 of the discourses of 
 1, in which this com- 
 B great ideal which 
 Jesus." — Hug, In- 
 in Mark, and three 
 storical deduction; 
 
 4-6) another apparent, and we think certain, error. 
 Only four generations are reckoned between Naason, who 
 lived in the time of Moses, and David, a period of four 
 hundred years. (Compare Num. i. 7; Ruth v. 20). 
 
 2, The genealogy here given, correct or incorrect, is the 
 genealogy of Joseph, who was in no sense whatever the 
 father (or any relation at all) of Jesus, since this last, we 
 are assured (verses 18 and 25), was in his Mother's womb 
 before she and her husband came together. The story 
 of the Incarnation and the genealogy are obviously at 
 variance ; and no ingenuity, unscrupulously as it has been 
 applied, can produce even the shadow of an agreement ; 
 — and when the flat contradiction given to each other by 
 the 1st and the 18th verses is considered, it is difl[icult 
 for an unprejudiced mind not to feel convinced that the 
 author of the genealogy (both in the first and third Gos- 
 pels) was ignorant of the story of the Incarnation, though 
 the carelessness and uncritical temper of the evangelist 
 —a carelessness partially avoided in the case of Luke, 
 by an interpolation* — has united the two into one com- 
 pilation. 
 
 3. The genealogy of Jesus given by Luke is wholly 
 different from that of Matthew ; and the most desperate 
 efforts of divines have been unable to eflfect even the 
 semblance of a reconciliation. Not only does Matthew 
 give 26 generations between David and Joseph where 
 Luke has 41, but they trace the descent through an en- 
 tirely different line of ancestry. According to Matthew, 
 the father of Joseph was named Jacob — according to 
 Luke, Heli. In Matthew, the son of David through 
 whom Joseph descended is Solomon ; — in Luke it is Na- 
 than. Thence the genealogy of Matthew descends through 
 the known royal line — the genealogy of Luke through uu 
 obscure collateral branch. The two lines only join in 
 Salathiel and Zorobabel ; and even here they differ as to 
 the father of Salathiel and the son of Zorobabel. Many 
 
 * Luke iii. 23 " Jesus . . . heing, at wm supposed (wt ivonl^ero), the 
 .^on of Joseph," — a parenthesis, which renders nugatory the whole of the 
 f ulowing genealogy, and cannot have originally formed a part of it.— The 
 16tb verse of Matthew also bears indications of a similar emendation. 
 
172 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 iDgenious hypotheses have been broached to explain and 
 harmonize these singular discrepancies, but wholly in 
 vain. One critic supposes that one evangelist gives the 
 pedigree of the adoptive, the other of the real father of 
 Joseph. Another assumes that one is the genealogv of 
 Joseph, and the other that of Mary — ^a most convenient 
 idea, but entirely gratuitous, and positively contradicted 
 by the language of the text. The circumstance that any 
 man could suppose that Matthew, when he said " Jacob 
 begat Joseph," or Luke, when he said " Joseph was the 
 son of Heli," could refer to the wife of the one, or the 
 daughter-in-law of the other, shows to what desperate 
 stratagems polemical orthodoxy will resort in order to de- 
 fend an untenable position. 
 
 The discrepancy between Matthew and Luke in their 
 narratives of the miraculous conception, affords no ground 
 for suspecting the fidelity of the former. Putting aside 
 the extraordinary nature of the whole transaction — a 
 consideration which does not at present concern us — the 
 relation in Matthew is simple, natural, and probable ; the 
 surprise of Joseph at the pregnancy of his wife (or his 
 betrothed^ as the words may mean) ; his anxiety to avoid 
 scandal and exposure; his satisfaction through the means 
 of a dream (for among the Jews dreams were habitually 
 regarded as means of communication from heaven) ; and 
 his abstinence from all conjugal connection with Mary 
 till after the birth of the miraculous infant, — ^present pre- 
 cisely the line of conduct we should expect from a simple, 
 pious, and confiding Jew. 
 
 But when we remember the dogmatic object which, 
 as already mentioned, Matthew had in view, and in con- 
 nection with that remembrance, read the 22nd and 23rd 
 verses, the whole story at once becomes apocryphal, and 
 its origin at once clear. "Now all this was done," 
 says Matthew, " that it might be fulfilled which was spo 
 ken of the Lord by the prophet, saying. Behold, a virgin 
 shall be with child, and shall bring forth a son," &c., &c. 
 Now this is one of the many instances which we shall 
 have to notice, in which this evangelist quotes prophecies 
 as intended for Jesus, and an fulfilled in nim, which have 
 
 not the slij 
 duced pro]: 
 lieving Ah 
 Isaiah woi 
 enough to 
 acy of Sy: 
 should be 
 ence to Jes 
 fore, is una 
 infulfilmei 
 posed to h 
 or modifiec 
 since it is 
 place, " in 
 Pursuini 
 stances in 
 Jesus the i 
 conceived 
 stances res 
 as well as 
 tions, relat 
 arity whic] 
 Thus in ii. 
 visit of th( 
 fled into E 
 " that it m 
 by the pn 
 son." Th( 
 has not tl 
 lows :— " ^V 
 called my 
 
 * "Therefc 
 shall conceive 
 fore the child 
 that thou abl 
 
 " And I w 
 Then said tl 
 to cry, My fa 
 Samaria shal] 
 
 No divine c 
 had any ref ei 
 out Matthew 
 
proELITT OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. 
 
 173 
 
 explain and 
 ut wholly in 
 slist gives the 
 real father of 
 genealogv of 
 3t convenient 
 
 contradicted 
 ance that any 
 
 said "Jacob 
 3eph was the 
 9 one, or the 
 bat desperate 
 n order to de- 
 Luke in their 
 rds no ground 
 Putting aside 
 ransaction — a 
 acem us — the 
 probable ; the 
 } wife (or his 
 iety to avoid 
 gh the means 
 re habitually 
 ieaven); and 
 
 1 with Mary 
 -present pre- 
 rom a simple, 
 
 •bject which, 
 ', and in con- 
 2nd and 23rd 
 )cryphal, and 
 was done," 
 lich was spo 
 lold, a virgin 
 3on," &c., &c. 
 lich we shall 
 es prophecies 
 I, which have 
 
 not the slightest relation to him or his career. The ad- 
 duced prophecy* is simply an assurance sent to the unbe- 
 lieving Ahaz, that before the child, which the wife of 
 Isaiah would shortly conceive (see Isa. viii. 2-4), was old 
 enough to speak, or to know good from evil, the conspir- 
 acy of Syria and Ephraim against the King of Judea 
 should be dissolved ; and had manifestly no more refer- 
 ence to Jesus than to Napoleon. The conclusion, there- 
 fore, is unavoidable, that the events said to have occurred 
 in fulfilment of a prophecy, which Matthew wrongly sup- 
 posed to have reference to them, were by him imagined, 
 or modified into accordance with the supposed prophecy ; 
 since it is certain that they did not, as he afilrms, take 
 place, " in order that the prophecy might be fulfilled." 
 
 Pursuing this line of inquiry, we shall find many in- 
 stances in which this tendency of Matthew to find in 
 Jesus the fulfilment of prophecies, which he ei^roneously 
 conceived to refer to him, has led him to narrate circum- 
 stances respecting which the other evangelists are silent, 
 as well as to give, with material (but intentional) varia- 
 tions, relations which are common to them all — a peculi- 
 arity which throws gteat suspicion over several passages. 
 Thus in ii. 13-15, we are told that immediately after the 
 visit of the Magi, Joseph took Mary and the child, and 
 fled into Egypt, remaining there till the death of Herod, 
 " that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord 
 by the prophet, saying, Out of Egypt have I called my 
 son." The passage in question occurs in Hosea, xi. 1, and 
 has not the slightest reference to Christ. It is as fol- 
 lows : — '' When Israel was a child, then I lovod him, and 
 called my son out of Egypt." Here is an event related, 
 
 • "Therefore the Lord spake unto Ahaz, saying, . . . Behold, a virein 
 aball conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name ImmanueL . . . Be- 
 fore the child shall know to refuse the evil, and choose the goodj the land 
 that thou abhorrest shall be forsaken of both her kin^s." Isa. vii. 10-16. 
 
 " And I went unto the prophetess ; and she conceived, and bare a son. 
 Then said the Lord to me ... . before the child shall have knowledge 
 to cry, My father, and my mother, the riches of Damascus and the spoil of 
 Samaria shall be taken away before the King of Assyria."— viii. 3, 4. 
 
 No divine of character will now, we believe, maintain that this prophecy 
 had any reference to tfesus ; nor ever would have imagined it to have, with* 
 out Matthew's intimation. —See Hebrew Monarchy, p. 262. 
 
f 
 
 174 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 very improbable in itself, flatly contradicted by Luke's 
 history,* and which occurred, we are told, that a prophecy 
 might be fulfilled to which it had no reference, of which 
 it was no fulfilment, and which in fact, was no prophecy 
 at all. 
 
 A similar instance occurs immediately afterwards in 
 the same chapter. We are told that Herod, when he 
 found " that he was mocked of the wise men, was exceed- 
 ing wi'oth, and sent forth and slew all the children that 
 were in Bethlehem, and in all the coasts thereof, from 
 two years old and under ; " — an act which, whether suit- 
 able or not to the known character of Herod (who was 
 cruel and tyrannical, but at the same time crafty and 
 politic, not silly nor insanef) — must, if it had occurred, 
 nave created a prodigious sensation, and made one of the 
 most prominent points in Herod's history! — yet of which 
 none of the other evangelists, nor any historian of the 
 day, nor Josephus (though he devoted a considerable por- 
 tion of his history to the reign of Herod, and does not 
 spare his reputation), makes any mention. But this also, 
 according to Matthew's notion, was the fulfilment of a 
 prophecy. " Then was fulfilled that which was spoken 
 by Jeremy the prophet, saying. In Rama there was a 
 voice heard, lamentation, and weeping, and great mourn- 
 ing, Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be 
 comforted, because they are not." — Here, again, the ad- 
 duced prophecy was quite irrelevant, being simply a des- 
 cription of the grief of Judea for the captivity of her 
 children, accompanied by a promise of their retnm.§ 
 
 * Luke's account entirely precludes the sojourn in Egypt. He says that 
 eiffht days after the birth of Jesus he was circumcised, forty days after was 
 presented in the temple, and that when these legal ceremonies were accom- 
 plished, he went with his parents to Nazareth. 
 
 t Neander argues very ably that such a deed is precisely what we should 
 expect from Herod's character. But Sir W. Jones gives reason for believ- 
 ing that the whole story may be of Hindoo orifirin. —Christian Theism, p. 84, 
 where the passage is quoted. 
 
 J Mr. Milman (Hist. .Tews, b. xii.), however, thinks differently, and ar- 
 gues that, among Herod's manifold barbarities, " the murder of a few chil- 
 dren in an obscure village " would easily escape notice. The story is at 
 leaBt highly improbable, for had Herod wished to secure the death of Jesus, 
 so canning a prince would have sent his messengers along with the Magi, 
 not awaited their doubtfuH return. 
 
 9 The pasdAgo is as follows : — " A voice wa^ heard iu Kaniah, lamentation. 
 
 A still 
 verse, whi 
 tion of ret] 
 and came 
 filled whij 
 called a 
 Nazarene 
 there is r 
 evangelist 
 spoken toj 
 her son 
 a vow, wt 
 was the o 
 In this 
 between 1 
 the paren 
 Nazareth 
 leftBethl 
 reth, only 
 tions. C: 
 right on i 
 There t 
 of the E 
 whether 
 really a 
 these sta 
 followers 
 first plac 
 that Jesi 
 born at 1 
 ever set 
 bom at 
 known ; 
 obvious 
 to the ^ 
 
 and bitte 
 forted for 
 frain thy 
 shall be n 
 of the ene 
 •SeelS 
 
FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. 
 
 175 
 
 ted by Lni^g.j, 
 lat a prophecy 
 ence, of which 
 i« no prophecy 
 
 afterwards in 
 rod, when he 
 n, was exceed- 
 children that 
 thereof, from 
 whether suit- 
 rod (who was 
 le crafty and 
 ^lad occurred, 
 de one of the 
 -yet of which 
 itorian of the 
 siderable por- 
 and does not 
 But this also, 
 ilfilment of a 
 ^ was spoken 
 there was a 
 ^reat mourn- 
 vould not be 
 ?ain, the ad- 
 imply a dos- 
 ivity of her 
 [•etTim.§ 
 
 ;. He says that 
 / days after was 
 ies were accom- 
 
 what we should 
 sason for believ 
 11 Theism, p. 84, 
 
 srently, and ar- 
 sr of a few chil- 
 rhe story is at 
 ieath of Jesus, 
 «^ith the Magi, 
 
 1, lamentation. 
 
 A still more unfortunate instance is found at the 23rd 
 verse, where we are told that Joseph abandoned his inten- 
 tion of returning into Judea, and turned aside into Galilee, 
 and came and dwelt at Nazareth, " that it might bo ful- 
 filled which was spoken by the prophets, He shall be 
 called a Nazarene." Now, in the first place, the name 
 Nazarene was not in use till long afterwards ; secondly,, 
 there is no such prophecy in the Old Testament. The 
 evangelist, perhaps, had in his mind the words that were 
 spoken to the mother of Samson (Judg. xiii. 5) respecting 
 her son : " The child shall be a Nazarite (i.e., one bound by 
 a vow, whose hair was forbidden to be cut, which never 
 was the case with Jesus*) unto God from the womb." 
 
 In this place we must notice the marked discrepancy 
 between Matthew and Luke, as to the original residence of 
 the parents of Jesus. Luke speaks of them as living at 
 Nazareth before the birth of Jesus ; Matthew as having 
 left Bethlehem, the birthplace of their child, to go to Naza- 
 reth, only after that event, and from peculiar considera- 
 tions. Critics, however, are disposed to think Matthew 
 right on this occasion. 
 
 There are, however, several passages in different parts 
 of the Evangelists which si^ggest serious doubts as to 
 whether Jesus was really born at Bethlehem, and was 
 really a lineal descendant of David, and whether both 
 these statements were not unfounded inventions of his 
 followers to prove his title to the Messiahship. In the 
 first place, the Jews are frequently represented as urging 
 that Jesus could not be the Messiah because he was not 
 born at Bethlehem ; and neither Jesus nor his followers 
 ever set them right upon this point. If he were really 
 bom at Bethlehem, the circumstance was generally un- 
 known ; and though its being unknown presented an 
 obvious and valid objection to the admission of his claim 
 to the Messianic character, no effort was made either by 
 
 and bitter weeping ; Bahel weeping for her children refused to be com- 
 forted for her children, because they were not. Thus aaith the Lord ; Re- 
 frain thy voice from weeping, and thine eyes from tears : for thy work 
 shall be rewarded, saith the Lord ; and they shall come again from tne land 
 of the enemy."— Jer. xxxi. 15, 16. 
 •SeeNum. vi. 2-6. 
 
176 
 
 THE CREED OF CHETSTENDOM. 
 
 Christ or his disciples to remove this objection, which 
 might have been done by a single word (John vii. 41-43, 
 52 ; i. 46). " Others said, This is the Christ. But some 
 said, ShaU Christ come out of Galilee ? Hath not the 
 scripture said, That Christ cometh of the seed of David, 
 and out of the town of Bethlehem, where David was ? 
 So there was a division among the people because of him." 
 — ^Again, the Pharisees object to Nicodemus, when arguing 
 on Jesus' behalf — " Search, and look: for out of Galilee 
 ariseth no prophet." 
 
 The three Synoptical evangelists (Matt. xxii. 41 ; Mark 
 xii. 35 ; Luke xx. 41) all record an argument of Christ 
 addressed to the Pharisees, the purport of which is to sliow 
 that th*^ Messiah need not be, and could not be, the Son 
 of David. " While the Pharisees were gathered together, 
 t'osus asked them, saying. What think ye of Christ? 
 whose son is he ? They say unto him. The son of David. 
 He saith unto them, How then doth David in spirit call 
 him Lord, saying, the Lord said unto my Lord, Sit thou 
 on my right hand, till I make thine enemies thy footstool ? 
 If David then call him Lord, how is he his son?" Nov — 
 [passing by the consideration that, as Mr. Arnold informs 
 us, " the translation ought to run, * The Eternal said unto 
 my lord the king,' and was a simple promise of victory to 
 a prince of God's chosen people,"] — is it conceivable that 
 Jesus should have brought forward the passage as an 
 argument if he were really a descendant of David ? Must 
 not his intention have been to argue that, though not a 
 son of David, he might still be the Christ ? 
 
 In xxi. 2~4, 6, 7, the entry into Jerusalem is thus 
 described : " Then sent Jesus two disciples, saying unto 
 them, Go into the village over against you, and straight- 
 way ye shall find an ass tied, and a colt with her : loose 
 them, and bring them to me. . . And the disciples 
 went, and did as Jesus commanded them, and brought the 
 ass, and the colt, and put on them their clothes, and set 
 him thereon " (literally " upon them'' tVavw avrcuv). Now, 
 [though two animals may well have been brought, the foal 
 naturally accompanying its mother, yet] the description 
 (in ver. 7), representing Jesus as sitting upon both ani- 
 
 mals, is al 
 all mentio] 
 animal onl 
 with both 
 we read in 
 be fulfille( 
 Tell ye th 
 unto thee, 
 foal of an 
 As a fin 
 Judas. T 
 covenantee 
 thew, hov 
 traitor an( 
 had been j 
 was given, 
 (the purch 
 by the rep 
 between M 
 by a propl 
 case before 
 be literallj 
 to have ha 
 it was utt 
 prophet vi 
 The passaj 
 they took 
 was value 
 value; an< 
 appointed 
 given in a 
 
 • The quol 
 writer's own 
 icnJ reduplics 
 Matthew tho 
 tran8la*-.e(l " i 
 
 t Luke, hf 
 the field wit 
 Matthew saj 
 
 X Matthev 
 12, 13. Soni 
 do really bel 
 
ction, which 
 m vii. 41-43 
 
 'j. But some 
 [ath not the 
 ed of David, 
 David was? 
 luse of him." 
 rhen arguing 
 it of Galilee 
 
 i 41 ; Mark 
 it of Christ 
 ch is to show 
 
 be, the Son 
 :"ed together, 
 
 01 Christ? 
 )n of David, 
 in spirit call 
 d, Sit thou 
 y footstool ? 
 ?" Now- 
 Lold informs 
 al said unto 
 )f victory to 
 sivable that 
 ssage as an 
 i^id ? Must 
 LOugh noto, 
 
 3m is thus 
 aying unto 
 id straight- 
 her : loose 
 16 disciples 
 brought the 
 les, and set 
 w). Now, 
 j'ht, the foal 
 description 
 a both aiii- 
 
 FIDELITT OP THE GOSPEL HISTORY. 
 
 177 
 
 mals, is absurd ; and again, Mark, Luke, and John, who 
 all mention the same occurrence, agree in speaking of one 
 animal only. But the liberty which Matthew has taken 
 with both fact and probability is at once explained, when 
 we read in the 4th versC; "All this was done, that it might 
 be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet, saying, 
 Tell ye the daughter of Zion, Behold, thy King cometh 
 unto thee, meek, and sitting upon an ass, aTid a colt the 
 foal of an ass."* 
 
 As a final example, we may instance the treachery of 
 Judas. The other evangelists simply narrate that Judas 
 covenanted with the chief priests to betray Jesus. Mat- 
 thew, however, relates the conversation between the 
 traitor and his fellow-conspirators as minutely as if he 
 had been present, specifies the exact sum of money that 
 was given, and the use to which it was put by the priests 
 (the purchase of the Potter's field), when returned to them 
 by the repentant Judas.f Here, as usual, the discrepancy 
 between Matthew and his feUow-evangelists, is explained 
 by a prophecy which Matthew conceived to apply to the 
 case before him, and thought necessary therefore should 
 be literally fulfilled ; but which, on examination, appears 
 to have had no allusion to any times but those in which 
 it was uttered, and which, moreover, is not found in the 
 prophet whom Matthew quotes from, but in another.^ 
 The passage as quoted by Matthew is as follows : — " And 
 they took the thirty pieces of silver, the price of him that 
 was valued, whom they of the children of Israel did 
 value : and gave them for the potter's field, as the Lord 
 appointed me." The original passage in Zechari.oh is 
 given in a note. 
 
 * The quotation is from Zechariah ix. 9 ; the passage has reference to the 
 writer's own time, and the second animal is obviously a mire common poet- 
 ical reduplication, ouch as is met with in every page of Hebrew poetry. But 
 Matthew thought a literal similitude essential. " And " ought t > have been 
 translated " even." 
 
 t Luke, however, in the Acts (i. 18), state.<i that Judas himself purchased 
 tho field with the money he had reoeivt'd, ami died accidentally therein. 
 Matthew says he returned the money, and went and hanged liimself. 
 
 + Matthew ijuotes Jeremiah, but the passage is contained in Zerhariah xi. 
 12, 13. Some people, however, imagine that the latter chaptors of Zechariah 
 do really belong to <Teremiah. Others conceive the passage to be contained 
 
178 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 To pass from this ground of want of confidence in 
 Matthew's fidelity, we may specify two others -.—first, 
 we find several discrepancies between him and the other 
 evan^^elists, in which there is leason to believe that he 
 was wrong ; and secondly, we find words and parts of dis- 
 courses put by him into Jesus' mouth, which there is 
 ample reason to believe that Jesus never uttered. 
 
 I. The second chapter opens with an account (peculiar 
 to Matthew) of the visit of the wise men of the East to 
 Bethlehem, whither they were guided by a star which 
 went before them, and stood over the house in which the 
 infant Jesus lay. The general legendary character of the 
 narrative — its similarity in style with those contained in 
 the apocryphal gospels — and more especially its conform- 
 ity with those astrological notions which, thou^'h 
 prevalent in the time of Matthew, have been exploded 
 by the sounder scientific knowledge of our days — all 
 unite to stamp upon the story the impress of poetic or 
 mythic fiction ; and its admission into his history is not 
 creditable to Matthew's judgment, though it may not 
 impugn his fidelity; as it may have been among his 
 materials, and he had no critical acumen which should 
 lead him to reject it. 
 
 In Matt. viii. 28-34, we have an account of the healing 
 of two demoniacs, whose diseases (or whose devils, ac- 
 cording to the evangelist) were communicated to an 
 adjacent herd of swine. Now, putting aside the great 
 improbability of two madmen, as fierce as these are 
 described to be, Uving togetherj Mark and Luke,* who 
 both relate the same occurrence, state that there was one 
 demoniac, obviously a much preferable version of the 
 narrative. 
 
 in some lost book of Jeremiah. " And I said unto them, If ye think good, 
 give me my price ; and if not, forbear. So they weighed for my price tliirty 
 pieces of silver. And the Lord said unto me, Cast it unto the potter : a 
 goodly price that I was prized at of them. And I took the thirtyjpieces of 
 silver, and cast them to the potter in the house of the Lord." The wo < 
 " potter " is a translation viade to accovimodate Matthew. The LXX. has 
 " treasury " or " foundry," as it were our " mint." 
 
 * Mark v. 1 ; Luke viii. 26. There are other discrepancies between tlie 
 three narratives, both in this and the following case, but they are beside 
 our precwnt purpose. 
 
 In the St 
 lates the ci 
 Luke* nar] 
 blind man. 
 evangelist's 
 he has aire 
 to it a difi"* 
 
 A still 1 
 dency to ai 
 etition, is 
 where the 
 described, 
 all four e^ 
 with a slig 
 and of the 
 and to Ma] 
 varying ac 
 from the m 
 weio coUec 
 and that o! 
 admitted 1 
 from sever 
 only one f( 
 Matthew a 
 similar, pr< 
 particulars 
 ties, are al 
 and, finalb 
 narration, i 
 disciples, s 
 occurrence 
 disciples hi 
 feeding of 
 
 • Mark, x. 
 
 t The paral 
 
 X See Mark 
 precisely siml 
 comraon docui 
 in the iccond, 
 
 § See also S 
 full disbelief i 
 
FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. 
 
 179 
 
 ifidence in 
 
 ers -.—first, 
 i the other 
 ^e that he 
 arts of dis- 
 ;h there is 
 3d. 
 
 it (pecuHar 
 bhe East to 
 star which 
 
 which the 
 Lcter of the 
 mtained in 
 ts conform- 
 :h, thouj'h 
 1 exploded 
 
 days — all 
 >f poetic or 
 itory is not 
 t may not 
 among his 
 lich should 
 
 the healing 
 devils, ac- 
 ited to an 
 ! the great 
 these are 
 Juke,* who 
 jre was one 
 ion of the 
 
 ye think good, 
 inv price thirty 
 tne potter : a 
 ihirtypieces of 
 i." The wo r 
 Phe LXX. has 
 
 8 between tlie 
 ley are beside 
 
 In the same manner, in chap. xx. 30-34, Matthew re- 
 lates the cure of two blind men near Jericho. Mark and 
 Luke* narrate the same occurrence, but speak of only one 
 blind man. This story affords also an example of the 
 evangelist's carelessness as a compiler, for (in chap. ix. 27) 
 he has already given the same narrative, but has assigned 
 to it a different locality. 
 
 A still more remarkable instance of Matthew's ten- 
 dency to amplification, or rather to multiplication and rep- 
 etition, is found in xiv. 16, et 8eq., and xv. 32, et seq.y'f 
 where the two miraculous feedings of the multitude are 
 described. The feeding of the five thousand is related by 
 all four evangelists ; but the repetition of the miracle, 
 with a slight variation in the number of the multitude 
 and of the loave^j and fragments, is peculiar to Matthew 
 and to Mark.| Now, that both these narratives are merely 
 varying accounts of the same event (the variation arising 
 from the mode in which the materials of the gospel history 
 were collected, as explained in our preceding chapter), 
 and that only one feeding was originally recorded, is now 
 admitted by all competent critics,§ and appears clearly 
 from several considerations. — First, Luke and John relate 
 only one feeding ; in the next place, the two narratives in 
 Matthew are given with the same accompaniments, in a 
 similar, probably in the very same, locality ; thirdly, the 
 particulars of the occurrence and the remarks of the par- 
 ties, are almost identically the same on each occasion ; 
 and, finally (what is perfectly conclusive), in the second 
 narration, the language and conduct both of Jesus and his 
 disciples, show a perfect unconsciousness of ar y previous 
 occurrence of the same nature. Is it credible, that if the 
 disciples had, a few days before, witnessed the miraculous 
 feeding of the " five thousand " with " five loaves and 
 
 • Mark, x. 46 : Luke xviii, 35. 
 
 t The parallel passages are Mark vi. 35 ; Lnke ix. 12 ; Jo' 
 
 vi. 5. 
 
 t See Mark viii. 1, et seq. The language of the two evanbdlists is here so 
 precisely similar, as to leave no doubt that one copied the other, or both a 
 common document. The word baskets is K6<pivoi in the first case, and tniviSpts 
 in the second, in both evangelists. 
 
 § See also Schleiermacher, p. 144, who does not hesitate to express his 
 full disbelief in the second feeding. 
 
180 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 two fishes," they should on the second occasion, when 
 they had " seven loaves and a few small Bshes," have re- 
 plied to the suggestion of Jesus that the fasting multitude 
 should again be fed, " whence should we have so much 
 bread in the wilderness as to till zo great a multitude ? " 
 It is certain that the idea of two feedings having really 
 taken place, could only have found acceptance in minds 
 preoccupied with the doctrine of the plenary inspiration 
 and infallibility of Scripture. It is now entirely aban- 
 doned by all divines except the English, and by the few 
 thinkers even among them. A confirmatory argument, 
 were any needed, might be drawn from observing that 
 the narrative of the fourth evangelist agrees in some 
 points with Matthew's first, and in some with his second 
 account. 
 
 The story contained in xvii. 27, of Jesus command- 
 ing Peter to catch a fish in whose v ^^th he should 
 find the tribute money, has a most pagtm md unworthy 
 character about it, harmonizes admirab];y with the puerile 
 narratives which abound in the apocryphal gospels, and 
 is ignored by all the other evangelists. 
 
 In xxvii. 24, we find this narrative : " When Pilate saw 
 that he could prevail nothing, but that rather a tumult 
 was made, he took water, and washed his hands before 
 the multitude, saying, I am innocent of the blood of this 
 just person ; see ye to it." Now, in the first place, this 
 symbolic action was a Jewish, not a Roman ceremony,* 
 «ntl as such most unsuitable and improbable in a Roman 
 govoi'nor, one of a nation noted for their contempt of the 
 habits and opinions of their subject nations. In the 
 secitnd place, is it inconceivr-ble that Pilate should so em- 
 phatically have pronouncf.'d his own condemnation, by 
 declaiai:!; -.'t^us to be a "just man," at the very moment 
 when h(^ v^ as about to scourge him, and deliver him over 
 to the "ic->L c, '.el tortures ? 
 
 In Mattlifiv/s account of the last moments of Jesus, w;' 
 
 * It appears from Dout. xxi. 1-9, that the washing of the hands was a 
 specially- appointed IVJo:- Ic rite, by which the authorities of any city in 
 which murder had been conimitted wor» to avow their innooence of the 
 eriuxe, and ignorance of the oriniinal. 
 
 have the 
 
 __'' Jesus 
 
 yielded u 
 
 was rent 
 
 earth diel 
 
 opened ; 
 
 and cam( 
 
 went int< 
 
 nrst, this 
 
 to have i 
 
 is ignore 
 
 reference 
 
 to believ 
 
 currence- 
 
 wonder. 
 
 self-cont 
 
 is, that i 
 
 hodie;s o: 
 
 vulsions 
 
 moment 
 
 speaks c 
 
 suppose, 
 
 that the 
 
 allowed 
 
 clearly t 
 
 avoid th 
 
 translate 
 
 graves, ' 
 
 the ques 
 
 Friday ) 
 
 emancip 
 
 return t 
 
 of dust 
 
 that it ^ 
 
 suppose 
 
 • Norte 
 others, on 
 probable, 
 probable i 
 truditlonn 
 
FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. 
 
 181 
 
 .sion, when 
 ' have re- 
 g multitude 
 ve so much 
 mltitude ? " 
 iving really 
 e in minds 
 inspiration 
 'irely aban- 
 by the few 
 argument, 
 erving that 
 3s in some 
 L his second 
 
 command- 
 he should 
 
 i unworthy 
 the puerile 
 
 ospels, and 
 
 1 Pilate saw 
 T a tumult 
 mds before 
 iood of this 
 ; place, this 
 ceremony,* 
 n a Boman 
 jmpt of the 
 s. In the 
 3uld so em- 
 matiou, by 
 ry moment 
 sr him over 
 
 f Jesus, W!' 
 
 I hands was a 
 :<f any city in 
 looenoe of the 
 
 have the following remarkable statements (xxvii. 50-53*) : 
 — '' Jesus, when he had cried again with a loud voice, 
 yielded up the ghost. And, behold, the veil of the temple 
 was rent in twain from the top to the bottom ; and the 
 earth did quake, and the rocks rent ; and the graves were 
 opened ; and many bodies of the saints which slept arose, 
 and came out of the graves after his resurrection, and 
 went into the holy city, and appeared unto many." Now, 
 iirst, this extraordinary fact, if it be a fact (and it is said 
 to liave been a public one — "they appeared unto many'), 
 is ignored by the other evangelists ; nor do we find any 
 reference to it in the Acts or the Epistles, nor any reason 
 to believe that any of the apostles were aware of the oc- 
 currence — one, certainly, to excite the deepest interest and 
 wonder. Secondly, the statement is a confused, if not a 
 self-contradictory, one. The assertion in ver. 52, clearly 
 is, that the opening of the graves, and the rising of the 
 bodie;:? of saints, formed a portion of that series of con- 
 vulsions of nature which is said to have occurred at the 
 moment when Jesus expired ; whereas the following verse 
 speaks of it as occurring " after his resurrection." To 
 suppose, as believers in verbal accuracy do, and must do, 
 that the bodies were re-animated on the Friday, and not 
 allowed to come out of their graves till the Sunday, is 
 clearly too monstrous to be seriously entertained. If, to 
 avoid this difficulty, we adopt Griesbach's reading, and 
 translate the passage thus : " And coming out of their 
 graves, went into the holy city after the resurrection," — 
 the question still recurs, " Where did they remain between 
 Friday and Sunday ? And did they, after three days' 
 emancipation, resume their sepulchral habiliments, and 
 return to their narrow prison-bouse, and their former state 
 of dust ? " Again, when we refer to the original, we find 
 that it was the bodies (o-w/iara) which " arose ; " but, if we 
 suppose that the evangelist wrote grammatically, it 
 
 • ISTorton (i. 214) thinks this passage an interpolation, as he docs many 
 others, on the obviously unfair ground that the statement it contains is im- 
 probable. It may be improbalifo that it yhould have happened, yet not im- 
 probable that Matthew should have recorded it if he found it among hi« 
 traditional materiala, 
 
182 
 
 THE CREED OF CHUISTENDOM. 
 
 could not have been the bodies which " came out of the 
 graves," or he would have written UeKdovra, not e^eA^ovres. 
 Whence Bush* assumes that the bodies arose (or were 
 raised, riyepOr}) at the time of the crucifixion, but lay down 
 again,"!* and that it was the souls which came out of the 
 graves after the resurrection of Christ and appeared unto 
 many ! We cannot, however, admit that souls inhabit 
 graves. 
 
 There can, we think, remain little doubt in unprepos- 
 sessed minds, that the whole legend ( it is greatly aug- 
 mented in the apocryphal gospels)^ was one of those in- 
 tended to magnify and honour Christ,§ ^ hich were cur- 
 rent in great numbers at the time when Matthew wrote, 
 and which he, with the usual want of discrimination and 
 somewhat omnivorous tendency which distinguished him 
 as a compiler, admitted into his gospel ; — and that the 
 confusing phrase, " after his resurrection," was added 
 either by him, or by fc;'^'me previous transmitter, or later 
 copier, to prevent the apparent want of deference and de- 
 corum involved m a resurrection which should have pre- 
 coded that of Jesus. 
 
 In chap, xxvii. C2-66, and xxviii. 11-15, we find a rec- 
 ord of two cojiversations most minutely given — one 
 between the d iof piip.«u3 and Pilate, and the other be- 
 tween the priests vtid tne guards of the sepulchre — at 
 which it is impossible the evangelist, and most improbable 
 
 * See a very elaborate work o£ Professor Bush, entitled " Anaetaais, or 
 the Beaurrection uf the Body " (p. 210), the object of which is to prove that 
 the reaixrrecti.in )f the boil^ is neither a rational nor a scriptural doctrine. 
 
 t The Professor's notion ajjpears to be ihat the rising of the bodies on the 
 Friday was n siisre mechanical effect of the earthquake, and that re-anima 
 ttoii did not cake place till the Sunday, and that even then it was not the 
 6odte«^hich ar'>ae. 
 
 % The (rOBpel of the Hebrews says that a portion of the temple was thrown 
 down. See also the Gospol of Nicodemus. 
 
 § Similar prodigies we»'e said, or supposed, to aceompaiiy the deaths of 
 mr.ny great men in former days, as in the case of Cassar (Virgil, Georif. i. 
 403, et seq,). Shakespeare has embalmed some traditions of the kind, 
 o;<nctly analogous to the present case. See Julius Csesar, Act ii. Sc. 2. 
 Again he days : Hamlet, Act i. Sc. 1. 
 
 '• In the most high and palmy state of Rome, 
 A little ere the mightiest Julius fell, 
 The graves stood tenantlesB, and the sheeted dead 
 Did squeak and gibber in the Roman streets." 
 
 that any ini 
 
 which, to 01 
 
 quent fictic 
 
 more invuli 
 
 is extreme! 
 
 should ha\ 
 
 against a f 
 
 believe thai 
 
 they allude 
 
 ciples, the 
 
 less secrecj 
 
 tirely disre 
 
 that the re 
 
 pected, bui 
 
 enemies of 
 
 predictions 
 
 The imp 
 
 striking. 
 
 tomb shou 
 
 tion (xxvi 
 
 ded to de 
 
 Sanhedrin 
 
 ing the st( 
 
 slept, and 
 
 beUeved \ 
 
 conclave, 
 
 —that R( 
 
 were, whc 
 
 against di 
 
 mllingly 
 
 such a br( 
 
 tions to 
 
 •It is tru( 
 the Jews' de 
 build it up. 
 Imt we knoi 
 and also fro' 
 t Matt. XI 
 J This is 
 scripture, tl 
 all the evan 
 
out of the 
 
 )t i$e\$ovT€^. 
 
 ie (or were 
 t lay down 
 out of the 
 )eared unto 
 uls inhabit 
 
 unprepos- 
 freatly aug- 
 )f those in- 
 h were cur- 
 ihew wrote, 
 ination and 
 :uished him 
 id that the 
 was added 
 ber, or later 
 nee and de- 
 1 have pre- 
 
 find a rec- 
 fiven — one 
 e other be- 
 pulchre — at 
 improbable 
 
 ' Anastaais, or 
 8 to prove that 
 turai doctrine. 
 e ttodiea on the 
 that re-anima 
 it was not the 
 
 pie was thrown 
 
 the deaths of 
 irgil, Geory. 1. 
 
 of the kind, 
 , Act ii. Sc. 2. 
 
 ad 
 
 FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. 
 
 183 
 
 that any informant of his, could have been present ; — and 
 which, to our minds, bear evident marks of being subse- 
 quent fictions supposed in order to complete and render 
 more invulnerable the history of Jesus' resurrection. It 
 is extremely unlikely that the chief priests and Pharisees 
 should have thought of taking precautions beforehand 
 against a fraudulent resurrection. We have no reason to 
 believe that they had ever heard of the prophecy to which 
 they allude,* for it had been uttered only to his own dis- 
 ciples, the twelve, and to them generally with more or 
 less secrecy ;f and we know that by them it was so en- 
 tirely disregarded,! or had been so completely forgotten 
 that the resurrection of their Lord was not only not ex- 
 pected, but took them completely by surprise. Were the 
 enemies of Christ more attentive to, and believing on, his 
 predictions than his own followers ? 
 
 The improbability of the sequel of the story is equally 
 striking. That the guard placed by the Sanhedrim at the 
 tomb should, all trembling with affright from the appari- 
 tion (xxviii. 4), have been at once, and so easily, persua- 
 ded to deny the vision, and propagate a lie ; — that the 
 Sanhedrim, instead of angrily and contempf^uously scout- 
 ing the story of the soldiers, charging them with having 
 slept, and threatening them with punishment, should have 
 believed their statement, and, at the same time, in full 
 conclave, resolved to bribe them to silence and falsehood ; 
 — that Roman soldiers, as it is generally assumed they 
 were, who could scarcely commit a more heinous offence 
 against discipline than to sleep upon their post, should so 
 willingly have accepted money to accuse themselves of 
 such a breach of duty ; — are all too improbable supposi- 
 tions to be readily allowed; especially when the 13th 
 
 *It is true that John (ii. 19) relates that Jesus said publicly in answer to 
 the J ews' demand for a sign, ' ' Destroy this temple, and in three days I will 
 build it up." This John considers to have reference to his resurrection, 
 lint we know that the Jews attached no auch meaning to it, from ver. 20, 
 and also from Matt. xxvi. 61. 
 
 t jMatt. xvi. 21, XX. 19 ; Mark viii. 31, x. 32 ; Luke ix. 22, xviii. 33. 
 
 J This is distinctly stated, John xx. 9 : " For as yet they knew not the 
 scripture, that he must rise again from the dead," and indeed it is clear from 
 hU the evangelical narratives. 
 
184 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 verse in^acates a subsequent Jewish rumour as the foun- 
 dation of iho story , and when the utter silence of all other 
 evangelista and apostles rerjpecting a narrative which, if 
 true, would be so essential a feature in their preaching of 
 the resurrection, is duly borne in mind. 
 
 Many mino'- instances in which Matthew has retrenched 
 or added to the accounts of Mark, according as retrench- 
 ment o)- omission would, in his view, most exalt the 
 character of Jesus, are specified in the article already 
 referred to (Prosp. Rev. xxi.), which we recommend to the 
 perusal oi all our readers as a perfect pattern of critical 
 
 reasonmg. 
 
 FIDELI' 
 
 In pursuing 
 
 placed on % 
 sideration c 
 believe tha 
 have been i 
 attributed 1 
 not utter in 
 been transn 
 more than ^ 
 discourses a 
 fectly hearc 
 and corrupt 
 to mouth, 
 reason to be 
 down by th 
 delivery, or 
 of the evan 
 renewed fo] 
 ditions per 
 belief, then 
 and inaccui 
 sincerity oi 
 informants, 
 Christ ; — w 
 tion of na 
 
 ^%' 
 
 •This seems 
 says:— "The 
 tinctness, unde 
 all desire to vit 
 condition of tb 
 falliblyinake it 
 merely in the 
 
as the foun- 
 eeof all other 
 .ve which, if 
 
 preaching of 
 
 as retrenched 
 as retrench- 
 >st exalt the 
 tide already 
 amend to the 
 m of critical 
 
 CHAPTER VIII. 
 
 FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY CONTINUED. — 
 
 MATTHEW. 
 
 In pursuing our inquiry as to the degree of reliance to be 
 placed on Matthew's narrative, we now come to the con- 
 sideration of those passages in which there is reason to 
 believe that the conversations and discourses of Christ 
 have been incorrectly reported ; and that words have been 
 attributed to him which he did not utter, or at least did 
 not utter in the form and context in which they have 
 been transmitted to us. That this should be so, is no 
 more than we ought to expect a 'priori ; for, of all things, 
 discourses and remarks are the most likely to be imper- 
 fectly heard, ii accurately reported, and materially altered 
 and corrupted m the course of transmission from mouth 
 to mouth. Indeed, as we do not know, and have no 
 reason to believe, that the discourses of Christ were written 
 down by those who heard them immediately after their 
 delivery, or indeed much before they reached the hands 
 of the evangelists, nothing less than a miracle perpetually 
 renewed for many years could have preserved these tra- 
 ditions perfectly pure and genuine. In admitting the 
 belief, therefore, that they are in several points imperfect 
 and inaccurate, we are throwing no discredit upon the 
 sincerity or capacity, either of the evangelists or their 
 informants, or the original reporters of the sayings of 
 Christ ; — we are simply acquiescing in the alleged opera- 
 tion of natural causes.* In some cases, it is true, we 
 
 * This seems to be admitted even by orthodox, writers. Thus Mr. Trench 
 says :— "The most earnest oral tradition will in a little while lose its dis- 
 tinctness, undergo essential though insensible modifications. Apart from 
 all desire to vitiate the committed word, yet, little by little, the subjective 
 condition of those to m hoin it is entrusted, through whom it passes, will in- 
 fallibly make itself felt ; and in such treacherous keeping is all which remains 
 merely in the memories of men, that, after a very little while, rival schools 
 
 U 
 
186 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 FIDELr 
 
 ■10$' 
 
 shall find reason to believe that the published discourses 
 of Christ have been intentionally altered and artificially 
 elaborated by some of the parties through whose hands 
 they passed; but in those days, when the very idea of his- 
 torical criticism was yet unborn, this might have been 
 done without any unfairness of purpose. We know that at 
 that period, historians of far loftier pretensions and more 
 scientific character, writing in countries of far greater 
 literary advancement, seldom scrupled to fill up and round 
 off* the harangues of their orators and statesmen with 
 whatever they thought appropriate for them to have said 
 — nay, even to elaborate for them long orations out of the 
 most meagre hearsay fragments.* 
 
 A general view of Matthew, and still more a comparison 
 of his narrative with that of the other three gospels, 
 brings into clear light his entire indifference to chronolog- 
 ical or contextual arrangement in his record of the dis- 
 courses of Christ. Thus in ch. v., vi., vii., we have crowd- 
 ed into one sermon the teachings and aphorisms which in 
 the other evangelists are spread over the whole of Christ's 
 ministry. In ch. xiii. we find collected together no less 
 than six parables of similitudes for the kingdom of heaven. 
 In ch. X. Matthew compresses into one occasion (the send- 
 ing of the twelve, where many of them are strikingly out 
 of jjlace) a variety of instructions and reflections which 
 must have belonged to a subsequent part of the career of 
 Jesus, where indeed they are placed by the other evan- 
 gelists. In ch. xxiv., in the same manner, all the prophe- 
 cies relating to the destruction of Jerusalem and the end 
 of the world are grouped together ; while, in many in- 
 stances, remarks of Jesus are introduced in the midst of 
 
 of disciples will begin to contend not merely how their Master's words were 
 to be accepted, but what thase verywords were," — Trench's Hulsean Lectures, 
 p. 16. 
 
 * This in fact was the custom of antiquity — the rule, not the exception :- 
 See Thucydides, Livy, Sallust, &c. passim. We find also (see Acts v. 34-39), 
 that Luke himself did not scruple to adopt this common practice, for he 
 gives us a verbatim speech of Gamaliel delivered in the Sanhedrim, after 
 the apostles had been expressly excluded, and which therefore he could have 
 known only by hearsay report. Moreover, it is certain that this speech 
 must have been Luke's, and not Gamalier», since it represents Gamaliel iu 
 the year ▲. d. 34 or 35, as speaking in the past tense of an agitator, Theudas, 
 who did not appear, as we learn from Josephus, till after the year A. D. 44, 
 
 othei-s with 
 they are ol 
 12, which e 
 
 In c. xi. ; 
 the days of 
 heaven sufl 
 force." Nc 
 cult to asce] 
 the days of 
 that the spe 
 from John ; 
 wrote in tl 
 could not h 
 A.D. 30 or 3 
 therefore, m 
 from Jesus. 
 
 In c. xvi. 
 with perfec 
 mouth of C 
 from which 
 could not 1 
 of the mult 
 The simple 
 upon our : 
 having in 1: 
 two feeding 
 Oi Jesus ha 
 that nature 
 such events 
 therefore 
 congruity 
 
 The pass 
 being eithe 
 ruption of 
 ye that I 
 Thou art 
 Jesus ansv 
 Simon Bar 
 unto thee, 
 say also ui 
 
id discourses 
 i artificially 
 ivhose hands 
 y idea of his- 
 t have been 
 know that at 
 ns and more 
 ! far greater 
 ip and round 
 tesmen with 
 to have said 
 DS out of the 
 
 a, comparison 
 :iree gospels, 
 ;o chroiiolog- 
 1 of the dis- 
 have crowd- 
 ims which in 
 le of Christ's 
 ether no less 
 im of heaven. 
 Dn (the send- 
 irikingly out 
 etions which 
 the career of 
 other evan- 
 l the prophe- 
 and the end 
 in many in- 
 the midst of 
 
 iter's words were 
 ulsean Lectures, 
 
 bhe exception :— 
 Be Acts V. 34-39), 
 practice, for he 
 sanhedrim, after 
 are he could have 
 that this speech 
 ents Gamaliel iu 
 gitator, Theudas, 
 ihe year a. d. 44, 
 
 FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY.-— MATTHEW. 187 
 
 others with which they .lave no connection, and where 
 they are obviously out of place ; as xi. 28-30, and xiii. 
 12, which evidently be^ mgs to xxv. 29. 
 
 In c. xi. 12 is the following expression : " And from 
 the days of John the Baptist until now the kingdom of 
 heaven sufFereth violence, and the violent take it by 
 force." Now, though the mef.ning of the passage is diffi- 
 cult to ascertain with precision, yet the expression " from 
 the days of John the Baptist until now," clearly implies 
 that the speaker lived at a considerable distance of time 
 from John ; and though appropriate enough in a man who 
 wrote in the year A. D. 65, or thirty years after John, 
 could not have been used by one who spoke in the year 
 A.D. 30 or 33, while John was yet alive. This passage, 
 therefore, must be regarded as coming from Matthew, not 
 from Jesus. 
 
 In c. xvi. 9, 10, is another remark which we may say 
 with perfect certainty was put fuiwarrantably into the 
 mouth of Christ either by the evangelist, or the source 
 from which he copied. We have already seen that there 
 could not have been more than one miraculous feeding 
 of the multitude ; yet Jesus is here made to refer to two. 
 The simple and obvious explanation at once forces itself 
 upon our minds, that the evangelist or his authority, 
 having in his uncritical and confused conceptions, related 
 two feedings, and finding among his materials a discourse 
 Oi Jesus having reference to a miraculous occurrence of 
 that nature, perceived the inconsistency of narrating ^'iyo 
 such events, and yet making Jesus refer to only one, and 
 therefore added verse 10, by way of correcting the in- 
 congruity. The same remark will apply to Mark also. 
 
 The passage at c. xvi. 18, 19, bears obvious marks of 
 being either an addition to the words of Christ, or a cor- 
 ruption of them. " He saith unto them. But whom say 
 ye that I am ? And Simon Peter answered and said. 
 Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God. And 
 Jesus answered and said unto him. Blessed art thou, 
 Simon Bar-jona ; for flesh and blood hath not revealed it 
 unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven. And I 
 say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this 
 
 « 
 
IMAGE EVALUATION 
 TEST TARGET (MT-3) 
 
 
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 33 WEST MAIN STRIET 
 
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188 
 
 THE CBEED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 rock I will build my church ; and the gates of hell shall 
 not prevail against it. And I will give unto thee the 
 keys of the kingdom of heaven : and whatsoever thou 
 shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven : and what- 
 soever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven." 
 
 The confession by Simon Peter of his belief in the 
 Messiahship of Jesus is given by all the four evangelists, 
 and there is no reason to question the accuracy of this 
 part of the narrative. Mark and John, as well a^s 
 Matthew, relate that Jesus bestowed on Simon the 
 surname of Peter, and this part, therefore, may also be 
 admitted. The remainder of the narrative corresponds 
 almost exactly with the equivalent passages in the other 
 evangelists ; but the 18th verse has no parallel in any of 
 them, li'oreover, the word "church" betrays its later 
 origin. The word iKKXrjoria was used by the disciples to 
 signify those assemblies and organizations into which 
 they formed them selves after the death of Jesus, and is 
 met with frequently in the epistles, but nowhere in the 
 Gospels, except in the passage under consideration, and 
 one other, which is equally, or even more contestable.* 
 It was in use when the gospel was written, but not when 
 the discourse of Jesus was delivered. It must be taken 
 as belonging, therefore, to Matthew, not to Jesus. 
 
 The following verse, conferring spiritual authority, or, 
 as it is commonly called, " the power of the keys," upon 
 Peter, is repeated by Matthew in connection with another 
 discourse (in c. xviii. 18) ; and a similar passage is found 
 in John (c xx. 23), who, however, places the promise 
 after the resurrection, and represents it as made to the 
 apostles generally, subsequent to the descent of the Holy 
 Spirit. But there are considerations which effectually 
 forbid our receiving this promise, at least as given by 
 Matthew, as having really emanated from Christ. In the 
 first place, in both passages it occurs in connection with 
 the suspicious word " church," and indicates an ecclesias- 
 
 * C. xviii, 17. " If he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church : 
 but if he neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as an heathen man 
 aad a publican." The whole paBsaye, with its context, betokens an eccleaiaa- 
 tioftl, not » Ohrietian spirit. 
 
 FIDELl' 
 
 tical as op 
 
 who nari'j 
 
 promise so 
 
 it is impo 
 
 mouth piec< 
 
 done, had i 
 
 the compai 
 
 equally on 
 
 Thirdly, n< 
 
 be the de 
 
 impetuosit 
 
 thorough 
 
 immediate 
 
 him, his L 
 
 of Satan, £ 
 
 spirituality 
 
 denied hi 
 
 conceivabl 
 
 power of 
 
 fellow-mer 
 
 Does any 
 
 fore, rega 
 
 unwarrant 
 
 indicative 
 
 the time tl 
 
 In xxiii. 
 
 to be uttei 
 
 against th 
 
 come all t 
 
 the blood 
 
 son of Bar 
 
 the altar." 
 
 as having 
 
 850 years 1 
 
 son of Bai 
 
 iv. 4).t ] 
 
 • See 'l^hirl 
 
 + Tt is true 
 
 Bftricliias, wl 
 
 nut have beei 
 
oi hell shall 
 to thee the 
 .soever thou 
 
 : and what- 
 1 in heaven." 
 lelief in the 
 
 evangelists, 
 iracy of this 
 as well a^ 
 
 Simon the 
 may also be 
 
 corresponds 
 in the other 
 el in any of 
 ys its later 
 
 disciples to 
 
 into which 
 esus, and is 
 vhere in the 
 eration, and 
 iontestable.* 
 lit not when 
 ist be taken 
 
 )SUS. 
 
 uthority, or, 
 keys," upon 
 vith another 
 ige is found 
 the promise 
 made to the 
 of the Holy 
 I effectually 
 IS given by 
 :ist. In the 
 lection with 
 a,n ecclesias- 
 
 wto the church : 
 an heathen man 
 ens an ecclesiiw- 
 
 FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. — ^MATTHEW. 189 
 
 tical as opposed to a Christian origin. Secondly, Mark, 
 who narrates the previous conversation, omits this 
 promise so honourable and distinguishing to Peter, which 
 it is impossible for those who consider him as Peter's 
 mouthpiece, or amanuensis, to believe he would have 
 done, had any such promise been actually made * Luke, 
 the companion and intimate of Paul and other apostles, 
 equally omits all mention of this singular conversation. 
 Thirdly, not only do we know Peter's utter unfitness to 
 be the depositary of such a fearful power, from his 
 impetuosity and instability of character, and Christ's 
 thorough perception of this unfitness, but we find that 
 immediately after it is said to have been conferred upon 
 him, his Lord addresses him indignantly by the epithet 
 of Satan, and rebukes him for his presumntion and un- 
 spirituality ; and shortly afterwards this very man thrice 
 denied his master. Can any one maintain it to be 
 conceivable that Jesus should have conferred the awful 
 power of deciding the salvation or damnation of his 
 fellow-men upon one so frail, so faulty, and so fallible ? 
 Does any one believe that he did? We cannot, there- 
 fore, regard the 19th verse otherwise than as an 
 unwarranted addition to the words of Jesus, and painfully 
 indicative of the growing pretensions of the Church at 
 the time the gospel was compiled. 
 
 In xxiii. 35, we have the following passage purporting 
 to be uttered by Jesus in the course of his denunciations 
 against the Scibes and Pharisees : " That upon you may 
 come aU the righteous blood shed ii^ on the earth, from 
 the blood of righteous Abel unto the blood of Zacharias 
 son of Barachias, whom ye slew between the temple and 
 the altar." Now, two Zachariases are recorded in history 
 as having been thus slain : Zacharias, son of Jehoiada, 
 850 years before Christ (2 Chron. xxiv. 20), and Zacharias, 
 son of Baruch, 35 years after Christ (Joseph., Bell. Jud. 
 iv. 4).-f- But when we reflect that Jesus could scarcely 
 
 • See Thirlwall, cvii., Introd. to Schleiennacher. 
 
 t Tt is true that there waH u third Z.-K^harian, the Prophet, also sou of a 
 Bnricliiafl, who lived about 500 years before Christ ; but this man could 
 not have been the one intended by Matthew, for no record exists, or up|)eara 
 
190 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 FIDEi; 
 
 have intended to refer to a murder committed 850 years 
 before his time as terminating the long series of Jewish 
 crimes ; and, moreover, that at the period the evangelist 
 wrote, the assassination of the son of Baruch was a recent 
 event, and one likely to have made a deep impression, 
 and that the circumstances of the murder (between the 
 Temple and the Altar) apply much more closely to the 
 second than to the first Zacharias. we cannot hesitate to 
 admit the conclusion of Hug, Eichhom, and other critics,* 
 that the Zacharias mentioned by Josephus was the one 
 intended by Matthew. Hug says : — 
 
 " There cannot be a doubt, if we attend to the name, 
 the fact and its circumstances, and the object of Jesus in 
 citing it, that it was the same Zoxapia<; Bapovxov who, ac- 
 cording to Josephus, a short time before the destruction 
 of Jerusalem, was unjustly sh in in the temple. The 
 name is the same, the murder, and the remarkable 
 circumstances which distinguished it. correspond, as well 
 as the character of the man. Moreover, when Jesus says 
 that all the innocent blood which had been shed, from 
 Abel to Zacharias, should be avenged upon * this genera- 
 tion,' the awo and Iws denote the beginning and the end 
 of a period. This period ends with Zacharias ; he w^as to 
 be the last before the vengeance should be executed. The 
 threatened vengeance, however, was the ruin of Jeru- 
 salem, which immediately followed his death. Must it 
 not, then, have been the same Zacharias whose death is 
 distinguished in history, among so many murdered, as 
 the only righteous man between Ananias and the 
 destruction of the Holy City ? The Zacharias mentioned 
 in the Chronicles is not the one here intended. He was 
 a son of Jehoiada, and was put to death, not between the 
 temple and the altar, or iv fxiai^ n^ vcuji, but in the court ; 
 nor was he the last of those unjustly slain, or one with 
 whom an epoch in the Jewish annals terminates." 
 
 Here, then, we have an anachronism strikingly illus- 
 trative of that confusion of mind which cha,i acterises 
 
 to have existed, of the manner of hia death, and in his time the Temple 
 iras in niins. — See Hennell, p. 81,^ note. 
 *Hug, p. 314 Thirlwall, p. xoix., note, 
 
 this evan, 
 that an u 
 one with i 
 as speakir 
 octjur till ' 
 though fr< 
 not have 
 phetically 
 in the fut 
 over, havt 
 therefore, 
 intended \ 
 he was gu 
 which Jes 
 In ch. 3 
 with alm( 
 Christ : " ( 
 them in tl 
 the Holy 
 proceeded 
 allocation 
 where app 
 while as a 
 thfoughoi; 
 the form 1 
 form com/, 
 in the Ac 
 Jesus," or 
 the threef 
 is only foi 
 the formu 
 been bom 
 difficult t( 
 thence mi 
 tjuence, re 
 
 *"Hngir 
 
 tl e death of 
 
 saw the prec 
 
 using the pa; 
 
 t Pom. vl 
 
«d 850 years 
 es of Jewish 
 he evangelist 
 
 was a recent 
 impression, 
 (between the 
 losely to the 
 3t hesitate to 
 )ther critics,* 
 
 was the one 
 
 to the name, 
 it of Jesus in 
 vxov who, ac- 
 e destruction 
 emple. The 
 remarkable 
 3ond, as well 
 jn Jesus says 
 sn shed, from 
 ' this genera- 
 and the end 
 IS ; he was to 
 «cuted. The 
 uin of Jeru- 
 .th. Must it 
 hose death is 
 murdered, as 
 ias and the 
 IS mentioned 
 ed. He was 
 between the 
 in the court; 
 , or one with 
 lates." 
 
 ikingly illus- 
 chiii acterises 
 
 time the Temple 
 
 FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. — MATTHEW. 191 
 
 this evangelist, and which betrays at the same time 
 that an unwarrantable liberty has been taken by some 
 one with the language of Jesus. He is here represented 
 as speaking in the past tense of an event which did not 
 occur till 35 years after his death, and which, consequently, 
 though fresh and present to the mind of the writer, could 
 not have l^een in the mind of the speaker, unless pro- 
 phetically ; in which case it would have been expressed 
 in the future, not in the past tense * ; and would, more- 
 over, have been wholly unintelligible to his hearers. If, 
 therefore, as there seems no reason to doubt, the evangelist 
 intended to specify the Zacharias mentioned by Josephus, 
 he was guilty of putting into the mouth of Jesus words 
 which Jesus never uttered. 
 
 In ch. xxviii. 19, is another passage which we may say 
 with almost certainty never came from the mouth of 
 Christ : " Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing 
 them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of 
 the Holy Ghost." That this definite form of baptism 
 proceeded from Jesus, is opposed by the fact that such an 
 allocation of the Father, Son, and Spirit, does not else- 
 where appear, except as a form of salutation in the epistles ; 
 while as a definite form of baptism it is nowhere met with 
 throughout the New Testament. Moreover, it was not 
 the form used, and could scarcely therefore have been the 
 form commanded ; for in the apostolic epistles, and even 
 in the Acts, the form always is " baptizing into Christ 
 Jesus," or, " into the name of the Lord Jesus ; "f while 
 the threefold reference to God, Jesus, and the Holy Ghost, 
 is only found in ecclesiastical writers, as Justin. Indeed, 
 the formula in Matthew sounds so exactly as if it had 
 been borrowed from the ecclesiastical ritual, that it is 
 difficult to avoid the supposition that it was transferred 
 thence into the mouth of Jesus. Many critics, in conse- 
 tjuence, regard it as a subsequent interpolation. 
 
 * «« 
 
 ' Hng imajfines," aaya Bishop Thirlwallj loc. dt., " that Christ prtdicted 
 tie death of this Zacharias, son of Barachias,^ but that St. Matthew, who 
 saw the prediction accomplished, expressed his knowledge of the fact by 
 using the past tense." But should this then have been the aoriet i^vtixrart ? 
 t Pom. vL 3 5 Gal, iii. 27 ; Acts ii. 38, viii. 16, x. 48, xix. 6. 
 
 
192 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 FIDELI 
 
 There are two other classes of discourses attributed to 
 Jesus both in this and in the other gospels, over the 
 character of which much obscurity hangs — those in which 
 he is said to have foretold his own death and resurrec- 
 tion ; and those in which he is represented as speaking 
 of his second advent. The instances of the first are, in 
 Matthew, jive in number, in Mark f(yiJijT, in Luke /ow 
 and in John three* 
 
 Now, we will at once concede,that it is extremely prob- 
 able that Christ might easily have foreseen that a career 
 and conduct like his could, in such a time and country, 
 terminate only in a violent and cruel death ; and that in- 
 dications of such an impending fate thickened fast around 
 him as his ministry drew nearer to a close. It is even 
 possible, though in the highest degree unlikely ,i* that his 
 study of the prophets might have led him to the conclu- 
 sion that the expected Messiah, whose functions he be- 
 lieved himself sent to fulfil, was to be a suffering and 
 dying Prince. We will not even dispute that he might 
 have been so amply endowed with the spirit of prophecy 
 as distinctly to foresee his approaching crucifGdon and 
 resurrection. But we find in the evangelists themselves 
 insuperable difficulties in the way of a(finitting the belief 
 that he actually did predict these events, in the language, 
 or with anything of the precision, which is there ascribed 
 to him. 
 
 In the fourth gospel, these predictions are three in 
 number,! and in all the language is doubtful, mysterious, 
 and obscure, and the interpretation commonly put upon 
 them is not that suggested by the words themselves, nor 
 that which suggested itself to those who heard them ; but 
 
 t Matth. xii. 40 ; xvi. 21 ; xvii. 9, 22, 23 ; xx. 17-19 ; xxvi. 2, 3. Mark viii. 
 31 ; ix. 9, 10, 31 ; x. 33 ; xiv. 28. Luke ix. 22, 44 ; xviu. 82, 33 ; xxii. 13. 
 John ii. 20-22 ; iii. 14 ; xii. 32, 33 ; all very questionable. 
 
 + It was in the highest degree unlikely, because this was neither the in- 
 terpretation put upon the prophecies among the Jews of that time, nor their 
 natural signification, but it was an interpretation of the disciples ex eventu. 
 
 X We pass over those touching intimations of approaching separation con- 
 tained in the parting discourses of Jesus during and immediately proc<^iaK 
 the last supper, as there can be little doubt that at that time h!s fate was so 
 imminent as to have become evident to any acute observer, without the sup- 
 position of auperaatnral information- 
 
 is one affii 
 
 supposed t 
 
 In the thr 
 
 are numer 
 
 it was imi 
 
 and parall 
 
 and the S 
 
 priests anc 
 
 to death, a 
 
 to scourge 
 
 rise again 
 
 explicit, a 
 
 have been 
 
 ineradical 
 
 when repe 
 
 distinct oc 
 
 vmpresaio 
 
 ception of 
 
 his resurr 
 
 either of 
 
 them enti: 
 
 by the on 
 
 We fine 
 
 stantly ai 
 
 which an 
 
 dominion 
 
 — gloryin 
 
 his right 
 
 (Matt, xi 
 
 which, w 
 
 " should i 
 
 * In the c« 
 
 three days I 
 used by Jesi 
 since the wo 
 8ii>n, and co' 
 vey, the mei 
 Jews, Inth( 
 of Jesus is I 
 vey. The < 
 altation, gl( 
 tively, migl 
 
FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. — MATTHEW. 193 
 
 attributed to 
 >ls, over the 
 ose in which 
 nd resurrec- 
 ts speaking 
 first are, in 
 Luke four 
 
 emely proh- 
 rhat a career 
 .nd country, 
 md that in- 
 fast around 
 It is even 
 y,t that his 
 the conclu- 
 tions he be- 
 iiffering and 
 at he might 
 )f prophecy 
 cifikion and 
 I themselves 
 ig the belief 
 le language, 
 ere ascribed 
 
 ^re three in 
 mysterious, 
 iy put upon 
 Qselves, nor 
 I them ; but 
 
 \ 3. Mark viii. 
 !, 33 ; xxii. 15. 
 
 neither the in- 
 time, nor their 
 iplea ex eventu. 
 separation con- 
 itoly procMiiag 
 h's fate was so 
 ithout the yup- 
 
 is one affixed to them by the evangelist after the event 
 supposed to be referred to ; it is an interpretatio ex eventu* 
 In the three synoptical gospels, however, the pi-edictions 
 are numerous, precise, and conveyed in language which 
 it was impossible to mistake. Thus (in Matt. xx. 18, 19, 
 and parallel passages), " Behold, we go up to Jerusalem ; 
 and the Son of man shall be betrayed unto the chief 
 priests and unto the scribes, and they shall condemn him 
 to death, and shall deliver him to the Gentiles to mock, and 
 to scourge, and to crucify him : and the third day he shall 
 rise again." Language such as this, definite, positive, 
 explicit, and circumstantial, if really uttered, could not 
 have been misunderstood, but must have made a deep and 
 ineradicable impression on all who heard it, especially 
 when repeated, as it is stated to have been, on several 
 distinct occasions. Yet we find ample proof that no such 
 impression was made ; — that the disciples had no con- 
 ception of their Lord's approaching death — still less of 
 his resurrection ; — and that so far from their expecting 
 either of these events, both, when they occurred, took 
 them entirely by surprise ; — they were utterly confounded 
 by the one, and could not believe the other. 
 
 We find them shortly after (nay, in one instance in- 
 stantly after) these predictions were uttered, disputing 
 which among them should be greatest in their coming 
 dominion (Matt. xx. 21-24 ; Mark ix. 35 ; Luke xxii. 26) ; 
 — glorying in the idea of thrones, and asking for seats on 
 his right hand and on his left, in his Messianic kingdom 
 (Matt. xix. 28, xx. 21 ; Mark x. 37 ; Luke xxii. 30) ; 
 which, when he approached Jerusalem, they thought 
 " should immediately appear " (Luke xix. 11, xxiv. 21). 
 
 * In the case of the first of these predictions—" Destroy this temple, and in 
 three days I will raise it up," — we can scarcely adnait that these words were 
 used by Jesus (if uttered by him at all) in the sense ascribed to them by John ; 
 since the words were spoken in the temple, and in answer to the demand for a 
 8i(>n, and could therefore only have conveyed, and have been intended to con- 
 vey, the meaning which we Know they actually did convey to the inquiring 
 Jews, In the two other cases (or three, if we reckon viii. 28 as one), the language 
 of Jesus is too indefinite for us to know what meaning he intended it to con- 
 vey. The expression " to be lifted up," is thrice used, and may mean ex- 
 altation, glorification (its natural significatioij, or, artificially and figura- 
 tively, might be intended to refer to bis cnioifixion. 
 
 I 
 
194 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 FIDELIT 
 
 When Jesus was arrested in the garden of Gethsemane, 
 they iirst attempted resistance, and then " forsook him 
 and fled ; " and so completely were they scattered, that it 
 was left for one of the Sanhedrim, Joseph of Aiimathea, 
 to provide even for his decent burial ; — while the women 
 who " watched afar off," and were still faithful to his 
 memory, brought spices to embalm the body — a sure sign, 
 were any needed, that the idea of his resurrection had 
 never entered into their minds. Further, when the wo- 
 men reported his resurrection to the disciples, "their 
 words seemed to them as idle tales, and they believed 
 them not " (Luke xxiv, 11). The conversation, moreover, 
 of the two disciples on the road to Emmaus is sufficient 
 proof that the resurrection of their Lord was a conception 
 which had never crossed their thoughts ; — and, finally, 
 according to John, when Mary found the body gone, her 
 only notion was that it must have been removed by the 
 gardener (xx. 15). 
 
 All this shows, beyond, we think, the possibility of 
 question, that the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus 
 were wholly unexpected by his disciples. If further 
 proof were wanted, we find it in the words of the evan- 
 gelists, who repeatedly intimate (as if struck by the in- 
 congruity we have pointed out) that they " knew not," 
 or " understood not," these sayings. (Mark ix. 31, 32 ; 
 Luke ix. 45, xviii. 34 ; John xx. 9). 
 
 Here, then, we have two distinct statements, which 
 mutually exclude and contradict each other. If Jesus 
 really foretold his death and resurrection in the terms 
 recorded in the Gospels, it is inconceivable that the dis- 
 ciples should have misunderstood him ; for no words 
 could be more positive, precise, or intelligible, than those 
 which he is said to have repeatedly addressed to them. 
 Neither could they have forgotten what had been so 
 strongly urged upon their memory by their Master, as 
 completely as it is evident from their subsequent conduct 
 they actually did.* They might, indeed, have disbelieved 
 
 * Moreover, if they had so completely forgotten these predictions, whence 
 did the evangelists derive them? 
 
 his pvedicti 
 
 have done), 
 
 led them to 
 
 think of it 
 
 prophecy 
 
 their minds 
 
 The cone 
 
 dictions we 
 
 uttered by 
 
 o-loomy ant 
 
 mind, and 
 
 danger cai 
 
 these app« 
 
 them for ai 
 
 he did so, 
 
 vious to, th 
 
 intimations 
 
 doahfless, I 
 
 existence o 
 
 garded by 
 
 minds afte 
 
 expanding 
 
 etition for 
 
 the evang( 
 
 prophetic : 
 
 us. 
 
 Anothei 
 tory of tl 
 affirming 1 
 terminatic 
 might he J 
 49; Luk( 
 the passio 
 connected 
 plains wh 
 passages "i 
 
 * " There 
 the mouth o 
 of his passio 
 crucified bee 
 
J^eth8emane, 
 Porsook him 
 •ered, that it 
 Arimathea, 
 the women 
 ;hf ul to his 
 -a sure sign, 
 rectiou had 
 len the wo- 
 )les, "their 
 ey believed 
 1, moreover, 
 is sufficient 
 t conception 
 nd, finally, 
 y gone, her 
 )ved by the 
 
 >ssibility of 
 )n of Jesus 
 If further 
 )f the evan- 
 : by the in- 
 knew not," 
 :ix.31, 32; 
 
 mts, which 
 . If Jesus 
 
 the terms 
 lat the dis- 
 ' no words 
 than those 
 id to them, 
 id been so 
 
 Master, as 
 mt conduct 
 disbelieved 
 
 ctions, whence 
 
 FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. — MATTHEW. 195 
 
 his prediction (as Peter appears in the first instance to 
 have done), but in that case, his crucifixion would have 
 led them to expect his resurrection, or, at all events, to 
 think of it : — which it *did not. The fulfilment of one 
 prophecy would necessarily have recalled the other to 
 tliL'ir minds. 
 
 The conclusion, therefore, is inevitable — that the pre- 
 dictions were ascribed to Jesus after the event, not really 
 uttered by him. It is, indeed, very probable that, as 
 o-loomy anticipations of his own death pressed upon his 
 mind, and became stronger and more confirmed as the 
 danger came nearer, he endeavoured to communicate 
 these apprehensions to his followers, in order to prepare 
 them for an event so fatal to their worldly hopes. That 
 he did so, we think the conversations during, and pre- 
 vious to, the last supper afford ample proof. These vague 
 intimations of coming evil — inteinningled and relieved, 
 doiihiless, by strongly expressed convictions of a future 
 existence of reunion and reward, disbelieved or disre- 
 garded by the disciples at the time — recurred to their 
 minds after all was over ; and gathering strength, and 
 expanding in definiteness and fulness during constant rep- 
 etition for nearly forty years, had at the period when 
 the evangelists tvrote, become consolidated into the fixed 
 prophetic form in which they have been transmitted to 
 us. 
 
 Another argument may be adduced, strongly confirma- 
 tory of this view. Jesus is repeatedly represented as 
 affirming that his expected sufferings and their glorious 
 termination must take place, in order that the prophecies 
 night be fulfilled. (Matt. xxvi. 24, 54; Mark ix. 12, xiv. 
 49 ; Luke xiii. 33, xviii. 31, xxii. 37, xxiv. 27). Now, 
 the passion of the disciples for representing everything 
 connected with Jesus as the fulfilment of prophecy, ex- 
 plains why they should have sought, after his death, for 
 passages which might be supposed to prefigure it,* — and 
 
 * " There were sufficient motives for the Christian legend tlius to put into 
 the mouth of Jesus, afte'- the event, a prediction of the particidar features 
 of his passion, especially of the ignominious crucifixion. The more a Christ 
 crucified became '^anto the Jews a stumbling-block, and unto the Greeks fool- 
 
196 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 •why these accommodations of prophecy should, in process 
 of time, and of transmission, have been attributed to 
 Jesus himself. But if we assume, as is commonly done, 
 that these references to prophecy really proceeded from 
 Christ in the first instance, we are landed in the inadmis- 
 sible, or at least the embarrassing and unorthodox con- 
 clusion, that he interpreted the prophets erroneously. To 
 confine ourselves to the principal passages only, a pro- 
 found grammatical and historical exposition has convin- 
 cingly sho\ n, to all who are in a condition to liberate 
 themselves from dogmatic presuppositions, that in none 
 of these is there any allusion to the sufferings of Christ.* 
 
 One of these references to prophecy in Matthew has 
 evident marks of being an addition to the traditional 
 words of Christ by the evangelist himself. In Matt. xvi. 
 4, we have the following : " A wicked and adulterous 
 generation seeketh after a sign ; and there shall no sign 
 be given unto it, but the sign of the prophet Jonaf , " The 
 same expression precisely is recorded by Luke (xi. 29), 
 with this addition, showing what the reference to Jonas 
 real ly meant : " For as Jonas was a sign unto the Ninevitos, 
 so also shall the Son of man be to this generation. The 
 men of Nineve shall rise up in the judgment with this 
 generation, and shall condemn it : for they repented at the, 
 preaching of Jonas ; and, behold, a greater than Jonas is 
 here." But when Matthew repeats the same answer of 
 Jesus in answer to the same demand for a sign (xii. 40), 
 he adds the explanation of the reference, " For as Jonas 
 was three days and three nights in the whale's belly ; so 
 shall the Son of man be three days and three nights [which 
 Jesus was not, but only one day and two nightsf] in the 
 heart of the earth ; " — and he then proceeds with the same 
 context as Luke. 
 
 The prophecies of the second coming of Christ (Matt, 
 
 ishnesB " (1 Cor. i. 23), the more need was there to remove the offence by every 
 possible means ; and as among the subsequent events, the resurrection es- 
 pecially served as a retrospective cancelling of that shameful death, so it mnst 
 . nave been earnestly desired to take the sting from that offensive catastrophe 
 beforehand also ; and this could not be done more effectually than by such a 
 minute prediction." — Strauss, iii. 54, where this idea is fully developed.- 
 
 * Even Dr. Arnold admitted this fully. (Sermons on Interpretations of 
 Prophecy, Preface). 
 
 + [Nay : possibly only a few hours.] 
 
 FIDELITY 
 
 xxiv; Mark 
 up with tho! 
 a manner w 
 of orthodox 
 passages w 
 which they 
 who wrote i 
 many sourc< 
 Christians— 
 the world si 
 those days"; 
 take place c 
 ation. " Vc 
 pass away, 
 34 ; Mark x 
 ing here, wl 
 of man com 
 I say unto ; 
 Israel, till t 
 I will that 
 (John xxi. * 
 Now,ift] 
 was entireb 
 spuit was r 
 follow close 
 years have 
 inary signs 
 If these pi 
 evangelist 
 mouth of C 
 never uttei 
 Much de 
 the predict 
 to the Ad 
 creditable 
 examined 
 
 * See 1 Cor 
 Peter iv. 7 ; 1 
 
 tAn appai 
 Mark xiii. 10, 
 all nations." J 
 that St. Paul 
 
Id, in process 
 ttributed to 
 monly done, 
 ceeded from 
 the inadmis- 
 •thodox con- 
 aeously. To 
 only, a pro- 
 has convin- 
 1 to liberate 
 hat in none 
 b of Christ.* 
 atthew has 
 i traditional 
 n Matt. xvi. 
 adulterous 
 hall no sign 
 onaf," The 
 ike (xi. 29), 
 36 to Jonas 
 leNinevitPs, 
 ation. The 
 fit with this 
 rented at the, 
 an Jonas is 
 6 answer of 
 ?n (xii. 40), 
 'or as Jonas 
 i's belly ; so 
 ghts [which 
 itsf ] in the 
 th the same 
 
 irist (Matt. 
 
 ffence by every 
 esurrection es- 
 ath, 80 it must 
 ve catastrojjhe 
 han by such a 
 develof»ed.- 
 irpretations of 
 
 FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. — MATTHEW. 197 
 
 xxiv ; Mark xiii ; Luke xvii. 22-37, xxi. 6-36) are mixed 
 up with those of the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus in 
 a manner which has long been the perplexity and despair 
 of ortliodox commentators. The obvious meaning of the 
 passages which contain these predictions — the sense in 
 which they were evidently understood by the evangelists 
 who wrote them down — the sense which we know from 
 many sources* they conveyed to the minds of the early 
 Christians — clearly is, that the coming of Christ to judge 
 the world should iollow iTnmediatelyf ("immediately," "in 
 those days") the destruction of the Holy City, and should 
 take place during the lifetime of the then existing gener- 
 ation. " Verily I say unto you, This generation shall not 
 pass away, till all these things be fulfilled" (Matt. xxiv. 
 34 ; Mark xiii. 30 ; Luke xxi. 32). " There be some stand- 
 ing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son 
 of man coming in his kingdom " (Matt. xvi. 28). " Verily 
 I say unto you. Ye shall not have gone over the cities of 
 Israel, till the Son of man be come " (Matt. x. 23). " K 
 I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee ? " 
 (John xxi. 23). 
 
 Now, if these predictions really proceeded from Jesus, he 
 was entirely in error on the subject, and the prophetic 
 spirit was not in him ; for not only did his advent not 
 follow close on the destruction of Jerusalem, but 1800 
 years have since elapsed, and neither he nor the prelim- 
 inary signs which were to announce him, have yet appeared. 
 If these predictions did n^t proceed from him, then the 
 evangelist has taken the liberty of putting into the 
 mouth of Christ words and announcements which Christ 
 never utterad. 
 
 Much desperate ingenuity has been exerted to separate 
 the predictions relating to Jerusalem from those relating 
 to the Advent ; but these exertions have been neither 
 creditable nor successful; and they have already been 
 examined and refuted at great length. Moreover, they 
 
 * See 1 Cor. x. 11, xv. 61; PhU. iv. 5 ; 1 Thess. iv. 15 ; Jamen v. 8 ; I 
 Peter iv. 7 ; 1 John ii. 18 ; Rev. i. 1, 3, xxii. 7, 10, 12, 20. 
 
 t An apparent contradiction to thie ia presented by Matt xxiv. 14 ; 
 Mark xiii. 10, \»here we are told that '* the gospel must be first preached to 
 all nations." It appears, however, from Col. i. 6, 6, 23 (se-j also Romans x. 18), 
 that St. Paul considered this to have been alr<>^v accomplished in his time. 
 
198 
 
 THE CREED OF CHBISTENDOM. 
 
 are rendered necessary only by two previous (usvmptions: 
 first, that Jesus cannot have been mistaken as to the 
 future ; and, secondly, that he really uttered these pre- 
 dictions. Now, neither of these assumptions is capable of 
 proof. The first we shall not dispute, because we have 
 no adequate means of coming to a conclusion on the sub- 
 ject. But as to the second assumption, we tliink there 
 are several indications that, though the predictions in 
 question were current among the Christians when the 
 Gospels were composed, yet that they did not, at least as 
 handed down to us, proceed from the lips of Christ ; but 
 were, as far as related to the second advent, the unau- 
 thorized anticipations of the disciples; and, as far as related 
 to the destruction of the city, partly gathered from the 
 denunciations of Old Testament prophecy, and partly from 
 actual knowledge of the events which passed under their 
 eyes. 
 
 In the Jirsi place, it is not admissible that Jesus could 
 have been so true a prophet as to one part of the predic- 
 tion, and so entirely in error as to the other, both parts 
 referring equally to future events. Secondly, the three 
 gospels in which these predictions occur, are allowed to 
 have been written between the years 65 and 72 A.D., or 
 during the war which ended in the destruction of Jeru- 
 salem* ; that is, they were written during and after the 
 events which they predict. They may, therefore, either 
 have been drawn entirely from the events, or have been 
 vaguely in existence before, but have derived their 
 definiteness and precision from the events. And we have 
 already seen in the case of the first evangelist, that he, at 
 least, did not scruple to eke out and modify the pi evic- 
 tions he recorded, from his own experience of their fulfil- 
 ment. Thirdly, the parallel passages, both in Matthew 
 and Mark, contain an expression twice repeated — " the 
 elect " — which we can say almost with certainty was un- 
 known in the time of Christ, though frequently found in 
 the epistles, and used at the time the Gospels were com- 
 posed, to designate the members oi the Christian Church. 
 
 * The war began by Vespasian's entering Galilee in the beginning of the 
 yMtf A.D. 67, and the city was taken in the autumn of a.d. 70. 
 
 SAME 
 
 Many of t 
 
 ters— tendii 
 
 several stai 
 
 to Jesus 
 
 not really 
 
 to Mark an 
 
 —of the gr 
 
 Matthew, I 
 
 gelist copi( 
 
 same docui 
 
 their histoi 
 
 was the ear 
 
 As we hi 
 
 the traditic 
 
 pel was w: 
 
 originated 
 
 who was s 
 
 records a 
 
 tradition 1: 
 
 pared witl 
 
 tirely the j 
 
 matters re 
 
 water, and 
 
 miraculoui 
 
 everythini 
 
 body was 
 
 visitors th 
 
 Tn addi 
 
 ties in tl 
 
 • SeeThii 
 
 + We muf 
 
 with the 8th 
 
'Sumptions : 
 1 as to the 
 [ these pre- 
 is capable of 
 use we have 
 on the sub- 
 tliink there 
 dictions in 
 i when the 
 , at least as 
 !)hrist; but 
 t, the unau- 
 ar as related 
 id from the 
 partly from 
 under their 
 
 Jesus could 
 the predic- 
 , both parts 
 y, the three 
 3 allowed to 
 i 72 AJ)., or 
 on of Jeru- 
 id after the 
 fore, either 
 r have been 
 rived their 
 -nd we have 
 , that he, at 
 the jjiedic- 
 their fulfil- 
 n Matthew 
 ated—" the 
 ity was un- 
 ly found in 
 were com- 
 :an Church. 
 
 giiming of the 
 
 CHAPTER IX. 
 
 SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED — MARK AND LUKE. 
 
 Many of the criticisms contained in the two last chap- 
 ters — tending to prove that Matthew's Gospel contains 
 several statements not strictly accurate, and attributes 
 to Jesus several expressions and discourses which were 
 not really uttered by him — are equally applicable both 
 to Mark and Luke. The similarity — not to say identity 
 — of the greater portion of Mark's narrative with that of 
 Matthew, leaves no room for doubt either that one evan- 
 gelist copied from the other, or that both employed the 
 same documents, or oral narratives, in the compilation of 
 their histories. Our own clear conviction is, that Mark 
 was the earliest in time, and far the most correct in fact. 
 
 As we have already stated, we attach little weight to 
 the tradition of the second century, that the second Gos- 
 pel was written by Mark, the companion of Peter. It 
 originated with Papias, whose works are now lost, but 
 who was stated to bo a " weak man " by Eusebius, who 
 records a few fragments of his writings. But if the 
 tradition be correct, the omissions in this Gospel, as com- 
 pared with the first, are significant enough. It omits en- 
 tirely the genealogies, the miraculous conception, several 
 matters relating to Peter (especially his walking on the 
 water, and the commission of the keys),* and everything 
 miraculous or improbable relating to the resurrection *f — 
 everything, in fact, but the simple statement that the 
 body was missing, and that a ** young man " assured the 
 visitors that Christ was risen. 
 
 In addition to these, there are two or three peculiari- 
 ties in the discourses of Jesus, as recorded by Mark, 
 
 • See Thirlwall's remarks on this subject. Introd. cviL 
 t We must not forget that the real geuuir') Gospel of Mark terminatM 
 with the 8th verse of tiie 16th diapter. 
 
200 
 
 THE C A;r >F CHBISTENDOM. 
 
 Wd 
 
 
 m 
 
 which indicate that cae evangelist thought it necessary 
 and allowable slightly to modify the language of them, 
 in Older to suit them to the ideas or the feelings of the 
 Gentile converts ; if, as is commonly supposed, it was 
 principally designed for them. We copy a few instances 
 of these, though resting little upon them. 
 
 Matthew, who wrote for the Jews, has the following 
 passage, in the injunctions pronounced by Jesus on the 
 sending forth of the twelve apostles : " Go not into the 
 way of the Gentiles, and into any city of the Samaritans 
 enter ye not : But go rather to the lost sheep of the 
 house of Israel " (x. 5). Mark, who wrote for the Gen- 
 tiles, omits entirely this unpalatable charge " (vi. 7-13). 
 
 Matthew (xv. 24), in the story of the Canaanitish 
 woman, makes Jesus say, " I am not sent but unto the 
 lost sheep of the house of Israel." Mark (vii. 26) omits 
 this expression entirely, and modifies the subsequent re- 
 mark. In Matthew it is thus ; — " It is not meet to take 
 the children's bread, and to cast it to the dogs." In Mark 
 it is softened by the preliminaiy, " Let the children first 
 he filled;' &;c. 
 
 Matthew (xxiv. 20), " But pray ye that your flight be 
 not in the winter, neither on the fiahbath day" Mark 
 omits the last clause, which would have had no meaning 
 for any but the Jews, whose Sabbath day's journey was 
 by law restricted to a small distance. 
 
 In the promise given to the disciples, in answer to 
 Peter's question, " Behold, we have forsaken all, and fol- 
 lowed thee ; what shall we have therefore V The follow- 
 ing verse, given by Matthew (xix. 28), is omitted by 
 Mark (x. 28) : — " Verily I say unto you, That ye which 
 have followed mo, in the regeneration when the Son of 
 man shall sit in the throne of his glory, ye also shall sit 
 upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel."* 
 
 The Gospel of Luke, which is a work in some respects 
 of . iore pretension, and unquestionably of more literary 
 
 * [It is, however, almost impoisible to resist the iiif erenoe that we have 
 her* one of the evanueliat's unwarranted ascriptions to Jesua of words which 
 he never uttered, wEen we compare the subsequeut contradiction— sx. 21- 
 
 merit, th 
 
 ol)serv;iti< 
 
 ocics of 1 
 
 Matthe\v 
 
 ('([ually t« 
 
 occuv; ai 
 
 third ovf 
 
 discourse! 
 
 liesirles tl 
 
 Loar an e 
 
 wil! l>e ill 
 
 The fir 
 
 of the an 
 
 all the n 
 
 the annu] 
 
 of Jesus- 
 
 crepancie 
 
 We are s 
 
 this chap 
 
 both of i. 
 
 the narra 
 
 at great 1 
 
 daring cli 
 
 and by S( 
 
 divines o 
 
 lated by 
 
 already c 
 
 " Thus 
 
 as an ori^ 
 
 it in this 
 
 the impr 
 
 ical worl 
 
 ter supp( 
 
 will ado| 
 
 the adve 
 
 • The rer 
 gelists ascr 
 uttered it. 
 member th 
 HoitfceB, na 
 
FIDELITY OF GOSPEL HISTORY. — MARK AND LIKE. 201 
 
 t it necessai-y 
 uage of them, 
 jelings of the 
 30sed, it was 
 few instances 
 
 the following 
 Jesus on the 
 not into the 
 le Samaritans 
 sheep of the 
 for tne Gen- 
 ' (vi. 7-13). 
 Canaanitish 
 but unto the 
 di. 26) omits 
 ibsequent re- 
 meet to take 
 fs." In Mark 
 children first 
 
 ^our flight be 
 day." Mark 
 i no meaning 
 journey was 
 
 a answer to 
 L all, and fol- 
 The follow- 
 8 omitted by 
 lat ye which 
 1 the Son of 
 also shall sit 
 ss of Israel."* 
 ome respects 
 nore literary 
 
 oe that we have 
 I of words which 
 kdiotion— XX. 21- 
 
 merit, than the two first, will require a few additional 
 observations. The remarks we have made on the propli- 
 ocics of his own sutierings and resurrection, alleged by 
 Matthew and Mark to have been uttered by Jesus, apply, 
 ('([ually to Luke's narrative, in which similar passages 
 occur; and in these, therefore, we must ailmit that the 
 third evangelist, like the other two, ascribed to Jesus 
 rliscourses which never really proceeded from him.* But 
 l)esides these, there are several passages in Luke which 
 bear an equally apochryphal character, some of which it 
 will be interesting to notice. 
 
 The first chapter, from verse 5-80, contains the account 
 of the annunciation and birth of John the Baptist, with 
 all the marvellous circumstances attending it, and also 
 the annunciation to Mary, and the miraculous conception 
 of Jesus — an account exhibiting many remarkable dis- 
 crepancies with the corresponding narrative in Matthew. 
 We are spared the necessity of a detailed investigation oi 
 this chapter by the agreement of the most learned critics, 
 both of the orthodox and sceptical schools, in considering 
 the narrative as poetical and legendary. It is examined 
 at great length by Strauss, who is at the head of tlie most 
 daring class of the Biblical Commentators of Germany, 
 and by Schleiermacher, who ranks first among the learned 
 divines of that country. The latter (in the work trans- 
 lated by one of our most erudite and libei-al Prelates, and 
 already often referred to) writes thus, pp. 25-7 : — 
 
 " Thus, then, we begin by detaching the first chapter 
 as an originally independent composition. If we consider 
 it in this light somewhat more closely, we cannot resist 
 the impression that it was originally rather a little poet- 
 ical work than a properly-historical narrative. The lat- 
 ter supposition, in its strictest sense at all events, no one 
 will adopt, or contend that the angel Gabriel announced 
 the advent of the Messiah in figures so purely Jewish, and 
 
 • The i-emark will perhaps occur to some, that the circumstance of threeev&n- 
 gelJHts ascribing the same language to Jesus, is a strong proof that he really 
 uttered it. But the fallacy of this argument will bo ar-parent when we re- 
 member thfait there is ample evidence that they ali drew from the same 
 sources, namely, the extant current tradition. 
 
202 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 FIDELn 
 
 in expressions taken mostly from the Old Testament ; or 
 that the alternate song between Elizabeth and Mary ac- 
 tually took place in the manner described ; or that Zacha- 
 rias, at the instant of recovering his speech, made use of 
 it to utter the hymn, without being disturbed by the joy 
 and surprise of the company, by which the narrator him«- 
 self allows his description to be interrupted. At all 
 events we should then be obliged to suppose that the 
 author made additions of his own, and enriched the his- 
 torical narrative by the lyrical effusions of his own genius." 
 .... "If we consider the whole grouping of the narra- 
 tive, there naturally presents itself to us a pleasing little 
 composition, completely in the style and manner of sev- 
 eral Jewish poems, still extant among our apocryphal 
 writings, written in all probability originally in Aramaic 
 by a Christian of the more liberal Judaising school." . . . 
 " There are many other statements which I should not 
 venture to pronounce historical, but would rather explain 
 by the occasion the poet had for them. To these belongs, 
 m t'^e first place, John's being a late-born child, which is 
 evidently only imagined for the sake of analogy with 
 several heroes of Hebrew antiquity ; and, in the next place, 
 the relation between the ages of John and Christ, and 
 likewise the consanguity of Mary and Elizabeth, which 
 besides, it is difficult to reconcile with the assertion of 
 John (John i. 33), that he did not know Christ before his 
 baptism." 
 
 Strauss's analysis of the chapter is in the highest degree 
 masterly and convincing, and we think cannot fail to sat- 
 isfy all whose minds have been trained in habits of logic- 
 al investigation. After showing at great length the iin- 
 satisfactoriness and inadmissibility of both the supernat- 
 ural and rationalistic interpretations, he shows, by a com- 
 E arisen of similar legends in the Old Testament — the 
 irth of Ishmael, Isaac, Samuel, and Samson, in particular 
 — how exactly the narrati\ j in Luke is framed m accord- 
 ance with the established ideas and rules of Hebrew 
 poetry.* 
 
 * We cpnnot agree with one of Strauss's critics (see Prospective Review, 
 Nov, 1846), that the evident poetical character of the first chapters of Mat- 
 
 " The sc 
 birth of d 
 OldTestai 
 in the min 
 tures mos 
 children b 
 prototype, 
 were botJ 
 ' were advi 
 son. It is 
 of the fat 
 parents^ ai 
 Abraham, 
 terity thro 
 Daan, doul 
 shall inhei 
 this?' Th 
 the Baptisi 
 son, Samso 
 destined t 
 was know] 
 source. B 
 womb, anc 
 The lyrica' 
 uel. As S 
 care of th 
 does the ft 
 particular 
 the same c 
 song of pn 
 natural inc 
 
 thew and Liil 
 
 early Chriatia 
 
 gobpels with V 
 
 against their i 
 
 agaiust the g( 
 
 — e. g. the mi 
 
 of money in t 
 
 chapters has 
 
 evidence. 
 
 • Leben J< 
 
 t The orig 
 
 t Compare 
 
istament ; or 
 tnd Mary ac- 
 [• that Zacha- 
 
 made use of 
 id by the joy 
 larrator him'- 
 )ted. At all 
 ose that the 
 ched the his- 
 own genius." 
 of the narra- 
 )leasiiig little 
 anner of sev- 
 apocryphal 
 y in Aramaic 
 
 school." . . . 
 
 I should not 
 ather explain 
 these belongs, 
 aild, which is 
 Einalogy with 
 he next place, 
 d Christ, and 
 zabeth, which 
 3 assertion of 
 rist before his 
 
 lighest degree 
 lot fail to sat- 
 abits of logic- 
 ength the un- 
 the supernat- 
 ws, by a com- 
 istament — the 
 I, in particular 
 Qed in accord- 
 s of Hebrew 
 
 ■ospective Review, 
 t ohaptera of Mat- 
 
 FIDELITY OF GOSPEL HISTORY. — MARK AND LUKE. 203 
 
 " The scattered traits," said he,* " respecting the late 
 birth of different distinguished nen, as recorded in the 
 Old Testament, blended themselves into a compound image 
 in the mind of the author, whence he selected the fea- 
 tures most appropriate to his present subject. Of the 
 children bom of aged parents, Isaac is the most ancient 
 prototype. As it is said of Zacharias and Elizabeth, 'they 
 were both advanced in days,' so Abraham and Sarah 
 ' were advanced in days'f when they were promised a 
 son. It is likewise from this history that the incredulity 
 of the father on account of the advanced age of both 
 parents^ and the demand of a sign, are borrowed. As 
 Abraham, when Jehovah promised him a numerous pos- 
 terity through Isaac, who should inherit the land of Ca- 
 naan, doubtingly inquires, ' Whereby shall I know that I 
 shall inherit it ? ' — so Zacharias, * Whereby shall I know 
 this V The incident of the angel announcing the birth of 
 the Baptist is taken from the h istory of another- late-born 
 son, Samson. The command which before his birth pre- 
 destined the Baptist — whose later ascetic mode of life 
 was known — to be a Nazarite, is taken from the same 
 source. Both were to be consecrated to God from the 
 womb, and the same diet was prescribed for both.j .... 
 The lyrical effusions in Luke are from the history of Sam- 
 uel. As Samuel's mother, when consigning him to the 
 care of the High Priest, breaks forth into a hymn, so 
 does the father of John at the circumcision ; though the 
 particular expressions in the canticle uttered by Mary, in 
 the same chapter, have a closer resemblance to Hannah's 
 song of praise, than that of Zacharias. The only super- 
 natural incident of the narrative, of which the Old Testa- 
 
 thew and Luke, their similarity with parts of the apocryphal gospels and 
 early Christian writings, and tfieir dissimilarity in tone with the rest of the 
 gospels with which they are incorporated, are sufficient to decide the question 
 affaiuat their genuineness. If this argument were valid, we must pronounce 
 against the genuineness of other passages of our gospels on the same ground 
 — e, g. the miracle of (Jana — the mirnculous draught of fishes— and the piece 
 of money in the fish's mouth — and others. The genuineness of these initial 
 chaoters has often been denied, but without sufficient warrant from external 
 evidence. 
 
 • Leben Jesu, i. 118, et seq. 
 
 + The original words are the same in both instances. 
 
 t Compare Luke i. 15, with Judges xiii. 4, 6, and Ntimbers vi. 3. 
 
204 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 I 
 
 tiient oftei-s no precise analogy, is the dumbness. But if it 
 be borne in mind that the asking and receiving a sign 
 from heaven in confirmation of a promise or prophecy was 
 common among the Hebrews (Isaiah vii. 11) ; that the 
 temporary loss of one of the senses was the peculiar pun- 
 ishment inflicted after a heavenly vision (Acts ix. 8, 17) ; 
 that Daniel became dumb while the angel was speaking 
 with him, and did not recover his speech till the angel 
 had touched his lips and opened his mouth (Dan. x. 15) ; 
 the origin of this incident also will be found in legend, 
 and not in historical fact. So that here we stand upon 
 purely mythico-poetical ground ; the only historical real- 
 ity which we can hold fast as positive matter of fact being 
 this : — the impression made by John the Baptist, in virtue 
 of his ministry, and his relation to Jesus, was so powerful 
 as to lead to the subsequent glorification of his birth in 
 connection with the Christian legend of the birth of the 
 Messiah." 
 
 In the second chapter we have the account of the birth 
 of Jesus, and the accompanying apparition of a multitude 
 of angels to shepherds in the fields near Bethlehem — as 
 to the historical foundation of which Strauss and Schleier- 
 macher are at variance ; the former regarding it as wholly 
 mythical, and the latter as based upon an actual occurrence, 
 imperfectly remembered in after times, when the celebrity 
 of Jesus caused every contribution to the history of his 
 birth and infancy to be eagerly sought for. All that we 
 can say on the subject with any certainty is, that the tone 
 of the narrative is legendary. The poetical rhapsody of 
 Simeon when Jesus was presented in the temple may be 
 passed over with the same remark ; — but the 33rd verse, 
 where we are told that " Joseph and his mother marvelled 
 at those things which were spoken of him," proves clearly 
 one of two things : — either the unhistorical character of 
 the Song of Simeon, and of the consequent astonishment 
 of the parents of Jesus — or the unreality of the miracu- 
 lous annunciation and conception. It is impossible, if an 
 angel had actually announced to Mary the birth of the 
 divine child in the language, or anything resembling the 
 language, in Luke i. 31-35 ; and if, in accordance with 
 
 FIDELIT 
 
 that annou 
 before she 
 she should 
 prophetic 
 the angeli( 
 miraculouj 
 "she pone 
 this dilficu 
 the first ai 
 inally by ( 
 his Gospel 
 not avoid 
 an unauth 
 
 The ger 
 may be in 
 piexitios i 
 live be co 
 only of J 
 but simpl; 
 parer of t 
 knew or I 
 we can co 
 which is < 
 previous { 
 supposed, 
 copyist, B 
 the incon] 
 to omittii 
 
 The ac( 
 audible si 
 been ver^ 
 with the 
 (vii. 19) i 
 and the i 
 or interp( 
 held imp 
 descendii 
 
 * The wh( 
 by the fact 1 
 queut refere 
 
ess. But if it 
 
 ceiving a sjtrn 
 
 prophecy was 
 
 11) ; that the 
 
 peculiar pun- 
 
 .cts ix. 8, 17) ; 
 
 was speaking 
 
 till the angel 
 
 (Dan. X. 15) ; 
 
 Lind in legend, 
 
 ve stand upon 
 
 listorical real- 
 
 sr of fact being 
 
 ptist, in virtue 
 
 as so powerful 
 
 Df his birth in 
 
 le birth of the 
 
 [it of the birth 
 of a multitude 
 Bethlehem — as 
 8 and Schleier- 
 ig it as wholly 
 ual occurrence, 
 n the celebrity 
 history of his 
 All that we 
 I, that the tone 
 a,l rhapsody of 
 /Cmple may be 
 he 33rd verse, 
 ther marvelled 
 proves clearly 
 l1 character of 
 astonishment 
 of the miracu- 
 ipossible, if an 
 e birth of the 
 esembling the 
 cordance with 
 
 FIDELITY OF GOSPEL HISTORY. — MARK AND LUKE. 205 
 
 that announcement, Mary had found herself with child 
 before she had any natural possibility of being so — that 
 she should have felt any astonishment whatever at the 
 prophetic announcement of Simeon, so consonant with 
 the angelic promise, especially when occurring after the 
 miraculous vision of the Shepherds, which, we are told, 
 "she pondered in her heart." Schleiermacher has felt 
 this difficulty, and endeavours to evade it by considering 
 the first and second chapters to be two monographs orig- 
 inally by different hands, which Luke incorporated into 
 his Gospel. This was very probably' the case ; but it does 
 not avoid the difficulty, as it involves giving up ii. 33 as 
 an unauthorized and incorrect statement. 
 
 The genealogy of Jesus, as given in the third chapter, 
 may be in the main correct, though there are some per- 
 plexities in one portion of it ; but if the previous narra- 
 tive be correct, it is not the genealogy of Jesus at all, but 
 only of Joseph, who was no relation to him whatever 
 but simply his guardian. On the other hand, if the pre ■ 
 parer of the genealogy, or the evangelist who records it, 
 knew or believed the story of the miraculous conception, 
 we can conceive no reason fot his admitting a pedigree 
 which is either wholly meaningless, or destructive of his 
 previous statements. The insertion in verse 23, " as was 
 supposed," whether by the evangelist or a subsequent 
 copyist, merely shows that whoever made it perceived 
 the incongruity, but preferred neutralizing the genealogy 
 to omitting it.* 
 
 The account given by Luke (iii. 21) of the visible and 
 audible signs from heaven at the Baptism of Jesus, has 
 been very generally felt and allowed to be incompatible 
 with the inquiry subsequently made by John the Baptist 
 (vii. 19) as to whether Jesus were the Messiah or not ; 
 and the incongruity is considered to indicate inaccuracy 
 or interpolation in one of the two narratives. It is justly 
 held impossible that if John had seen the Holy Spirit 
 descending upon Jesus, and had heard a heavenly voice 
 
 * I'he whole story of the iQcamation^ however, is effectually discredited 
 by the fact that none of the Apostles or sacred Historians make any subse- 
 quent reference to it, or indicate any knowledge of it. 
 
206 
 
 THE CREBD OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 declaring Him to be the beloved Son of God, he couli 
 ever have entertained a doubt that he was the Messiah, 
 whoso coming ho himself had just announced* (iii. 16), 
 According to Luke, as he now stands, John expected the 
 Messiah — described himself as his forerunner — saw at the 
 moment of the Baptism a supernatural shape, and heard 
 a supernatural voice announcing Jesus to be that Mes- 
 siah; — and yet, shortly after — on hearing, too, of miracles 
 which should have confirmed his belief, had it e\ er wa- 
 vered — he sends a message implying doubt (or rather 
 ignorance), and asking the question which Heaven itself 
 had already answered in his hearing Some commenta- 
 tors have endeavoured to escape from tho difficulty by 
 pleading that the appearances at Baptism might have 
 been perceptible to Jesus alone ; and they have adduced 
 the use of the second person by the divine voize (" Thou 
 art my beloved Son ") in Mark and Luke, and the pecu- 
 liar language of Matthew, in confirmation of this view. 
 But (not to urge that, if the vision and the voice were 
 imperceptible to the spectators, they could not have given 
 that public and conclusive attestation to the Messiahship 
 of Jesus which was their obvious object and intention) a 
 comparison of the four accounts clearly shows that the 
 evangelists meant to state that the dove was visible and 
 the voice audible to John and to all the spectators, who, 
 according to Luke, must have been numerous.' In Mat- 
 thew the grammatical construction of iii. 16, would inti- 
 mate that it was Jesus who saw the heavens open and 
 the dove descend, but that the expression "lighting 
 upon him," ipx^fifvov ctt' airrov, should in this case have 
 been €<f> avrov, " upon himself." However, it is very pos- 
 sible that Matthew may have written inaccurate, as he 
 certainly wrote unclassical, Greek. But the voice in the 
 
 FIDELIT1 
 
 next verse, 
 beloved Soi 
 not to Jesu 
 sion, €7r'avT0 
 numbers, " 
 pass, that 
 the accoun 
 ded •• in a 
 diet the id 
 fact,— a vi 
 that it wa: 
 version gi^' 
 clearly tha 
 the traditi 
 
 1" was embo 
 represente 
 
 * Neander conceives that doubt may have assailed the mind of John in his 
 dismal phson, and led to a transient questioning of his earlier conviction, 
 and that it was in this state of feeling that he sent his disciples to Jesus. 
 Bat, in the first place, the language of the message is less that of doubt than 
 of inquiry, and would appear to intimate that the idea of Jesus' character 
 and nuBsion had been then first suggested to him by the miracles of which 
 rejxntN had reached him in his prison. And, in the next place, doubt as- 
 smils men wbn have formed an Opinion from observation or induction, not 
 xncD who ha^e received positive artd divine communication of a fact. 
 
 descending 
 appearance 
 
 Jesus. 
 
 Conside 
 
 the natura 
 
 act accord 
 
 historical 
 
 discrepam 
 
 ly indicat 
 
 different 
 
 modificati 
 
 the narra 
 
 quent mei 
 
 defender 
 
 eiSei are J 
 
 himself 8 
 
 ture mor 
 
 with a 81 
 
 In all 
 
 cure of ( 
 
 the den 
 
 testimoi 
 
 once in 
 
 34; iii. 
 
3M. 
 
 FIDELIT\ OF iiO«PEL HISTORY. — MARK AND LUKE. 207 
 
 of God, he coulm 
 ^as the Messiah 
 mnced* (iii. m 
 »hn expected the 
 mer — saw at the 
 ihape, and heanl 
 to be that Mes- 
 , too, of miracles 
 had it ev er wa- 
 oubt (or rather 
 ■a Heaven itself 
 iomft commenta- 
 h(} difficulty by 
 sm might have 
 y have adduced 
 e voi.3e (« Thou 
 3, and the pecu- 
 >n of this view. 
 the voice were 
 not have given 
 'he Messiahship 
 nd intention) a 
 shows that the 
 «^as visible and 
 pectators, who, 
 rous; InMat- 
 16, would inti- 
 vens open and 
 ion "lighting 
 his f^ase have 
 t is very pos- 
 .ccurate, as he 
 e voice in the 
 
 lindof Johninhis 
 aarlier conviction, 
 iisoiples to Jesus, 
 that of doubt tlian 
 f Jesus' character 
 miracles of which 
 t place, doubt as- 
 OT induction, not 
 of a fact. 
 
 next verse, speaking in the third person, " This is my 
 beloved Son," must have been addressed to the spectators, 
 not to Jesus. Mark has the same unharmonizing expres- 
 sion, cVaurdv. Luke describes the scene as passing before 
 numbers, " when all the people were baptized, it came to 
 pass, that Jesus also being baptized ; " — and then adds to 
 the account of the other evangelists that the dove descen- 
 
 ded " in a bodily 
 
 Siiupe, 
 
 ev (TCD/MaTiKw eiSet, as if to contra- 
 
 dict the idea that it was a subjective, not an objective 
 fact, — a vision, not a phenomenon ; he can only mean 
 that it was an appearance visible to all present. The 
 version given in the fourth evangelist shows still more 
 clearly that such was the meaning generally attached to 
 the tradition current among the Christians at the time it 
 was embodied in the Gospels. The Baptist is there 
 represented as affirming that he himself saw the Spirit 
 descending like a dove upon Jesus, and that it was this 
 appearance which convinced him of the Messiahship of 
 Jesus. 
 
 Considering all this, then, we must admit that, while 
 the naturalness of John's message to Christ, and the ex- 
 act accordance of the two accounts given of it, render the 
 historical accuracy of that relation highly probable, the 
 discrepancies in the four narratives of the baptism strong- 
 ly indicate, either that the original tradition came from 
 diflFerent sources, or that it has unde^'gone considerable 
 modification in the course of transmission ; and also that 
 the narratives themselves are discredited by the subse- 
 quent message. We think with Schleiermacher, the great 
 defender and eulogist of Luke, that the words ev o-v/utaTiKoi 
 ctSet are an interpolation which our evangelist thought 
 himself at liberty to make by way of rendering the pic- 
 ture more graphic, without perceiving their inconsistency 
 with a subsequent portion of his narrative. 
 
 In all the synoptical gospels we find instances of the 
 cure of demoniacs by Jesus early in his career, in which 
 the demons, promptly, spontaneously, and loudly, bear 
 testimony to his Messiahship. These statements occur 
 once in Matthew (viii. 29) ; four fimes in Mark (i. 24, 
 34; iii. 11 ; v. 7) ; and three times in Luke (iv. 33, 41; 
 
208 
 
 THE CREED OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 FlDHlii' 
 
 viii. 28).* Now, two points are evident to common 
 sense, and are fully admitted by honest criticism : — first, 
 that these demoniacs were lunatic and epileptic patients; 
 and, secondly, that Jesus (or the narrators who framed 
 the language of Jesus throughout the synoptical gospels) 
 shared the common belief that these maladies were caused 
 by evil spirits inhabiting the bodies of the sufferers. We 
 are then landed in this conclusion — certainly not a prob- 
 able one, nor the one intended to be conveyed by the 
 narrators — that tLe idea of Jesus being the Messiah was 
 adopt d by madmen before it had found entrance into 
 the public mind, apparently even before it was received 
 by his immediate disciples — was in fact first suggested by 
 madmen ; in other words, that it was an idea which orig- 
 inated within insane brains — which presented itself to, 
 and found acceptance with, insane brains more readily 
 than sane ones. The conception of the evangelists clearly 
 was that Jesus derived honour (and his mission confirma- 
 tion) from this early recognition of his Messianic char- 
 acter by hostile spirits of a superior order of Intelligen- 
 ces ; but to us, who know that these supposed superior 
 Intelligences were really unhappy men whose natural in- 
 tellect had been perverted or impaired, the effect of the 
 narratives becomes absolutely reversed ; — and if they are 
 tb be accepted as historical, thty lead inevitably to the 
 conclusion that the idea of the Messiahship of Jesus was 
 originally formed in disordered brains, and spread thence 
 among the mass of the disciples. The only rescue from 
 this conclusion lies in the admission, that these narratives 
 are not historical, but mythic, and belong to that class of 
 additions which early grew up in the Christian Church, 
 out of the desire to honour and aggrandise the memory 
 /f its Founder, and which our uncritical evangelists em- 
 Dodied as they found them. 
 Passing over a few minor passages of doubtful authen- 
 
 * It is worthy of remark that no narrative of the healing of demoniacs, 
 stated as such, occurs in the fourth Gosiiel. This would intimate it to be 
 the work of a man who had outgrown, or had never entertained, the idea, of 
 maladies arising from powsesaion. It is one of many iudiijations in this 
 evangelist of a C reok rather than a Jewish miud. 
 
 ticity or ai 
 
 Gospel, wh 
 
 unwaiTant 
 
 ported, aft 
 
 " He that 
 
 one. Am 
 
 And he sai 
 
 have utter 
 
 anything 
 
 very idea 
 
 utterly pr 
 
 gelists ; — i 
 
 a severe r 
 
 into the si 
 
 shall I not 
 
 thy sword 
 
 shall peris 
 
 passf'.ge w 
 
 early nar 
 
 Peter havi 
 
 si on ; and 
 
 like Luke 
 
 apocrypha 
 
 In cone' 
 
 synoptical 
 
 really occi 
 
 not utter ; 
 
 of great si 
 
 stances, h( 
 
 want of h 
 
 indicates ' 
 
 scrutiny c 
 
 curable ni 
 
 communit 
 
 * Compari 
 original exp 
 erence for L 
 words by th' 
 For the ana* 
 in Matthew 
 
KIDKLITY OF GOSPEL HISTORY. — MARK AND LUKE. 209 
 
 tful authen- 
 
 ticity or accuracy,* we come to one near the close of the 
 Gospel, which we have no scruple in pronouncing to bo an 
 unwarranted interpolation. In xxii. 36-38, Jesus is re- 
 porteii, after the last Supper, to have said to his disciples, 
 " He that hath no sword, let him sell his garment, and buy 
 one. And they said. Lord, behold, hero are two swords. 
 And he said unto them, It is enough." Christ never could 
 have uttered such a command, nor, we should imagine 
 anything which could have been mistaken for it. The 
 very idea is contradicted by his whole character, and 
 utterly precluded by the narratives of the other evan- 
 gelists ; — for when Peter did use the sword, he met with 
 a severe rebuke from his Master : — " Put up thy sword 
 into the sheath : the cup which my Father hath given me 
 shall I not drink it," — a(;cording to John. " Put up again 
 thy sword into its placo ; for all they that take the sword 
 shall perish by the sword," — according to Matthew. The 
 passf.gt; we conceive to be a clumsy invention of some 
 early narrator, to account for the remarkable fact of 
 Peter having a sword at the time of Chris's apprehen- 
 sion ; and it is inconceivable to us how a sensible compiler 
 like Luke could have admitted into his history such an 
 apocryphal and unharmonizing fragment. 
 
 In conclusion, then, it appears certain that in all the 
 synoptical gospels we have events related which did not 
 really occur, and words ascribed to Jesus which Jesus did 
 not utter ; and that many of these words and events are 
 of great significence. In the great majority of these in- 
 stances, however, this incorrectness does not imply any 
 want of honesty on the part of the evangelists, but merely 
 indicates that they adopted and embodied, without much 
 scrutiny or critical acumen, whatever probable and hon- 
 ourable narratives they found current in the Christian 
 community. 
 
 * Compare Luke ix. 50 with xi. 23, where we probably have the eame 
 original expression differently reported. Schleierniacher, with all his rev- 
 erence for Luke, decides (p. 94) that Iiuke vi. 24-2(5 is an addition to Christa 
 words by the evangelist liimsolf— an *' innocent interpolation" he calls it. 
 For the anachronism in xi. 51, see oui- ^emarkB on the oorrespunding passage 
 in Matthew. 
 
CHAPTER X. 
 
 SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED — GOSPEL OF JOTHN. 
 
 In the examination of the fourth Gospel a different mode 
 of criticism from that hitherto pursued is required. Here 
 we do not find, so frequently as in the other evangeliste, 
 particular passages which pronounce their own condem- 
 nation, by anachronisms, peculiarity of language, or in- 
 compatibility with others more obviously historical ; but 
 the whole tone of the delineations, the tenour of the dis- 
 courses, and the general course of the narrative, are utter- 
 ly difierent from those contained in the synoptical gospels, 
 and also from what we should expect from a Jew speak- 
 ing to Jews, writing of Jews, imbued with the spirit, and 
 living in the land, of Judaism. 
 
 By the common admission of all recent critics, this Gos- 
 pel is r«,ther to be regarded as a polemic, than an historic 
 composition.* It was written less with the intention of 
 giving a complete and continuous view of Christ's char- 
 acter and career, than to meet and confute certain heresies 
 which had sprung up in the Christian church near the 
 close 01 the first century, by selecting, from the memory 
 of the author, or the traditions then current among 
 believers, such narratives and discourses as were conceived 
 to be most opposed to the heresies in question. Now 
 these heresies related almost exclusively to the person 
 and nature of Jesus ; on which points we have many in- 
 dications that great difierence of opinion existed, even 
 during the apostolic period. The obnoxious doctrines 
 especially pointed at in the Gospel appear, both from in- 
 ternal evidence and external testimony ,-f- to be those held 
 by Cerinthus and the Nicolaitans, which, according to 
 
 * See Hug, Strauss, Hennellj DeWetfce. Also Dr. Tait's " Suggestions." 
 
 t Irenseus, Jerome, Ei>iplianiu8. See Hug, § 51. See also a very detailed 
 
 account of the Gnostics in Norton's Genuineness of the Gospels, li. c. 1, 2. 
 
 FID 
 
 Hug, were 
 perfect, an 
 matter ; bt 
 gradually 
 was the Ci 
 Jesus was 
 great and 
 natures — t 
 Jesus at h; 
 human po^ 
 exalted ori 
 his nature 
 and pain, 
 passion, re 
 to pain an( 
 Cerinthus 
 Son of Go 
 The Nicol 
 Supreme '. 
 ferior spirl 
 the subalt 
 distinguisl 
 existence, 
 Word, wl: 
 begotten." 
 These, 1 
 fourth G( 
 which bei 
 31): "Tl 
 life and u 
 but that ; 
 " that ye" 
 of God ; J 
 his name 
 sial aim— 
 lected or 
 
 * Several 
 " Every epi 
 Hug, p, 423 
 
 t HSig, § 
 
FIDELITY OP THE GOSPEL HISTORY. — JOHN. 211 
 
 Hug, were as follows : — The one Eternal God is too pure, 
 perfect, and pervading an essence to be able to operate on 
 matter ; but from him emanated a number of inferior and 
 gradually degenerating spiritual natures, one of whom 
 was the Creator of the world, hence its imperfections. 
 Jesus was simply and truly a man, though an eminently 
 great and virtuous one ; but one of the above spiritual 
 natures — the Christ, the Son of God — united itself to 
 Jesus at his baptism, and thus conferred upon him super- 
 human power. " This Christ, as an immaterial Being of 
 exalted origin, one of the purer kinds of spirits, was from 
 h?s nature unsusceptible of material affections of suffering 
 and pain. He, therefore, at the commencement of the 
 passion, resumed his separate existence, abandoned Jesus 
 to pain and death, and soared upwards to his native heaven. 
 Cerinthus distinguished Jesus and Christ, Jesus and the 
 Son of God, as beings of different nature and dignity.* 
 The Nicolaitans held similar doctrines in regard to the 
 Supreme Deity and his relation to mankind, and an in- 
 ferior spirit who was the Creator of the world. Among 
 the subaltern orders of spirits they considered the most 
 distinguished to be the only-begotten, the /xovoyei':^? (whose 
 existence, however, had a beginning), and the Xoyos, the 
 Word, who was an immediate descendant of the only- 
 begotten."f 
 
 These, then, were the opinions which the author of the 
 fourth Gospel wrote to controvert ; in confirmation of 
 which being his object we have his own statement (xx. 
 31) : " These are written " (not that ye may know the 
 life and understand the character of our great Teacher, 
 but that ye may believe #his nature to be what I affirm), 
 " that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son 
 of God ; and that believing ye might have life through 
 his name." Now, a narrative written with a controver- 
 sial aim — a narrative, more especially, consisting of recol- 
 lected or selected circumstances and discourses — carries 
 
 * Several critics contend that the original reading of 1 John iv. 3, was 
 " Every spirit iAiaX teparateth Jesus (from the Christ) is not of God." — See 
 Hugjp. 423. 
 
 + Hug, § oL 
 
212 
 
 THE CREED OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 within it, as everyone will admit, from the very nature of 
 fallible humanity, an obvious element of inaccuracy. A 
 man who writes a history to prove a doctrine, must be 
 something more than a man, if he writes that history with 
 a scrupulous fidelity of fact and colouring. Accordingly, 
 we find that the public discourses of Jesus in this Gospel 
 turn almost exclusively upon the dignity of his own per- 
 son, wliich topic is brought forward in a manner and with 
 a frequency which it is impossible to regard as histoiical. 
 The prominent feature in tl character of Jesus, as here 
 depicted, is an overweening tendency to self-glorification, 
 We ste no longer, as in the other Gospels, a prophet enger 
 to bring men to God, and to instruct them in righteous- 
 ness, but one whose whole mind seems occupied with the 
 grandeur of his own nature and mission. In the three 
 fir.st Gospels we have the message ; in the fourth we have 
 comparatively little but the messenger. If any of our 
 readers will peruse the Gospel with this observation in 
 their minds, we are persuaded the result will be a very 
 strong and probably painful impression that they cannot 
 here be dealing with the genuine language of Jesus, but 
 simply with a composition arising out of deep conviction 
 of his superior nature, left in the mind of the writer by 
 the contemplation of his splendid genius and his noble and 
 lovely character. 
 
 The difference of style and subject between the dis- 
 courses of Jesus in the fourth Gospel and in the synoptical 
 ones, has been much dwelt upon, and we think by no 
 means too much, as proving the greater or less unauthen- 
 ticity of the former. This objection has been met by the 
 supposition that the finer intellect and more spiritual 
 character of John induced him to select, and enabled him 
 to record, the more subtle and speculative discourses of 
 his Master, which were unacceptable or unintelligible to 
 the more practical and homely minds of the other disciples ; 
 and reference is made to the parallel case of Xenophon 
 and Plato, whose reports of the conversations of Socrates 
 are so diflferent in tone and matter as to render it very 
 difficult to believe that both sat at the feet of the same 
 master, and listened to the same teaching. But the cita- 
 
 FIPI 
 
 tion is an u 
 than suspe( 
 correct one 
 ties in th(^ 
 the (lisciph 
 added som 
 by his pre 
 have beer 
 that here t 
 and discre 
 Another 
 sive ago 
 Jesus in tl 
 discourses 
 style of tl 
 own remai 
 He makes 
 himself sp 
 
 John iii. 3 
 He that comt 
 all : he that i 
 and speaketh 
 loineth fron 
 And what h 
 that he teat 
 ceiveth his tc 
 
 He that : 
 hath set to 1 
 
 Forhewhi 
 eth the wore 
 eth not the s 
 
 The Fath 
 hath given a 
 
 He that t 
 
 everlasting 1 
 not the So 
 the wrath o 
 
FFDRLITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. — JOHN. 213 
 
 •ery nature of 
 accuracy. A 
 vine, must be 
 i history with 
 Accordingly 
 n this Gospel 
 his own per- 
 inerand with 
 as histoiical. 
 Tesus, as here 
 glorification, 
 prophet Giiger 
 in rightooiis- 
 3ied with the 
 In the three 
 Lirth we have 
 any of our 
 bservation in 
 I'^ill be a very 
 ; they cannot 
 of Jesus, but 
 3p conviction 
 ihe writer by 
 his noble and 
 
 -•een the dis- 
 he synoptical 
 think by no 
 3s unauthen- 
 1 met by the 
 3re spiritual 
 enabled him 
 discourses of 
 itelligible to 
 ler disciples ; 
 tf Xenophon 
 of Socrates 
 nder it very 
 of the same 
 tut the cita- 
 
 tion is nn unfortunate one ; for in this case, also, it is more 
 tliiui suspected that the more simple recorder was the more 
 c(>rro(*t one, and that the sul)limer and subtler pecidiari- 
 ties in the discourses re})()rted by Plato, belong rather to 
 the disciple than to the teaciier. Had John merely siqx'r- 
 (uhled some more refined and mystical discour.ses omitted 
 by his predecessors, the supposition in question might 
 have Iteer admitted; but it is impossible not to perceive 
 that here the tvhole tone of the mind delineated is new 
 and discrepant, though often eminently beautiful. 
 
 Another argument, which may be considered as conclu- 
 sive against the historical fidelity of the discourses of 
 Jesus in the fourth Go.spel is, that not only they, but the 
 discourses of John the Baptist likewise, are entirely in the 
 style of the evangelist himself, where he introduces his 
 own remarks, both in the Gospel and in the first epistle. 
 He makes both Jesus and the Baptist speak exactly as he 
 himself speaks. Compare the following passages : — 
 
 John iii. 31-36. (Baptist loquitur). 
 He that cometh from above is above 
 all : he that is of the earth is earthly, 
 and speaketh of the earth : he that 
 tometn from heaven is above all. 
 And what he hath seen and heard, 
 that he testifieth ; and no man re- 
 ceiveth his testimony. 
 
 He that receiveth his testimony 
 hath set to his seal that God is true. 
 
 For he whom God hath sent speak- 
 eth the words of God ; for God giv- 
 eth not the spirit by measure. 
 
 The Father loveth the Son, and 
 hath given all things into his hand. 
 
 He that believeth on the Son hath 
 everlasting life : and he that believeth 
 not the Son shall not see life ; but 
 the wrath of God abideth on him. 
 
 John viii. 23. (Jesus loq. ). Ye are 
 from beneath ; I am from above : 
 ye are of this world ; I am not of 
 this world. 
 
 iii. 11. (Jesus loq.). We speak 
 that we do know, and testify that we 
 have seen ; and ye receive not our 
 testimony. 
 
 viii. 26. (Jesus loq.). I speak to 
 the world tliose things which I have 
 heard of him. — (See also vii. 16-18 ; 
 xiv. 24.) 
 
 V, 20. (Jesus loq.). The Father 
 loveth the Son, and showeth him all 
 things that himself doeth. 
 
 xiii. 3. (Evangelist Ion.). Jesus 
 knowing that the Father had given 
 all things into his hands. 
 
 vi. 47 (Jesus loq.). He that be- 
 lieveth on me hath everlasting life. 
 —(See also 1 Epistle v 10-13, and 
 Gospel iii. 18, where the evangelist or 
 Jesus speaks). 
 
 vi. 40 (Jesua loq.). And this ia 
 the will of him that; sent me, that 
 every one which seeth the Son, and 
 believeth on him, may have everlast- 
 ing life. 
 
214 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 
 1 Epistle iii. 14. We know that 
 we have passed from death unto life. 
 
 1 Epistle iv. 6. We are of God : 
 he that knoweth God heareth us ; he 
 that is not of God heareth not us . 
 
 1 Epistle V. 9. If we receive the 
 witness of men, the witnjss of God is 
 greater ; for this is the witness of 
 (irod which he hath witnessed of his 
 Son. 
 
 xix. 35 (John loq.). And his rec- 
 ord is true : and he knoweth that 
 he saith true. 
 
 xxi. 24. This is the disciple which 
 testifieth of these things ; . . . and 
 we know that his witness is true. 
 
 V. 24 (JesuB lotj.). He that hear- 
 eth my word .... is passed from 
 death unto life. 
 
 viii. 47 (Jesus loq. ). He that is of 
 (iod heareth God's words : ye there- 
 fore hear them not, because ye are 
 not of God. 
 
 v. 34 etc. (Jesus loq.). I receive 
 not testimony from man. ... I have 
 greater witness than that of John . . . 
 . the Father himself which hath sent 
 me, hath borne witness of me, 
 
 V. 32. There is another that heareth 
 witness of me ; and I know that the 
 witness which he witnesseth of me is 
 true. 
 
 Another indication that in a gi-eat part of the fourth 
 Gospel we have not the genuine discourses of Jesus, is 
 found in the mystical and enigmatical nature of the 
 language. This peculiarity, of which we have scarcely 
 a trace in the other evangelists, beyond the few parables 
 which they did not at first understand, but which Jesus 
 immediately explained to them, pervades the fourth Gos- 
 pel. The great Teacher is here represented as absolutely 
 labouring to be unintelligible, to soar out of the reach of 
 his hearers, and at once perplex and disgust them. " It 
 is the constant method of this evangelist, in detailing the 
 conversations of Jesus, to form the knot and progress of 
 the discussions, by making the interlocutors understand 
 literally what Jesus intended figuratively. The type of 
 the dialogue is that in which language intended spiritual- 
 ly is understood carnally." The instances of this are in- 
 conceivably frequent and unnatural. W*> have the con- 
 versation with the Jews about " the temple of his body " 
 (ii. 21) ; the mystification of Nicodemus on the subject of 
 regeneration (iii. 3-10) ; the conversation with the 
 Samaritan woman (iv. 10-15) ; with his disciples about 
 " the food which ye know not of" (iv. 32) ; with the peo- 
 ple about the " bread from heaven " (vi. 81-35) ; with tlie 
 Jews about giving them his flesh to eat (vi. 48-66) ; with 
 the Pharisees about his disappearance (vii. 33-39, and viii. 
 21, 22) ; again about his heavenly origin and pre-exist- 
 
 FIDE 
 
 ence (viii. 
 about the s 
 place, it is v 
 the gospel 
 in a style v 
 the next p 
 people, so a 
 literature 
 inisapprehe 
 cessantly a 
 But perl 
 historical c 
 is to be foul 
 logues, the; 
 positions r 
 it is next 
 tained — e\ 
 thesis, tha 
 the time o: 
 been said i 
 memory ir 
 to believe 
 14th, 15th 
 retained ai 
 one favou] 
 therefore ' 
 main we i 
 in the fou 
 evangelist 
 eral sayii 
 hence we 
 which are 
 pels. In 
 the viciss 
 only in tl 
 
 « See the 
 which it api 
 Jewfi, and ( 
 in fact that 
 
 f Leben < 
 
 p;i. 
 
FIDELITY OP THE GOSPEL HISTORY. — JOHN. 215 
 
 ). He that hear- 
 18 passed from 
 
 q.). He that is of 
 
 I words : ye there- 
 t, because ye are 
 
 loq.). I receive 
 
 n that of John 
 f which hath sent 
 tnesB of me, 
 
 lotherthatbeareth 
 
 II know that the 
 I'ltneseeth of me is 
 
 of the fourth 
 s of Jesus, is 
 atiire of the 
 lave scarcely 
 few parables 
 which Jesus 
 le fourth Gos- 
 as absolutely 
 r the reach of 
 it them, " It 
 detailing the 
 td progress of 
 s understand 
 The type of 
 ied spiritual- 
 >f this are in- 
 ave the con- 
 of his body" 
 he subject of 
 1 with the 
 iciples about 
 s'ith the pco- 
 5) ; with the 
 8-66) ; with 
 -39, and viii. 
 d pre-exist- 
 
 ence (viii. 37, 43, and 56-58) ; and with his disciples 
 about the sleep of Lazarus (xi. 11-14). Now, in the first 
 place, it is very improbable that Jesus, who came to preach 
 the gospel to the poor, should so constantly have spoken 
 in a style which his hearers could not understand ; and in 
 the next place, it is equally improbable that an Oriental 
 people, so accustomed to figurative language,* and whose 
 literature was so eminently metaphorical, should have 
 misapprehended the words of Jesus so stupidly and so in- 
 cessantly as the evangelist represents them to have done. 
 But perhaps the most conclusive argument against the 
 historical character of the discourses in the fourth Gospel 
 is to be found in the fact that, whether dialogues or mono- 
 logues, they are complete and continuous, resembling com- 
 positions rather than recollections, and of a length which 
 it is next to impossible could have been accurately re- 
 tained — even if we adopt Bertholdt's improbable hypo- 
 thesis, that the apostle took notes of Jesus' discourses at 
 the time of their delivery. Notwithstanding all that has 
 been said as to the possible extent to which the powers of 
 memory may go, it is difficult for an unprepossessed mind 
 to believe that discourses such as that contained in the 
 14th, 15th, and 16th chapters, could have been accurately 
 retained and reported unless by a shorthand writer, or by 
 one favoured with supernatural assistance. " We hold it 
 therefore to be established " (says Strauss,^ and in the 
 main we agree with him), " that the discourses of Jesus 
 in the fourth gospel are mainly free compositions of the 
 evangelist ; but we have admitted that he has culled sev- 
 eral sayings of Jesus from an authentic tradition, and 
 hence we do not extend this proposition to those passages 
 which are countenanced by parallels in the synoptical gos- 
 pels. In these latter compilations we have an example of 
 the vicissitudes which befall discourses that are preserved 
 only in the memory of a second party. Severed from their 
 
 * See the remarks of Strauss on the conversation with Nicodemus, from 
 which it appears that the image of a new birth was a current one among the 
 Jew3, and could not have been ho misunderstood by a master in Israel, and 
 in fact that the whole convsrsfttion is almost certainly fictitious.— ii. 153. 
 
 t Leben Jesu, ii. 187. 
 
216 
 
 THE OREED OF CHBISTENDOM. 
 
 l 
 
 original connection, and bn 'I'in up into smaller and 
 smaller fragments, they prese; when reassembled, the 
 appearance of a mosaic, in which the connection of the 
 parts is a purely external one, and every transition an 
 artificial juncture. The discourses in John present just 
 the opposite appearance. Their gradual transitions, only 
 occasionally rendered obscure by the mystical depths of 
 meaning in which they lie — transitions in which one 
 thought develops itself out of another, and a succeeding 
 proposition is frequently but an explanatory amplification 
 of the preceding one — are indicative of a pliable, unresist- 
 ing mass, such as is never presented to a writer by the 
 traditional sayings of another, but by such only as pro- 
 ceeds from the stores of his own thought, which he moulds 
 according to his will. For this reason the contributions 
 of tradition to these stores of thought were not so likely 
 to have been 'particular independent sayings of Jesus, 
 as rather certain ideas which formed the basis of many oj 
 his discourses, and which were modified and developed 
 according to the bent of a mind of Greek or Alexandrian 
 culture."* 
 
 Another peculiarity of this Gospel — arising, probably, 
 out of its controversial origin — is its exaltation of dogma 
 over morality — of belief over spiritual affection. In the 
 other Gospels, piety, charity, forgiveness of injuries, purity 
 of life, are preached by Christ as the titles to his kingdom 
 and his Father's favour. Whereas, in John's Gos})el as 
 in his epistles, belief in Jesus as the Son of God, the Mes- 
 siah, the Logos — belief, in fact, in the evangelist's view of 
 his nature — is constantly represented as the one thing 
 needful. The whole tone of the history bears token of 
 a time when the message was beginning to be forgotten 
 in the Messenger ; when metaphysical and fruitless dis- 
 cussions as to the nature of Christ had superseded devo- 
 tion to his spirit, and attention tp the sublime piety and 
 
 * See also Hennel, p. 200. " The picture of .Tenus bequrtathing hi'^ pu't- 
 ingbonedictionw to the tlisoipleH, seems fully to warrant the idea that the 
 author was one whose irnai,'iuatioii and affections had received an impress 
 from real scenes and real attachments. The few relics of the words, lonks, 
 and acts of Jesus, which friendship itself could at that time preserve unmixiil, 
 he expands into a complete record of his own and the disciples' aentimout- ; 
 what they felt, he makes JeBuo aneak.' 
 
 FIDl 
 
 simple self- 
 of his own 
 eloquent a 
 pathos, anc 
 gible truth 
 histories ; 
 ity, and m( 
 apostle at i 
 fragment ( 
 original se» 
 subtle and 
 this Gospe 
 purity to i 
 which hav 
 dogmatic c 
 and more i 
 lels to mal 
 
 John xiii.l 
 know that hil 
 he should de] 
 unto the Fal 
 own which v, 
 loved them ur 
 
 John xiii. 
 men know thi 
 if ye have lov 
 
 John XV. 12 
 ment, That j 
 have loved yoit 
 
 John xvii. 
 pray not for 
 which tiMU hi 
 world, (v. 20) 
 alone, but jc 
 believe on me 
 
 * I ventui 
 this work w; 
 of an a;j[e in 
 times a spec: 
 witho>it it tl 
 other. I CO' 
 certainly do 
 sauie heart, 
 day, howevt 
 who are to 1 
 larijed or CO 
 
FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. — JOHN. 
 
 217 
 
 smaller and 
 assembled, the 
 mection of the 
 transition an 
 present just 
 ansitions, only 
 tical depths of 
 in which one 
 d a succeeding 
 Y amplification 
 iable, unresist- 
 
 writer by the 
 n only as pro- 
 lich he moulds 
 
 contributions 
 e not so likely 
 ngs of Jesm, 
 sis of many oj 
 and developed 
 r Alexandrian 
 
 ling, probably, 
 ktion of dogma 
 ction. In the 
 njuries, purity 
 o his kingdom 
 hn's Gospel as 
 God, the Mes- 
 felist's view of 
 the one thing 
 Dears token of 
 be forgotten 
 fruitless dis- 
 lerseded dovo- 
 ime piety and 
 
 unathing his i>.ivt- 
 the idea that tlie 
 jceived an iini>ies3 
 F the words, looks, 
 preBerveuniiii.M'd, 
 iipl«3H' sentiuieat- ; 
 
 simple self-sacrificing holiness which formed the essence 
 of his own teaching. The discourses are often touchingly 
 eloquent and tender; the narrative is full of beauty, 
 pathos, and nature ; but we miss the simple and intelli- 
 gible truth, the noble, yet practical, morality of the other 
 histories ; we find in it more of Christ than of Christian- 
 ity, and more of John than of Jesus. If the work of an 
 apostle at all, it was of an apostle who had caught but a 
 fragment of his Master's mantle, or in whom the good 
 original seed had been choked by the long bad habit of 
 subtle and scholastic controversies. We cannot but regard 
 this Gospel as decidedly inferior in moral sublimity and 
 purity to the other representations of Christ's teaching 
 which have come down to us ; its religion is more of a 
 dogmatic creed, and its very philanthropy has a narrower 
 and more restricted character. We will give a few paral- 
 lels to make our meaning clearer. 
 
 John xiii.l. Now when Jesus 
 knuw that his hour was come, that 
 he should depf't out of this world 
 unto the Father, having loved his 
 own which were in the world, he 
 loved them unto the end. 
 
 John xiii. 35- By this shall all 
 men know that ye are my disciples, 
 if ye have love one to another. 
 
 John XV. 12. This is my command- 
 ment, That ye love one another, as I 
 have loved you. 
 
 John xvii. 9. I pray for them : / 
 ftfay not for the world, but for them 
 which tliou hast given me out of the 
 world, (v. 20). Neither pray I for these 
 alone, but for them also which shall 
 believe on m« through their word.* 
 
 Matth. V. 43. Ye have heard thaf, 
 it hath been said, Thou shalt love 
 thy neighbour, and hate thine 
 enemy. But I say unto you, Love 
 your enemies, bless them that curse 
 you, do good to them that hate you, 
 pray for them which despitef ully use 
 you, and persecute you ; . . For if ye 
 love them which love you, what reward 
 have ye f do not even the publicAus 
 the name ? 
 
 Luke X. 27. Thou shalt love thy 
 neighbour as thyself.— (Definition of 
 a neighbour, as any one whom we 
 can serve.) 
 
 Luke vi. 28. Pray for them which 
 despitefuUy use you ; bless them 
 which persecute you. 
 
 Luke xxiii. 34. Father, forgive 
 them ; for they know not what they 
 do. 
 
 • I venture here to insert a note written by a friend to whom the MS. of 
 this work was submitted for correction. "These passages are the growth 
 of an a:,'e in which Christians were already suffering jjersecution. In such 
 times a sppcial and peculiar love to * the brethren ' is natural and desirable ; 
 without it thoy could not be animated to risk all that is needed for one an- 
 other. I could not call it, at that time, a ' narrow philanthropy,' but it 
 certainly does not belong to the aamo moral state, nor conm forth from the 
 same heart, at the same time, as that of the other Gospels. In the present 
 clay, however, the results are intensely evil : for this Gospel defines those 
 who are to love another by an intellectual creed ; and however this be en« 
 lartjud or coutractiid, we have here tiie usicnce of Bigotry. " q 
 
 
218 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 !! !:, 
 
 
 Juhn iii. U. And as MoHea lifted 
 up the Horpeut in the wilderness, 
 even so must the Son uf man be 
 lifted up ; That whosoever believeth 
 in him should not perish, but havf 
 eternal life. 
 
 John vi. 40. And this is the will 
 of him that sent me, that every one 
 which seeth the Son, ana believeth on 
 him, may have ei'erlastinn b'fe. 
 
 John xvii. ',i. And this is life eter- 
 nal, that they might know thee, the 
 only true God, andJesua Christ, whom 
 thou hast sent. 
 
 John vi. 29. This is the work of 
 God, that ye believe an him whom he 
 hath sent. 
 
 John iii. 36. He that believah wi 
 the Son hath evcrlasliiKj life ; and /«- 
 tlmt believeth not the Hon shall not 
 see life; but the wrath of God ahidpth 
 in him. 
 
 Matth. V. 3, 8. Blessed are the 
 poor in spirit : for theirs is the kiwj- 
 dom of heaven. Blesded are the pure 
 in heart : for they shall see God. 
 
 Matth. vii. 21. Not every one that 
 aaithunto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter 
 into the kingdom of heaven ; bnt he 
 that doeth the will of my Father which 
 is in haven. Many will say to me 
 ia that day, Lord, Lord, have we not 
 prophesied in thy name ? and in thy 
 name have cast out devils ? ami in thy 
 name done many wonderful works? 
 And then will I profess unto them, I 
 never knew you : depart from me, ye 
 that work iniquity. 
 
 Matth. xix. 16, et soq. And, be- 
 hold, one came and said unto him, 
 Good Master, what good tiling shall I 
 do, that I may have eternal life? And 
 hesaidunto him, Why callestthoume 
 good f Slc, &c. ; but if thou wilt eiUer 
 into life, keep the commandments, ic. 
 
 Matth. XXV. 31-46.— (Definition of 
 Christ's reception of the wicked and 
 the righteous.) — And these rhallgo 
 away into everlasting punishment, 
 but the righteous into life eternal. 
 
 Mark xii. 28-34. And the Scribe 
 said unto him,Well, Master, thou hast 
 said the truth : for there is one God ; 
 and there is none other but he : &c., 
 &c. . . . And when Jesus saw that 
 he answered discreetly, he said unto 
 him, Thou art not far from the king- 
 dom of €hd. 
 
 Luke ix. 51-56. And when James 
 and John saw this (that the Samari- 
 tans would not receive Jesus), they 
 said, Lord, wilt thou that we com- 
 mand fire to come down from heaven, 
 and consume them, even as Elias 
 did ? But he turned, and rebuked 
 them, and said. Ye know not what 
 manner of spirit ye are of, &c. 
 
 Luke x. 25-28. And, behold, a 
 certain lawyer stood up, and tempted 
 him, saying. Master, what shall I do 
 to inherit eternal life? He said unto 
 him, What is written in the law! 
 How readest thou ? And he answer- 
 ing said, Thou shalt love the Lord 
 thy God with all thy heart, and with 
 all 1^7 soul, and with all thy strength, 
 and vdth all thy mind ; and thy 
 neighbour as thyself. And Jesus 
 said unto him, Thou hast answered 
 rightly ; thi$ do, and tlutu t/taU Uct. 
 
 There ai 
 this Gospe 
 more than 
 dom of H 
 confined t( 
 of devils- 
 nothing al 
 topics wh 
 Christ's m 
 omission c 
 narrative 
 mitted int 
 possession 
 Jerusalem 
 had quite 
 pale of tl] 
 
 * Modem 
 in the fourth 
 preted sent, i 
 not have bet 
 John. 
 
 [These, ho 
 
 to the date o 
 
 fixing it on t 
 
 day. Thisc 
 
 versy " as it 
 
 last only qu 
 
 Those who \ 
 
 throw upon 
 
 haustive ace 
 
 f erred to. — 1 
 
 took the vie 
 
 Apostle Jolo 
 
 till very lat< 
 
 of quoting 1 
 
 nores the i 
 
 Jesus, thoui 
 
 the object c 
 
 at least, Ch 
 
 If the for 
 
 seem impos 
 
 rnent " of h 
 
 unhistorica] 
 
 from it fall 
 
 such comm 
 
 " Take eat 
 
 were ever s 
 
 si:;iiificanc< 
 
 uttered, co 
 
 cord them. 
 
f. 
 
 FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTORY. 
 
 219 
 
 Blesse.l are the 
 or theirs is the (■»,„. 
 Ulesded are the pure 
 V shall see God. 
 
 Not ever// one that 
 'd. Lord, shall enter 
 1 of heaven ; bnt Kt 
 <if my Father which 
 any will say to me 
 I, Liord. have we not 
 y name ? and in thy 
 Jt devils? and in thy 
 y wonderful worka* 
 profets unto them, / 
 depart froin rM,yt 
 
 6, et soq. And, be- 
 »nd said unto him 
 at good tiling shall I 
 -veetemallife? And 
 Whjrcallestthoume 
 Jut if thou wilt enter 
 commandmfnts, 4c 
 -46.— (Definition of 
 1 of the wicked and 
 -And these rliallgo 
 asting punishment, 
 into life eternal. 
 4. And the Scribe 
 b11, Master, thou hast 
 or there is one God ; 
 9 other but he : &c.,' 
 vhen Jesus saw that 
 reetly, he said unto 
 7t far from the king- 
 
 And when James 
 is (that the Samari- 
 ■eceive Jesus), they 
 thou that we com- 
 I down from heaven, 
 em, even as Elias 
 imed, and rebuked 
 Ye know not what 
 ye are of, &c. 
 . And, behold, a 
 od up, and tempted 
 ber, what shall 1 do 
 life? He said unto 
 ritten in the law? 
 ? And he answer 
 lalt love the Lord 
 hy heart, and with 
 ith all thy strength, 
 ■ mind ; and thy 
 self. And JesuH 
 lou hast answx-red 
 tiiU tliou t/iuU /int. 
 
 There are several minor peculiarities which distinguish 
 this Gospel from the preceding ones, which we can do no 
 more than indicate. We find here little about the King- 
 dom of Heaven — nothing about Christ's mission being 
 confined to the Israelites — nothing about the casting out 
 of devils — nothing about the destruction of Jerusalem — 
 nothing about the struggle between the law and gospel — 
 topics which occupy so large a space in the picture of 
 Christ's ministry given in the s)mioptical Gospels ; and the 
 omission of which seems to refer the composition of this 
 narrative to a later period, when the Gentiles were ad- 
 mitted into the Church — when the idea of demoniacal 
 possession had given way before a higher culture — when 
 Jerusalem had been long destroyed — and when Judaism 
 had quite retired before Christianity, at least within the 
 pale of the Charch.* 
 
 * Modem criticism has detected several slight errors and inaccuracies 
 in the fourth Gospel, suoh as Sycliar for Sichem, Siloam erroneously inter- 
 preted sent, Sic, &c., from which it has been argued that the writer could 
 not have been a native of Palestine, and by consequence not the Apostle 
 John. 
 
 [These, however, are insignificant in comparison with the discrepancjr as 
 to the date of the Last Supper in the different Evangelists, the Synoptists 
 fixing it on the Feast of the Passover, and the fourth Gospel on the previous 
 day. This discrepancy gave rise to the famous " Quarto-deciman Contro- 
 versy " as it 7 called, which so long agitated the early Church, and was at 
 last only quelled by an authoritative decree of the Emperor Constantine. 
 Those w^ho wish to understand the question, and the light which its details 
 throw upon the probable author hip of the fourth Gospel, will find an ex- 
 haustive account in Section ix. of Mr. Tayler's learned inquiry already re- 
 ferred to. — The remarkable points are that the early controversialists, who 
 took the view and held to the practice of the Synoptists, appealed to tfie 
 Apostle John as their strongest authority on their side ; — wh'ie it was not 
 till very late in the discussion that their adversaries seem to hs ve thought 
 of quoting the fourth Gospel in tlieir favour ;— that this Gospel entirely ig- 
 nares the institution of the Eucharist in its account of the last days of 
 Jesus, though apparently alluding to it in some earlier chapters ;— and that 
 the object of the Author appears to have been to represent, by implication 
 at least, Christ as being himself the Paschal Lamb, not as partaking of it. 
 
 If the fourth Gospel were really the work of the Apostle John, it would 
 seem impossible to avoid the inference that the institution of " the Sacra- 
 ment '■ of bread and wine as recorded by the other Evangelists is entirely 
 unhistorical, and then all the stupendous ecclesiastical corollaries flowing 
 from it fall to the ground. It is impossible that John conld have fonjotteu 
 such commands or assertions as are supjposed to be involved in lihe words, 
 "Take eat; this is my body," &c.— It is equally impossible that, if they 
 were ever spoken, and signified what Christians in general believe to be their 
 si:4uificance, the disciple who leaned on the bosom of Jesus while they were 
 uttered, could have so undervalued their meaning as to have omitted to re- 
 cord them. The clilomma, then, seems to be inescapable :— Either John did 
 
220 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 Though we have seen ample reason to conclude that 
 nearly all the discourses of Jesus in the fourth Gospel 
 are mainly the composition of the evangelist from memory 
 or tradition, rather than the genuine utterances of our 
 great Teacher, it may be satisfactory, as further continua- 
 tion, to select a few single passages and expressions, as to 
 the unauthentic character of which there can be no ques- 
 tion. Thus at ch. iii. 11, Jesus is represented as saying 
 to Nicodemus, in the midst of his discourse about regen- 
 eration, " We speak that we do know, and testify that 
 we have seen ; and ye receive not our witness," — ex- 
 pressions wholly unmeaning and out of place in the 
 mouth of Jesus on an occasion where he is testifying 
 nothing at all, but merely propounding a mystical dogma 
 to an auditor dull of comprehension — but expressions 
 which are the evangelist's habitual form of asseveration 
 and complaint. 
 
 It is not clear whether the writer intended veises 16-21 
 to form part of the discourse of Jesus, or merely a com- 
 mentary of his own. If the tormer, they are clearly un- 
 warrantable ; their point of view is that oi a period when 
 the teachings of Christ had been known and rejected, 
 and they could not have been uttered with any justice 
 or appropriateness at the very commencement of his min- 
 istry. 
 
 Ch. xi. 8. " His disciples say unto ' him, Master, the 
 Jews of late sought to stone thee ; and goest thou thither 
 again ? " The Jeivs is an expression wliich would be nat- 
 ural to Ephesians or other foreigners when speaking of 
 the inhabitants of Palestine, but could not have been used 
 by Jews speaking of their own countrymen. They would 
 have said, the People, or, the Pharisees. The same ob- 
 servation applies to xiii. 33, and also probably to xviii. 30, 
 
 Ch. xvii. 3. " And this is life eternal, that they might 
 know tlice the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom 
 
 not writo the fourth Gospel — in which case we h:ive the direct testimony of 
 no eye-witness to the fact, and sayinys of Christ's ministry ; — Or, the Sacra- 
 ment of the Lord's Supper, iis deduced from the Synoptical accounts, with 
 the 8i)ecial doctrines of Sacramental grace to partakers of it, and of t'ne 
 Atonement (as far as it in warranted or origi'ially was suggested by those 
 words of Christ), becomes " the baseless fabric of a viaion."! 
 
 thou hast 
 
 the evangv 
 
 As bef or 
 
 story of th 
 
 his baptisn 
 
 rcpresente< 
 
 that it cou 
 
 his foUowc 
 
 Jesus, or a; 
 
 (i. 20-30 
 
 and again 
 
 whoappea 
 
 which we 
 
 ments abo 
 
 The que 
 
 chapter, [2 
 
 nificantly^ 
 
 have speci 
 
 miracle, p' 
 
 a eharact€ 
 
 water intc 
 
 has long i 
 
 logians, ai 
 
 sist in re 
 
 None of i 
 
 a probabh 
 
 with the 
 
 ancholy 5 
 
 honesty j 
 
 portion o: 
 
 Testamer 
 
 unmistak 
 
 in any ot 
 
 as a clurr 
 
 it is a mi 
 
 had alrea 
 
 to the ch 
 
 his mira( 
 
 first of 1: 
 
 ing him 
 
iM. 
 
 FIDELITY OF THE GOSPEL HISTOPY. 
 
 221 
 
 ■) conclude that 
 fourth Gospel 
 
 t from nieiiiory 
 
 crance.s of our 
 rther confirma- 
 
 pressions, as to 
 ;an be no ques- 
 mted as .saying 
 
 ie about regen- 
 tid testify that 
 
 witness," — ex- 
 place in the 
 e is testifying 
 nystical dogma 
 ut expressions 
 )f asseveration 
 
 ed verses 16-21 
 merely a corn- 
 are clearly un- 
 a period when 
 I and rejected, 
 ith any justice 
 ent of his min- 
 
 n, Master, the 
 st thou thither 
 
 would be nat- 
 3n speaking of 
 have been used 
 . They would 
 
 The same ob- 
 )ly to xviii. 30, 
 lat they miglit 
 
 Christ, whom 
 
 direct testimony of 
 y i—Or, the Sacra- 
 ical accounts, with 
 5 of it, and of tiie 
 'ujjgested bytlioBe 
 a."T 
 
 thou hast sent." This would be a natural expression for 
 the evangelist, but scarcely for his Master. 
 
 As before observed, great doubt hangs over the whole 
 story of the testimony borne by the Baptist to Jesus at 
 his baptism. In the fourth evangelist, this testimony is 
 represented as most emphatic, public, and repeated — so 
 that it could have left no doubt in the minds of any of 
 his followers, either as to the grandeur of the mission of 
 Jesus, or as to his own subordinate character and position 
 (i. 20-30 ; iii. 26-36). Yet we find, from Acts xviii. 25, 
 and again xix. 3, circles of John the Baptist's disciples, 
 who appear never even to have heard of Jesus — astatement 
 which we think is justly held irreconcilable with the state- 
 ments above referred to in the fourth Gospel. 
 
 The question of miracles will be considered in a future 
 chapter, [and several of those related in this Gospel — sig- 
 nificantly seven in number, and in culminating order — 
 have special characteristics of their own ;] but there is one 
 miracle, peculiar to John, of so siiigular and apocryphal 
 a character as to call for notice here. The turning of 
 water into wine at the marriage feast in Cana of Galilee 
 has long formed the opprobrium and perplexity of theo- 
 logians, and must continue to do so as long as they per- 
 sist in regarding it as an accurate historical relation. 
 None of the numberless attempts to give anything like 
 a probable ex planation of the narrative has been attended 
 with the least success. They are for the most part mel- 
 ancholy specimens of ingenuity misapplied, and plain 
 honesty perverted by an originally false assumption. No 
 portion of the gospel history, scarcely any portion of Old 
 Testament, or even of apocryphal, narratives, bears such 
 unmistakable marks of fiction. It is a story which.if found 
 in any other volume, would at once have been dismissed 
 as a clumsy and manifest invention. In the first place, 
 it is a miracle wrought to supply more wine to men who 
 had already drunk much — a deed which has no suitability 
 to the character of Jesus, and no analogy to any other of 
 his miracles. Senoridly, though it was, as we are told, the 
 first of his miracles, his mother is represented as expect- 
 ing him to work a miracle, and to commence his public 
 
222 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 ii ' 
 
 career with so unfit and improbable a one. Thirdly, Jeau! 
 is said to have spoken harshly* to his mother, askinj,' her 
 what they had in common, and telling her that " his hour 
 (for working miracles) was not j^et come," when he knew 
 that it was come. Fourthly, in spite of this rebuff, Maiy is 
 represented as still expecting a miracle, and this paiiimlar 
 one, and as making preparation for it : " She saith to the 
 servants, Whatsoever he saith unto you, do it ; " and ac- 
 cordingly Jesus immediately began to give orders to them, 
 Fifthly, the superior quality of the wine, and the enor- 
 mous quantity produced (135 gallons, or in our language, 
 above 43 dozenj) are obviously fabulous. And those who 
 are familiar with the apocryphal gospels will have no dif- 
 ficulty in recognizing the close consanguinity between 
 the whole narrative and the stories of miracles with 
 which they aboi\nd. It is perfectly hopeless, as well as 
 mischievous, to endeavour to retain it as a portion of 
 authentic history. 
 
 * All attempts at explanation have failed to remove this character from 
 the expression— "yui/ai rl 'efiol koI <roi'. 
 
 t See the calciilation in Hennell, and in Strauss, ii. 432. The /xcTpT)rj)s 
 is supposed to correspond to the Hebrew bath, which was equal to 14 Roman 
 ampnora, or 87 gallons ; the whole qiuuitity would therefore be from 104 
 t<>ili6g{ulons. 
 
 The conch 
 
 chapters is 
 
 veloped. 
 
 means of 
 
 ing Christ 
 
 Gospels, T 
 
 Christ's cl 
 
 least), fill 
 
 that man) 
 
 torical, bu 
 
 least of th 
 
 by him, b 
 
 selves, or 
 
 which the 
 
 in all cas< 
 
 many we 
 
 prohabilii 
 
 discourses 
 
 With res{ 
 
 they are i 
 
 with aim 
 
 words ; bi 
 
 certainly 
 
 did not p 
 
 ungenuin 
 
 forced, b; 
 
 eonclude- 
 
 those in ' 
 
 in a man 
 
 delineate 
 
 elsewheri 
 
 moral ai: 
 
Thirdly, Jeaug 
 ler, askinir }^^f 
 
 'hat "his hour 
 ivlien he knew 
 •ebuff, Mary is 
 his paHicdar 
 le saith to the 
 
 it ; " and ac- 
 rders to them. 
 md the enor- 
 our lanp^uago, 
 Lnd those who 
 11 have no dif- 
 nity between 
 miracles with 
 ess, as well as 
 
 1 a portion ot 
 
 ms character from 
 
 32. The nfTpTiriis 
 equal to li Roman 
 refore be from 104 
 
 CHAPTER XI. 
 
 RESULTS OF THE FOREGOING CRITICISM. 
 
 The conclusion at which we have arrived in the foregoing 
 chapters is of vital moment, and deserves to be fully de- 
 veloped. When duly wrought out, it will be found the 
 means of extracting Religion from Orthodoxy — of rescu- 
 ing Christianity from Calvinism. "We have seen that the 
 Gospels, while they give a fair and faithful outline of 
 Christ's character and teaching (the synoptical Gospels at 
 least), fill up that outline with much that is not authentic ; 
 that many of the statements therein related are not his- 
 torical, but mystical or legendary ; and that portions at 
 least of the language ascribed to Jesus were never uttered 
 by him, but originated either with the evangelists them- 
 selves, or more frequently in the traditional stories from 
 which they drew their materials. We cannot, indeed, say 
 in all cases, nor even in most cases, tuith certainty — in 
 many we cannot even pronounce with any very strong 
 prohahility — that such and such particular expressions or 
 discourses are, or are not, the genuine utterances of Christ. 
 With respect to some, we can say with confidence, that 
 they are not from him ; with respect to others, we can say 
 with almost equal confidence, that they are his actual 
 words ; but with regard to the majority of passages, this 
 certainly is not attainable. But us we know that much 
 did not proceed from Jesus — that much is unhistorical and 
 ungenuine — we are entitled to conclude — we are even 
 forced, by the very instinct of our reasoning faculty, to 
 conclude — that the unhistorical and ungenuine passages are 
 those in which Jesus is represented as speaking and acting 
 in a manner uncomformable to his character as otherwise 
 delineated, irreconcilable with the tenour of his teaching as 
 elsewhere described, and at variance with those grand 
 moral and spiritual truths which have commanded the 
 
 f 
 
224 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 R 
 
 ll 
 
 assent of all disciplined and comprehensive minds, and 
 which could scarcely have escaped an intellect so just, 
 wide, penetrating, and profound, as that of our great 
 Teacher. 
 
 Most reflecting minds rise from a perusal of the gospel 
 history with a clear, broad, vivid conception of the char- 
 acter and mission of Christ, notwithstanding the many 
 f)assages at which they have stumbled, and which they 
 lave felt — perhaps with needless alarm and self-reproach 
 — to be incongruous and unharmonizing with the great 
 whole. The question naturally arises. Did these incon- 
 gruities and inconsistencies really exist in Christ himself? 
 or, are they the r suit of the imperfect and unhiatorical 
 condition in which his biography has been transmitted to 
 us ? The answer, it seems to us, ought to be this : — Wf 
 cannot prove, it is true, that some of these unsuitabilities 
 did not exist in Christ himself, but we have shown that 
 many of them belong to the history, not to the subject of 
 the history, and it is only fair, therefore, in the absence of 
 contrary evidence, to conclude that the others also are due 
 to the same origin. 
 
 Now the peculiar, startling, perplexing, revolting, and 
 contradictory doctrines of modern orthodoxy — so far as 
 they have originated from or are justified by the Gospels 
 at all — have originated from, or are justified by, not the 
 general tenour of Christ's character and preaching, hvt 
 those avnyle, unharmonizing, discrepant texts of which we 
 have been speaking. Doctrines, which unsophisticated men 
 feel to be inadmissible and repellant, and which those who 
 hold them most devotedly, secretly admit to be fearful and 
 perplexing, are founded on particular passages which con- 
 tradict the generality of Christ's teaching, but which, being 
 attributed to him by the evangelists, have been regarded 
 as endowed with an authority which it would be profane 
 and dangerous to resist. In showing, therefore, that sev- 
 eral of these passages did not emanate from Christ, and 
 thatin all probability none of them did, we conceive that we 
 shall have rendered a vast service to the cause of true 
 religion, and to those numerous individuals in whose tor- 
 tured minds sense and conscience have lon^ struggled for 
 
 the maste 
 specificatic 
 One of 
 able doctr 
 stamped 
 !— is, that 
 Jesus as t 
 sent dovn 
 mankind) 
 vation. 
 sought fo] 
 common a 
 motives t( 
 themselve 
 minds. 1 
 tain man^ 
 trine so i 
 these, anc 
 they are 
 The m 
 couched 
 language 
 ous porti 
 by the w 
 the mout 
 tical Gos 
 wrested i 
 teach it. 
 several j 
 Salvatioi 
 mirit of 
 abounds 
 
 * It is tn 
 
 gin at all, I 
 
 texts from 
 
 we shall CO 
 
 show that \ 
 
 chief obBta( 
 
 i- " He t 
 
 not shall b 
 
 Buffice to •' 
 
 ; John i 
 
 § 1 Johi 
 
RESULTS OF THE FOREGOING CRITICISM. 
 
 225 
 
 ' minds, and 
 llect so just, 
 of our great 
 
 of the gospel 
 
 of the char- 
 
 »g the many 
 
 which they 
 
 self-reproach 
 
 th the great 
 
 these incon- 
 irist himself? 
 
 unhistoiical 
 ansmitted to 
 e this: — We 
 Qsuitabilities 
 
 shown that 
 he subject of 
 [le absence of 
 p also are due 
 
 jvolting, and 
 y — so far aa 
 '■ the Gospels 
 I by, not the 
 eaching, bid 
 • of which we 
 sticated men 
 ch those who 
 e fearful and 
 js which con- 
 which, being 
 jen regarded 
 d be profane 
 >re, that sev- 
 Ohrist, and 
 !eive thatwe 
 ause of true 
 1 whose tor- 
 truggled for 
 
 the mastery. We will elucidate this matter by a few 
 specifications.* 
 
 One of the most untenable, unphilosophical, uncharit- 
 able doctrines of the orthodox creed — one most peculiarly 
 stamped with the impress of the bad passions of humanity 
 ^is, that belief (by which is generally signified belief in 
 Jesus as the Son of God, the promised Messiah, a Teacher 
 sent dov;^n from heaven on a special mission to redeem 
 mankind) is essential, and tlie one thing essential, to Sal- 
 vation. The source of this doctrine must doubtless be 
 sought for in that intolerance of opposition unhappily so 
 common among men, and in that tendency to ascribe bad 
 motives to those who arrive at difierent conclusions from 
 themselves, which prevails so generally among unchastened 
 minds. But it cannot be denied that the Gospels con- 
 tain many texts which clearly afiirm or fully imply a doc- 
 trine so untenable and harsh. Let us turn to a few of 
 these, and inquire into the degree of authenticity to which 
 they are probably entitled. 
 
 The most specific assei-tion of the tenet in question, 
 couched in that positive, terse, sententious, danmatory 
 language so dear to orthodox divines, is found in the spuri- 
 ous portion of the Gospel of Mark (c. xvi. 16),-f- and is there 
 by the writer, whoever he was, unscrupulously put into 
 the mouth of Jesus after his resurrection. In the synop- 
 tical Gospels may be found a few texts which may be 
 wrested to support the doctrine, but there are none which 
 teach it. But when we come to the fourth Gospel we find 
 several passages similar to that in Mark,J proclaiming 
 Salvation to believers, hut all in the peculiar style and 
 mirit of the Author of the first Epistle of John, which 
 abounds in denunciations precisely similar§ (but directed, 
 
 * It is true that many of the doctrines in question had not a scriptural ori- 
 gin at all, but an ecclesiastical one ; and, when originated, were defended by 
 texts from the epistles, rather than the gospels. The authority of the epistles 
 we shall consider in a subsequent chapter, but if in the meantime we can 
 show that those doctrinea have no foundation in the langui^e of Christ, the 
 chief obstacle to the renunciation of them is removed. 
 
 t " He that believeth and u baptized shall be saved ; but he that believeth 
 not shall be damned," a passage wiiich, were it not happily spurioufl, would 
 BuflBco to «' dauin " the book which contains it. 
 
 ; John iii. 16, 18, 36 ; v. 24 ; vi. 29, 40, 47 ; xi. 25, 26 ; xx. 3i, 
 
 § 1 John ii. 19, 22, 23 ; if, 2, .% 6, 15 ; v. 1, 5, 10, 12, 13. 
 
226 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 RI 
 
 ' I 
 
 it is remarkable, apparently against heretics, not against 
 infidels, against those who believe amiss, not again-st tliose 
 who do not believe at all) — all, too, redolent of the temper 
 of that apostle who wished to call down fire from heaven 
 on an imbelieving village, and who was rebuked by JeavM 
 for the savage and presumptuous suggestion. 
 
 In the last chapter we have shown that the style ol 
 these passages is of a nature to point to John, and not to 
 Jesus, as their author, and that the spirit of them is en- 
 tirely hostile and incompatible with the language of 
 Jesus in other parts more obviously laithful. It appears, 
 therefore, that the passages confirmatory of the doctrine 
 in question are found exclusively in a portion of the syn- 
 optists which is certainly spurious, and in portions of the 
 fourth Gospel which are almost certainly unhistorical ; 
 and that they are contradicted by other passages in all the 
 Gospels. It only remains to show that as the doc>,;ine is 
 at variance with the spirit of the mild and benevolent 
 Jesus, so it is too obviously unsound not to have been rec- 
 ognised as such by one whose clear and grand intelligence 
 was informed and enlightened by so pure a heart. 
 
 In the first place, Christ must have known that the 
 same doctrine will be presented in a very different man- 
 ner, and with very different degrees of evidence for its 
 truth, by different preachers ; so much so that to resist 
 the arguments of one preacher would imply either dulness 
 of comprehension or obstinate and wilful blindness, while 
 to yield to the arguments of his colleague would imply 
 weakness of understanding or instability of purpose. The 
 same doctrine may be presented and defended by one 
 preacher so clearly, rationally, and forcibly that all sensi- 
 ble men (idiosyncracies apart) must accept it, and by 
 another preacher so feebly, corruptly, and confusedly, that 
 all sensible men must reject it. The rejection of the 
 Christianity preached by Luther, and of the Christianity 
 preached by Tetzel, of the Christianity preached by 
 Loyola and Dunstan, and of the Christianity preached by 
 Oberlin and Pascal, cannot be wofthy of the same con- 
 demnation. Few Protestants, and no Catholics, will deny 
 that Christianity has been so presented to men as to make 
 
 it a simple 
 
 veprt'sent, 
 
 ter of meri 
 
 p'j-'i'cncc i 
 
 predched, i 
 
 an error w 
 
 ;in(l wise t 
 
 ?'urtlie! 
 
 ascribe to 
 
 sul)liniest 
 
 ' disbelief 
 
 penalty — 
 
 liciv we h 
 
 telleet wli 
 
 BoHef is .1 
 
 of the mil 
 
 ed. Bein 
 
 l)c,()v hav 
 
 voluntary 
 
 Itredlcate 
 
 (if it be n 
 
 lief ") by 
 
 operation 
 
 the redui 
 
 meritoric 
 
 In san( 
 
 is sufficie 
 
 —if it dc 
 
 lence ad( 
 
 tend beli 
 
 jiental i 
 
 but the 
 
 is imposs 
 
 or dishoi 
 
 rious by 
 
 for rew« 
 
 Such is 
 
 l();j;ians I 
 
 nounce ( 
 
 But, i 
 
RESULTS OF THE FOREGOING CRITICISM. 
 
 227 
 
 not affainst 
 against tliose 
 of the temper 
 I from heaven 
 ked by Jesm 
 
 b the style ol 
 n, and not to 
 •f them is en- 
 language of 
 It appears, 
 the doctrine 
 »n of the syn- 
 ortions of the 
 unhistorieal ; 
 iges in all the 
 he doc^iiiie is 
 id benevolent 
 ave been rec- 
 d intelligence 
 heart. 
 
 own that the 
 lifferent man- 
 idence for its 
 that to resist 
 3ither dulness 
 ndness, while 
 would imply 
 urpose. The 
 jnded by one 
 hat all sensi- 
 t it, and by 
 if usedly, that 
 jction of the 
 Christianity 
 preached by 
 preached by 
 he same con- 
 ies, will deny 
 m as to make 
 
 it n simple affair both of sense and virtue to reject it. To 
 lepivsent, therefore, the reception of a doctrine as a mat- 
 ter of merit, or its rejection as a matter of blame, mlthout 
 rt'f'nynca to the consideration fioiv and by 'whom it in 
 prt'dchcd, is to leave out the main element of judgment — 
 an error whicli could not have been committed by the jusl 
 .111(1 wise Jesus. 
 
 Further. The doctrine and the passages in (luestion 
 jisciibe to " belief" the highest degree of merit, and the 
 suldiniest conceivable reward — "eternal life;" and tu 
 ' (lis])elief " the deepest wickedness, and the most fearful 
 |)enalty — " damnation," and " the wrath of God." Now. 
 lici e we have a logical error, betraying a confusion of In- 
 tel h:(t which Ave may well scruple to ascribe to Jesus. 
 Belief is an effect produced by a cause. It is a condition 
 of the mind induced by the operation of evidence present- 
 ed. Being, therefore, an efect, and not an act, it cannot 
 bc.or have, a merit. The moment it becomes a distinctly 
 \()luntary act (and therefore a thing of which merit can be 
 l)ie<Hcated)itce&8G8 to be genuine — it is then broughtabout 
 (if it be not an abuse of language to name this state " be- 
 lief ") by the will of the individual, not by the bond fide 
 operation of evidence upon his mind — which brings us to 
 the reductio ad absurdum, that belief can only become 
 meritorious by ceasing to be honest. 
 
 In sane and competent minds, if the evidence presented 
 is sufficient, belief will follow as a necessary consequence 
 —if it does not follow, this can only arise from the evi- 
 lence adduced being insufficient — and in such case to pre- 
 tend belief, or to attempt belief, would be a forfeiture of 
 mental integrity ; and cannot therefore be meritorioua. 
 but the reverse. To disbelieve in spite of adequate proof 
 is impossible — to believe without adequate proof, is weak. 
 or dishonest. Belief, therefore, can only become merito- 
 rious by becoming sinful — can only become a fit subject 
 for reward by becoming a fit subject for punishment. 
 Such is the sophism involved in the dogma which theo- 
 loL^ians have dared to put into Christ's mouth, and to an- 
 nounce on his authority. 
 
 But, it will be urged, the disbelief which Christ blamed 
 
 • 
 
:ji 
 
 223 
 
 THE CREED OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 n 
 
 4\> 
 
 and menaced with punishment was ( as appears from John 
 iii. 19) the disbelief implied in a wilful rejection of his 
 claims, or a refusal to examine them — a love of darkness 
 in preference to light. If so, the language employed is 
 incorrect and deceptive, and the blame is predicated of an 
 effect instead of a cause — it is meant of a voluntary 
 action, but it is predicated of a specified and denounced 
 consequence which is no natural or logical indication of 
 that voluntary action, but may arise from independent 
 causes. The moralist who should denounce gout as a fin, 
 meaning the sinfulness to apply to the excesses of which 
 gout is often, but by no means always, a consequence and 
 an indication, would be held to be a very confused teacher 
 and inaccurate logician. Moreover, this is not the sense 
 attached to the doctrine by orthodox divines in common 
 parlance. And the fact still remains that Christ is repre- 
 sented as rewarding by eternal felicity a state of mind 
 which, if honestly attained, is inevitable, involuntary, and 
 therefore in no way a fitting subject for reward, and 
 which, if not honestly attained, is hollow, fallacious, and 
 deserving of punishment rather than of recompense. 
 
 We are aware that the orthodox seek to escape from 
 the dilemma, by asserting that belief results from the 
 state ot the heart, and that if this be rif t, belief will 
 inevitably follow. This is simply false i fact. How 
 many excellent, virtuous, and humble minds, in all ages, 
 have been anxious, but unable to believe — have prayed 
 earnestly for belief, and sufiered bitterly for disbelief — 
 iu \^m\ 
 
 The dogma of the Divinity, or, as it is called in the 
 technical language of polemics, the proper Deity, of Christ, 
 though historically provable to have had an ecclesiasti- 
 cal, not an evangelical, origin* — though clearly negatived 
 by the whole tenour of the syno|)tical Gospels, and even 
 by some passages in the fourth Gospel [and though it is 
 difficult to i?ad the narrative of his career with an un- 
 
 [* " The ITnecriptural Origin and EcdeRiastical History of the Doctrine nf 
 the Trinity," by the Rev. J. Hamilton Thorn.] 
 
)ears from John 
 rejection of his 
 )ve of darkness 
 ?e employed is 
 radicated of an 
 )f a voluntary 
 and denounced 
 al indication of 
 •m independent 
 ;e gout as a ein, 
 cesses of which 
 onsequence and 
 onfused teacher 
 s not the sense 
 nes in common 
 Christ is repre- 
 ; state of mind 
 ivoluntary, and 
 )r reward, and 
 , fallacious, and 
 compense. 
 to escape from 
 ssults from the 
 ig t, belief will 
 in fact. How 
 nds, in all ages, 
 ! — have prayed 
 for disbelief— 
 
 8 called in the 
 ')eity, of Christ, 
 an ecclesiasti- 
 sarly negatived 
 »pels, and even 
 id though it is 
 'r with an un- 
 
 j^ of the Doctrine of 
 
 RESULTS OF THE FOREGOING CRITICISM. 
 
 229 
 
 forestalled mind without being clear that Jesus had no 
 notion of such a belief himself, and would have repudia- 
 ted it with horror] — can yet appeal to several isolated 
 po'tions and texts, as suggesting and confirming, if not 
 asserting it. On close examination, however, it will be 
 seen that all these passages are to be found either in the 
 fourth Gospel — which we have already shown reason to 
 conclude is throughout an unscrupulous and most inexact 
 j)araphrase of Christ's teaching — or in those portions of 
 the three first Gospels which, on other accounts and from 
 independent trains of argument, have been selected as at 
 least of questionable authenticity. It is true that the 
 doctrine in question is now chiefly defended by reference 
 to the Epistles ; but at the same time it would scarcely 
 be held so tenaciously by the orthodox if it were found 
 to be wholly destitute of evangelical support. Now, the 
 passages which appear most confirmatory of Christ's De- 
 ity, or Divine Nature, are, in the first place, the narra- 
 tives of the Incarnation, of the miraculous Concept! •)n, 
 as given by Matthew and Luke. We have already en- 
 tered pretty fully into the consideration of the authenti- 
 city of these portions of Scripture, and have seen that we 
 may almost with certainty pronounce them to be fabulous, 
 or mythical. The two narratives do not harmonize with 
 each other ; they neutralize and negative the genealogies 
 on which depended so large a portion of the proof of Je- 
 sus being the Messiah ;* — the marvellous statement they 
 contain is not referred to in any subsequent portion of 
 the two Gospels, and is tacitly but positively negatived 
 by several passages — it is never mentioned in the Acts 
 or in the Epistles, and was evidently unknown to all the 
 apostles— and, finally, the tone of the narrative, espe- 
 cially in Luke, is poetical and legendary, and bears a 
 marked similarity to the stories contained in the apocry- 
 phal gospels. 
 
 * Tlie Mesaiah must, according to Jewish prophecy, be a lineal descendant 
 of David : this Christ was, according to the ^teni-alogies : tliiw he was not, if 
 the miraculous con ption be a fact. If, therefore, JePvis cauie into being 
 as Matthew and Luke athrm, we do not see how he could have been th« 
 Mesbiah, 
 
230 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 The only other expressions in the three first GospeU 
 which lend the slightest countenance to the doctrine in 
 question, are the acknowledgments of the disciples, the 
 centurion, and the demoniacs, that Jesus was the Son of 
 God,* — some of which we have already shown to be of 
 very questionable genuineness, — and the voice from hea- 
 ven said to have beon heard at the baptism and the trans- 
 figuration, saying, " This is my beloved Son," &lc. But, 
 besides that, as shown in chapter vii., considerable doubt 
 rests on the accuracy of the first of these relations : the 
 testimony borne by the heavenly voice to Jesus can in no 
 sense mean that he was physically the Son of God, or a 
 partaker of the divine nature, inasmuch as the very same 
 expression was frequently applied to others, and as indeed 
 a " Son of God " was, in the common parlance of the Jews, 
 simply a prophet, a man whom God had sent, or to whom 
 He had spoken.f 
 
 But when we come to the fourth Gospel, especially to 
 those portions of it whose peculiar style betrays that tliey 
 came from John, and not from Jesus, the case is very dif- 
 ferent. We find here many passages evidently intended 
 to convey the impression that Jesus was endowed with a 
 superhuman nature, but neaiiy all expressed in language 
 savouring less of Christian simplicity than of Alexandrian 
 philosophy. The evangelist commences his Gospel with a 
 confused statement of the Platonic doctrine as modified 
 in Alexandria, and that the Logos was a partaker of the 
 Divine Nature, and was the Creator of the world ; on 
 which he proceeds to engraft his own notion, that Jesus 
 was this Logos — that the Logos or the divine wisdom, 
 
 * An expreaaion here merely signifying a Prophet or the Messiah. 
 
 + " The Lord hath said unto me (David), Thou art my Son; this day 
 have I begotten thee. " — (Ps. ii. 7). Jehovah says of Solomon, ' ' I will be 
 his father, and he shall be my son." — {2 Sam. vii. 14). The same expres- 
 sion is applied to Israel (Exod. iv. 22 ; Hos. xi. 1), and to David (Ps. Ixxxix. 
 27). " I have said, Ye are gods ; and all of you are children of the most 
 High." — (Ps. Ixxxii. 6). " If he called them gods, unto whom the WDfd of 
 Qoaoame,"ftc. — (John x. Sf)), "Behold what manner of love the Father 
 
 hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called the Sons of God 
 
 Beloved, now are we the Sous of God." — (1 John iii. 1, 2). (Sfe also Gal. 
 UL 26: IV. 5, 6). " As j lany as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the 
 ■ona of God."— (Rom. viii. 14). "But to as many as received him, he giive 
 power to become the soiu of GoU."— (John L 12). 
 
 the seconi 
 
 person of 
 
 read the < 
 
 whole of 
 
 tion that 
 
 of the W 
 
 Throughc 
 
 the same 
 
 for Chris 
 
 already \ 
 
 [Take, 
 
 punishm( 
 
 in the pc 
 
 one sing] 
 
 fire," " e 
 
 petually 
 
 the consi 
 
 typifying 
 
 distinctly 
 
 precise < 
 
 structioi 
 
 The dod 
 
 that we 
 
 God of 
 
 Great ] 
 
 with th 
 
 Scriptu] 
 
 the wic 
 
 finally, 
 
 of the ( 
 
 compari 
 
 connect 
 
 end of i 
 
 . generat 
 
 now de 
 
 no nee 
 
 *[Seec 
 fied divi 
 Punishm 
 the Oonte 
 
RESULTS OF THE FOREGOmO CRITICISM. 
 
 231 
 
 first Gospels 
 le doctrine in 
 
 disciples, the 
 as the Son of 
 lown to be of 
 )ice from hea- 
 and the trans- 
 >n," &c. But, 
 derable doubt 
 relations : the 
 esus can in no 
 a of God, or a 
 the very same 
 and as indeed 
 36 of the Jews, 
 it, or to whom 
 
 , especially to 
 rays that they 
 -se is very dif- 
 jntly intended 
 idowed with a 
 sd in language 
 »f Alexandrian 
 Gospel with a 
 le as modified 
 a,rtaker of the 
 he world ; on 
 on, that Jesus 
 ivine wisdom, 
 
 e Messiah, 
 ny Son ; this clay 
 lomon, " I will be 
 The same expres- 
 David (Ps. Ixxxix, 
 iliiren of the most 
 [vhom the vord of 
 of love the Father 
 
 •ns of God 
 
 i). (See alHo Gal. 
 God, they are the 
 ived him, he gave 
 
 the second person in Plato's Trinity, became flesh in the 
 person of the prophet of Nazareth. Now, can any one 
 read the epistles, or the three first Gospels — or even the 
 whole of the fourth — and not at once repudiate the no- 
 tion that Jesus was, and knew himself to be, the Creator 
 of the World ? — which John affirms him to have been. 
 Throughout this Gospel we find constant repetitions of 
 the same endeavour to make out a supv^rhuman nature 
 for Christ ; but the ungenuineness of these passages has 
 already been fully considered. 
 
 [Take, again, the doctrine of the Eternity of future 
 punishments — the most impossible of the tenets included 
 in the popular creed. It rests upon and is affirmed by 
 one single Gospel text. Matt. xxv. 46 ; — for, though "hell 
 fire," " everlasting fire" — i.e., the fire that was kept per- 
 petually burning in the adjacent valley of Gehenna for 
 the consumption of the city refuse — is often spoken of as 
 typifying the fate of the wicked, yet the expression 
 distinctly implies, not everlasting life in fire, bvt the 
 precise opposite — namely death, annihilation, total de- 
 struction, in a fire ever at hand and never extinguished. 
 The doctrine is not only in diametric antagonism to all 
 that we can conceive or accept of the attributes of the 
 God of Jesus, but to the whole spirit and teaching of our 
 Great Master. It is at variance with other texts and 
 with the general view* gathered from the authentic 
 Scripture, which teaches the " perishing," the " death," of 
 the wicked, not their everlasting life in torment. And 
 finally, the isolated text in question occurs in one only 
 of the Gospels, — and occurs there (as will be seen by 
 comparing Matth. xxv. 31, with xxiv. 30) in Immediate 
 connection with the prophecy as to the coming of the 
 end of the world within the lifetime of the then existing 
 generation, — a prophecy, the erroneousness of which is 
 now demonstrated, and which there is (to say the least) 
 no need for believing ever to have come out of the 
 
 * [See countlesB argniments from the pens, not of unbelievers, but of quali- 
 fied divines — among later ones, " Haimony of Scripture on future 
 Punishments," by the Rev. S. Miuton, and a paper by " Anglicanua," iu 
 the (hntemtiomry Bcview, for May, 1872.] 
 
 ! i 
 
 1 
 i 'I 
 
 ;i';' 
 
232 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 K.-!| i 
 
 mouth of Christ. What are called the " eschatological " 
 discourses are notoriously among the passages in the 
 Gospels of most questionable genuineness. 
 
 Yet it is on the authority of a single verse so sus- 
 piciously located, so repeatedly contradicted else wli ere 
 either distinctly or by implication, and so flagrantly outot 
 harmony with the spirit both of Theism and of Christian- 
 ity, that we are summoned to accept a dogma revolting 
 alike to our purer instincts and our saner reason !] 
 
 Once more ; the doctrine of the Atonement, of Christ's 
 death having been a sacrifice in expiation of the sins of 
 mankind, is the keystone of the common form of modem 
 orthodoxy. It takes its origin from the epistles, and we 
 believe can only appeal to three texts in the evangelists, 
 for even partial confirmation. In Matt. xx. 28, it is 
 said, " The Son of man came not to be ministered unto, 
 but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many" 
 an expression which may countenance the doctrine, but 
 assuredly does not contain it. Again in Matth. xxvi. 28, 
 we find, " This is my blood of the new testament, which 
 is shed for many for the remission of sins." Mark (xiv. 
 24) and Luke (xxii. 20), however", who give the same 
 sentence, both omit the significant expression; while 
 John omits, not only the expression, but the entire 
 narrative of the institution of th<j Eucharist, which is 
 said elsewhere to have been the occasion of it. In the 
 fourth Gospel, John the Baptist is represented as saying 
 of Jesus (i. 29), " Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh 
 away the sin of the world," an expression which may 
 possibly be intended to convey the doctrine, but which 
 occurs in what we have already shown to be about the 
 most apocryphal portion of the whole Gospel. 
 
 In fine, then, we arrive at this irresistible conclusion ; 
 that — knowing several passages in the evangelists to be 
 unauthentic, and having reason to suspect the authenti- 
 city of many others, and scarcely being able with absolute 
 certainty to point to any which are perfectly and indubi- 
 tably authentic — the probability in favour of the fidelity 
 
 REI 
 
 of any of tl 
 
 perplexing 
 
 to the prob 
 
 A doctrine 
 
 feelings ma 
 
 its being fr 
 
 refragable ; 
 
 rot scruple 
 
 he never u1 
 
 amounts to 
 
 gelists, the 
 
 Sciently ur 
 
 dation of d( 
 
 mon sense. 
 
 But, it -w 
 
 absolute ui 
 
 tory, and o 
 
 limine, in 
 
 sequence cj 
 
 sideration 
 
 lead to a r 
 
 But the 
 
 reach so ft 
 
 main poin 
 
 trenchmen 
 
 ton accoui 
 
 tone, of h 
 
 to us a cl< 
 
 over those 
 
 which ma 
 
 destroy it 
 
 tbxnish iti 
 
 is true, w 
 
 to any on 
 
 sary nor i 
 
 accepting 
 
 we must, 
 
 those fac 
 
 nation ai 
 
 what he 
 
RESULTS OF THE FOREGOING CRITICISM. 
 
 23? 
 
 chatological " 
 sages in the 
 
 verse so sus- 
 ed elsewliere 
 ^rantly outot 
 of Christian- 
 
 ^a revolting 
 
 sason !] 
 
 nt, of Christ's 
 
 of the sins of 
 
 rm of modem 
 
 istles, and we 
 
 le evangehsts, 
 
 XX. 28, it ia 
 
 nistered unto, 
 
 jmn for many," 
 
 J doctrine, but 
 
 atth. xxvi. 28, 
 
 tament, which 
 
 ." Mark (xiv. 
 
 jive the same 
 
 easion ; while 
 
 ut the entire 
 
 .rist, which is 
 
 of it. In the 
 
 ited as saying 
 
 which takoth 
 
 »n which may 
 
 Qe, but which 
 
 be about the 
 
 lel. 
 
 le conclusion ; 
 
 mgelists to be 
 the authenti- 
 with absolute 
 
 y and indubi- 
 
 of the fidelity 
 
 of any of the texts relied on to prove the peculiar and 
 perplexing doctrines of modern orthodoxy, is far inferior 
 to the probability (igaiinst the truth of those doctrines. 
 A doctrine perplexing to our reason and painful to our 
 feelings may be from God ; but in this case the proof of 
 its being from God must be proportionally clear and ir- 
 refragable ; the assertion ol it in a narrative which does 
 rot scruple to attribute to God's Messenger words which 
 he never uttered, is not only no proof, but scarcely even 
 amounts to a presumption. There is no text in the evan- 
 gelists, the divine (or Christian) origin of which is suf- 
 ficiently unquestionable to enable it to serve as the foun- 
 dation of doctrines repugnant to natural feeling or to com- 
 mon sense. 
 
 But, it will be objected, if these conclusions are sound, 
 absolute uncertainty is thrown over the whole gospel his- 
 tory, and over all Christ's teaching. To this we reply, in 
 limine, in the language oi Algernon Sidney, " No conse- 
 sequence can destroy any truth ; " the sole matter for con- 
 sideration is, Are our arguments correct ? not. Do they 
 lead to a result which is embarrasing and unwelcome ? 
 
 But the inference is excessive ; the premises do not 
 reacli so far. The uncertainty thrown is not over the 
 main points of Christ's history, which, after all its re- 
 trenchments, still stands out an intelligible though a skele- 
 ton account— not over the grand ieatures, the pervading 
 tone, of his doctrines or his character, which still present 
 to us a clear, consistent, and splendid delineation ; but 
 over those individual statements, passages, and discourses, 
 which mar this delineation, which break its unity, which 
 destroy its consistency, which cloud its clearness, which 
 twnish its beauty. The gain to us seems immense. It 
 is true, we have no longer absolute certainty with regard 
 to any one especial text or scene : such is neither neces- 
 sary nor attainable ; it is tine that, instead of passively 
 accepting the whole heterogeneous and indigestible mass, 
 we must, by the careful and conscientious exercise of 
 those faculties with which we are endowed, by ratioci- 
 nation and moral tact, separate what Christ did, from 
 what he did not teach, as best we may. But the task 
 
234 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 mi 
 I 
 
 
 will be difficult to those only who look in the Gospels for 
 a minute, d(%matic, and sententious creed — not to those 
 who seek only to learn Christ's spirit, that they may im- 
 bibe it, and to comprehend his views of virtue and of 
 God, that they may draw strenfjth and consolation from 
 those fountains of living water, ' 
 
 ♦ " The character of the record is such^ that I set. not how any ci«at 
 stress can be laid on particular actions attributed to Jesus. That he 1 ved 
 a divine life, suffered a violent death, taught and lived a most beautiful re- 
 ligion —this seems the great fact about which a mass of truth and error has 
 been collected. " — Theodore Parker, Discourse, p. 188. 
 
 THE L] 
 
 We now 
 amount c 
 apostles, 
 fully imfc 
 infallible 
 word, reg 
 self? 
 
 Whati 
 tainty, th 
 sired. V 
 record of 
 
 The laj 
 conveys i 
 faithful J 
 churches 
 ings, an( 
 written 1 
 ion of Pf 
 ings, mm 
 therefore 
 confiden 
 doctrine 
 safety, i 
 the freec 
 — of coi 
 thus the 
 garded 
 
 * Tiuke 
 that when 
 narrator 
 &c. &c., X 
 Phi'.em. 2- 
 
he Gospels for 
 —not to those 
 they may im- 
 virtue and of 
 Qsolation from 
 
 not how any neat 
 
 KM 
 
 SU8. That he ! ved 
 3, most beautiful re- 
 iruth and error has 
 
 CHAPTER XIL 
 
 THE LIMITS OP APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 
 
 We now come to the very important question — as to the 
 amount of authority which belongs to the teaching of the 
 apostles. Are they to be implicitly relied on as having 
 fully imbibed Christ's spirit ? and as faithful, competent, 
 infallible expounders of his doctrine ? May we, in a 
 word, regard their teaching as the teaching of Jesus him- 
 self? 
 
 What their teaching was we know with perfect cer- 
 tainty, though not with all the fulness that might be de- 
 sired. We have the teaching itself in the epistles, and a 
 record of it in the Acts. 
 
 The latter work is not perfectly to be relied on. It 
 conveys a vivid, and on the whole, in all probability, a 
 faithful picture of the formation of the early Christian 
 churches, their sufferings, their struggles, their proceed- 
 ings, and the spirit which animated them ; and, being 
 written by a participator in those events, and a compan- 
 ion of Paul* through a portion of his missionary wandei-- 
 ings, must be regarded as mainly historical ; and we shall, 
 therefore, make use of the narrative with considerable 
 confidence. But, as a source for discovering the special 
 doctrines preached by the apostles, it is of questionable 
 safety, inasmuch as the writer evidently allowed himself 
 the freedom indulged in by all historians of antiquity 
 — of composing speeches in the names of his actors ; and 
 thus the discourses, both of Paul and Peter, can only be re- 
 garded as proceeding from Luke himself, containing, prob- 
 
 * Luke is genorally considered to be the same as Silas, '♦is remarked 
 that when Silas is represented in the narrative as being with Paul, the 
 narrator speaks in the first person plural. " We came to Sarnothracia." 
 &c. &c.. xvi. 11 ; Rom. xvi. 21 ; Col. iv. 14 ; 2 Thes. i. 1 ; ? Titm iv. 11 1 
 Phi'.em. 24. 
 
 

 236 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 ably, much that was said, but much also, that was only 
 fitting to have been said, on such occasions. 
 
 We have already adduced one unmistakable instance 
 of this practice in a previous chapter, where Luke not 
 only gives the speech of Gamaliel in a secret council of 
 the Sanhedrim, from which the apostles were expressly 
 excluded,* but makes him refer, in the past tense, to an 
 event which did not take place till some years after the 
 speech was delivered. In the same way we have long 
 discourses delivered by Stephen, Peter, and Paul, at some 
 of which Luke may have been present, but which it is 
 impossible he should have remembered verbatim; we 
 have the same invalid argument and erroneous reference 
 to prophecy regarding the resurrection of Christ put into 
 the mouths of two such opposite characters as Peter and 
 Paul (ii. 27, xiii. 35) ; we have another account of a con- 
 versation in a secret council of the Jews (iv. 15-17) ; we 
 have the beautiful oration of Paul at Athens, when we 
 know that he was quite alone (xvii. 14, 15) ; we have the 
 private conversation of the Ephesian craftsmen, when 
 conspiring against the apostles (xix. 25-27) ; we have 
 the private letter of the Chief Captain Lysias to Felix 
 (xxiii. 26) ; we have two private conversations between 
 Festus and Agrippa about Paul (xxv. 14-22, and xxvi. 
 31, 32); and all these are given in precisely the style and 
 manner of an ear-witness. We cannot, therefore, feel 
 certain that any particular discourses or expressions at- 
 tributed by Luke to the apostles were really, genuinely, 
 and unalteredly, theirs. In the epistles, however, they 
 speak for themselves, and so far there can be no mistake 
 as to the doctrines they believed and taught. 
 
 Before proceeding further, we wish to premise one re- 
 mark. The epistles contained in our canon are twenty- 
 one in number, viz., fourteen of Paul (including the He- 
 brews), three of John, two of Peter, one of James, and 
 one of Jude. But the authorship of the Epistle to the 
 Hebrews is more than doubtful ; the second of Peter, 
 the second and third of John, and even those of James 
 
 • Aofav.34. 
 
^at was only 
 
 |ble instance 
 
 re Luke not 
 
 it council of 
 
 ire expressly 
 
 tense, to an 
 
 ars after the 
 
 e have long 
 
 ^aul, at some 
 
 It which it is 
 
 srbatim; we 
 
 ous reference 
 
 hrist put into 
 
 as Peter and 
 
 unt of a con- 
 
 . 15-17) ; we 
 
 ens, when we 
 
 ; we have the 
 
 'tsmen, when 
 
 r ) ; we have 
 
 i'-sias to Felix 
 
 bions between 
 
 22, and xxvi. 
 
 the style and 
 
 herefore, feel 
 
 Kpressions at- 
 
 ly, genuinely, 
 
 owever, they 
 
 )e no mistake 
 
 emise one re- 
 Q. are twenty- 
 ding the He- 
 f James, and 
 5pistle to the 
 >nd of Peter, 
 Dse of James 
 
 LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 237 
 
 and Jude, were at a very early period reckoned among 
 the spurious or doubtful writings.* The epistles of cer- 
 tain or acknowledged genuineness are thus reduced to 
 fifteen, viz., thii'teen of Paul, one of John, and one of 
 Peter. 
 
 Thus, of fifteen epistles, of which we can pronounce 
 with tolerable certainty that they are of apostolic origin, 
 two only proceeded from the companions of Jesus, and 
 the remaining thirteen from a man who had never seen 
 him, save in a vision, nor heard his teaching, nor learnt 
 from his disciples ; — a converted persecutor, who boasted 
 that he received his instructions from direct supernatural 
 communications.-}- 
 
 We will now proceed to establish the following prop- 
 ositions : — 
 
 I. That the apostles differed from each other in opinion, 
 and disagreed among themselves. 
 
 II. That they held and taught some opinions which 
 we know to have been erroneous. 
 
 III. That both in their general tone, and in some im- 
 portant particulars, their teaching differed materially from 
 that of Christ as depicted in the synoptical Gospels. 
 
 I. Infallible expounders of a system of Religion or 
 Philosophy cannot disagree among themselves as to the 
 doctrines which compose that system, nor as to the spirit 
 which should pervade it. Now, the apostles did disagree 
 among themselves in their exposition of the nature and 
 constituents of their Master's system — and this, too, in 
 matters of no small significance ; they are not, therefore, 
 infallible or certain guides. 
 
 Putting abide personal and angry contentions, such as 
 those recorded in Acts xv. 39, which, however undigni- 
 fied, are, we fear, natural even to holy men ; the first re- 
 corded dispute among the apostles we find to have related 
 to a matter of the most essential importance to the char- 
 
 * De Wette, i. 69-83. See also Hug, 583-650. The Epistle of Jamea we 
 are still disposed to consider genuine ; that of Jude is uiiimp()rt.-uit ; tlie 
 second of Feter, and the third of John, are almost certoiuly unnrioiiij. 
 '^ ■ 11-19. 
 
 Ti 
 
 .i.ii 
 
 i'i\ 
 
 Njralatians i. 
 
 I.- ■ 
 

 Vi: 
 
 238 
 
 THE CREED OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 acter of Christianity — viz., whether or not the Gospel 
 should be preached to any but Jews — whether the Gen- 
 tiles were to be admitted into the fold of Christ ? We 
 find (c. xi. j that when the apostles and brethren in Jiidea 
 heard that Peter had ventured to visit Gentiles, to eat 
 with them, to preach to them, and even to baptize them, 
 they were astonished and scandalized by the innovation 
 and " contended with him." The account of the discus- 
 sion which ensued throws light upon two very interesting 
 questions : upon the views entertained by Jesus himself 
 (or at least as to those conveyed by him to his disciples), 
 as to the range and limit of his mission ; and upon the 
 manner in which, and the grounds on which, controversies 
 were decided in the early Church. 
 
 We have been taught to regard Jesus as a prophet who 
 announced himself as sent from God on a mission to 
 preach repentance, and to teach the way of life to all 
 mankind, and who left behind him the apostles to com- 
 plete the work which he was compelled to leave un- 
 finished. The mission of Moses was to separate and edu- 
 cate a peculiar people, apart from the rest of the world, 
 for the knowledge and worship of the one true God : — 
 The mission of Christ was to bring all nations to tliat 
 knowledge and worship — to extend to all mankind that 
 salvation which, in his time, was considered to belong to 
 the Jews alone, as well as to point to a better and wider 
 way of life. Such is the popular and established notion. 
 But when we look into the New Testament we find little 
 to confirm this view, and much to negative it. Putting 
 aside our own prepossessions, and inferences drawn from 
 the character of Christ, and the comprehensive grandeur 
 of his doctrine, nothing can well be clearer from the evi- 
 dence presented to us in the Scriptures, than that Jesus 
 considered himself sent, not so much to the world at large 
 as to the Jews exclusively, to bring back his countrymen 
 to the true essence and spirit of that religion whose purity 
 had in his days been so grievously corrupted ; and to ele- 
 vate and to enlarge their views from the stores of his 
 own rich and comprehensive mind. 
 
 It will be allowed by all that the apostles, at the com- 
 
 LIMITS 
 
 luenccnient 
 
 Lord, had n 
 
 to any but 
 
 but a Jewi 
 
 tient questi 
 
 vesurrcctioi 
 
 this time re 
 
 of the acc( 
 
 strong relie 
 
 ministry. 
 
 the rclatio; 
 
 new idea 
 
 God is no 
 
 that fearet 
 
 with him" 
 
 word whic 
 
 and which 
 
 the peopU 
 
 shows, me 
 
 we are to 
 
 astonishe( 
 
 out the gi 
 
 to accouE 
 
 and bapt 
 
 dently (x 
 
 tified bin 
 
 not by q 
 
 simply b 
 
 to proce( 
 
 peared v 
 
 in a ma 
 
 light ha' 
 
 the Gen 
 
 could th 
 
 ciples ai 
 
 tiles, or 
 
 other ni 
 
 mission 
 
LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 23.9 
 
 the Gospel 
 ^er tlic Gen- 
 'hrist ? We 
 [ren in Judea 
 btiles, to eat 
 faptize them, 
 innovation 
 the discus- 
 , interesting 
 esus himself 
 is disciples), 
 nd upon the 
 controversies 
 
 prophet who 
 ' mission to 
 of life to all 
 sties to com- 
 o leave un- 
 ate and edu- 
 f the world, 
 true God .— 
 tions to that 
 ankind that 
 to belong to 
 V and wider 
 shed notion, 
 ^e find little 
 t. Putting 
 irawn from 
 'e grandeur 
 )m the evi- 
 that Jesus 
 rid at large 
 3untrymen 
 lose purity 
 and to ele- 
 3res of his 
 
 menconient of their ministry after the crucifixion of their 
 Lord, had not the least idea that their mission extended 
 to any but the Jews, or that tlieir Master was anytliing 
 but a Jewish Messiah and Deliverer. Their first impa- 
 tient question to him when assembled together after the 
 resurrection, is said to have been, " Lord, wilt thou at 
 this time restore the kingdom to Israel ? "* The whole 
 of the account we are now considering, brings out in 
 strong relief their notions as to che narrow limits of their 
 ministry. When Peter is sent for by Cornelius, and hears 
 the relation of his vision, he exclaims, as if a perfectly 
 new idea had struck him, " Of a truth I perceive that 
 God is no respecter of persons : but in every nation he 
 that feareth him, and worketh righteousness, is accepted 
 with him" (Acts x. 34) ; and he goes on to expound " the 
 word which God sent unto the children of Israel" (v. 3G), 
 and which the apostles were commanded to " preach unto 
 the people" (v. 42\ — " the people," as the context (v. 41) 
 shows, meaning simply the Jews. The Jewish believers, 
 we are told (v. 45), "as many as came with Peter were 
 astonished, because that on the Gentiles also was poured 
 out the gift of the Holy Ghost." When Peter was called 
 to account by the other apostles for having preached to 
 and baptized Gentiles (xi. 1) — a proceeding which evi- 
 dently (xi. 2, 3) shocked and surprised them all — he jus- 
 tified himself, not by reference to any commands of Jesus, 
 not by quoting precept or example of his Master, but 
 simply by relating a vision or dream which he supposed 
 to proceed from a divine suggestion. The defence ap- 
 peared valid to the brethren, and they inferred from it, 
 in a manner which shows what a new and unexpected 
 light had broken in upon them, — " Then hath God also to 
 the Gentiles granted repentance unto life" (xi. 18). Now, 
 could this have been the case, had Christ given his dis- 
 ciples any commission to preach the gospel to the Gen- 
 tiles, or given them the slightest reason to suppose that; 
 other nations besides the Jews were included in that com- 
 mission ? (See also for confirmation xi. 19, aiid xiii. 46,) 
 
 the 
 
 com- 
 
 • Acta. L <x 
 
240 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM.. 
 
 It is to be obHerved also that throughout the ela>)orate 
 arguments contained in the Epistle to the Romans, to 
 !*how that the gospel ovxfht to be preached to the GtntileH 
 
 —that there is no dihorence between Greek and Jew, &e. 
 
 —Paul, thongl'. he quotes largely from the Hebrew Proph- 
 ets, never ajypeida to any sayings of Jesus, in confir- 
 mation of his view , and in the Acts, in two instances, his 
 mission to the Gentiles is represented as arising out of a 
 direct subsequent revelation (in a vision) to hinisolf. 
 (Acts xxii. 21 , xxvi. 17 ; ix. 15.) 
 
 As, therefore, none of the apostles, either in their 
 writings or in their discussions, appeal to the sayings or 
 deeds of Christ during his lifetime as their warrant for 
 preaching the gospel to the Gentiles, but on the contrary, 
 one and all manifest a total ignorance of any such deeds 
 or sayings — we think it must be concluded that the va- 
 rious texts extant, conveying his commands to " preach 
 the gospel to all nations," could never have proceeded from 
 him, but are to be ranked among the many ascribed say- 
 ings, embodying the ideas of a later period, which we 
 find both in the Acts and the evangelists.* None of these 
 are qiioted or referred to by the apostles in their justifi- 
 cation, and therefore could not have been known to them, 
 and, since unknown, could not be authentic. 
 
 On the other hand, there are several passages in the 
 Gospels which, if genuine, clearly indicate that it was not 
 from any neglect or misunderstanding of the instructioTis 
 
 * ThcHe texts are the following (Matth. viii. 11, 12) : " Many shall come 
 from the east and west, and shall sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and 
 Jacob, in the kingdom of heaven. But the children of the kingdom shall 
 be cast out into outer darkness. " This, however, as well as the parable of the 
 vineyard (xxi. 43), and that of the supper (Luke xiv. 16), might be merely 
 an indignant denunciation called fortn by the obstinacy of the Jews in re- 
 fusing to listrin to his claims. Matth. xxiv. 14, xxviii. 19 ; Mark xvi, 15, 
 we have already shown reason to believe spurious ; and Luke xxiv. 47, 
 with Acts i. 8, d> ar equal marks of unauthenticity. It is true that Jesus 
 talked with a Samaritan woman, and healed a Samaritan leper ; but the 
 Samaritans were not (xen tiles, only heretical Jews. We find from Acts 
 viii. 5, 14, that th^e apostles early and without scruple preached to and bap- 
 tized Samaritans. Jesus also healed a Gentile centurion's servant : but in 
 the first place, the servant might have been a Jew, though his master was 
 not ; antf, secondly, a temporal blessing, a simple act of charity, Jeaus could 
 not gruf'ge even to strangers. 
 
the ela>»orate 
 
 |»e Romans, to 
 
 the Gt'ii tiles 
 
 and Jew, &e. 
 
 lebrew Pioph." 
 
 ^, in confir- 
 
 instances, his 
 
 [rising out of a 
 i) to hiijLsolf. 
 
 'her in their 
 the sayings or 
 sir warrant for 
 the contrary, 
 ny such deeds' 
 I that the va- 
 ^ds to " preach 
 proceeded from 
 p ascribed say- 
 nod, which we 
 None of these 
 n their justifi- 
 nown to them, 
 c. 
 
 issages in the 
 ihat it was not 
 le instructions 
 
 Many shall come 
 ffl, and Isaac, and 
 ;he kingdom shall 
 I the parable of tlie 
 , might be merely 
 of the Jews in re- 
 9 ; Mark xvi 15, 
 d Luke xxiv. 47, 
 is true that Jesus 
 m leper; but the 
 e find from Acts 
 ached to and biip- 
 8 servant: but in 
 h his master was 
 arity, Jesus could 
 
 LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 241 
 
 of their Lord, that the Apostles regarded their mission as 
 confined to the Jews. " Go not into the way of the Gen- 
 tiles, and into any city of the Samaritans enter 3''e not : 
 but go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel " 
 (Matth. X. 5, 6). " I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of 
 the house of Israel " (Matth. xv. 24). " Verily I say unto 
 you, Tliat ye which have followed me, in the regeneration 
 when the Son of ..lan shall sit in the throne of his gloiy, 
 ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve 
 tril)es of Israel" (Matth. xix. 28).* " It is easier for li aven 
 and oai-th to pass, than one tittle of the law to fail" (Luke 
 xvi. 17). " Think not that I am come to destroy the law, 
 or tlie prophets : I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil " 
 (Maith. v. 17). " This day is salvation come to this house, 
 forsomuch as he also is a son of Abraham" (Luke xix. 9). 
 " Salvation is of the Jews" (John iv. 22). 
 
 It would appear, then, that neither the historical nor 
 the epistolary Scriptures give us any reason for surmising 
 that Jesus directed, or contemplated, the spread of his 
 gospel beyond the pale of the Jewish nation ; that the 
 apostles at least had no cognizance of any such views on 
 his pait ; that when the question of the admission of the 
 Gentiles to the knowledge of the gospel, came before 
 them in the natural progress of events, it created con- 
 siderable difference of opinion among them, and at fii-st 
 the majority were decidedly hostile to any such liberality 
 of view, or such extension of their missionary labours. 
 The mode in which the controversy was conducted, and 
 the grounds on which it was decided, are strongly charac- 
 teristic of the moral and intellectual condition of t le 
 struggling church at that early period. The objectors 
 bring no argument to show why the Gentiles should not 
 be admitted to the gospel light, but they put Peter at 
 once on his defence, as having, in preaching to others 
 than to Jews, done a thing which, prwui facie, was out 
 of rule, and required justification. And Peter replies to 
 them, not by appeals to the paramount authority of 
 
 * [It is, however, nearly impossible to consider this verse as genuine, es- 
 pecially when read in connection with ch. xx. 20-28]. 
 
242 
 
 THE CBEED OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 LIMI' 
 
 ■f! 
 
 Christ, — not by reference to the tenour of his life and 
 teaching, — not by citing the case of the Centurion's ser- 
 vant, the Cauaanitish woman, or the parables of the vine- 
 yard and the supper, — not by showing from the nature 
 and fitness of things that so splendid a plan of moral 
 elevation, of instruction — tach a comprehensive scheme 
 of ledemption, according to the orthodox view — ought 
 to be as widely preached as possible, — not by arguing 
 that Christ had come into the world to spread the heal- 
 ing knowledge of Jehovah, of our God and Father, to all 
 nations, to save all sinners and all believers ; — but simply 
 by relating a vision, or rather a dream — the most natural 
 one possible to a man as hungry as Peter is represented 
 to have been — ^the interpretation of which — at first a 
 'puzzle to him — is suggested by the simultaneous appear- 
 ance of the messengers of Cornelius, who also pleads a 
 heavenly vision as a reason for the summons. This 
 justification would scarcely by itself have been sufficient, 
 for the dream might have meant nothing at all, or 
 Peter's interpretation of it — evidently a doubtful and 
 tentative one — might have been erroneous ; so he goes on 
 to argue that the event showed him to have been right, 
 inasmuch as, after his preaching, the Holy Ghost fell 
 upon all the household of Cornelius ; " And as I began to 
 speak, the Holy Ghost fell on them, as on us at the begin- 
 
 ing ; Forasmuch then as God gave them the like gift 
 
 as unto us, who believed on the Lord Jesus Christ ; what 
 was I, that I could withstand God?" (Acts xi. 15, 17.) 
 This argument clenched the matter, satisfied the brethren, 
 and settled, once for all, the question as to the admission 
 of the gentiles into the Church of Christ. 
 
 It becomes nect'ssary, therefore, to inquire more closely 
 into the nature of this argument which appeared to the 
 apostles so conclusive and irrefragable. What was 
 this Holy Spirit ? and in what way did it manifest 
 its presence ? so that the apostles recognised it at 
 once as the special and most peculiar gift vouchsafed 
 to believers. 
 
 The case, as far as the Acts and the Epistles enable us 
 to leam it, appears clearly to have been this : — The indi- 
 
 cation — 01 
 indubitab 
 upon any ' 
 to utter st 
 in an unk 
 on the da 
 filled wit 
 other tony 
 ii.4). H 
 " And th( 
 on the Ge 
 Ghost, i 
 magnify ( 
 also in th 
 found at 
 upon the 
 s'pake vji 
 " speakinj 
 is added ' 
 external 
 which it 
 received i 
 ing with 
 The po 
 foreign le 
 naturally 
 and probi 
 (Acts ii. : 
 apostles 
 audience 
 many dii 
 much re 
 adraixtu: 
 1. We 
 plicitly 
 
 * See als 
 "Andthcs 
 cant out d< 
 this interp 
 period sp 
 beUef. 
 
liis life and 
 nturion's ser- 
 8 of the vine- 
 n the nature 
 Ian of mural 
 isive scheme 
 view — oii<rht 
 
 by arguing 
 !ad the heal- 
 Father, to all 
 —but simply 
 most natural 
 3 represented 
 — at Jird a 
 eous appear- 
 Iso pleads a 
 mons. This 
 en sufficient, 
 i at all, or 
 oubtful and 
 3 he goes on 
 
 been right, 
 ' Ghost fell 
 s I began to 
 it the begin- 
 the like gift 
 Christ ; wliat 
 xi. 15, 17.) 
 he brethren, 
 e admission 
 
 ttore closely 
 ared to the 
 What was 
 t manifest 
 sed it at 
 vouchsafed 
 
 enable us • 
 -The indi- 
 
 LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 243 
 
 cation — or at least the most common, specific, and 
 indubitable indication- — of the Holy Spirit having fallen 
 upon any one, was his beginning to " speak with tongues," 
 to utter strange exclamations, unknown words, or words 
 in an unknown tongue. Thus, in the case of the apostles 
 on the day of Pentecost, we are told, '' They < were all 
 filled with the Holy Ghost, and began to speak with 
 other tony des, as the Spirit gave them utterance " (Acts 
 ii. 4). Again, in the case of the household of Cornelius, 
 " And they .... were astonished .... because that 
 on the Gentiles also was poured out the gift of the Holy 
 Ghost. For they heard them speak with tongues, and 
 magnify God " (x. 45, 46). The same indicatiOi.^ appeared 
 also in the case of the disciples of the Baptist, whom Paul 
 found at Ephesus : " And when Paul had laid his hands 
 upon them, the Holy Ghost came on them ; and tJcey 
 spake vjith tongues, and prophesied " (xix. 6). The 
 " speaking with tongues " (to which in the last instance 
 is added "p/ >phesying," or preaching) is the only specified 
 external manifestation, cognisable by the senses, by 
 which it was known that such and such individuals had 
 received the Holy Ghost. What, then, was this " speak- 
 ing with tongues ? "* 
 
 The popular idea is, that it was the power of speaking 
 foreign languages without having learned them — super- 
 naturally, in fact. This interpretation derives countenance, 
 and probably its foundation, from the statement of Luke 
 (Acts ii. 2-8), which is considered to intimate that the 
 apostles preached to each man of their vast and motley 
 audience in his own native language. But there are 
 many difficulties in the way of tliis interpretation, and 
 much reason to suspect in the whole narrative a large 
 admixture of the mythic element. 
 
 1. We have already seen that Luke is not to be im- 
 plicitly trusted as an historian; and some remarkable 
 
 * See also the passage in the spurious addition to Mark's Gospel (xvi. 17): 
 "And these signs sliall follow them that believe ; In my name shall thev 
 cast out devils ; they sltall apeak with new tonr/uea," &c. The date at which 
 this interpolation was written is unknown, but it serves to show that, at that 
 period speaking with new tongues was one of the establiehed signs of 
 belief. 
 
244 
 
 THE CREED OF CHEtSTENDOM. 
 
 discrepancies between the accounts of the Gospels and the 
 Acts Mrill be noted in a subsequent chapter, when we 
 treat of the Resurrection and Ascension.* 
 
 2. It appears from Matthew (x. 1, 8, 20), that the Holy 
 Spirit had been akeady imparted to the apostles during 
 the lifetime of Jesus, and a second outpouring therefore 
 could not be required. John, however, tells us (xx. 22), 
 that Jesus expressly and personally conferred this gift 
 after his resurrection, but before his ascension: "And 
 when he had said this, he breathed on them, and saith 
 tmto them, Receive ye the Holy Ghost." But in the Acta 
 the " breathing " had become " a rushing mighty wind," 
 and the outpouring of the Spirit is placed some days after 
 the ascension, and the personal interposition is dispensed 
 with These discrepant accounts cannot all be faithful, 
 and that of Luke is apparently the least authentic. 
 
 3 We have no evidence anywhere that the apostles 
 knew, or tjmployed, any language except Hebrew (or Ara- 
 maic) and Greek — Greek being (as Hug has clearly 
 proved*!") ^^^^ conunon language in use throughout the 
 eastern provinces f>f the Roman Empire. Nay, we have 
 soTTbc reason to l)elieve that they were not acquainted with 
 other languages ;* for by the general tradition of the early 
 church^: Mark is called the " interpreter " of Peter. Now, 
 if Peter had been gifted as we imagine on the day of 
 Pentecost, he would have needed no interpreter. 
 
 4. The language in which the occurrence is related 
 would seem to imply that the miracle was wrought upon 
 the hearers, rather than on the speakers — that whatever 
 
 * [See also similar dififeiences between tiie Acts aiid the Epistles of Paul 
 in narrating the same events.] 
 
 t Hug. ii. 1, § 10, p. 326. 
 
 t Papias, Ireneeus, and Jerome all call him so. See Eusebius. Another 
 consideration which renders the story still more doubtful is, that it appenrs 
 very probable that Greek, though not always the native, was the current 
 language, or a current language, among all those nations enumerated (Acts li. 
 9-11). Media, Mesopotamia, Asia Minor, Arabia, and Egynt were full of 
 Greek cities, and Greek was generally spoken there. (See the dissertation 
 of Hug, above referred to.) 1* therefore the apostles had addressed the 
 audience in Greek, as it was probably their habtt to do, they would natu- 
 railv have been intelligible even to that miscellaneous audience. Acts xxiL 
 2, shows that even in Jenisaleni addressing the people in Hebrew was an 
 uniiwiftl thing. 
 
 LtMlTS 
 
 the languag 
 heard them 
 came togeth 
 ffian heard 
 « Behold, ar 
 how licar w 
 were born ? 
 addressed d: 
 cessively, is 
 dicates that 
 at one time 
 are not drui 
 hovar of the 
 
 5. The 
 strange an 
 " What mea 
 must be d 
 if the Utter 
 culations — 
 to each set 
 Moreover, 1 
 in the latte; 
 dowed f ron 
 languages > 
 say, ignorai 
 that we mi 
 that those 
 his fellow-< 
 that outpc 
 prophesied 
 "This is \ 
 and it shal 
 I will poi 
 sons and \ 
 men shaU 
 dreams." 
 
 6. Luk< 
 cases men 
 in tfte sar 
 apostles ( 
 
xspels and the 
 ier, when we 
 
 that the Holy 
 )ostles during 
 ■ing therefore 
 
 s us (xx. 22), 
 rred this gift 
 'Sion: "And 
 m, and saith 
 it in the Acts 
 ighty wind," 
 ne days after 
 i is dispensed 
 1 be faithful, 
 ihentic. 
 
 the apostles 
 3rew (or Ara- 
 
 has clearly 
 oughout the 
 fay, we have 
 uainted with 
 1 of the early 
 Peter. Now, 
 n the day of 
 ter. 
 
 e is related 
 rought upon 
 at whatever 
 
 Bpistles of Paul 
 
 ibius. Another 
 that it appears 
 was the current 
 lerated (Acts Ji. 
 nit were full of 
 tlie dissertation 
 I addressed the 
 By would nalu- 
 ice. Acts xxii. 
 riebrew was an 
 
 LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 24)5 
 
 the language in which the apostles spoke, the audience 
 heard them each man in his own. " When the multitude 
 came together they were confounded, because that every 
 man heard them speak in his own language" .... 
 " Behold, are not all these which speak Galileans ? And 
 how liear we every man in our own tongue, wherein we 
 were born ? " The supposition that the (MfFerent apostles 
 addressed different audiences in different languages, suc- 
 cessively, is inconsistent with the text, which clearly in- 
 dicates that the whole was one transaction, and took pla( o 
 at one time, " Peter standing up . . . said . , . These 
 are not drunken as ye suppose, seeing it is but the third 
 hour of the day." 
 
 5. The people, we are told, " werg in doubt " at the 
 strange and incomprehensible phenomenon, and said, 
 " What meaneth this ? " while others thought the apostles 
 must be drunk — a natural perplexity and surmise, 
 if the Utterances were incoherent and unintelligible eja- 
 culations — but not so, if they were discourses addressed 
 to each set of foreigners in their respective languages. 
 Moreover, Peter's defence is not what it would have been 
 in the latter case. He does not say. " We have been en- 
 dowed from on high with the power of speaking foreign 
 languages which we hove never learned : we are, as you 
 say, ignorant Galileans, but God has given us this faculty 
 that we might tell you of his Son ; " but he assures them 
 that those utterances which led them to suppose him and 
 his fellow-disciples to be drunk were the consequences of 
 that outpouring of spiritual emotion which had been 
 prophesied as one of the concomitants of the millennium. 
 " This is that which was spoken by the Prophet Joel : 
 and it shall come to pass in the last days, saith Jehovah, 
 I will pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh ; and your 
 sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young 
 men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream 
 dreams." 
 
 6. .Luke indicates in several passages, that in the other 
 cases mentioned the Holy Spirit fell upon the recipients 
 in tlie same manner, ana with tlte same results, as on the 
 apostles on the day of Pentecost (Acts x. 47 ; xi. 16-17 ; 
 
246 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRIST TNDOM. 
 
 {1,1 
 
 ;l'i 
 
 XV. 8, 9*). Now, in these cases there is no rea.«ion whtt^ 
 ever to believe that the "gift of tongues" meant the 
 power of speaking foreign languages. In the first case 
 (that of Cornelius) it could not have been this ; for as all 
 the recipients began to " speak with tongues," and yet 
 were members of one household, such an unnecessary 
 display of newly-acquiied knowledge of power would 
 have been in the highest deg?'e& impertinent and osten- 
 tntious. 
 
 There can, we think, be no doubt — indeed we are not 
 aware that any doubt has ever been expressed — that the 
 remarks of Paul in the 12th, 13th, and 14th chapters of 
 the first epistle to the Corinthians, respecting the *' speak- 
 ing with tongues," — the " gift of tongues," — " the un- 
 known tongue," &ic., — refer to the same faculty, or 
 supposed spiritual endowment, spoken of in the Acts ; 
 which fell on the apostles at the day of Pentecost, 
 and on the household of Cornelius, and the disciples 
 of ApoUos, as already cited. The identity of the gift 
 referred to in all the cases is, we believe, unquestioned. 
 Now the language of Paul clearly shows, that this 
 " speaking with tongues " was not preaching in a foreign 
 language, but in an ttnknown language ; — that it ' con- 
 sisted of unintelligible, and probably incoherent, utter- 
 ances.-f- He repeatedly distinguishes the gift of tongues 
 from that of preaching (or, as it is there called, prophecy), 
 and the gift of speaking the unknown tongues from the 
 gift of interpreting the same. " To one is given by the 
 Spirit the working of miracles ; to an- 
 other prophesy ; to another divers kinds of tongues ; to an- 
 other the interpretation of tongues!* ..." Have all 
 the gifts of healing ? do all speak with tongues ? do all 
 
 * Peter says "Can any man forbid water, that these should not be bnp. 
 tized, which have receievd the Holy Ghost OS weW a« wc ? " . . . "The 
 Holy Ghost fell on them, as on us at the beginning." ..." ForaBmuch, 
 then, a« God gaw them the like gift as tinto us." ..." And God gave 
 them the Holy Ghost, even as unto us, and put no difference between us and 
 them. " 
 
 t We are glad to corroborate our opinion by a reference to that of Nean- 
 der, who, in his " History of the Planting o^ the Early Church,'' comes to 
 the same conclusion, chap. i. 
 
 
 LIM 
 
 interjiret 
 
 "Let hi 
 
 that he i 
 
 power of 
 
 been re{ 
 
 very low 
 
 second ar 
 
 then gift 
 
 tongues ' 
 
 he that s 
 
 pressly i 
 
 terances, 
 
 " He tha 
 
 unto ma: 
 
 (xiv. 2). 
 
 pretty p 
 
 known 
 
 discredit 
 
 age it. 
 
 than ye 
 
 words w 
 
 also, tha 
 
 (xiv. 18, 
 
 into one 
 
 in unlea 
 
 mad ? " 
 
 tongue, 
 
 by coui 
 
 not the 
 
 (See als 
 
 It is, 
 
 the thr< 
 
 made, \ 
 
 Christii 
 
 imaginj 
 
 the ne\ 
 
 eloquer 
 
 ble line 
 
 gave ve 
 
 utterar 
 
M. 
 
 LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 247 
 
 10 
 
 es 
 
 reason what 
 meant the 
 ti the first case 
 this; for as all 
 igues," and yet 
 in unnecessary 
 power would 
 lent and osteu- 
 
 eed we are not 
 3ssed-— that the 
 
 4th chapters of 
 -ng the *' speak- 
 3s,"— "the un- 
 me faculty, or 
 of in the Acts ; 
 
 of Pentecost, 
 i the disciples 
 ity of the gift 
 , unquestioned. 
 3WS, that this 
 ag in a foreign 
 ; — that it con- 
 oherent, utter- 
 gift of tongues 
 [led, prophecy), 
 agues from the 
 is given by the 
 racles ; to an- 
 'onguea ; to an- 
 
 . " Ilave all 
 ongues ? do all 
 
 should not be bnp. 
 
 ?" . . . "The 
 . " Foraamuch, 
 " And God gave 
 
 '.nee between us and 
 
 e to that of Nean- 
 Church,' comes to 
 
 interpret ? " (1 Cor. xii. 10-30. See also xiii. 1, 2, 8.) 
 " Let him that speaketh in an unknown tongue pray 
 that he may interpret " (xiv. 13). Again, he classes this 
 power of tongues (so invaluable to missionaries, had it 
 been really a capacity of speaking foreign languages) 
 veiy low among spiritual endowments. " First apostles, 
 secondarily prophets, thirdly teachers, after that miracles, 
 then gifts of healings, helps, governments, divei^sities of 
 tongues " (xii. 28.) " Greater is he that prophesieth than 
 he that speaketh with tongues " (xiv. 5). He further ex- 
 pressly explains this gift to consist in unintelligible ut- 
 terances, which were useless to, and lost upon the audience. 
 " He that speaketh in an unknown tongue speaketh not 
 unto man, but unto God: for no man understandeth him " 
 (xiv. 2). (See also ver. 6-9, 16.) Finally, he intimates 
 pretty plainly that the practice of speaking these un- 
 known tongues was becoming vexatious, and bringing 
 discredit on the Church ; and he labours hard to discour- 
 age it. " I thank my God, I speak with tongues more 
 than ye all : yet in the church I had rather speak five 
 words with my understanding, that I might teach others 
 also, than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue " 
 (xiv. 18, 19). " If the whole church be come together 
 into one place, and all speak with tongues, and there come 
 in unlearned men or unbelievers, will they not say ye are 
 mad ? " (ver. 23). " If any man speak in an unknown 
 tongue, let it be by two, or at the most by three, and that 
 
 by course ; and let one interpret For God is 
 
 not the author of confusion, but of peace " (ver. 27-33). 
 (See also ver. 39, 40). 
 
 It is, we think, almost impossible to read the whole of 
 the three chapters from which the above citations are 
 made, without coming to the conclusion that in the early 
 Christian Church there were a number of weak, mobile, 
 imaginative minds, who, over-excited by the sublimity of 
 the new doctrine expounded to them, and by the stirring 
 eloquence of its preachers, passed the faint and undefina- 
 ble line which separates enthusiasm from delirium, and 
 gave vent to their exaltation in incoherent or inarticulate 
 utteraiHcea, which the compassionate sympathy, or the 
 
 i 
 
248 
 
 THE CREED 01* CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 consanguineous fancies, of those around them, dignified 
 with the description of speaking, or prophesying, in an 
 unknown tongue. No one familiar with physiology, or 
 medical or religious history,* can be ignorant how con- 
 tagious delusions of this nature always prove, and when 
 once these incoherences became the recognised sign of the 
 descent of the Spirit, every one would, of course, be 
 anxious to experience, and to propagate them. We have 
 seen the same thing precisely in our own day among the 
 Irvingites. How is it, then, that the same phenomena ol 
 mental weakness and excitability which in the one case 
 
 * Somewhat similar phenomena have manifested themselves on several 
 occasions in the course of the last eight hundred years, and even in our own 
 day, when religious excitement has proved too strong for weak minds or 
 sensitive frames to bear without giving way We find them recorded in the 
 case of the ecstatics of Cevennes, who underwent severe persecution in 
 France after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, and among the con- 
 nulaionnaires oi St. Medard near the close of last century. Both these cases 
 are examined in considerable detail in a venr curious and valuable work by 
 Bertrand, a French physician, " Sur les Variet^s de I'Extase" (pp.323, 
 3.59). But our own country has presented us within a few years with a re- 
 production of precisely the same results arising from similar causes. There 
 IS extant a very remarkable and painfully-interesting pamphlet by a Mr. 
 Baxter, who was at one time a shining light in Mr. Irving's congregation, 
 and a great " speaker with tongues," in which he gives a detailed account 
 of all the accompanying phenomena. It was written after he had recovered ; 
 though he never relinquished his belief in the supernatural nature of these 
 utterances, but finally concluded them to be from Satan, on the ground of 
 some of the speakers uttering what he thought false doctrine. The descrip- 
 tion he gives of his own state and that of others during the visitations in- 
 dicates in a manner that no physiologist can mistake, a condition of cerebral 
 excitement implying hysteria, and verging on madness, and by no means 
 uncommon. Sometimes, when praying, his shrieks were so loud that he was 
 compelled to "thrust his handkerchief into his mouth that he might not 
 alarm the house. " Others fell down ' ' convulsed and foaming like demo- 
 niacs." "My whole body was violently agitated ; for the space of ten 
 minutes I was paralyzed under a shaking of my limbs, and no expression 
 except a convulsive sigh." His friends "remarked on his excited state of 
 mind." A servant was taken out of his houste deranged, and pronounced 
 by the t jngues to be possessed by a devil. Another " speaker with tongues " 
 did nothing but mutter inarticulate nonsense with a "mobt revolting expres- 
 sion of countenance." Mr. Baxter says the utterances which wei« urged 
 upon him by "the power," were sometimes intelligible, sometimes not; 
 sometimes I^rench, sometimes Latin, and sometimes in languages which he 
 did not know, but which his wife thought to be Spanish. He says at last, 
 " My i>ersua.sion concerning the unknown tongue is that it is no tangunf/e 
 whatever, but a mere collection of words and sentences, often a mere jar^'uu 
 of sounds." One man seldom began to speak without the contagion seizinjj: 
 upon others, so that numbers spilke at once, as in Paul's time. It is clear 
 to any one who reads Mr. Baxter's candid and unpretending narrative, that 
 a skilful physician would at once have terminatea the whole delusion by a 
 liberal exhibition of phlebotomy and anodynes. 
 
LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORI'IY. 249 
 
 aroused only pity and contempt, should in the other be 
 regarded with a mysterious reverence and awe ? v 
 
 The language of Paul in reference to the " unknown 
 tongues " appears to us clearly that of an honest and a 
 puzzled man, whose life in an agf of miracles, and whose 
 belief in so many grand religious L^arvels, has prepared 
 him to have faith in more ; — whose religious humility 
 will not allow him to prescribe in what manner the Spirit 
 of God may, or may not, operate : — but, at the same time, 
 whose strong good sense makes him feel that these in- 
 comprehensible utterances must be useless, and were 
 most probably nonsensical, morbid, and grotesque. He 
 seems to nave been anxious to repress the unknown 
 tongue, yet unwilling harshly to condemn it as a vain 
 delusion. 
 
 That there was a vast amount of delusion and unsound 
 enthusiasm in the Christian Church at the time of the 
 apostles, not only seems certain, but it could not possibly 
 have been otherwise, without such an interference with 
 the ordinary operations of natural causes as would have 
 amounted to an incessant miracle. Wonders, real or sup- 
 posed, were of daily occurrence. The subjects habitually 
 brought before the contemplation of Believers were of 
 such exciting and sublime magnificance that even the 
 strongest minds cannot too long dwell upon them without 
 some degree of perilous emotion. The recent events 
 which closed the life of the Founder of their Faith, and 
 above all the glorious truth, or the splendid fiction, of his 
 resurrection and ascension, were depicted with all the 
 stirring grandeur of oriental imagination. The expecta- 
 tion of an almost immediate end of the world, and the 
 reception into glory and power of the living believer, — 
 the hope which each one entertained, of being " caught 
 up " to meet his Redeemer in the clouds, — was of itself 
 sufficient to overthrow all but the coldest tempers ; while 
 the constant state of mental tension in which they wero 
 kept by the antagonism and persecution of the world 
 without, could not fail to maintain a degree of oxaltatioo 
 very unfavourable to sobriety either ot thought or feeling. 
 All these influences, too, wore brought to buav upon iniuds 
 
 ill 
 
250 
 
 THE CREED OF CHBISTENDOM. 
 
 the most ignorant and unprepared, upon the poor and the 
 oppressed, upon women and children ; and to crown the 
 whole, the most prominent doctrine of their faith was 
 that of the immediate, special, and hourly influence of the 
 Holy Spirit — a doctrine of all others the most liable to 
 utter and gross misconception, and the most apt to lead 
 to perilous mental excitement. Hence they were con- 
 stantly on th© look-out for miracles. Their creed did not 
 supply, and indeed scarcely admitted, any criterion of 
 what was or was not of divine origin — for who could 
 \ unture to pronounce or define how the Spirit might or 
 should manifest itself ? — and thus ignorance and folly too 
 often become the arbiters of wisdom — ^and the ravings of 
 delirium were listened to as the words of inspiration, and 
 of God. If Jesus could have returned to earth thirty 
 yeai-s after his death, and sat in the midst of an assembly 
 of his followers, who were listening in hushed and won- 
 dering prostration of mind to a speaker in the " unknown 
 tongue," how would he have wept over the humiliating 
 and disappointing spectacle ! how would he have grieved 
 to think that the incoherent jargon of delirium or hys- 
 teria should be mistaken for the promptings of his Fa- 
 ther's spirit ! 
 
 We are driven, then to the painful, but unavoidable, 
 conclusion, that those mysterious and untelligible utter- 
 ances which the apostles and the early Christians gener- 
 ally looked upon as the effects of the Holy Spirit — the 
 manifestation of its presence, the signs of its operation, 
 the special indication and criterion of its having fallen 
 upon any one — were in fact simply the physiologically 
 natural results of morbid and perilous cerebral exaltation, 
 induced" by strong religious excitement acting on uncul- 
 tivated and susceptible minds ; — ^results which in all ages 
 and nations have followed in similar circumstances and 
 from similar stimulants ; — ^and that these " signs," to 
 which Peter appealed, and to which the other brethren 
 succumbed, as proving that God intended the gospel to 
 bj preached to Gentiles as well as to Jews, showed only 
 that Gentiles were susceptible to the same excitements, 
 and manifested that susceptibility in the same manner as 
 the Jews. 
 
 LIMI 
 
 Shortly 
 Gentiles i 
 the singi 
 second su 
 corollary 
 confirms 
 dispute ^ 
 Gentiles 
 Christian 
 Jewish la 
 they had 
 observan 
 and the 
 show ho^ 
 disciples, 
 of the sp 
 Jesus, ai 
 simply a 
 It api 
 when Ps 
 baptizin] 
 sees we 
 and diss 
 new con 
 Moses "■ 
 opposed 
 sion bee 
 elders v 
 the mai 
 the pro 
 there v 
 —the 
 James, 
 accoun 
 second 
 that I 
 side oi 
 I witk 
 
 •The 
 
M. 
 
 'he poor and the 
 id to crown the 
 their faitli was 
 influence of the 
 most liable to 
 lost apt to lead 
 hey were con- 
 r creed did not 
 ly criterion of 
 ■for who could 
 Spirit might or 
 Je and folly too 
 the ravings of 
 nspiration, and 
 o earth thirty 
 of an assembly 
 shed and won- 
 bhe " unknown 
 he humiliating 
 e have grieved 
 Jlirium or hys- 
 ^gs of his Fa- 
 
 i unavoidable, 
 illigible utter- 
 fistians gener- 
 f Spirit — the 
 its operation, 
 having fallen 
 ^ysiologically 
 ;al exaltation, 
 ing on unciil- 
 ch in all ages 
 Qstances and 
 "si^ns," to 
 ier brethren 
 he gospel to 
 showed only 
 excitements, 
 e manner as 
 
 LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 261 
 
 Shortly after the question as to the admission of the 
 Gentiles into the Christian Church had been decided in 
 the singular and inconclusive manner above related, a 
 second subject of dispute arose among the brethren — a 
 corollary almost of the first — the nature of which strongly 
 confirms some of the views we have just put forth. The 
 dispute was this: — whether it was necessary for those 
 Gentiles who had been baptized and admitted into the 
 Christian Community, to observe the ritual portion of the 
 Jewish law ? — whether, in fact, by becoming Christians, 
 they had, ipso facto, become Jews, and liable to Judaic 
 observances ? The mere broaching of such a question, 
 and the serious schism it threatened in the infant sect, 
 show how little the idea had yet taken root among the 
 disciples, of the distinctness of the essence, the superiority 
 of the spirit, the newness of the dispensation, taught by 
 Jesus, and how commonly Christianity was regarded as 
 simply a purification and renewal of Judaism. 
 
 It appears from the 15th chapter of the Acts, that 
 when Paul and Barnabas were at Antioch, teaching and 
 baptizing the Gentiles, certain Jewish Christians (Phari- 
 sees we are told in verse 5) caused considerable trouble 
 and dissension by asserting that it was necessary for the 
 new converts " to be circumcised, and to keep the law of 
 Moses " — a doctrine which Paul and Barnabas vehemently 
 opposed. The question was so important, and the dissen- 
 sion became so serious, that a council of the apostles and 
 elders was summoned at Jerusalem to discuss and decide 
 the matter. From the brief account given by Luke of 
 the proceedings of this conclave it does not appear that 
 there was any material difference among those assembled 
 — the speakers among them, at least Peter, Paul, and 
 James, all arguing on the same side ; but from the 
 account of the same* transaction, given by Paul in the 
 second chapter of his Epistle to the Galatians, it is clear 
 that Peter (covertly or subsequently) took the Jewish 
 side of the discussion, " When Peter was come to Antioch, 
 I withstood him to the face, because he was to be blamed. 
 
 *The same, or a similar one. 
 
252 
 
 THE CREED OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 LIM 
 
 For before that certain came from James, he did eat with 
 the Gentile s : but when they were come, he withdrew and 
 separated himself, fearing them which were of the cir- 
 cumcision. And the otlier Jews dissembled likewise with 
 him; insomuch that Barnabas also was carried away 
 with their dissimulation. But when I saw that they 
 walked not uprightly according to the truth of the 
 gospel, I said unto Peter before them all. If thou, being a 
 Jew, livest after the manner of Gentiles, and not as 
 do the Jews, why compellest thou the Gentiles to live as 
 do the Jews ? " This speech, directed against Peter, is 
 so like that which Luke (Acts xv. 10, 11) puts into the 
 mouth of Peter, that we cannot but suppose some mistake 
 on the historian's part.* It is certain, however, both 
 from the narrative in the Acts and from the whole tenuur 
 of the Pauline Epistles, that the case was argued without 
 any reference to the intentions of Christ, or to instructions 
 left by him — but, instead, by inconclusive quotations from 
 prophecy, and by considerations of practical good sense. 
 The decision £.t which they arrived, on the suggestion of 
 James, seems t>n the whole tc have been both wise and 
 sound ; viz., that the Gentile converts should not be bur- 
 dened with the observances of the ritual law, but should 
 abstain from everything which could be considered as 
 countenancing or tolerating idolatry, from fornication, 
 and from food which, probably from its unwholesomeness, 
 was considered unlawful in most oriental countries. 
 
 The discussion and decision of this Council on a ques- 
 tion of such vital import, both to the success and to the 
 character of Christianity — a question involving its spirit- 
 ual nature and essence as apart from ceremony — shew 
 strongly and clearly the two points essential to our pres- 
 ent argument ; Jlrst, that difference of opinion on matters 
 of vital significance existed among the apostles ; and, 
 secondly, that these matters were discussed in their 
 Councils on argumentative grounds, without the least 
 
 * tTnless, as has been suggested, Peter, after <vards overpowered by the 
 unanimity of the Judaizers, flinched from liia priuoipleB, and >o incurred 
 Faul's indignation. 
 
 1] 
 
 preiensio 
 supernat 
 of the mi 
 Thatv 
 iniportar 
 several" 
 ments nr 
 through 
 seemed 
 others 
 contaiRe( 
 one who 
 coinparis 
 of James 
 erepancy 
 tive per 
 by a cita 
 of tone 8 
 that the 
 entertaii 
 ent.* ■ 
 There 
 differed 
 views V 
 course o 
 in contr 
 marriage 
 given in 
 
 11. 
 
 some o] 
 essentia 
 opinion 
 which, 
 have b 
 
 *Hug 
 (it I mey 
 8c» flatly, 
 his doctr 
 efficacy i 
 tiavened 
 
le did eat with 
 3 withdrew and 
 ere of the cir- 
 i likewise with 
 carried away 
 iaw that they 
 truth of the 
 thou, being a 
 s, and not as 
 tiles to live as 
 ainst Peter, is 
 puts int.o the 
 B some mistake 
 however, both 
 ) whole tenour 
 rgued without 
 to instructions 
 uotations from 
 al good sense. 
 > suggestion of 
 >oth wise and 
 Id not be bur- 
 'W, but should 
 considered as 
 n fornication, 
 holesomeness, 
 •untries. 
 cil on a ques- 
 ts and to the 
 ing its spirit- 
 3mony — shew 
 1 to our pres- 
 n on matters 
 Dostles ; and, 
 sed in their 
 Dut the least 
 
 rpowered by the 
 iuid 80 incurred 
 
 LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 253 
 
 pretension on the part of any of them to infallibility, 
 supernatural wisdom, or exclusive or peculiar knowledge 
 of the mind of Christ. 
 
 That veiy different views as to the essentials and most 
 important elements of Christianity were taken by tho 
 several' apostles, or rather, perhaps, that the same ele- 
 ments underwent very material modifications in passing 
 through such different minds — that to some its essence 
 seemed to consist in the ethical and spiritual, and to 
 others in the speculative and scholastic, ideas which it 
 contained or suggested — can scarcely be doubted by any 
 one who will read simultaneously, and for the purpose of 
 comparison, Paul's Epis le to the Corinthians, the Epistle 
 of James, and the first of John and Peter. But the dis- 
 crepancy is of a kind that will be perceptible on an atten- 
 tive perusal, rather than one which can be pointed out 
 by a citation of particular passages. It is a discrepancy 
 of tone and spirit. No one, we think, can fail to perceive 
 that the views of Christ's object, character, and mission, 
 entertained by Paul and by James, were radically differ- 
 ent.* • 
 
 There is some evidence also that the Apostles not only 
 differed from each other, but that their own respective 
 views varied materially on important subjects in the 
 course of their ministry. This will appear, more especially, 
 in contrasting the exhortations of Paul on the subject of 
 marriage, for example, contained in 1 Cor. vii., with those 
 given in 1 Timothy iv. 3, v. 14 
 
 II. Our second position was, that the Apostles held 
 some opinions which we know to be erroneous. It is 
 essential not to overstate the case. They held jever«l 
 opinions which we believe to be erroneous, but only one 
 which, as it is related to a matter of fact, we know to 
 have been erroneous. They unanimously and unques- 
 
 • Hug (p. 613) Bays, " In this epistle (that of James) the Apostle Paul is 
 (if I niey be allowed to use so harsli an expression for a while) contradicted 
 so flatly, that it would seem to have been written in opposition to some of 
 his doctrines and positions. All that Paul has taught respecting faith, its 
 efficacy in justification, and the inutility of works, is here directly con- 
 tiavened. " 
 
254 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 I . 
 
 tioningly believed and taught that the end of the world 
 was at hand, and would arrive in the lifetime of the then 
 existing generation. On this point there appears to Imve 
 been no hesitation in their individual minds, nor any dif- 
 fei nee of opinion among them. 
 
 The following are the passages of the apostolic 
 writings which most strongly express, or most clearly 
 imply this conviction. 
 
 Paul (1 Thess. iv. 15, 16, 17). " This we say unto 
 you hy the word of the Lord, that we tvhich are alije 
 and remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not pre- 
 vent them which are asleep. For .... the dead in 
 Chi-ist shall rise first : then we ivhich are alive and re- 
 main shall be caught up together with them in the 
 clouds, to meet the Lord in the air : and so shall we ever 
 be with the Lord." (1 Cor vii. 29.) " But this I say, 
 brethren, the time is short : it remaineth, that both they 
 that have wives be as though they had none ; and they 
 that weep, as though they wept not ; and they that 
 rejoice, as though they rejoiced not ; and they tliat buy, 
 as though they possessed not ; and they that use this 
 world, as not abusing it ; for the fashion of this world 
 passeth away." (1 Cor. xv. 51.) " Behold, I shew you a 
 mystery; we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be 
 changed." (See also 1 Tim. iv. 1 ; 2 Tim. iii. 1.) 
 
 Peter. (1 Ep. i. 5, 20.) " An inheritance incorruptible, 
 and undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved in 
 heaven for you, who are kept by the power of God 
 through faith unto salvation ready to he revealed in the 
 last time." " Christ .... who verily was foreordained 
 before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in 
 these last times for you." (iv. 7.) " The end of all things 
 is at hand." 
 
 John. (1 Ep. ii. 18.) " Little children, it is the last time: 
 and as ye have heard that antichrist shall come, even 
 now are there many antichrists ; whereby we know that 
 it is the last time." 
 
 James, (v. 8.) " Be ye also patient ; . . . for the 
 coming of the Lord draweih nigh." * 
 
 vfh(tn 
 
LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 256 
 
 of the world 
 ne of the then 
 )pears to liave 
 ", nor any dif- 
 
 the apostolic 
 most clearly 
 
 we say unto 
 
 kick are alije 
 
 shall not pre- 
 
 the dead in 
 
 alive and re- 
 
 them in the 
 
 shall we ever 
 
 it this I say, 
 
 hat both they 
 
 )ne ; and they 
 
 tnd they that 
 
 they that buy, 
 
 that use this 
 
 of this tuorld 
 
 , I shew you a 
 
 5 shall all be 
 
 ii. 1.) 
 
 incorruptible, 
 T, reserved in 
 )ower of God 
 zvealed in the 
 } foreordained 
 3 manifest in 
 i of all things 
 
 ithe last time: 
 11 come, even 
 we know that 
 
 . . . for the 
 
 We may well conceive that this strong conviction must, 
 in men like the apostles, hav(i been something far beyond 
 a more abstract or speeulativo opinion. In fact, it modi- 
 Ht'd their whole tone of thought and feeling; and could 
 not fail to do so.* The firm and living fjtith that a few 
 years would bring the second coming of their Lord in his 
 glo"}', and the fearful termination of all eaithly things — 
 when "the heavens should bo gathered together as a 
 fjcroil, and the elements should melt with fervent heat " 
 — and that many among them should be still alive, and 
 should witness these awful occurrences with human eyes, 
 and should join their glorified Master without passing 
 tlirough the portals of the grave — could not exist in their 
 minds without producing not only a profound contempt 
 for all the pomps and distinctions of the world, but an 
 utter carelessness for the future interests of mankind, 
 f( )r posterity, even for kindred — without indeed distorting 
 all the just proportions of those scenes of nature and 
 society, in the midst of which their lot was cast.-f* If the 
 world, and all its mighty and far-stretching interests — if 
 the earth, and its infinite and ever-varying beauties — if 
 (he sky, and its myraids of midnight glories — were 
 indeed to be finally swept away in the time and the 
 presence of the existing actors in the busy scene of life, 
 wl ere was the use of forming any new ties of kindred 
 or affection, which must terminate so suddenly and so 
 soon ? Why give a moment's thought to the arts which 
 embellish life, the amenities which adorn it, the sciences 
 which smooth it or prolong it, or the knowledge which 
 enriches and dignifies its course 5 Marriage, children, 
 wealth, power, astronomy, philosophy, poetry, — what 
 were they to men who knew that ten or twenty years 
 would transplant not only themselves but the whole race 
 of man, to a world where all would be forgotten, and 
 would leave the earth — the scene of these things— a 
 
 * [How indispatably this conviction was the current one in the apostolio 
 age may be perceived from finding that Matthew makes no scruple of 
 putting the announcement into the mouth of Chist himself, " Verily I say 
 unto you, thi^ generation shall not pass, till ye shall see the Sou of man 
 coming in the clouds of heaven," &c., fto. — .Matt lew xxiv. 30-34.1 
 
 t See Natural History of Enthusiaam, § v., pp. 100, 101. 
 
256 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 LIMII 
 
 destroyed and blackened chaos ? To this conviction may 
 be traced St. Paul's confused and fluctuating notions on 
 the subject of marriage. And this conviction, teenung 
 with such immense and dangerous consequences, and held 
 by all the apostles, was, we now know, wholly incorrect 
 and unfounded. Next to the resui-rection of Christ, there 
 was probably no doctrine which they held so undoulit- 
 ingly, or preached so dogmatically as this, with regard to 
 which they were totally in error. 
 
 If, then, they were so misinformed, or mistaken, on a 
 point having so immediate and powerful a bearing upon 
 practical life, how is it possible to place absolute con- 
 fidence in them when they deal with matters of deeper 
 speculation, or enforce obscure and startling dogmas, or 
 lay down conditions of salvation apparently at least at 
 variance with those announced by Christ ? . 
 
 III. Our third position is, that the teaching of the 
 apostles in some important particulars, but still more in 
 its general tone, diifered from that of their Master, as the 
 latter is recorded in the synoptical Gospels. 
 
 We know that the apostles, during the lifetime of 
 their Lord, were very far indeed from imbibing his 
 spirit, or fully apprehending his doctrine. Their miscon- 
 ceptions of his mission and his teaching are represented 
 as constant and obstinate, almost to stupidity. They are 
 narrow, where he was liberal and comprehensive ; they 
 were exclusively Jewish, where he was comparatively 
 cosmopolitan ; they were violent, where he was gentle ; 
 impetuous, where he was patient ; vindictive, where he 
 was forgiving ; worldly, where he was spiritual. They 
 had their thoughts too much fixed on " the rep''.oration 
 of the Kingdom to Israel," and the " twelve thrones " on 
 which they hoped to sit ; they could not embrace or 
 endure the sublime conception of a suffering Teacher and 
 Redeemer ; of a victory to be acbipved by death ; they 
 were dismayed and confounded by their Master's cnici- 
 fixion ; they had no expectation of his resurrection ; and 
 when his hour of calamily arrived, "they all forsook him 
 and fled." 
 
 Disciple 
 
 nnderstooc 
 
 representa 
 
 unless sor 
 
 them, of e 
 
 change th( 
 
 prise the { 
 
 induence l 
 
 cording to 
 
 given, afte 
 
 them all t 
 
 brance" v 
 
 to the Ra 
 
 be traced 
 
 views of 1 
 
 ambitious 
 
 reasonabl 
 
 urrection 
 
 work, a v 
 
 the tweb 
 
 view of i 
 
 cations t 
 
 rather th 
 
 notions ; 
 
 »"The 
 
 sary cbang 
 
 Messianic 
 
 God. The 
 
 in connect 
 
 principal i 
 
 of his Kii 
 
 vnih him ; 
 
 wise migh 
 
 might rais 
 
 Jew."-(S 
 
 28.) The' 
 
 large dedi 
 
 of the M 
 
 crucified 
 
 reiippearf 
 
 words att 
 
 and, if ge 
 
 .4and ye 
 
 you into 
 
 heaven. 
 
 gion of tl 
 
LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 257 
 
 lonviction may 
 Ing notions on 
 ption, teeming 
 bees, and held 
 holly incorrect 
 ff Christ, tliere 
 'so undoiibt- 
 i^ith regard to 
 
 istaken, on a 
 
 bearing upon 
 
 absolute con- 
 
 ters of deeper 
 
 ng dogmas, or 
 
 ly at least at 
 
 iching of the 
 ft still more in 
 Master, as the 
 
 he lifetime of 
 imbibing his 
 Their miscon- 
 re represented 
 by. They are 
 lensive; they 
 5omparatively 
 > was gentle ; 
 ve, where he 
 'itual. They 
 le res'^oration 
 thrones" on 
 i embrace or 
 Teacher and 
 death; they 
 aster's cnici- 
 rection; and 
 forsook him 
 
 Disciples who so little resembled and so imperfectly 
 understood their Lord during his life, could not be adequate 
 representatives or expounders of his religion after his death, 
 unless some new and strange influence had come upon 
 them, of energy sufficient to rectiiy their notions and to 
 change their characters. The Supematuralists, who com- 
 prise the great body of the Christian World, conceive this 
 induence to have consisted in that Holy Spirit which, ac- 
 cording to John, was promised, and, according to Luke, was 
 givenjafter the Ascension ol Christ, and which was to "teach 
 them all things," and to " bring all things to their remem- 
 brance" which their Lord had taught them. According 
 to the Rationalists, this metamorphosing influence must 
 be traced to the death of Jesus, which spiritualized the 
 views of the disciples by extinguishing their worldly and 
 ambitious hopes.* The first is a possible, the second is a 
 reasonable and probable explanation. The death and res- 
 urrection of Christ must have worked, and evidently did 
 work, a very great modification in many of the notions of 
 the twelve apostles, and materially changed their point of 
 view of their Lord's mission. But there are many indi- 
 cations that this change was not a radical one ; it aflfected 
 rather the accessories than the essence of their Messianic 
 notions ; for, though they relinquished their expectation 
 
 * " The death, resurrection, and ascension of Christ, introduced a neces- 
 sary cliangc into the conceptions of the Apostlen ; these drove out of their 
 Messianic idea the spirit of the world, and introduced into it the spirit of 
 God. They could not retain their Jewish ide;-.3 of the reign of the Messiah, 
 in connection wit', the crucified Jesus. . . . His death struck down a 
 principal part o*' their errors, and his exaltation forced upon them a new idea 
 of hi« Kingdom. . . . Christ returns to i arth to hTiow taat God wae 
 with him : and he ascends into heaven to repel the imagination which other- 
 wise might possibly arise, nay, which actually had arisen, that even yet he 
 might raise nis standard upon earth, and realize the gigantic illusion of the 
 Jew."— (Sermon on the Comforter, by the Rev. J. H, Thom, Liverpool, p. 
 28.) There is much reason in these remarks, but they must be taken with 
 lai;,'e deductions. It is astonishing how much of the ** Jewish concejitions 
 t)f the Messiah" the apostles did contrive to retain "in connection with a 
 crucified and ascended Christ." They still looked for his victorious earthly 
 reappearance in Judea, in their own times ; an expectation to which the 
 words attributed by Luke (Acts i. 11) to the angels, l)ear ample testimony, 
 and, if genuine, would have gone far to justify. "Ye men of Galileo, why 
 stand ye gazing up into heaven ? This same Jesus, which ia taken up from 
 you into heaven, wiall so come in like manner as ye have spnn him go into 
 heaven. " —See also the view of Paulus on this subject, quote by Hare (Mia- 
 sion of the Comforter, ii. 480.) 
 
258 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 LIMIT 
 
 of an immediate restoration of the kingdom, they still, as 
 we have seen, retained the conviction that that restoration 
 would take place, in their own day, in a far more signal 
 and glorious manner. Their views were spiritualized up 
 to a certain point, but no further y even as to this great 
 subject ; and on other points the change seems to have 
 been less complete. The Epistle of James, indeed, is a 
 worthy relic of one who had drunk in the spirit, and ap- 
 preciated the lessons of the meek, practical, and spiritual 
 Jesus. But in the case of the other two apostles, Peter 
 is Peter still, and John is the John of the Gospel. Peter is 
 the same fine, simple, affectionate, impetuous, daring, ener- 
 getic, irtipalsive character, who asked to walk on the water, 
 and was over-confident in his attachment to his Master, 
 but who has now derived new strength and dignity from 
 his new position, and, from the sad experience of the past, 
 has learned to look with a steady eye on suffering and 
 death. And John, in the Epistles, is precisely the same 
 mixture of warm affcctionateness to his friends, and un- 
 charitableness to his enemies, whicli the few glimpses we 
 have of him in the Gospels would lead us to specify svs his 
 characteristics. We meet with several passages in his 
 writings which indicate that the gentle, forbearing, and 
 forgiving spirit of the Master had not yet thoroughly pene- 
 trated and chastened the mind of the disciple — several 
 passages which Jesus, had he read them, would have re- 
 buked as before, by reminding his zealous follower that 
 he knew not what manner of spirit he was of.* 
 
 The case of Paul is peculiar, and must be considered by 
 itself. His writings are more voluminous than those of 
 the other apostles, in a tenfold proportion, and have a 
 
 * "Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jeaus is the Christ? He is 
 aatichrist, that denieth the Father and the Son. " — (1 Ep. ii. 22. ) " We are of 
 God : he that knoweth God heareth us ; he that is not of God hoareth not 
 us. "— (iv. 6. ) " There is a sin unto death : I do not say that he shall pray for 
 it."- (v. 16. ) '* We know that v.e are of God, and the whole world lieth in 
 wickedness." -(v. ID.) "Ii there come any unto you, and bring not this 
 doctrine, receive him not into your house ; neither bid him God speed."— (2 
 Ep. veraelO.) "I wrote unto tho church: but Diotrenhes, who loveth to 
 have the pre-eminence among theui, receiveth us not. Wherefore, if I come, 
 I will remember his deeds which he dueth, prating agaiost us with mAlicioua 
 words."-(3Ep. ver. 9,10.) 
 
 flistinctive 
 in the flesV 
 till sudden 
 means of b< 
 of bis Lore 
 And, fin 
 have four 
 given by 1 
 Acts ; a se^ 
 given by 1 
 salein ; a t 
 been givei 
 cursory, fr 
 to the Ga 
 mar veil on 
 internal* 
 Nowtl 
 which, w 
 either fro 
 has not I 
 in doubt 
 whether, 
 his 'narr 
 light wa 
 himself, 
 was. ] 
 saying, 
 . atfirms 
 as hims 
 speech 
 and we 
 supernE 
 on his 
 not an 
 Paul rl 
 f-turc 
 of his 
 
 preach 1 
 
they still, as 
 |at restoration 
 r more signal 
 iritualized up 
 to this great 
 leems to have 
 [, indeed, is a 
 ipirit, and ap- 
 and spiritual 
 _)ostIes, Peter 
 >pel. Peter is 
 I, daring, ener- 
 ■ on the water, 
 '0 his Master] 
 dignity from 
 ^ce of the past, 
 suffering and 
 soly the same 
 iends, and un- 
 k glimpses we 
 specify as his 
 issages in his 
 ^rbearing, and 
 >roughly pene- 
 ciple — several 
 ''ould have re- 
 foUower that 
 of* 
 
 considered by 
 than those of 
 , and have a 
 
 leChriBt? He is 
 22.) "We are of 
 trod heareth not 
 ; lie shall pray for 
 >le world lieth in 
 d bring not tliis 
 'jfodspeed."— (2 
 I, who loveth to 
 trefore, if I come, 
 18 Mrith niftlicious 
 
 LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 259 
 
 flistiiictive character of their own; yet he never saw Christ 
 in the flesh, and was a bitter persecutor of his followers 
 till suddenly converted by a vision. What, then, were his 
 means of becoming acquainted with the spirit and doctrines 
 of his Lord ? 
 
 And, first, as to the vision which converted him. We 
 have four narratives of this remarkable occurrence — one 
 (riven by Luke, as an historian, in the 9th chapter of the 
 Acts ; a second, reported by Luke (c. xxii.), as having been 
 o-iven by Paul himself in his speech to the people at Jeru- 
 salem ; a third, reported also by Luke (c. xxvi.). as ha^dng 
 been given by Paul to King Agrippa; and a fourth, more 
 cursory.from Paul himself , in the first chapter of his Epistle 
 to the Galatians, which omits entirely the external and 
 marvellous part of the conversion, and speaks only of an 
 internal* revelation. 
 
 Now there are certain discrepancies in these accounts, 
 which, while they seem to show that the occurrence — 
 either from carelessness, confusion, or defect of memory — 
 has not been related with perfect accuracy, leave us also 
 in doubt as to the precise nature of this vision ; as to 
 whether, in fact, it was mental or external. Luke, in 
 his narrative, omits to state whether the supernatural 
 light was visible to the companions of Paul as well as to 
 himself. Paul, in his speech to the Jews, declares that it 
 was. Paul is said to have heard a voice speaking to him, 
 saying, " Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me ?" Luke 
 affirms that Paul's companions heard this voice as well 
 as himself; but this assertion Paul afterwards, in his 
 speech at Jerusalem (Acts xxii. 9), expressly contradicts ; 
 and we are, therefore, left with the impression that the 
 supernatural voice fell rather upon Paul's mental, than 
 on his outward ear — was, in fact, a spiritual suggestion, 
 not an objective fact. Again, in his speech at Jerusalem, 
 Paul represents the heavenly voice as referring him to 
 f'turc onfepences, at Damascus (xxii. 10), for particulars 
 of his '.■■ lunission; in liis address to Agrippa (xxvi. 16- 
 
 * " But when it pleaBcd God ... to reveal hia Son in me, that I might 
 prea<:h him amoat; the heathen," &c, — Gal. i, 16. 
 
260 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 18), he represenis the same voice as giving him his ecu- 
 mission on the spot. 
 
 Thus, in the three versions of the story which come, 
 entirely or proximately, from the pen of Luke, we have 
 positive and not reconcilable contradictions ; while in 
 that reference to it, which alone we are certain pro- 
 ceeded direct from Paul, the supernatural and external is 
 wholly ignored. 
 
 But the important practical question for our considera- 
 tion is this . — In what manner, and from what source, 
 did Paul receive instruction in the doctrines of Christi- 
 anity ? Was it from the other apostles, like an ordinary 
 convert ? or by special and private revelation from heaven ? 
 Here, again, we find a discrepancy between the state- 
 ment of Luke and Paul. In Acts ix. 19, 20; xxii. 10; 
 and xxvi. 20, it is expressly stated that immediately 
 after his conversion, and during his abode with the dis- 
 ciples at Damascus, he was instructed in the peculiar 
 doctrines of his new faith, and commenced his mission- 
 ary career accordingly, there and then. If this state- 
 ment be correct, his teaching will have the authority 
 due to that of an intelligent and able man, vjdl ki- 
 atruded at second hand, but no more. Paul, however, 
 entirely contradicts this supposition, and on several oc- 
 casions distinctly and emphatically declares that he lid 
 not receive his religious teaching from any of the dis- 
 ciples or apostles (whom he rather avoided than other- 
 wise), but by direct supernatural communications from 
 the Lord Jesus Christ,* 
 
 ♦For example: — " Paul, au apostle, not of men, neither by man , but by Jesus 
 Christ." "But I certify you, brethren, that the gospel which was 
 preached of mo is not after man. For I neither received it of man, neither 
 was I taught it, but by the revelation oj Jesus Christ." " But when it pleased 
 God to reveal his Son in me, that I might preach him among the heathen ; 
 immediately I conferred not loith flesh and blood : neither went I up to Jeru- 
 salem to them which were apostles before me ; but I went into Arabia, and 
 returned .igain unto Damascus. ITien after three years I jjvent up to Jem- 
 salem to see Peter, and abode witli him fifteen dayH. But othi^)' of the apos- 
 tles saw I none, save JamcH the Lord'w brother." ((Jalatians i. 1, 11, l.'i-l'.t.) 
 " By revelation he made known unto me the mysttiry . . . whereby ye may 
 understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ." — (Eph. iii. 3.j "1 
 will come to visions and revelations of the liord. I knew a man in Christ 
 about fourteen years p.go (whether in the body, or out of the body, I cannot 
 tell ; God knoweth) ; sucn an one caught up to the third heaven. And I 
 
 LIMIT! 
 
 Of cours( 
 
 received hii 
 
 preference 
 
 mation cou 
 
 derived fro 
 
 seen, that 
 
 channels oi 
 
 nality, exc 
 
 knowledge 
 
 competent 
 
 triiies of ( 
 
 may form ! 
 
 and revels 
 
 voured. I: 
 
 from his r 
 
 of no furt] 
 
 apostles, a 
 
 other. If, 
 
 the worki 
 
 tude and 
 
 ardent an< 
 
 easily cor 
 
 Spirit, ai 
 
 guish fro] 
 
 teachings. 
 
 Now, 
 coidd ha" 
 himself, t 
 than a s 
 yond a m 
 which n 
 more rea 
 with one 
 
 knew such i 
 Grod know* 
 unspeakabl 
 lest I shoul 
 tinns,'" &c. 
 * Perhaj 
 he was seet 
 tion. I'he 
 moment of 
 
LIMITS OF APOSTOLIC WISDOM AND AUTHORITY. 261 
 
 him bis ecu. 
 
 which come, 
 uke, we have 
 ns; while in 
 certain pro- 
 id external is 
 
 a< 
 
 )ur considera- 
 
 what source, 
 
 es of Christi- 
 
 e an ordinary 
 
 from heaven ? 
 
 len the state- 
 
 20; xxii. 10; 
 
 immediately 
 
 with the dis- 
 
 the peculiar 
 
 i his mission- 
 
 If this state- 
 
 the authority 
 
 man, vjcM ki- 
 
 \\i\, hos^evfr, 
 
 )n several oc- 
 
 ?s that he lid 
 
 ly of the dis- 
 
 d than other- 
 
 lications from 
 
 yman, buthy Jesm 
 fospel which was 
 it of man, neither 
 ut when it pleased 
 nong the heathen ; 
 irent I up to Jeru- 
 b into Arabia and 
 |vent up to Jein- 
 t othei- oj the apoK- 
 ml 1, 11, 1&-I!t.) 
 , where))y ye may 
 Eph. iii. 3.) "1 
 f a man in Christ 
 36 body, I cannot 
 1 heaven. And I 
 
 Of course Paul's own account of the mode in which he 
 received his knowledge of Christianity must be taken, in 
 preference to that of a nan-ator like Luke, whose infor- 
 mation could only have been second-hand, though probably 
 derived from Paul himself. Paul intimates, as we have 
 seen, that he rather slighted and avoided all ordinary 
 channels of instruction, and prides himself on the origi- 
 nality, exclusiveness, and directness, of the sources of his 
 knowledge. The decision, therefore, of his fidelity and 
 competence as a representative and teacher of the doc- 
 trines of Christ, depends entirely on the conclusion we 
 may form as to the genuineness and reality of the visions 
 and revelations with which he tilaims to have been fa- 
 voured. If these were actup,l and positive communications 
 from his risen and glorified Mastei', the (juestion admits 
 of no further discussion; Paul was the greatest of the 
 apostles, and his writings of paramount authority to any 
 other. If, on the other hand, these visions were merely 
 the workings of a powerful and fiery mind in the soli- 
 tude and seclusion of an Arabian hermitage, such as an 
 ardent and excited temperament, like that of Paul, might 
 eas,ily come to regard as the suggestions of the Divine 
 Spirit, and, perhaps, even could with difficulty distin- 
 guish from them ; then all his numerous epistles are the 
 teachings, not of Jesus, but of Paul. 
 
 Now, not only have we no evidence- (perhaps we 
 could have none^ — beyond the bare assertion of Paul 
 himself, that these alleged communications had any other 
 than a subjective existence — were in fact anything be- 
 yond a mere mental process ; but among all the passages 
 which refer to this subject, there are none which do not 
 more readily bear this interpretation than any other, 
 with one exception.* That exception is the statement 
 
 knew such a man (whether in the body, or out of the body, I cannot tell : 
 Grod knoweth) ; How that he was caught up into paradiae, and heard 
 unspeakable words, which it is not lawful for a man to utter. . . . And 
 lest I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the revela- 
 tions,- &c.— (2 Cor. xii. 1. 2. .^ 4, 7.) 
 
 * Perhaps the assertion of Paul that he had seen Jesus, " and last of all 
 he was seen of ma also " (1 Cor. xv. 8), may be considered as another excep- 
 tion. I'he sight of Jenus, however, probably refers to the viaion at tne- 
 uomeut of his oonversion. 
 
262 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 of Luke, that the heavenly voice at mid-day was heard 
 by Paul's companions as well as by himself — a stateraent 
 which, being afterwards contradicted by Paul (ov by 
 Luke for him), may at once be put aside as incorrect. 
 Paul " immediately," as he says, upon his miraculous con- 
 version, went into seclusion to meditate and commune 
 with his own heart upon the marvellous change which 
 had taken place in all his feelings ; and the state into which 
 he more than once describes hill's :lf as having fallen, 
 is that of trance, a condition of the cerebral system — as- 
 suredly not a sound one — which solitude, fasting, and 
 religious excitement combined, produce in all ages and 
 countries, and nowhere so readily as in the East. (Acts 
 xxii. 17 ; 2 Cor, xii. 2, 3, 4.) We cannot, of course, and 
 do not wish, to take upon us to affirm that, while in 
 this state, Paul was not favoured with divine com- 
 munications ; we merely wish to make it clear that 
 we have no reason to believe that he was so favoured, 
 beyond his own assertion — an assertion which has been 
 made with equal sincerity and conviction by hundreds 
 of ecstatics whom similar causes have brought into a 
 similar physiological condition. 
 
 There is much in the tone of the doctrinal writings of 
 Paul which we believe and feel to be at variance, or at 
 least little in harmony, with the views and spirit of 
 Jesus, but nothing perhaps which we can prove to be so. 
 We must therefore conclude with the ungracious task of 
 pointing out a few passages of which the moral tone 
 shows that the writer was not adequately imbued with 
 the temper of him who said, " Do good to those that 
 hate you : Pray for them which despitefully use you, and 
 persecute you." (2 Thess. i. 6-8, ii. 11, 12; 1 Tim. i. 20; 
 2Tim.iv.l4;GaLi8, 9.) 
 
 The posi< 
 are made 
 importani 
 foundatio 
 scarcely ^ 
 respecting 
 wrought 
 and the { 
 he preach 
 received 
 because h 
 ' jach anc 
 the preva 
 more thii 
 doctrines 
 we shoul 
 been foi 
 and whf 
 acles, ar^ 
 must th^ 
 
 Now 
 confusic 
 clear dij 
 proceed 
 
 L TI 
 nor can! 
 he preal 
 
 II. 
 and car 
 inasmul 
 
|ay was heard 
 a statement 
 Paul (or by 
 as incorrect, 
 [iraculous con- 
 -nd commune 
 change which 
 fate into which 
 having fallen, 
 .1 system— as- 
 ', fasting, and 
 all ages and 
 e East. (Acts 
 of course, and 
 that, while in 
 I divine corn- 
 it clear that 
 IS so favoured, 
 '■hich has been 
 1 by hundreds 
 brought into a 
 
 inal writings of 
 variance, or at 
 3 and spirit of 
 prove to be so. 
 racious task of 
 he moral tone 
 r imbued with 
 to those that 
 y use you, and 
 I; 1 Tim. i. 20; 
 
 CHAPTER Xni. 
 
 MIRACLES. 
 
 The position which the miracles of the New Testament 
 are made to hold in the Christian economy is of the first 
 importance. In the popular theory they lie at the very 
 foundation of the system. The current and, till recently, 
 scarcely questioned opinion of Protestant Christendom 
 respecting them was this : — " The miracles which Jesus 
 wrought constitute the proof of his divine commission, 
 and the guarantee for the truth of the doctrines which 
 he preached. His declarations and his precepts are to be 
 received with unquestioning submission and belief 
 because he wrought miracles in proof of his authority to 
 ' jach and to command."* According to this view (still 
 the prevalent one, though of late largely modified by the 
 more thinking among the orthodox) the truth of Christ's 
 doctrines is made to rest upon the reality of his miracles ; 
 we should not know the doctrines to be divine, had it not 
 been for the attesting wonders wrought by the teacher ; 
 and whatever doctrines are preached by a worker of mir- 
 acles, are, ipso facto, proved to be of divine authority, and 
 must therefore be received without question. 
 
 Now this popular notion appears to us to contain much 
 confusion, and at least two fatal fallacies ; for the more 
 clear disentanglement and exposure of which we shall 
 proceed to show, 
 
 I. That miracles wrought by any individual are not, 
 nor can be, a pooof of the truth of the doctrines which 
 he preaches ; and, 
 
 II. That miracles are not the real basis of Christianity, 
 and cannot be a safe foundation on which to rest its claims, 
 inasmuch as miracles can never be proved by docu/men- 
 
 •SeeFaley,Evid. 
 
264 
 
 THE CREED O^ CHRT? ENOOM 
 
 m) 
 
 m 
 
 tary evidence — least of all, by sucb 'documentary evidence 
 as we possess. 
 
 Before proceeding further, we wisi "'efine the precise 
 theological meaning afl&xed to the word miracle in the 
 popular mind (as far as the popular mind can be said to 
 attach a precise meaning to any word). This is the more 
 necessary, as a writer of great eminence and ability, in 
 his attempt to show that miracles may be not a violation 
 but a fulfilment, of the order of nature, appears to us tc 
 have confounded a miracle with a prodigy. 
 
 In common parlance — which alone we profess to use— 
 a miracle is a suspension or violation of the ordinary 
 course of nature, at the will of an individual — indica- 
 ting, therefore, the possession by that individual of super 
 human power. A similar suspension or violation, uncon- 
 nected with the command or prediction of any indivi- 
 dual, is simply a prodigy, not a miracle. A prodigy is 
 merely a marvellous and abnormal occurrence, of the 
 cause and meaning of which we are wholly ignorant ; a 
 miracle is a marvellous and supernatural occurrence, the 
 cause of which lies open to us in the expressed volition 
 of an agent. Lazarus rising out of a four days' grave, 
 without any discoverable cause or antecedent, would 
 merely present to us a prodigy ; Lazarus coming forth at 
 the command of Christ was a manifest miracle. 
 
 Mr. Babbage, in that ingenious chapter, in his " Ninth 
 Bridgewater Treatise," wherein he endeavours to show 
 that miracles may be merely natural, but exceptional 
 occurrences — the exceptional expressions of a natural 
 law expressly provided for beforehand — seems to have al- 
 together lost sight of this distinction. We might not 
 have deemed it necessary to controvert this theory, had 
 it not been recently adopted and promulgated in a popu- 
 lar work of fiction (" Alton Locke "), by a clergyman of 
 the Church of England, But when so sanctioned it be- 
 comes incumbent upon us to unmask the fallacy. " The 
 object of the present chapter (says Mr. Babbage) is to 
 show that miracles are not deviations from the laws as- 
 signed by the Almighty for the government of matter 
 and of mind ; but tliat they are tLe exact fulfilment of 
 
 k 
 
 much mor< 
 His conce] 
 things, thf 
 viatioiis fi 
 call miracl 
 stances ; ; 
 suggests 
 than eith. 
 turbed orr 
 both poini 
 occurrence 
 of the W" 
 arguments 
 in obedier 
 law " imp: 
 is Mr. B 
 may be a 
 dead by a 
 from the 
 this (the [ 
 On Mr. B 
 the comm 
 resurrecti< 
 efiect, but 
 at the utn 
 of his supt 
 arrived w 
 to operate 
 position C( 
 tive, and 
 that Chrij 
 not merel 
 knowledg 
 Mr. Ba 
 make mir 
 30 by dep] 
 the fact ci 
 it ; or, to 
 ible, by n 
 
 * ItMr. 1 
 
MIRACLES. 
 
 265 
 
 )ary evidence 
 
 e the precise 
 liracle in the 
 m be said to 
 3 is the more 
 id ability, in 
 t a violation 
 lears to us tc 
 
 fess to use- 
 she ordinary 
 ual — indica- 
 lual of super 
 ition, uncon- 
 
 any indivl- 
 A prodigy is 
 3nce, of the 
 
 ignorant ; a 
 Burrence, the 
 issed volition 
 
 days' grave, 
 dent, would 
 ning forth at 
 cle. 
 
 I his " Ninth 
 urs to show 
 
 exceptional 
 ■ a natural 
 ls to have al- 
 ''e might not 
 3 theory, had 
 id in a popu- 
 ilergyman of 
 itioned it be- 
 llacy. "The 
 abbage) is to 
 
 the laws as- 
 it of matter 
 fulfilment of 
 
 much more extensive laws than those we suppose to exist." 
 His conception is that, in the final arrangement of all 
 things, the Deity provided for the occurrence of those de- 
 viations from the established course oi nature which we 
 call miracles, at certain periods, and under certa,in circum- 
 stances ; and he contends that such an arrangement 
 suggests grander views of creative power and foresight 
 than either casual interpositions or a uniform and undis- 
 turbed order of proceeding would do. We may concede 
 both points ; we merely contend that such pre-arranged 
 occurrences would not be miracles in the ordinary sense 
 of the word, on which ordinary sense all theological 
 arguments are based. If Lazarus rose from the dead 
 in obedience to, and in consequence of, " an exceptional 
 law " impressed upon matter in primeval times (which 
 is Mr. Babbage's conception of the case, and which 
 may be a correct one), then he was not raised from the 
 dead by an action upon the laws of nature, emanating 
 from the will of Christ ; and aU arguments based upon 
 this (the prevalent) view of the event fall to the ground. 
 On Mr. Babbage's supposition, the connection between 
 the command of Christ, " Lazarus, come forth ! " and the 
 resurrection of the dead man, was not that of cause and 
 efiect, but merely that of coincidence or simultaneity ; or, 
 at the utmost, the command was uttered, because Jesus, 
 of his superhuman knowledge, knew that the moment was 
 arrived when one of these " exceptional laws " was about 
 to operate ; in fact the command was a prediction^ — a sup- 
 position contradicted by the whole language of the narra- 
 tive, and unavailing for the popular argument ; which is, 
 that Christ had the power of coimtermanding nature — 
 not merely that of foreseeing events hidden from ordinary 
 knowledge. 
 
 Mr. Babbage's conception, therefore, though it may 
 make miracles more admissible by scientific minds, does 
 30 by depriving them of their theological utility. It makes 
 the fact credible by annulling the argument drawn from 
 it ; or, to speak more correctly, it renders prodigies cred- 
 ible, by making them cease to he mdracles* 
 
 * ItHr. Babbaija mfans. !;s i>n expression at page 97 aeema to intimate. 
 
266 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 I. We now proceed to illustrate the first of our two 
 positions. A miracle, we say, cannot authenticate a doc- 
 trine. A miracle, if genuine, proves the possession, by 
 him who works it, of superhuman power — but it is a 
 strained and illogical inference to assume that it proves 
 anything beyond this. This inference, so long and so 
 universally made — and allowed — arises from a confusion 
 in the popular mind between 'power and wisdom — be- 
 tween the divine nature as a whole, and one ol the di- 
 vine attributes. It mvolves the immense and inadmis- 
 sible assumption that the possession of superhuman power 
 necessarily implies the possession of superhuman know- 
 ledge also, and the will truly to impart that knowledge ; 
 that the power to heal diseases, or to still the waves, im- 
 plies and includes a knowledge of the mind of God. The 
 thoughts of ordinary men, undistinguishing and crude, 
 jump rapidly to a conclusion in such matters , and on rec 
 ognising (or conceiving that they recognise) supernatu- 
 ral power in any individual, at once and without ratioci- 
 nation endow him with all other divine attributes, and 
 bow before him in trembling and supine prostration. 
 
 Yet at other times, and in most countries, men ha\e, 
 by happy inconsistency, admitted the falseness of this 
 logic. Wherever there is iound a belief in one evil angel, 
 or in many (and such is the current nominal belief of 
 Christendom), the distinction between the attributes of 
 Deity is made, and power is divorced from wisdom, truth, 
 and goodness, and in a great degree from knowledge also. 
 If there be such existences as Satan, Arimanes, or inferior 
 agencies of evil — (and who can say that there are not ? 
 What orthodox Christian but believes there are ?) — then 
 superhuman power exists apart from divine wisdom, and 
 in antagonism to it ; — then the power to work miracles 
 involves no knowledge of divine truth, or at least no mis- 
 sion to teach it — nay, may imply the very opposite, and 
 can therefore authenticate no doctrine enunciated by the 
 worker. 
 
 hat the Creator had provided for these exceptional occurrences taking place 
 wfuinever Chritt performed a certain operation which He gave him power to 
 perform, and told him when to perform— then we are at a loss to discover 
 in what way the oonception varies from, or is superior to, the vulgar view. 
 
 The CO 
 natural p 
 have best 
 pose but 
 But this : 
 gies of th 
 — the po^ 
 wealth, a 
 — yet are 
 these bes 
 mainly, ii 
 the reveri 
 
 So strc 
 reasoners 
 which mu 
 can auth( 
 at the pr( 
 worked b 
 him a do( 
 our mod( 
 Locke, M 
 the stror 
 Course a: 
 
 "Faith 
 power-w( 
 ship ; foi 
 an idea 
 than of 
 might, th 
 ledge it a 
 be devilij 
 from the 
 distingui 
 idea of 
 reason b< 
 Now. if 
 world ag 
 pronoun 
 in confr 
 God." 
 
)M. 
 
 first of our two 
 thenticate a doc- 
 le possession, by 
 wer — but it is a 
 tie that it proves 
 
 so long and so 
 from a confusion 
 -nd wisdom — be- 
 id one ol the di- 
 ase and inadmis- 
 3erhuman power 
 jerhuman know- 
 that knowledge ; 
 11 the waves, im- 
 ind of God. The 
 3hing and crude, 
 iters , and on rec 
 jnise) supernatu- 
 i without ratioci- 
 e attributes, and 
 I prostration, 
 ntries, men have, 
 falseness of this 
 in one evil angel, 
 lominal belief of 
 the attributes of 
 >m wisdom^ truth, 
 1 knowledge also. 
 manes, or inferior 
 Eit there are not ? 
 ihere are ?) — then 
 vine wisdom, and 
 to work miracles 
 ir at least no mis- 
 ery opposite, and 
 nunciated by the 
 
 currences taking place 
 He gave him power to 
 e at a loss to discover 
 or to, the vulgar view. 
 
 MIRACLES. 
 
 267 
 
 The common feeling no doubt is, that as all super- 
 natural power is the special gift of God, He would not 
 have bestowed it upon any but the good, nor for any pur- 
 pose but that of conferring blessings and spreading truth. 
 But this inference is wholly at variance with the analo- 
 gies of the divine economy. All power is the gift of God, 
 — the power of intellect, the power of rank, the power of 
 wealth, as well as the power of working physical marvels, 
 — ^yet are these given to the good alone, or chiefly ? — are 
 these bestowed on those who employ them exclusively, or 
 mainly, in the service of mercy and truth ? Would not 
 the reverse of the statement be nearer to the fact ? 
 
 So strongly has the force of our position been felt by 
 reasoners, — so plain does it appear that it is the doctrine 
 which must authenticate the miracle, not the miracle whicli 
 can authenticate the doctrine, — that few could be found 
 at the present day who would not admit that no miracle 
 worked by a preacher would induce them to receive from 
 him a doctrine manifestly dishonouring to God. Many of 
 our modern divines — Dr. Arnold, Archdeacon Hare, Mi-. 
 Locke, Mr. Trench, and others — express this feeling in 
 the strongest language. Dr. Arnold says (" Christian 
 Course and Character," notes, pp. 4(32-3) : — 
 
 " Faith, without reason, is not properly faith, but mere 
 power-worship; and power- worship may be devil-wor- 
 ship ; for it is reason which entertains the idea of God — 
 an idea essentially made up of truth and goodness, no less 
 than of power. A sign of power, exhibited to the senses, 
 might, through them, dispose the whole man to acknow- 
 ledge it as divine; yet power in itself is not divine, it may 
 
 be devilish How can we distinguish God's voice 
 
 from the voice oi evil ? . . . . We distinguish it (and can 
 distinguish it no otherwise) by comparing it with that 
 idea of God which reason intuitively enjoys, the gift of 
 reason being God's original revelation of himself to man. 
 Now, if the voice which comes to us from the unseen - 
 world agree not with this idea, ive have no choice but to 
 pronounce it not to hs God's voice : for no signs of power, 
 in confirmation oj it, can alone prove it to be from 
 God." 
 
268 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 Locke says : — ** I do not deny in the least that God can 
 do, or hath done, miracles for the confirmation of truth, 
 I only say that we cannot think He should do them to 
 enforce doctrines or notions of himself, or any worship of 
 Him, not conformable to reason, or that we can receive 
 such as truth for the ffwraclea' sake ; and even in those 
 books which have the greatest proof of revelation from 
 God, and the attestation of miracles to confirm their being 
 so, the miracles are to be judged by the doctrine., and not 
 the doctrine by the miracles."* 
 
 Further. The idea that a miracle can authenticate a 
 doctrine, or is needed to do so, involves an additional fal- 
 lacy. It implies that our understanding is competent to 
 decide whether an act be divine, but not whether a doc^ 
 trine be divine ; — that the power displayed in a prodigy 
 may be sufficient to justify us in confidently assuming it 
 to be from God, — but that the beauty, the sublimity, the 
 innate light of a doctrine or a precept cannot be sufficient 
 to warrant us in pronouncing it to be from Him ; — that 
 God can impress His stamp unmistakably on His physical, 
 but not on His moral emanations ; — ^that His handwriting 
 is legible on the sea, or the sky, on the flower, or on the 
 insect, but not on the soul and intellect of man. It in- 
 volves the coarse and monstrous conception that God's 
 presence in His chosen temple can only be made manifest 
 by a loud appeal to those external senses which perish 
 with the flesh ; — that He pervades the earthquake and 
 the whirlwind, but not " the still small voice ; " — ^that, in 
 fine, the eye or the ear is a truer and quicker porcipient 
 of Diety than the Spirit which came forth from Him ;— 
 that God is Tnore cognizable by the senses than by the sovl,— 
 
 * See also Lord King's Life of Locke, i. 231 et seq. Trench's Hulsean 
 Lectures for 1845, pp. 8, 9.—' After all is done, men will feel in the deep- 
 est centre of their being, that it is the moral which must prove the historic, 
 not the historic which can ever prove the moral ; that evidences drawn from 
 without may be accepted as tne welcome buttresses, but that we can know 
 no ot\ier foundations, of our Faith, than those which itself supplies. Reve- 
 lation, like the sun, must be seen by its own light." Hare's Mission of the 
 Comforter, ii. p. 553. — " The notion that miracles have an augmentative and 
 demonstrative efficacy, and that the faith of Christians is to be grounded 
 upon them, belongs to a much later age. and is in fact the theological paral- 
 lel to the materialist hypothesis, that all our kuowledge is deriv^ from the 
 senses." 
 
MIRACLES. 
 
 260 
 
 by the material philosopher than by the pure-hearted but 
 unleanied \vor8hipper. 
 
 Tlie power to work miracles, then, does not, in the eye 
 of reason, imply any other supernatural endowment. 
 Neither does it in the eye of the Scripture. We have 
 many indications, in both the Old and the New Testa- 
 ment, that neither miracles, nor the co^ate gift of proph- 
 ecy, were considered to qualify a Teacher, or to au- 
 thenticate his teaching. The possession of miraculous 
 and prophetic power is distinctly recogriised in individu- 
 als who not only were not divinely authorised agents or 
 teachers, but were enemies of God and of His people. 
 Passing over the remarkable but inconclusive narratives 
 relative to the Egyptian magicians, and to Balaam, — we 
 find in Deut. xiii. 1-5, an express warning to the children 
 of Israel against being led astray by those who shall em- 
 ploy real nuraculous or prophetic gifts to entice them 
 away from the worship of Jehovah, a warning couched in 
 language which distinctly expresses that the miracle must 
 be judged of by the doctrine of the thaumaturgist, — not 
 be considered to authenticate it. " If there arise among 
 you a prophet, or a dreamer of dreams, and giveth thee a 
 sign or a wonder, cmd the sign or the wonder come to pass, 
 whereof he spake unto thee, saying. Let us go after other 
 gods, which thou hast not known, and let us serve them ; 
 thou shalt not hearken unto the words >f that prophet, or 
 that dreamer of dreams: and that Prophet, or that dreamer 
 Of dreams, shall be put to death." 
 
 The same proposition is affirmed with almost equal dis- 
 tinctness in Matth. vii. 22, 23. " Many will say to me in 
 that day. Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name ? 
 and in thy name have cast out devils ? and in thy name 
 done many wonderful works ? And then will I profess 
 unto them, I never knew you ; depart from me, ye that 
 work iniquity." Again, Matth. xxiv. 24, " For there shall 
 arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great 
 signs and wonders ; insomuch that, if it were possible, 
 they shall deceive the very elect." In Matth. xii. 27, and 
 Mark ix, 38, Christ clearly admits the power to work 
 miracles in both his enemies and his ignorers. 
 
i :l 
 
 270 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 If anything further were wanted to show the vicv 
 taken by Jesus of this matter, we should find it in his 
 steady refusal to authenticate his mission by a miracle, 
 when, in strict conformity to Jewish ideas (and to divine 
 prescription, if the Mosaic books may be at all trusted), 
 the rulers of the synagogue, in the plain performance of 
 their official duty, 'billed upon him to work one. (See 
 Matth. xii. 39 ; xvi. 4, and the parallel passages, as Mark 
 viii. 11.) He reproaches the deputation for their demand, 
 — grieves over it; according to Mark, — and says positively, 
 " There shall no sign be given unto this generation." In an- 
 other conversation with the Pharisees, the same idea is 
 still more clearly enunciated. He there (John vi. 30-33) 
 distinctly tells them that though Moses may have been 
 accredited by miiaclos, lie will be judged o by his doctrine 
 only. " They said therefore unto him, What sign she west 
 thou then, mat we may see, and believe thee ? what dost thou 
 work ? Our fathers did eat manna in the desert ; as it is 
 written, He gave them bread from heaven to eat. Then 
 Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, 
 Moses gave you not that bread from heaven ; but my 
 Father giveth you the true bread from heaven. ... I am 
 the bread of life, ' &c. The low estimation in which 
 were held by the Apostle Paul (1 Cor. xii. 28), 
 
 mirac 
 
 clearly shows that he did not regard them as the credeji- 
 tials Ox his mission ; and several passages in the Acts seem 
 to intimate that, by th? early Christians, the possession 
 of the miraculous or prophetic gift was not considered in- 
 consistent both with false doctrine and enmity to Christ's 
 Church (Acts viii. 9-11 ; xiii. 6-10 ; xvi 16 ; 2 Cor. xi. 
 13.) Finally, we have the conclusive fact that, according 
 to the gospel narrative, the power to work miracles had 
 been expressly conferred upon all the apostles, who " for- 
 sook Jesus and fled " in his day of trial, — ^upon Judas who 
 betrayed him, — upon Peter, who thrice denied him. 
 
 It is said, however, by some, that miraculous power is 
 bestow od upon Prophets, as their credentials; not as 
 proving their doctrines, but as proving them to be sent 
 I'rom God. But, is it not clear, that these credentials, if 
 they mean anything at all, must mean that men are to 
 
lOBACLES. 
 
 271 
 
 listen to the Prophets who* present them, as God's mouth- 
 pieces ? What is the object of proving them to be sent 
 hom God, except for the sake ot the inference that there- 
 Jjre what they teach must be God's truth ? 
 
 II. Having now proved our first position, — that mir- 
 acles cannot authenticate either the doctrines or the divine 
 commission oi the thaumaturgist, — we proceed to the 
 establishment of our second thesis, viz., — that miracles 
 cannot be the basis ot Christianity, or of any historical or 
 transmitted religion 
 
 We fully admit at the outset of our argument that a 
 miracle, as well as any other occurrence, is capable of proof 
 by testimony — provided only the testimony be adequate 
 in kind and in quantity. The testimony must be of 
 the same kind as that on which we should accept any of 
 the more rare and marvellous among natural phenomena, 
 and must be clear-, direct, and ample, in proportion to the 
 raarvellousness, anomalousness, ani rarity of the occur- 
 rence. This, it appears to us, is all that philosophy 
 authorizes us to demand for the authentication of the 
 jact-part of a miracle. 
 
 Miracles, we say, are not, and never can be, a sure loun 
 dation for a revealed religion — an historic creed. A true 
 Revelation, addressed to all mankind, and destined for all 
 ages, must be attested by evidence adequate and accessible 
 to all men and to all ages. It must carry with it its own 
 permanent and unfading credentials. Now, miracles are 
 evidence only to those who see them, or can sift the testi- 
 mony which atfirms them Occurrences so anomalous and 
 rare, which violate the known and regular course of na- 
 ture, can, at the utmost, only be admitted on the evidence 
 ol our own senses, or on the carefully-sifted testimony of 
 eye-witnesses. Therefore, a revelation, whose credentials 
 are miracles, can he a revelation only to the age in which 
 it appears The superhuman powers of its Preacher can 
 authenticate it only to those who witness the exertion of 
 them, and — more faintly and feebly — to those who have 
 received and scrutinized their direct testimony : — the 
 superhuman excellence of its doctrines may authenticate 
 

 272 
 
 THE CREED OF CHBISTENDOM. 
 
 II 
 
 it through all time, and must constitute, therefore, its only 
 adequate and abiding proof. 
 
 Now, the essence of the whole question lies in this: — ThcU 
 we have not the apostles and evangelists to cross-exarnvm; 
 we do not know that they were ever cross-examined ; we 
 do not know what was the nature ol the evidence or t«vS- 
 timony which satisfied their minds ; and we have ampU 
 indications that they, like most imperi jctly-educated men, 
 were satisfied with a nature and amount of proof which 
 woi-M never satisfy us. 
 
 We have stated that we are far from denying the ade- 
 quacy of positive and direct testimony to prove a miracle, 
 if its amount and quality be suitable. What would be the 
 amount and quality required ? It will be allowed on all 
 hands that the testimony of one witness, however com- 
 petent and honest, would not suffice. We must have the 
 concurring testimony of several competerd and inde- 
 pendent witnesses. Mr. Babbage has made a calculation 
 (which many will think puerile, but which assuredly does 
 not overstate the case), that, to prove some of the chief 
 miracles, such as the raising of the dead, the concfurring 
 testimony of six independent, competent, veracious wit- 
 nesses will suffice, hut not less. 
 
 Now, let us ask. Have we, for any of the gospel mir- 
 acles, evidence — we do not say as strong as this, but — 
 approaching to it ? in the slightest degree similar to it ? 
 Have we the concurring testimony of six independent and 
 competent witnesses ? or oi five ? or of three ? or of two ? 
 Do we know that we have the testimony even of OTie wit- 
 ness ? Do we know anything at all about the competency 
 or the independence of any of the witnesses ? Have we 
 any reason to believe that the evangelists sifted the testi- 
 mony they received ? Have we, in fine, the distinct state- 
 ment of any one individual that he saw or wrought such 
 or such a specific miracle ? No ; but what we nave in- 
 stead is this : — We have four documents, written we have 
 to guess when — proceeding from we know not whom — 
 transmitted to us we know not how purely ; three of them 
 evidently compositions from oral testimony or tradition, 
 and clearly not from independent testimony ; and all four, 
 
 not conmrr 
 
 documents i 
 
 certain indi 
 
 vious that \ 
 
 testimony.* 
 
 who any of 
 
 says, " I wi 
 
 know that 
 
 that their 
 
 concii'rrinQ 
 
 ments of ur 
 
 with many 
 
 miraculous 
 
 thirty yeai 
 
 which, in i 
 
 atiect per8< 
 
 — e 'idencc 
 
 summoned 
 
 bow to th( 
 
 Since 
 Gospels 
 would be 
 tionable c 
 for those 
 its being 
 tion deal 
 be dispeD 
 tion of tl 
 tice the 
 his own 
 case, wil 
 responds 
 ccnsideri 
 divines ( 
 they res< 
 narrativ 
 1, Th 
 
 " We as 
 Apostle J< 
 
 tl 
 W 
 
 o 
 
MIBACLEa 
 
 273 
 
 pore, its only 
 
 ithis:— TAo^ 
 
 oss-examim; 
 [amined; we 
 
 ience or tes- 
 have ampU 
 
 lucated men, 
 [proof which 
 
 ing the ade- 
 »ve a miracle, 
 would be the 
 lowed on all 
 owever com- 
 lust have the 
 t and inde- 
 a calculation 
 Jsuredly does 
 ( of the chief 
 e concvrriTig 
 racious wit- 
 gospel mir- 
 3 this, but— 
 milar to it? 
 spendent and 
 ? or of two ? 
 Q of one wit- 
 competency 
 f Have we 
 led the testi- ' 
 istinct state- 
 rought such 
 sve have in- 
 ten we have 
 lot whom — 
 iree of them 
 >r tradition, 
 md all four. 
 
 not coTiGiirrvng, but often singularly discrepant ; — which 
 documents relate that such miracles were wrought by a 
 certain individual in a certain place and time. It is ob- 
 vious that we have not here even an approach to personal 
 testimony* We do not know with the least certainty 
 who any' of those four narrators were; not one ol them 
 says, " I witnessed this miracle;" — we do not, therefore, 
 know that they were witnesses at all ; — ^and we do know 
 that their testimony was not indevend/Gnt nor always 
 concurring. At the best, therefore, we have only docu- 
 ments of unknown date and uncertain authorship, stating, 
 with many discrepancies and contradictions, that certain 
 miraculous occurrences were witnessed hy others, at least 
 thirty years before the record was composed ; — evidence 
 which, in an honest court oi justice, would not suffice to 
 ahect person or property to the slightest possible extent ; 
 — e 'idenco, nevertheless, on which we are peremptorily 
 summoned io accept the most astounding dogmas, and to 
 bow to the heaviest yoke. 
 
 Since then, for the miracles recorded in the synoptical 
 Gospels we have not even that degree oi evidence which 
 would be required to establish any remarkable or ques- 
 tionable occurrence; and since the only superior authority 
 for those of the iourth Gospel rests on the supposition of 
 its being the production of the Apostle John — a supposi- 
 tion doabtful and unproven, to say no more ; we might 
 be dispensed from entering into any more close examina- 
 tion of the narratives themselves — as in a court of jus- 
 tice the jury frequently decide against the plaintiff on 
 his own showing — pronounce that the appellant has no 
 case, without requiring to hear the objections of the 
 respondent. But it is important to call attention to a few 
 ccasiderations which should long since have warnec' 
 divines of the perilous position they had taken up, when 
 they resolved to base Christianity upon the miraculous 
 narratives of the Gospel. 
 
 1. The whole tenour of the Old Testament, and many 
 
 " We assume here, not that the fourth G-ospel was not written by t ./ 
 Apostle John, but Himply that we do not know that it was. 
 
;'^;V' 
 
 mi 
 
 I 
 
 K\ 
 
 mm 
 tell 
 
 274. 
 
 THE CREED OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 passages of the New, plainly indicate either that tlie povcr 
 of working miracles was so common in those days as to 
 argue nothing very remarkable in its possessor, or that a 
 belief in miracles was so general and so easily yielded as 
 to render the testimony of such facile believers inadequate 
 to prove them. On the first supposition they will not 
 warrant the inference ditiwn from them , on the second 
 they are themselves questionable. 
 
 Now, it is certain that the miracles recorded in the New 
 Testament do not appear to have produced on the be- 
 holders or the hearers the same eiioct as they would do 
 at the present day, nor to have been regarded in the 
 same light even by the workers of them. When Jesus 
 was told by his disciples (Mark ix. 38) that they had 
 found some unauthorized person casting out devils in his 
 name, he expresses no amazement — intimates no douht 
 as to the genuimeness Oj the nviracle — but rebukes his 
 disciples for interfering with the thaumaturgist, saying, 
 " Forbid him not : for there is no man whirl (Kid do a 
 mvi'acle in my name, that can lightly speak evi' jf me." 
 The casting out of devils — i.e,, the healing of the more 
 furious epileptic and maniacal disorders — was the 
 most frequent and among the most striking and the 
 of tenest appealed to o the miracles of Jesus , yet in the 
 conversation already referred to between himself and the 
 Pharisees (Matth. xii. 24«-27) he speaks of it as one tha^ 
 was constantly and habitually performed by their own 
 exorcists ; and, so far from insinuating any difference be- 
 tween the two caseS; expressly puts tJiem on a level* 
 Paul, th'?ugh himself gifted with miraculous power, and 
 claiming liom. xv. 19, 2 Cor. xii. 11) to be equally so 
 gifted with any of tLt^ other apostles (2 Cor. xi. 5), yet 
 places thu poiuer very low in the rank oj spiritual 
 endowmencs (1 C w xii. 8, 9, 10, 28)'f* — distinguishing 
 
 * Matth. vii. 22 ; xxiv, 21 ; Gal. iii. 5, and many other passages, show how 
 common miracles thsiu "^ere, or were esteemed. 
 
 t " For to uue ia ,.'ivtn 1 v > '.:9 8, irit the word of wisdom , to another the 
 word of knowledge ; t( no^aer faith; to another the gifts of healing; to 
 anoi>her ^Ae working of r«i/. - -to; to another prophecy," &(;. "And God hath 
 aet some in the chnrcii, li- v apostles, aecondarily propheto, thirdly teachers, 
 aflcr that miraolos, thea gifts of bealiugs, belps^ government^!, divorsitios of 
 
 
 in hath p 
 gifts o 
 slighting 
 suppositio 
 real and i 
 ot the wo 
 served ore 
 2. Thoi 
 to in the 
 mission ; 
 indication 
 quenc'^ an 
 For exam 
 satisfy th 
 gifts,'thoi 
 unsuitable 
 We have 
 declines t< 
 sion, but 
 miraclep. 
 0. Galilee 
 not believ 
 were not 1 
 to be jud 
 miracle, 1 
 sreaks of 
 the provo 
 viii. 10 ; i 
 evangelis 
 — the vei 
 miracles ; 
 why Jesi 
 mighty v 
 xiii. 58). 
 that he 1 
 them. J 
 (Mark vi 
 3 Ne 
 — nor tl 
 convictic 
 
M. 
 
 MIBACLES. 
 
 275 
 
 'that the poorer 
 lose davs as to 
 sessor, or tiiat a 
 isily yielded as 
 vers inadequate 
 they w'ili not 
 on the second 
 
 ded in the New 
 Bed on the be- 
 they would do 
 egarded in the 
 When Jesus 
 that they had 
 it devils in his 
 ^tes no doubt 
 it rebukes his 
 ui'gisi,, saying, 
 li^''- 'Md do a 
 ^k fvr ,)f me." 
 g of the more 
 jrs — was the 
 king and the 
 us , yet in the 
 mself and the 
 it as one tha^ 
 
 by their own 
 difference be- 
 
 on a level* 
 as power, and 
 be equally so 
 )r. xi. 5), yet 
 
 oj spiritual 
 istinguishing 
 
 ssages, show how 
 
 , to another the 
 B of healiii;^ ; to 
 
 "And God hath 
 thirdly teachers, 
 ti, divoi'sitiosof 
 
 
 in hath passages 'iniraxiles or thawmaturgie signs from 
 gifts o healing ; and speaks of them in a somewhat 
 slif'hting tone, which is wholly irreconcilable with the 
 supposition that the miracles of which he speaks were 
 real and indisputable ones after the modern signification 
 ot the word, i.e. unquestionable deviations from the ob- 
 served order of nature at the command of man. 
 
 2. Though the miracles of Christ are frequently referred 
 to in the Gospels as his credentials, as proola of his divine 
 mission; yet there are not wanting many significant 
 indication.; that they were wrought rather as a conse- 
 quenct! and reward of belief than as means to produce it. 
 For example, we have the repeated refusal of Jesus to 
 satisfy the Jewish chiefs by a display of his miraculous 
 gifts, thou<;h wo can perceive nothing unreasonable or 
 uusuitabie to pure Judaism in the demand (John vi. 30). 
 We have the remarkable fact that Jesus here not only 
 declines to work a new miracle in attestation of his mis- 
 sion, but does nofc even refer his questioners to his former 
 miracles. We have the reproach of Jesus to the people 
 0. Galilee — " Except ye see signs and wonders, ye will 
 not believe " (John iv. 48), clearly intimating that these 
 were not the criterions by which he intended his mission 
 to be judged. On several occasions, before working a 
 miracle, he ascertains the faith of the applicant, and 
 sreaks of the miracle as if it were to be the reward, not 
 the provocative, of their faith (Matthew ix. 27, 29 ; ix. 2 ; 
 viii. 10 ; ix. 22 ; xv. 28 ; Mark i. 40). And, finally, the 
 evangelists twice assign the want of faith of the people 
 — the very reason, according to the orthodox view, why 
 miracles should be worked before them — as the reason 
 why Jesus would not work them. " And he did not many 
 mighty works there because of their unbelief" (Matt, 
 xiii. 58). " And he could there do no mighty work, save 
 that he laid his hands upon a few sick folk, and healed 
 them. And lie marvelled because of their unbelief" 
 (Mark vi. 5, 6). 
 
 3 Neither did his miracles produce general conviction 
 — nor the conclusion which would have followed irom 
 conviction — in those who witnessed thciu, whether 
 
276 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 friends, enemies, or indifferent spectators. Had they ap- 
 peared to the witnesses in that age in the same form 
 which they assume in the documents in which they are 
 handed down to us, conviction must have been inevitable, 
 Yet this was far from being the case. We read, indeed, 
 frequently that the people " marvelled " and " glorified 
 God " — and that " the fame of his wonc'erful works went 
 throughout all the land ;" — but we also find several pas- 
 sages which point to a very opposite conclusion. " Then 
 began he to upbraid the cities wherein most of his mighty 
 works were done, because they repented not : Woe unto 
 thee, Chora ^n ! woe unto thee, Bethsaida ! for it the 
 mighty works, which Trere done in you, had been Jone in 
 Tyre and Sidon, they woi -Id have repented long ago in 
 sackcloth and ashes." (Matt, xi 20, 21.) " But though 
 be had done so many miracles before them (the people), 
 yet they believed not on him." (John xii. 37.) Even 
 his friends and disciples were not always convinced The 
 miracle of the loaves, even, sec bis to have produced little 
 effect on their minds, for we are told (as a reason tor 
 their surprise at a subsequent marvel), " For they consid- 
 ered not the miracle of the loaves : lor theii heart was 
 haAdened' (Mark vi. 52) an expression which a corn- 
 pa ison with xvi. 14, shows to have signified incredulity, 
 A still more signified')! statenjont is tound in John vii 5, 
 " For neither did his breil? -'rn b; lieve in him " A refer- 
 ence to Johnxi. 45, lo, jhows th'l^ even so signal and un- 
 questionable a miracle as is tkie n * ^ing of Lazarus, in the 
 form in which it has com£ down tO us, did not produce 
 universal conviction. " Thei many of the Jews which 
 came to Mary, and b .;d seen ihe things which Jesus did, 
 believed on him. Ijut some of them, went their ways to 
 the Pharisees, ani told them what things Jesus had 
 done." 
 
 It is worthy of especial note, that to the last, in de- 
 fiance of the numerous, astonishing, and public miracles 
 recorded in the Gospels — of many of which, as the rais- 
 ing of Lazarus, the cure of the blind man (John ix.), tht- 
 Pharisees and chief men among the Jews are said to have 
 been witnesses — the incredulity of these Rulers and of 
 
 the Sanhed 
 that it was 
 refusal to 
 Christ on 
 a disbelief 
 of its bei 
 tation of tl 
 intimidates 
 them. Ha( 
 blind, heal 
 raise the d( 
 degree or k 
 still more, 
 of superna 
 and ambiti 
 to his pret< 
 his enmity 
 they must 
 baffle their 
 taliation. 
 the reverse 
 were frienc 
 tacked hin 
 play of hi 
 conduct si 
 had not g( 
 a convicti( 
 4. The : 
 narratives 
 discrepam 
 one evani 
 corded in 
 pels ; the 
 cases of t 
 by John i 
 tioned bj 
 from the 
 ing Jesus 
 but sleep 
 in detail 
 
MIRACLES. 
 
 277 
 
 Had theyap. 
 'he same form 
 hich they are 
 Jen inevitable. 
 
 read, indeed, 
 id "glorified 
 1 works went 
 1 several pa^. 
 sion. " Then 
 of his mighty 
 t : Woe unto 
 1 ! for it the 
 been Jone in 
 
 long ago in 
 'But though 
 (the people), 
 
 37.) Even 
 ivinced. The 
 •oduced little 
 a reason tor 
 they consid- 
 iii heart was 
 '■hich a com- 
 l incredulity, 
 
 John vii 5, 
 A reter- 
 ?nal and un- 
 zarus, in the 
 not produce 
 Jews which 
 ti Jesus did, 
 eir ways to 
 Jesus had 
 
 last, in de- 
 lic miracles 
 as the rais- i 
 hn ix.), th(, 
 laid to havG 
 lers and of 
 
 the Sanhedrim i*emained unshaken. It is evident, too, 
 that it was genuine and sincere disbelief — not merely a 
 refusal to accept the inference of the divine mission of 
 Christ on the ground of his miraculous power, but 
 a disbelief in the miraculous power itself — or at least 
 of its being miraculous in our full modern accep- 
 tation of the term ; they were exonerated, but no way 
 intimidated, by the wonders which he wrought before 
 them. Had they really supposed that he could cure the 
 blind, heal the lame, command spirits, still the waves, 
 raise the dead (in a differerit manner, and w ith a different 
 degree or kind of power from their own thaumaturgists) — 
 still more, had they seen any one of these awful evidence? 
 of supernatural power — then, however hostile selfishness 
 and ambition [or class prejudices] might have made them 
 to his pretensions, they would have dreaded to provoke 
 his enmity, or to practise against his safetj^ satisfied, as 
 they must have been, that he could not only foresee and 
 baifle their machinations, but could inflict a fearful re- 
 taliation. But we see nothing of all this ; we see just 
 the reverse ; — they feared, not him, but the people who 
 were friendly to him ; — they more than once openly at- 
 tacked him, and tempted him, even by taunts, to a dis- 
 play of his superhuman gifts ; — in a word, their whole 
 conduct shows that his miracles, whatever they were, 
 had not gone any way towards producing in their minds 
 a conviction (or even a fear) of his supernatural power. 
 4. The minuter objections to the individual miraculous 
 narratives in the Gospel, we need not dwell on. The 
 discrepancies in the accounts, where given by more than 
 one evangelist ; — the entirely distinct set of miracles re- 
 coided in the fourth, from those in the first three Gos- 
 pels ; the remarkable circumstance that, of the three 
 cases of the dead being restored to life, one is mentioned 
 by John only, one by Luke only, and the third case, men 
 tioned by three of the evangelists, was no resurrection 
 from the dead at all (for all accounts concur in represent- 
 ing Jesus to have said expressly, " The damsel is not dead, 
 but sleepeth ; ") — ^^all these topics have been dwelt upon 
 in detail by other critics, and need not be considered here. 
 
278 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 The conclusion suggested by all these combined con- 
 sideration:^ .eras to be this : — that the miracles spoken 
 of in the New Testament had not the eftect of lertl mira- 
 cles upon the bystanders ; — thai, they were, probably, 
 either remarkable occurrences elevated into supernatural 
 ones by the general supernaturalistic tendencies of ♦^he 
 age, or examples of wonderful healing powers, the original 
 accounts of which have become strangely intermingled 
 and overlaid with fiction in the process of transmission 
 T^he Gospels (we must bear constantly in mind) are not 
 contemporaneous annals ; they merely narrate the occur- 
 rence of certain events, which, at the tiwje ivhen the tra- 
 dition was congealed into a record, had assumed such 
 and such a form and consistency in the public mind. 
 They show us not the facts that occurred in the year 
 A.D. 30, but the form those /acts had asswrned in popular 
 belief in the pear A.i 70. 
 
 There is yet another objection to the plan of propound- 
 ing miracles as the basis for a Revelation, which is all 
 but insuperable. The assertion oi a miracle having been 
 performed, is not a siwmle statement ; it involves three 
 elements — a lact and two injtrences. It predicates, iirst. 
 that such an occurrence took place ; second, that it was 
 brought about by the act and will oi the individual to 
 whom it is attributed ; third, that it implied supernatu- 
 ral power in the agent — i.e., that it could not have been 
 produced by mere human means. Now, the fact may 
 have been accurately observed, and yet one or both oi 
 the inferences may be unwarianted. Or, either infer- 
 ence may be rendered unsound by the slightest omission 
 or deviation from accuracy in the observation or state- 
 ment of the fact.* Nay, any new discovery in science— 
 any advance in physiological knowledge — may show that 
 the inference, which has always hitherto appeared quite 
 irrefragable, was, in fact, wholly unwarranted and incor- 
 rect. In the process of time, and the triumphant career 
 of scientific inquiry, any miracle may be — as so many 
 
 * Bentham observes that the report of u man going up with a balloon 
 would become a miracle, if a spectator told all the rest of the story truly, 
 but omitted to tell of the balloon. 
 
 thousand pi 
 
 currence. 
 
 for so vast s 
 
 A miracle \i 
 
 —based up 
 
 sible by ad^ 
 
 — a creed Vi 
 
 at the mere 
 
 It should 
 
 decline to r 
 
 mission, we 
 
 demurring 
 
 and two i 
 
 constituent 
 
 acc'iracy ;- 
 
 reasoning, i 
 
 r,Mn power 
 
 [" Romai 
 
 miracles oi 
 
 Protestant? 
 
 by themsel 
 
 of the late 
 
 miracles w 
 
 a natural 
 
 stand siidi 
 
 of scientific 
 
 as our kno 
 
 iravagance 
 
 earlier rui] 
 
 admits mi] 
 
 vites to a 
 
 When Ste 
 
 and saw 
 
 the right 
 
 solid fact. 
 
 las and M 
 
 * " The mi 
 to-day is a m 
 wonders to o 
 been though 
 f^o." — Park 
 
MIR \CLES. 
 
 271) 
 
 sombined con- 
 iracles spoken 
 ' of veil] mira- 
 ere, probably, 
 ) supernatural 
 iencies of ^he 
 •s, the original 
 intermingled 
 transmission 
 mind) are not 
 ate the occur- 
 luhen the tra- 
 assumed such 
 public mind. 
 in the year 
 d in popular 
 
 of propound- 
 , which is all 
 J having been 
 ivolves three 
 edicates, first. 
 , that it was 
 individual to 
 id supernatu- 
 ot have been 
 ihe fact may 
 e or both oi 
 either infer- 
 best omission 
 ion or state- 
 in science- 
 ay show that 
 peared quite 
 id and incor- 
 phant career 
 ■as so many 
 
 > with a balloon 
 the story truly, 
 
 thousand prodigies have been — reduced to a natural oc- 
 currence No miracle can, therefore, be a safe foundation 
 for so vast and weighty a superstructure as a Revelation. 
 A miracle is an argument in some measure ab ignorantia 
 —based upon [scanty knowledge,] and, therefore, defea- 
 sible by advancing knowledge. A miraculous revelation 
 — a creed whose foundation is miracle — must always be 
 at the mercy of Science, and must always dread it. 
 
 It should, then, be clearly understood that, when we 
 decline to receive a miracle as evidence of a divine com- 
 mission, we are not refusing simple testimony — we are 
 demurring to a proposition composed of one observation 
 and two injerences — a proposition, each of the three 
 constituents oi which contains the elements of possible in- 
 accuracy ; — wo are demurring, in fact, to a process of 
 reasoning, which assumee as its basis that the li/mits of hu- 
 ri.an power and knowledge are indisputably known to vs.* 
 
 ["Roman Catholics laacy that Bible miracles and the 
 miracles of their Church form a class by themselves; 
 Protestants fancy that Bible miracles, alone, form a class 
 by themselves. This was emii\enily ihe posture of mind 
 of the late Archbishop Whately ; — to hold that all other 
 miracles would turn out to be impostures, or capable of 
 a natural explanation, but that Bible miracles would 
 stand siiLing by a London special jury or by a committee 
 of scientific men. No acuteness can save such notions, 
 as our knowledge widens, from being seen to be mere ex- 
 travagances ; and the Protestant notion is doomed to an 
 earlier ruin than the Catholic. For the Catholic notion 
 admits miracles in the mass ; the Protestant notion in- 
 vites to a criticism by which it must finally itself perish. 
 When Stephen was martyred, he looked up into heaven 
 and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing on 
 the right hand of Grod. That, says the Protestant, is 
 solid fact. At the martyrdom of St. Fructuosus, BalDy- 
 las and Mygdone, the Christian servants of the Roman 
 
 * " The miracle is of a moat fluctuating character. The miracle worker of 
 to-day is a matter-of-fact juggler to-morrow. Science each year Jtdds new 
 wonders to our store. The master of a locomotive steam-engine would have 
 been thought greater than Jupiter Tonans, or the Elohim thirty centurie' 
 1^0."— Parker, p. 202. 
 
280 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 governor, saw the heavens open, and the saint and his 
 deacon Eulogius carried up on high with crowns on their 
 heads. That, says the Protestant, is imposture or else 
 illusion. St. Paul hears on h's way to Damascus tht 
 voice of Jesus say to him : ' Saul, Saul, why persecutest 
 thou me ? ' That, again, is solid fact. The companion of 
 St. Thomas Aquinas hears a voice from the crucifix say 
 to the praying saint : ' Thou hast written well of me, 
 Thomas , what recompense dost thou desire ? ' That, 
 again, is imposture or else illusion. Why ? It is im- 
 possible to find any criterion by which one of these 
 incidents may establish its claim to a solidity which we 
 refuse to the others. 
 
 " One of two things must be made out in order to place 
 either the Bible miracles alone, or the Bible miracles and 
 the mirar!! >s of the Catholic Church with them, in a class 
 by themselves. Either they must be shown to have 
 arisen in a time eminently unfavourable to such a process 
 as Shakespeare describes, to amplification and the pro- 
 duction of legend ; or they must be shown to be recorded 
 in documents of an eminently historical mode of birth 
 and publication. But surely it is manifest that the Bible 
 miracles fulfil neither oi these conditions. It was said 
 that the waters of the Pamphylian Sea miraculously 
 opened a passage for the army oi Alexander the Great. 
 Admiral Beaufort, however, tells us that, * though there 
 are no tides in this part of the Mediterranean, a consider- 
 able depression of the sea is caused by long-continued 
 north winds ; and Alexander, taking advantage of such a 
 moment, may have dashed on without impediment ;' and 
 we accept the explanation as a matter of course. But 
 the waters of the Red Sea are said to have miraculously 
 opened a passage for the children of Israel ; and we insist 
 on the literal truth of this story, and reject natural ex- 
 planations as monstrous. Yet the time and circumstances 
 of the flight from Egypt were a thousand times more 
 favourable to the rise of some natural incident into a 
 miracle, than the age of Alexander. They were a time 
 and circumstances of less broad daylight."]* 
 
 * Arnold's Literature atui Dooma, p. 130' 
 
 We are no^v 
 
 the most in 
 
 records — th 
 
 to which tl 
 
 cherished e 
 
 hopes depe 
 
 sequence ol 
 
 tural Insp 
 
 rejoice thai 
 
 great for it 
 
 the gospel 
 
 Christianit 
 
 more minu 
 
 find their f 
 
 the miracle 
 
 obligatory 
 
 feeling tha 
 
 the less to 
 
 should pro 
 
 evidence, « 
 
 punge it f ] 
 
 feel that i. 
 
 and their ( 
 
 which, per! 
 
 this ought 
 
 All that V 
 
 must be ii 
 
 sequences 
 
 hopes. 
 
 we have I 
 
 grounds, a 
 
 to the fla-* 
 
saint and his 
 owns on their 
 >sture or else 
 Damascus the 
 ly persecutest 
 companion of 
 > crucifix say 
 
 well of me, 
 sire?' Thati 
 
 ? It is im- 
 one of these 
 ity which we 
 
 order to place 
 ! miracles and 
 lem, in a class 
 own to have 
 iuch a process 
 and the pro- 
 X) be recorded 
 lode of birth 
 that the Bible 
 It was said 
 miraculously 
 3r the Great, 
 though there 
 .n, a consider- 
 ing-continued 
 age of such a 
 diment ;* and 
 course. But 
 miraculously 
 and we insist 
 i natural ex- 
 jircumstances 
 I times more 
 iident into a 
 were a time 
 
 CHAPTER XIV. 
 
 RESURRECTION OF JESUS. 
 
 We are now arrived at the most vitally important, and 
 the most intensely interesting, portion of the Christian 
 records — the resurrection of Jesus. This is the great fact 
 to which the afiections ot Christians turn with the most 
 cherished eagerness, the grand foundation on which their 
 hopes depend, on which their faith is fixed. If, in con- 
 sequence of our enquiries, the ordinary doctrine of Scrip- 
 tural Inspiration be relinquished, we have reason to 
 rejoice that Religion is relieved from a burden often too 
 great for it to bear. If the complete verbal accuracy of 
 the gospel narratives is disproved, orthodoxy and not 
 Christianity is a suflterer by the change, since it is only the 
 more minute and embarrassing tenets of our creed that 
 find their foundation swept away. If investigation shows 
 the miracles of the Bible to be untenable, or at least un- 
 obligatory upon our beliei, theologians are comforted by 
 feehng that they have one weak and vulnerable outpost 
 the less to deiend. But if the resurrection of our Lord 
 should prove, on closer scrutiny, to rest on no adequate 
 evidence, and mental integrity should compel us to ex- 
 punge it from our creed, the generality of Christians will 
 feel that the whole basis oi their faith and hope is gone, 
 and their Christianity will vanish with the foundation on 
 which, perhaps half unconsciously, they rested it. "Whether 
 this ought to be so is a point for future consideration. 
 All that we have now to do is to remember that truth 
 must be investigated without any side-glance to the con- 
 sequences which that investigation may have upon our 
 hopes. Our faith is sure to fail us in the hour of trial if 
 we have based it on consciously or suspectedly fallacious 
 grounds, and maintained it by wilfully closing our eyes 
 to the flaws in its foundations. 
 
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282 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 The belief in the resurrection of our Lord, when based 
 upon reflection at all, and not a mere mental habit, will 
 be found to rest on two grounds -.—first, the direct testi- 
 mony of the Scripture narratives; and secondly, the 
 evidence derivable from the subsequent conduct of the 
 apostles. 
 
 I. The narratives of the resurrection contained in the 
 four Gtospels present many remarkable discrepancies. 
 But discrepancies in the accoimts of an event given by 
 different narrators, whether themselves witnesses, or 
 merely historians, by no means necessarily impugn the 
 reality of the event narrated, but simply those accessaries 
 of the event to which the discrepancies relate. Thus, 
 when one evangelist tells us that the two malefactors, who 
 were crucified along with Jesus, reviled him, and another 
 evangelist relates that only one of them reviled him, and 
 was rebuked by the other for so doing, though the contra- 
 diction is direct and positive, no one feels that the least 
 doubt is thereby thrown upo*: the fact of two malefactors 
 having been crucified with Jesus, nor of some reviling 
 having passed on the occasion. Therefore the varifitions 
 in the narratives of the resurrection given by the four 
 evangelists do not, of themselves, impugn the fact of the 
 resurrection. Even were they (which they are not) the 
 first-hand accounts of eye-witnesses, instead of merely de- 
 rived from such, still it is characteristic of the honest tes- 
 timony of eye-witnesses to be discrepant in collateral 
 minutiae. But, on a closer examination of these accounts, 
 several peculiarities present themselves for more detailed 
 consideration. 
 
 1. We have already seen reason for concluding that, of 
 the four Gospels, three at least were certainly not the pro- 
 duction of eye-witnesses, but were compilations from oral 
 or documentary narratives current among the Christian 
 community at the time of their composition, and derived 
 doubtless for the most part from very high authority. 
 With legard to the fourth Gospel the opinions of the best 
 critics are so much divided, that all we can pronounce 
 upon the subject with any certainty is, that if it were thu 
 
 production 
 
 when, eith( 
 
 gination, oi 
 
 allowed hii 
 
 therefore, \ 
 
 tive of the 
 
 the form i1 
 
 or more af 
 
 Now, th 
 
 accounts a 
 
 in historia 
 
 event, whi 
 
 they wrot( 
 
 are, are, W( 
 
 0/ the kvthi 
 
 which ga> 
 
 more. Tl 
 
 something 
 
 that this ( 
 
 have beer 
 
 Someth 
 
 groundwo 
 
 then, wai 
 
 fact? TI 
 
 cleus, anc 
 
 the other 
 
 credible, 
 
 formed a 
 
 ture. Ml 
 
 to the Se 
 
 gone, anc 
 
 that he v 
 
 — and th 
 
 the body 
 
 was risei 
 
 because 
 
 • See chi 
 
 t Wemi 
 
 8t ' verse 
 
RESURRECTION OF JESUS. 
 
 283 
 
 when based 
 1 habit, will 
 direct testi- 
 icondly, the 
 duct of the 
 
 lined in the 
 
 iscrepancies. 
 
 nt given by 
 
 ntnesses, or 
 
 impugn the 
 
 le accessaries 
 
 )late. Thus, 
 
 jfactors, who 
 
 and another 
 
 ed him, and 
 
 1 the contra- 
 
 hat the least 
 
 [) malefactors 
 
 )me reviling 
 
 le varintions 
 
 by the four 
 
 B fact of the 
 
 are not) the 
 
 f merely de- 
 
 J honest tes- 
 
 n collateral 
 
 jse accounts, 
 
 tore detailed 
 
 ling that, of 
 not the pro- 
 is from oral 
 e Christian 
 and derived 
 I authority, 
 of the best 
 pronounce 
 it were tho 
 
 production of the Apostle John, it was written at a time 
 when, either from defect of memory, redundancy of ima- 
 gination, or laxity in his notions of an historian's duty, he 
 allowed himself to take strange liberties with fact.* All, 
 therefore, that the Gospels now present to us is the narra- 
 tive of the Resurrection, not as it actually occurred, but in 
 the form it had assumed among the disciples thirty years 
 or more after the death of Jesus. 
 
 Now, the discrepancies which we notice in the various 
 accounts are not greater than might have been expected 
 in historians recording an event, or rather traditions of an 
 «vent, which occurred from thirty to sixty years before 
 they wrote. These records, therefore, di.'ciepant as they 
 are, are, we think, quite sufficient to prove that something 
 oj the kmd occurred, i. e., that some recurrence took place 
 which gave rise to the belief and the traditions ; — but no 
 more. The agreement of the several accounts show that 
 something ot the kind occurred : — their discrepancies show 
 that this occurrence was not exactly such as it is related to 
 have been. 
 
 Something of the kind occurred which formed the 
 groundwork for the belief and the narrative. What, 
 then, was this something — this basis — this nucleus of 
 fact ? The Gospel of Mark appears to contain this nu- 
 cleus, and this alone.i* It contains nothing but what all 
 the other accounts contain, and nothing that is not simple, 
 credible, and natural, but it contains enough to have 
 formed a foundation for the whole subsequent superstruc- 
 ture. Mark informs us that w^hen the women went early 
 to the Sepulchre, they found it open, the body of Jesus 
 gone, and some one in white garments who assured them 
 that he was risen. This all the four narratives agree in : 
 — and they agree in nothing else. The disappearance of 
 the body, then, was certain ; — the information that Jesus 
 "was risen came from the women alone, who believed it 
 because they were told it, and who were also the first to 
 
 * See chap. x. 
 
 t We must hear in mind that the genuine Gospel of Mark ends with the 
 dt ' verse of chapter xvi. ; and that there is eood reauon to believo tbftt 
 M vck's Gospel wm, if not the original one, at Utast the earlleit. 
 
284 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 affirm that they had seen their Lord. In the excited statt 
 of mind in which all the disciples must have been at this 
 time, were not these three unquestioned circumstances— 
 that the body was gone ; — that a figure dressed in white 
 told the women that their Lord was risan ; — and that the 
 same women saw some one tvhom they believed to be him ; 
 — amply sufficient to make a belief in his resurrection 
 spread with the force and rapidity of a contagion ? 
 
 2. It is clear that to prove such a miracle as the reap- 
 pearance in life of a man who had been publicly slain, the 
 direct and concurrent testimony of eye-witnesses would 
 be necessary : — that two or more should state that they 
 saw him at such a time and place, and kneiv him ; — and 
 that this clear testimony should be recorded and handed 
 down to us in an authentic document. This decree ot 
 evidence we might have had : — this we have not. We 
 have epistles from Peter, James, John, and Jude — all of 
 whom are said by the evangelists to have seen Jesus after 
 he rose from the dead, in none of which epistles is the fact 
 of the resm'rection even stated, much less that Jesus wa8 
 seen by the writer after his resurrection. This point de- 
 serves weighty consideration. We have ample evidence 
 that the belief in Christ's resurrection* was very early 
 and very general among the disciples, but we have not the 
 direct testimony c^ any one of the twelve, nor of any eye- 
 witness at all, that they saw him on earth after his death. 
 Many writers say, " he was seen ; " — no one says, " / saw 
 him alive in the flesh." 
 
 There are three apparent exceptjons to this, which, how- 
 ever, when examined, will prove rather confirmatory of 
 our statement than otherwise. If the last chapter of the 
 fourth Gospel were written by the Apostle John, it would 
 contain the direct testimony of an eye-witness to the ap- 
 pearance of Jesus upon earth after his crucifixion. But 
 its genuineness has long been a matter of question amon<r 
 
 • The belief in a general resurrection was, we know, prevalent among the 
 JewB in general, and the disciples of Clirist especially ; and it appears from 
 several paHSf gcH that the opinion was that the re urrection would be innin'- 
 diato upon death (Luke xx. 08; xxiii. 43). In this case the belief that 
 Olu'iuti wftfl risen would follow immediately on the knowledge of hia death. 
 
 learned men, 
 
 the belief th 
 
 even that it 
 
 it is a|>pend( 
 
 preceding ch 
 
 of a history. 
 
 chapter— its 
 
 from shore, i 
 
 fire ready m 
 
 tradiction b( 
 
 twelfth, as t( 
 
 of the leger 
 
 tion betwee 
 
 draught of ; 
 
 tion of Chri 
 
 very comm 
 
 last two vei 
 
 and we ha 
 
 genuine tha 
 
 whole ques 
 
 chapter wa? 
 
 elder of th( 
 
 In the fir 
 
 and existen 
 
 but when 
 
 lieved in a 
 
 transferenc 
 
 and that tl 
 
 disciples o 
 
 23-31 ; XX 
 
 assertion t 
 
 and that 
 
 pression tl 
 
 doctrine (" 
 
 8pirit,"t) i 
 
 not a flesh 
 
 * See Hu^ 
 
 + BofarwOc 
 
 mon translat 
 
 and thue ent 
 
excited stato 
 been at this 
 umstances— 
 5sed in white 
 -and that the 
 d to be him ; 
 
 resurrection 
 Lgion ? 
 
 as the reap- 
 
 cly slain, the 
 
 nesses would 
 
 ite that the\ 
 
 w him ;— and 
 
 1 and handed 
 
 lis degree of 
 
 rve not. Wo 
 
 Jude— all of 
 
 )n Jesus after 
 
 les is the fact 
 
 it Jesus was 
 
 i^his point de- 
 
 iple evidence 
 
 IS very early 
 
 have not the 
 
 r of any eye- 
 
 ;er his death. 
 
 says, "/saw 
 
 , which, how- 
 ifirmatory of 
 japter of the 
 )hn, it would 
 ss to the ap- 
 fixion. But 
 3stion amoni^ 
 
 alent among the 
 it appears from 
 
 would be imnii'- 
 the belief that 
 
 e of his death. 
 
 RESURRECTION OP JESUS. 
 
 285 
 
 learned men,* and few can read it critically and retain 
 the belief that it is a real relic of the beloved apostle, or 
 even that it originally formed part of the Gospel to which 
 it is appended. In the first place, the closing verse of the 
 preceding chapter unmistakably indicates the termination 
 of a history. Then, the general tone of the twentv-firsi 
 chapter — its particularity as to the distance of the bark 
 from shore, and the exact number of fishes taken — the 
 fire ready made when the disciples came to Und — the con 
 tradiction between the fourth verse and the seventh and 
 twelfth, as to the recognition of Jesus — all partake strongly 
 of the legendary character, as does likewise the conversa- 
 tioij between Jesus and Peter. Again, the miraculous 
 draught of fishes which is here placed after the resurrec- 
 tion of Christ, is by Luke related as happening at the 
 very commencement of his ministry. And finally, the 
 last two verses, it is clear, cannot be from the pen of John, 
 and we ha ""e no grounds for supposing them to be less 
 genuine than the rest of the chapter. On a review of the 
 whole question we entertain no doubt that the whole 
 chapter was an addition of later date, perhaps by some 
 elder of the Ephesian Church. 
 
 In the first epistle of Peter (iii. 21, 22), the resurrection 
 and existence in heaven of Jesus are distinctly afiirmed ; 
 but when we remember that the Jews at that time be- 
 lieved in a future life, and apparently in an immediate 
 transference of the spirit from this world to the nert, 
 and that this belief had been especially enforced on the 
 disciples of Jesus (Matt. xvii. 1-4 ; xxii. 32 ; Luke xvi. 
 23-31 ; xxiii. 43), this will appear very different from an 
 assertion that Jesus had actually risen to an earthly life, 
 and that Peter had seen him. Indeed the peculiar ex- 
 pression that is made use of at ver. 18, in affirming the 
 doctrine (" being slain in flesh, but made alive again in 
 8pirit,"t) indicates, in the true meaning of the original, 
 not a fleshly, but a spiritual revivification. 
 
 * See Hug, 484. 
 
 \ 9avar<it6(U nhp (TupK\ C<Doiroirf9e\s Si irvfifxart. (Griesbach.) Our com. 
 moa translation alters the preposition, grat litously and without warrant, 
 and thu« entirely loses tiie writer's autithc us. 
 
286 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 :i 
 
 There remains the statement of Paul (1 Cor. xv. 8), 
 " And last of all he was seen of me also." This assertion, 
 taken with the context, negatives rather than affirms the 
 reappearance of Christ upon the earth to the bodily eye 
 of his disciples. The whole statement is a somewhat 
 rambling one, and not altogether consistent with the 
 Gospel narratives ; but the chiei point to be attended to 
 here is, that Paul places the appearance of Jesus to the 
 other disciples on the same footing as his appearance to 
 himself. Now, we know that his appearance to Paul was 
 in a vision — a vision visible to Paul alone of all the by- 
 standers, and, therefore, subjective or mental merely. 
 [Moreover, strictly speaking, there was no vision at all ; ~ 
 no one was seen ; there was a bright light, and a voice 
 was heard. In this all the accounts agree In a subse- 
 quent verse, indeed (Acts xxii. 18), Paul says that, when 
 " in a trance in the temple at Jerusalem," he " saw him (the 
 Lord) saying to him," &c. Bt.t this expression, again, 
 seems to imply hearing, not sight.] The conclusdon to be 
 drawn from the language of Paul would, therefore, be 
 that the appearance ol Jesus to the other disciples was 
 visionary likewise.* Our original statement, therefore, 
 remains unqualified : — We might have had, and should 
 have expected to have, the direct assertion of four apos- 
 tles, that they had seen Jesus on earth and in the flesh 
 after his death • — we have not this assertion from any one 
 of them. 
 
 3. The statements which have come down to us as to 
 when, where, by whom, and how often, Jesus was seen 
 after his death, present such serious and irreconcilable 
 variations as to prove beyond question that they are not 
 the original statements of eye-witnesses, but merely the 
 form which the original statements had assumed, after 
 much transmission, thirty or forty years after the event 
 to which they relate. Let us examine them more partic- 
 ularly. It will he seen that they agree in evei^ything that 
 is natural and probable, and c^Uagree in everything thai 
 is supernatural and difficult o, credence. All the accounts 
 
 * Bush's Anastasis, n. 104. 
 
 agree that 
 Sepulchre 
 white rail 
 dse. 
 
 (1.) Th 
 mentions 
 Magdalen 
 Marys an< 
 and " cert 
 (2.) Th 
 raiment \ 
 one " you 
 two " mei 
 also, the i 
 second vi 
 there. 
 
 (3.) Tl 
 tions. A 
 the resur 
 and sent 
 follow 1 
 stated tl 
 tion of h 
 asked M 
 (4.)T 
 thew, L 
 tion as 
 Accordi 
 (6.)' 
 peared. 
 to Matt 
 eleven. 
 then 
 Luke i 
 
 • If, a 
 
 ever uttt 
 
 t The 
 
 with clof 
 
 casion is 
 
 iii! 
 
 •i... 
 
BESURRECTION OF JESUS. 
 
 287 
 
 Cor. XV. 8), 
 
 is assertion, 
 
 affirms the 
 
 bodily eye 
 
 somewhat 
 
 it with the 
 
 attended to 
 
 "esus to the 
 
 •pearance to 
 
 to Paul was 
 
 all the by- 
 
 ital merely. 
 
 ion at all ;•— 
 
 , and a voice 
 
 In a subse- 
 
 s that, when 
 
 saw him (the 
 
 ission, again, 
 
 elusion to be 
 
 therefore, be 
 
 disciples was 
 
 nt, therefore, 
 
 , and should 
 
 tf four apos- 
 
 i in the flesh 
 
 from any one 
 
 n to us as to 
 5us was seen 
 rreconcilable 
 they are not 
 b merely the 
 isumed, after 
 -er the event 
 more partic- 
 I'ything that 
 rything that 
 the accounts 
 
 agree thai the women, on their matutinal visit to the 
 Sepulchre, found the body gone, and saw some one in 
 white raiment who spoke to them. Thsy agree in nothing 
 dse. 
 
 (1.) They differ as to the number of the women. John 
 mentions only (me, Mary Magdalene ; — Matthew two, Mary 
 Magdalene and the other Mary ; — Mark three, the two 
 Marys and Salome ; — Luke several, the two Marys, Joanna, 
 and " certain others with them." 
 
 (2.) They differ as to the number of persons in white 
 raiment who appeared to the women. Mark speaks ol 
 one " young man " ; — Matthew of one " angel " ; — Luke of 
 two " men " ; — John of two " angels." According to John, 
 also, the appearance of the two angels was not till Mary's 
 second visit to the tomb, after Peter and John had been 
 there. 
 
 (3.) They differ as to the words spoken by the appari- 
 tions. According to Matthew and Mark they assert-ed 
 the resurrection of Jesus, and his departure into Galilee, 
 and sent a message to his disciples enjoining them to 
 follow him thither. According to Luke they simply 
 stated that he was risen, and referred to a former predic- 
 tion of his to this effect.* According to John they only 
 asked Mary, " Woman ! why weepest thou ?" 
 
 (4.) They differ in another point. According to Mat- 
 thew, Luke, and John, the women carried the informa- 
 tion as to what they had seen at once to the disciples. 
 According to Mark " they said nothing to any man." 
 
 (5.) They differ as to the parties to whom Jesus ap- 
 peared. — According to Mark it was no one, According 
 to ]\Iatthew it was first to the two women, then to the 
 eleven. According to John it was first to one woman 
 then twice to the assembled apostles.-f* According to 
 Luke it was first to no woman, but to Cleopas and his 
 
 * If, as we liave reason to believe (chap, viii.), no such prediction was 
 ever uttered, it follows that this reference to it must be purely fictitious. 
 
 t The text says simply "the disciples," but as they met in a room and 
 with closed doors, and the absence of one of the apostles ou the first oc- 
 casion is r entioned, it evidently means " the eleven." 
 
288 
 
 THE CREED OF CHBISTENDOM. 
 
 companion, then to Peter*, and then to the assembled 
 fcieven. 
 
 (6.) They differ as to the locality. According to Mark 
 it was nowhere. According to Matthew it was first at 
 Jerusalem and then in Galilee, whither the disciples went 
 in obedience to the angelic command. According to 
 Luke it was in Jerusalem and its vicinity, and there cdone, 
 where the disciples remained in obedience to the reiter- 
 ated command of Jesus himsell.f According to the 
 genuine part of John, also, the appearances were confined 
 to Jerusalem. 
 
 The account of Paul differs slightly from all the others ; 
 it must have been second-hand ; and is valuable only as 
 showing the accounts which were current in the Chris- 
 tian Church at the time at which he wrote, and how 
 much these varied from the evangelic documents, which 
 were, in fact, a selection out of these current accounts. 
 The epistle of Paul was written, probably, about the 
 year A.D. 67 ; the first three Gk)spels between the years 
 A.D. 60 and 70. The appearance to James, which Paul 
 mentions, was taken from the Gospel to the Hebrews, 
 now lost.J 
 
 Now, we put it to any candid man whether the dis- 
 crepancies in these accounts are not of a nature, and to 
 an extent, entirely to disqualify them from being received 
 as evidence of anything, except the currency and credit 
 of such stories among Christians thirty years after the 
 death of Christ ? 
 
 4. A marked and most significant peculiarity in these 
 
 * This appearance to Peter is also mentioned by Paul (1 Cor. xv. 5), 
 from whom probably Luke received it. We have nowhere else any trace 
 of it. 
 
 t Luke xxiv. 49, 53 ; Acts i. 4. Luke and Matthew thus oontradict each 
 other past all possibility of reconciliation. Mucthew tells us that Jesus 
 commanded them to go into Galilee, and that they went thither ; — Luke 
 tells us that he positively commanded them " not to a.epart from Jerusalem," 
 and that they remained there (xxiv. 53). But Luke contradicts himself 
 quite as flatly on another point. In the Gospel he represents the ascension 
 as taking place on the evening of the th -d day after .'•he crucifixion : such 
 is the clear meaning of the text (as may be seen from verRes 21, 33, 36, 50) : 
 — in the Acts i. 3 he places the ascension forty days after the resurrection, 
 and says that Jesus was seen by his disciples during the whole interval. 
 
 t The passage, however, is preserved by Jerome. (See Heonell, p. 287). 
 
 accounts, "v 
 
 is, that sea 
 
 Jesus afte 
 
 and intimi 
 
 to Matthe 
 
 in Galilee 
 
 " doubted 
 
 identity b 
 
 the two d 
 
 and who 
 
 recognise 
 
 should nc 
 
 had been 
 
 to Peter ( 
 
 they wer( 
 
 According 
 
 had spok< 
 
 still did I 
 
 orardener. 
 
 same wai 
 
 part of M 
 
 various t 
 
 for the 
 
 others (3 
 
 another j 
 
 * Hereai 
 
 versation b« 
 
 prophecies, 
 
 of Jesus, bi 
 
 Now, if th( 
 
 correct, viz 
 
 to a sutfeii: 
 
 story of CI 
 
 that Jesus 
 
 his discipl 
 
 t Fumej 
 
 "dark" w 
 
 the reason 
 
 not so darl 
 
 gone. In 
 
 second visi 
 
 her irst vii 
 
 John and 
 
 the thirl 
 
), 
 
 assembled 
 
 ng to Mark 
 ^as first at 
 ciples went 
 icording to 
 there alone, 
 ) the reiter- 
 ing to the 
 ire confined 
 
 the others; 
 ble only as 
 
 the Chris- 
 and how 
 ents, which 
 it accounts. 
 
 about the 
 1 the years 
 ivhich Paul 
 B Hebrews, 
 
 aer the dis- 
 ire, and to 
 Qg received 
 and credit 
 s after the 
 
 by in these 
 
 (1 Cor. XV. 5), 
 else any trace 
 
 onta-adict each 
 us that Jesus 
 lither ;— Luke 
 na Jerusalem," 
 idiots himself 
 I the ascension 
 ciiixiou : sucli 
 II, 33, 36, 60) : 
 > resurrection, 
 I interval, 
 nnell, p. 287). 
 
 RESURRECTION OF JESUS. 
 
 289 
 
 accounts, which has not received the attention it deserves, 
 is, that scarcely any of those who are said to have seen 
 Jesus after his resurrection, recognised him, though long 
 and intimately acquainted with his person. According 
 to Matthew (xxviii 17), when Jesus appeared to the eleven 
 in Galilee by his own appointment, some, even of them, 
 " doubted ," which could not have been the case had his 
 identity been clearly recognisable. According to Luke, 
 the two disciples, with whom ho held a long conversation, 
 and who passed many hours in his company, did not 
 recognise him. "Their eyes were holden that they 
 should not know him."* And even after the disciples 
 had been informed, both of this reappearance and of that 
 to Peter (xxiv. 34-37), yet when Jesus appeared to them, 
 they were afirighted, and supposed that they saw a spirit. 
 According to John, even Mary Magdalene, after Jesus 
 had spoken to her, and she had turned to look at him, 
 still did not recognise him, but supposed him to be the 
 (rardener.*}" In the spurious part of John" (xxi. 4-6) the 
 same want of recognition is observable. In the spurious 
 part of Mark we see traces of a belief that Jesus assumed 
 various forms after his resurrection, to account, doubtless, 
 for the non-recognition ot some and the disbelief of 
 others (xvi. 11, 12, 13): "After that he appeared in 
 another form unto two of them." Now, if it really were 
 
 * Here another interestiEsj point comt ". in for consideration. The con- 
 versation between Jesus and his two companions turned upon the Messianic 
 prophecies, which the disciples held to have been disappointed by the death 
 of Jesus, but which Jesus as iured them related to and were fulfilled in him. 
 Now, if the conclusion at which we arrived in a previous chapter (iv. ) be 
 correct, viz., that the Old Te.<t&ment prophecies contain no real reference 
 to a suffering Messiah, or to i> esus at all, it follows, that at least half the 
 story of Oleopas must be fabulous, unless, indeed, we adopt the supposition 
 that Jesus held uhe same erroneous views respecting these propuecies as 
 his djsciples. 
 
 t Fume^s (" On the Four Gospels ") dwells much on the fact that t was 
 "dark" when Mary visited the sepulchre (John xx. 1), and that this was 
 the reason why she did not re<!ogni8e Jesus. But, in the first place, it was 
 not so dark but that she could see that the sepulchre was open and the body 
 gone. In the second place, her sight of Jesus was on the occasion of her 
 .second visit to the sepulchre, and the " darkness " of early dawn was during 
 her Urst visit, and in the interval she had gone to the city to find Peter and 
 John and had returned, by which time it must have been broad day. In 
 the thir ,1 place, Mark tells us that the \asit of Mary was at sunriae — 
 kvKTfiKtfjrroi tow ^aIov— " the sun being risen." 
 
290 
 
 THE CBEED OF 0HBI8TENDOM. 
 
 Jesus who appeared to these various parties, would this 
 want of recognition have been possible ? If it were 
 Jesus, he was so changed that his most intimate friends 
 did not know him. How then can we know that it was 
 himself? 
 
 We will not attempt to construct, as several have en- 
 deavoured to do, out of these conflicting traditions, a 
 narative of the real original occurrence which gave rise 
 to them, and of the process by which they attained the 
 form and consistency at which they have arrived in the 
 evangelical documents. Three different suppositions may 
 be adopted, each of which has found favour in the eyes 
 of some writers. We may either imagine that Jesus was 
 not really and entirely dead when taken down from the 
 cross, a supposition which Paulus and others show to be 
 far from destitute of probability ;* or we may imagine 
 that the apparition of Jesus to his disciples belongs to 
 that class of appearances of departed spirits for which so 
 much staggering and be^'vildering evidence is on record ;f 
 or, lastly, we may believe that the minds of the disciples, 
 excited by the disappearance of the body, and the an- 
 nouncement by the women of bis resurrection, mistook 
 some passing individual for their crucified I^ord, and that 
 from such an origin multiolied rumours of his reappear- 
 ance arose and spread. \^e do not, ourselves, definitively 
 adopt any of these hypotheses : we wish simply to call 
 attention to the circumstance that we have no clear, con- 
 sistent, credible account of the resurrection; that the 
 only elements of the narrative which are retained and 
 remain uniform in all its forms, — viz., the disappearance 
 of the body, and the appearance of some one in white at 
 the tomb-— are simple and probable, and in no way neces- 
 sitate, or clearly point to, the surmise of a bodily resur- 
 rection at all. Christ Tnay have risen from the dead and 
 appeared to his disciples; but it is certavih that ij he did, 
 the Gospels do Tiot contain a correct account o such resur- 
 rection and reappearance. 
 
 * StrauHs, 'ii. 288. 
 
 f iSee Buab'B AnaataBis, 156, 
 
 II. Th 
 
 death of . 
 
 fiom timi 
 
 (lepressio 
 
 depicted 
 
 favour of 
 
 of the n 
 
 seems to 
 
 surrectio: 
 
 filiort of I 
 
 what the 
 
 what the 
 
 mains f( 
 
 have bel 
 
 ception c 
 
 of a f utr 
 
 body of 
 
 laid, anc 
 
 ment of 
 
 vivid an 
 
 actual I 
 
 apostles 
 
 have b( 
 
 really d 
 
 by diffe 
 
 will we 
 
 ment oi 
 
 Paith oi 
 
 3viden( 
 
 would 
 
 * [The 
 aaediate 
 'esurrect 
 Mark xi 
 
 t It if 
 ;iou of a 
 ind ours 
 reasonin 
 quiring, 
 bat, on 1 
 aval as 
 ioas, an 
 
RESURRECTION OF JESUS. 
 
 291 
 
 Iwould this 
 jlf it were 
 late friends 
 [that it was 
 
 -1 have en- 
 [raditions, a 
 gave rise 
 itained the 
 ived in the 
 [sitions may 
 in the eyes 
 t Jesus was 
 ■n from the 
 show to be 
 ay imagine 
 i belongs to 
 or "which so 
 on record ;f 
 he disciples, 
 and the an- 
 on, mistook 
 >rd, and that 
 is reappear- 
 definitively 
 iply to call 
 clear, con- 
 a; that the 
 stained and 
 Jappearance 
 in white at 
 ' way neces- 
 adily resur- 
 le dead and 
 tt ij he did, 
 such resur- 
 
 II, The conduct of the apostles subsequent to the 
 death of Jesus, — the marked change in their character 
 I'l om timidity to boldness, and in their feelings from deep 
 depression and dismay to satisfaction and triumph, — as 
 depicted in the Acts, affords tar stronger evidence in 
 favour of the bodily resurrection of their Lord, than any 
 of the narratives which have recorded the event. It 
 seems to us certain that the apostles believed in the re- 
 surrection of Jesus [with absolute conviction.] Nothing 
 .short of such a belief could have sustained them through 
 what they had to endure, or given them enthusiasm for 
 what they had to do ; the question, therefore, which re- 
 mains for our decision is, whether the apostles could 
 have believed it, had it not been fact ; whether their re- 
 ception of the doctrine of a general resurrection, [or rather 
 of a futuie life,*] coupled with the disappearance of the 
 body of Jesus from the sepulchre in wiiich he had been 
 laid, and the report of the women regarding the state- 
 ment of the angelic vision, be sufficient to account for so 
 vivid and actuating a faith, without the supposition of his 
 actual appearance to themselves ; whether, in fact, the 
 apostles, excited by the report that he was risen, could 
 have believed that they had seen him if they had not 
 really done so. 1'his question will be differently answered 
 by different minds ; nor do we know that any arguments 
 will weigh more on either side than the simple state- 
 tYient oi the problem to be resolved.*!* Certainly, the bold 
 faith of the apostles, if sufficient, is the only sufficient 
 avidence for the occurrence; the narrative testimony 
 would be inadequate to prove a far more credible event. 
 
 * [The current belief in those days appears to have been not in an im- 
 oiediate liberation of the soul to a spiritual existence^ but in am ultimate 
 ■esurrection of all at the great day of account. John xi. 24 ; Luke xx. 33 ; 
 Mark xii. 23. See infra, note, p. 362]. 
 
 t It is certain that we, in these days, could not believe in the resurrec- 
 aou of an individual to an earthly life unless we had ascertained his death, 
 ind ourselves seen him afterwards alive. But we cannot justly apply this 
 reasoning to the early followers of Christ ; they were not men of critical, in- 
 :iuiring, or doubting minds, nor accustomed to sift or scrutinize testimony, 
 but, on the contrary, inured to marvels, anl trained to re3;a"d tlie f uperuat- 
 nral as almost an ordinary part of the natural, given moreover to see vis« 
 ions, and unhesitatingly to accept them as divnic communications. 
 
292 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 All we can say is this ; that a belief in the resurrection 
 and bodily reappearance of Jesus early prevailed and 
 rapidly obtained currency in the Christian community ; 
 that the apostles shared the belief in the resurrection, 
 and did not discourage that in the bodily reappearance ; 
 that, however, none of them (the fourth Gospel not hav- 
 ing been written by John) has left us his own testimony 
 to having himself seen Jesus alive after his death ; and 
 that some of the disciples doubted, and others long after 
 disbelieved the fact* 
 
 In order to mitigate our pain at finding that the fact 
 of Christ's resurrection has been handed down to us on 
 such inadequate testimony as to render it at best a doubt- 
 ful inference, it is desirable to inquire whether, in reality, 
 it has the doctrinal value which it has been the habit ot 
 theologians to attribute to it. We have been taught to 
 regard it not only as the chief and crowning proof of the 
 diviidty of our Saviour's mission, but as the type, earnest, 
 and assurance of our own translation to a life beyond the 
 grave. It is very questionable, however, whether either 
 of these vieT^s of it is fully justified by reason. 
 
 There can be no doubt that the fact of an individual 
 having been miraculously restored to life, is a signal proof 
 of divine interposition in his behalf. Such restoration 
 may be viewed in three lights — either as a reward for a 
 liie of extraordinary virtue ; or as an intimation that his 
 mission upon earth had been prematurely cut short, and 
 that his reanimation was necessary for its fulfilment ; or 
 as an announcement to the world that he was in a pecu- 
 liar manner the object of di-nne regard and the subject o 
 divine influence. The first point of view is evidently ir- 
 rational, and the offspring of unregenerate and unculti- 
 vated thought. It is prompted either by the inconsiderate 
 instincts of the natural man, or by disbelief in a future 
 
 _ • See 1 Cor. xv. 12. The whole argument of Paul respecting the resurrec- 
 tion is remarkable — it is simply this, there must be a resurrection from tlie 
 dead because Christ " is preached " to have risen ; and that if there were no 
 resurrection, then Christ could not be risen. It would seem as if he con- 
 sidered the truth of the resurrection of Christ to depend upon the correct- 
 neas of the doctrine of the general resurrection (vers^ 13). 
 
 life. It 1 
 that this 
 ing in an( 
 gard it as 
 lence to 
 is, if poss 
 that God 
 defeat of 
 their ren( 
 to be reg 
 which it 
 viz., as a 
 is my be 
 is attend 
 lu the 
 taken as 
 one case 
 did not 
 contain 
 record t 
 in none 
 subject ' 
 love or 1 
 one of B 
 were a] 
 pears U 
 point o: 
 them t 
 enablin 
 belief 
 shaker 
 ably 
 vatich( 
 then t' 
 Now,] 
 in an 
 comm 
 
RESURRECTION OF JESUS. 
 
 293 
 
 hurrcction 
 Jailed and 
 Immunity ; 
 Burrection,' 
 jpearance ; 
 II not hav- 
 I testimony 
 leath ; and 
 long after 
 
 .t the fact 
 
 n to us on 
 
 it a doubt- 
 
 , in reality, 
 
 le habit of 
 
 taught to 
 
 roof of the 
 
 pe, earnest, 
 
 beyond the 
 
 ther either 
 
 individual 
 ignal proof 
 restoration 
 ivard for a 
 m that his 
 short, and 
 ilment; or 
 in a pecu- 
 subject 
 idently ir- 
 d unculti- 
 3nsiderate 
 a future 
 
 the resurrec- 
 on from tlio 
 here were no 
 •8 if he con- 
 the correct- 
 
 life. It implies either that there is no future world, or 
 that this world is preferable to it, since no man, believ- 
 ing in another and a better state of existence, would re- 
 gard it as an appropriate reward for distinguished excel- 
 lence to be reduced to this. The second point of view 
 is, if possible, still more unreasonable, since it assumes 
 that God had permitted such an interference with and 
 defeat of his plans, that he was obliged to interpose for 
 their renewal. The third aspect in which such a fact is 
 to be regarded alone remains, and is in effect the one in 
 which it is commonly viewed throughout Christendom, 
 viz., as a public announcement from the Most High, " This 
 is my beloved Son, hear ye him." But this point of view 
 is attended with many difficulties 
 
 In the first place, if the Gosp(3l narratives are to be 
 taken as our standing-ground (and they are as valid for the 
 one case as for the other), the restoration of the dead to life 
 did not necessarily imply any such peculiar favour, or 
 contain any such high announcement. The evangelists 
 record three instances of such miraculous resuscitation, 
 in none of which have' we any reason foi- believing the 
 subject of the miracle to be peculiarly an object of divine 
 love or approbation, in all of which the miracle was simply 
 one of mercy to mourning friends. The resuscitated parties 
 were all obscure individuals, and only one of them ap- 
 pears to have been a follower of Christ, Secondly, this 
 point of view was not the one taken by the apostles. To 
 them the value of Christ's resurrection consisted in its 
 enabling them still to retain, or rather to resume, that 
 belief in the Messiahship of Jesus which his death had 
 shaken.* If restored to life, he might yet be, and prob- 
 ably was, that Great Deliverer whom, as Jews, they 
 Tsacched and waited and prayed for ; if he were dead, 
 then that cherished notion was struck dead with him. 
 Now, if we are right in the conclusion at which we arrived 
 in an earlier chapter,-f- viz., that Jesus had nothing in 
 common with that liberating and triumphant conqueror 
 
 * This is especially xuamfedt froui the conversation on the journey to Em- 
 maus. 
 t See chap. iv. 
 
*>!<>/, 
 
 THE CREED OF CHBISTENDOM. 
 
 predicted by the Jewish prophets and expected by the 
 Jewish nation ; it follows that the especial effect which 
 the resurrection of Christ produced upon the minds of 
 his disciples, was to confirm them in an error. This, to 
 them, was its dogmatic value, the ground on which they 
 hailed the announcement and cherished the belief. Thirdly, 
 it will admit of question whether, in the eye of pure 
 reason, the resurrection of Christ, considered as an attes- 
 tation to the celestial origin of his religion, be not super- 
 fluous — whether it be not human weakness, i-ather than 
 human reason, which needs external miracle as a sanction 
 and buttress of a system which may well rely upon its 
 own innate strength — whether the internal does not sur- 
 pass and supersede the external testimony to its character 
 — whether the divine truths which Christ taught, should 
 not be to us the all-sufficient attestation of his divine 
 mission. We have seeiA in the preceding chapter that 
 miraculous power in any individual is no guarantee for 
 the correctness ol his teaching. We have seen that if 
 the doctrines which Jesus taught approve themselves to 
 the enlightened understanding and thQ uncorrupted heart, 
 they are equally binding on our allegiance whether he 
 wrought miracles in the course of his career or not. And 
 if the truth that God is a loving Father, and the precept, 
 " Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself," derive no 
 corroboration from the resurrection of Lazarus or the 
 Youth of Nain, neither can they from that of Christ him- 
 self. Doubtless we should sit with more prostrate sub- 
 mission and a deeper reverence at the feet of a Teacher 
 who came to us from the grave, but it is probably only 
 the infirmity of our faith and reason which would cause 
 us to do so.* Rationally considered, Christ's resurrection 
 cannot prove doctrines true that would else be false, nor 
 certain that would else be doubtful. Therefore, considered 
 as a reward, it is contradictory and absurd ; considered as 
 the renewal ol an interrupted mission, it involves an un- 
 worthy and monstrous conception of God's providence ; 
 
 * Jmob seems to intimate as much wheu he says, " If they hear not Moses 
 and the Prophets, neither will they be persuaded though one rose from the 
 
 dMML" 
 
 considered 
 it is an at 
 and corrol 
 superfluoi 
 Is the ( 
 take of ( 
 and foret 
 reason? 
 truth. T 
 is here n 
 coming oi 
 their own 
 tion, — wl 
 into the 
 forth out 
 company 
 resurrect 
 of the da 
 fore, of V 
 cognate 
 only alt€ 
 lieved, a 
 body wl 
 earnest 
 still ren 
 case ; it 
 are not 
 8ure ; 
 tions w 
 our ear 
 other 
 myriaa 
 pected 
 lesurre 
 rection 
 — it m 
 If, on 
 poreal 
 on ear 
 pledge 
 
BBSUBBECnON 07 JESUS. 
 
 296 
 
 cr 
 
 ;ed by the 
 •ect which 
 miDds of 
 This, to 
 hich they 
 ■ Thirdly, 
 e of pure 
 'S an attes- 
 not super- 
 ^ather than 
 a sanction 
 y upon its 
 es not sur- 
 character 
 ■ht, should 
 his divine 
 hapter that 
 arantee for 
 een that if 
 emselves to 
 jpted heart, 
 whether he 
 [• not. And 
 ;he precept, 
 " derive no 
 rus or the 
 Dhrist him- 
 ►strate sub- 
 a Teacher 
 bably only 
 '^ould cause 
 esurrection 
 e false, nor 
 considered 
 isidered as 
 ves an un- 
 rovidence ; 
 
 lear not Moses 
 rose from the 
 
 considered as an attestation to the Messiahship of Jesus, 
 it is an attestation to an error ; considored as a sanction 
 and corroboration of his doctrines, it is, or ought to be, 
 superfluous. 
 
 Is the other view which we have been accustomed to 
 take of Christ's resurrection, — viz., as the type, pledge, 
 and foretelling of our own, — more consonant to sound 
 reason ? We believe the reverse will prove nearer to the 
 truth. That it was regarded in this view by the apostles, 
 is here no argument for us. For they looked for the 
 coming of their Lord, and the end of the world, if not in 
 their own lifetime, at least in that of the existing genera- 
 tion, — when they who were alive would be caught up 
 into the clouds, and those who were dead would come 
 forth out of tlveir graves, and join together the glorious 
 company of the redeemed. They looked for a bodily 
 resurrection for themselves — which on their supposition 
 of the date might appear possible, — a resurrection, there- 
 fore, of which that of Jesus was a prototype — a pattern — ^a 
 cognate occurrence. But in our position the case is not 
 only altered, but reversed. Christ's resurrection was [be- 
 lieved, and is affirmed to have been,] a reanimation of the 
 body which he wore in life ; it could, therefore, be an 
 earnest of the resurrection of those only whose bodies 
 still remained to be reanimated : it was an exceptional 
 case ; it refers not to us ; it conveys no hope to us ;—we 
 are not of those whose resurrection it could typify or as- 
 sure ; for our bodies, like those of the countless genera- 
 tions who have lived and passed away since Christ trod 
 our earth, will have crumbled into dust, and passed into 
 other combinations, and become in turn the bodies of 
 myriads of other animated beings, before the great ex- 
 pected day of the resurrection of the just. To us a bodily 
 resurrection is impossible. If, therefore, Christ's resur- 
 rection were spiritual — independent of his buried body 
 — it might be a type and foreshadowing of our own ; — 
 if, on the other hand, as the evangelists relate, it was cor- 
 poreal — if his body left the grave undecayed, and appeared 
 on earth, and ascended into glory, — then its value as a 
 pledge beloiiged to the men of that time alone,— we have 
 
296 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 ( I 
 
 neither part nor lot in its signification ; — it is rather an 
 extinguisher than a confirmation of our hopes. 
 
 It will be seen that we make no scruple in negativing 
 a doctrine held verbally by the Church, viz., " the resur- 
 rection of the body ; " since, whatever was intended by 
 the authors of this phrase* — the meaning ol which is by 
 no means clear to us, and was probably no clearer to 
 themselves, — thus much is certain, that our " resurrection 
 of the body " can bear no similarity to Christ's resurrec- 
 tion of the body; — for his body remained only a low 
 hours in the grave, and, we are expressly told, " did not 
 see corruption," and ours, we know, remains there for un- 
 told years, and moulders away into the original elements 
 of its marvellous chemistry. 
 
 We conclude, then, as before : — that as we c-nnot hope 
 to rise, as Christ is said to have done, with our own pres- 
 ent uncorrupted body, his resurrection, if it were a reani- 
 mation of his earthly frame, can be no argument, proof, 
 pledge, pattern, or foreshadowing of our own. If, on the 
 contrary, his resurrection were spiritual, and his appear- 
 ances to his disciples mental and apparitionary only, the} 
 would, pro tanto, countenance the idea of a future state. 
 Our interest, therefore, as waiters and hopers for an iin 
 mortality, would appear to lie in cZisbelieving the letter 
 of the Scripture narratives. 
 
 • "We can," says Pearson, "no otherwise expound this article teaching 
 the resurrection of the body, than by asserting that the same bodies whicL 
 have lived and died shall live again ; that the sanae flesh which is corrupted 
 shall be restored." Again, "That the same body, not any other, bhaU be 
 raised to life which died, that the same flesh which was separated from the 
 Boul at the day of death shall be united to the soul at the last day," Ac— 
 Ptarton on the Creed, art. xi. 
 
 IS 
 
 Having n 
 p-nise anc 
 which we 
 have arri^ 
 of Scripti 
 but is a g 
 We have 
 laws ot y. 
 the prodi 
 name the 
 ding thai 
 primary 
 Hebrew j 
 and imj 
 perfect 
 their Po 
 people i 
 ered thi 
 Predict" 
 single J 
 or can 
 pearanc 
 been cc 
 able qi 
 that m 
 down 
 while 
 Christ 
 teachi 
 recorc 
 of Ch 
 or act 
 
[t is rather an 
 
 L negativing 
 , "the resur- 
 iatended by 
 J>1 which is bj 
 |no clearer to 
 I " resurrection 
 list's resurrec- 
 P only a low 
 fold, " did not 
 IS there for un- 
 jinal elements 
 
 e cnnothope 
 
 our own pres- 
 
 were a reani- 
 
 ument, proof. 
 
 n. If, on the 
 
 ind his appeaj- 
 
 iaryonly,tho} 
 
 a future state. 
 
 Jrs for an im 
 
 ing the letter 
 
 IS article teaching 
 same bodies whicL 
 which is corrupted 
 ay other bhall be 
 separated from the 
 e last day," Ac. - 
 
 CHAPTER XV. 
 
 IS CHRISTIANITY A REVEALED RELIGION ? 
 
 Eaving now arrived at this point of our inquiry, let us 
 ponse and cast a summary sj^lance on the ground over 
 which we have travelled, and the conclusions at which we 
 have arrived. We have found that the popular doctrine 
 of Scriptural Inspiration rests on no foundation whatever, 
 but is a grai uitous as well as an untenable assumption. 
 We have seen that neither the books of Moses nor the 
 laws ot Moses, as we have them, were (at least as a whole) 
 the production ot the great Leader and Lawgiver whose 
 name they bear We have seen ample reason for conclu- 
 ding that a belief in One only Supreme God was not the 
 primary religion either of the Hebrew nation or the 
 Hebrew priests ; but that their Theism — originally limited 
 and impure — was gradually elevated and purified into 
 perfect and exclusive monotheism, by the influence of 
 their Poets and Sages, and the progressive advance of the 
 people in intelligence and civilization. We have discov- 
 ered that their Prophets were Poets and Statesmen, not 
 Predictors — and that none of their writings contain a 
 single prediction Avhich was originally designed by them, 
 or can be honestly interpreted by us, to foretell the ap- 
 pearance and career of Jesus of Nazareth. What have 
 been commonly regarded as such, are happy and ai:>plic- 
 ahle quotations: but no more. We have seen further 
 that none of the four histories of Christ wh ich have come 
 down to us are completely genuine and faithful ; — that 
 while they are ample and adequate for showing us what 
 Christ was, and what was the essence and spirit of his 
 teaching, we yet do not possess sufficient certainty that they 
 record, in any special instance, the precise words or actions 
 of Christ, to warrant us in building upon those words 
 or actions doctrines revolting to our uncorrupted instincts 
 T 
 
298 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOBI. 
 
 and our cultivated sense. We have found, moreover, that 
 the apostles — zealous and devout men as they were— 
 were yet most imperfect, and fallible expounders of the 
 mind of their departed Lord. We have seen that miracles 
 — even where the record of them is adequate and abovt 
 suspicion, if any such case there be — are no sufficient 
 guarantee of the truth of the doctrines preached by the 
 worker of those wonders. And finally, we have been 
 compelled to conclude that not only is the resurrection oi 
 our Lord, as narrated in the Gospels, encumbered with toe 
 many difficulties and contradictions to be received as un- 
 questionable, but that it is far from having the dogmatic 
 value usually attached to it, as a pledge and foreshadow- 
 ing of our own. 
 
 But however imperfect may be the records we possess 
 of Christ's ministry, this imperfection does not affect the 
 nature or authority of his mission. Another great ques- 
 tion, therefore, here opens before us :-r-" Was Christ a 
 divinely-commissioned Teacher of Truth?" In other 
 words, "Is Christianity to be regarded as a Religion 
 revealed by God to n lan through Christ ? " 
 
 What is the meaning which, in ordinary theological 
 parlance, we attach to the words "Divine Revelation?" 
 What do we intend to signify when we say that " God 
 spoke " to this Prophet, or to that saint ? 
 
 We are all of us conscious of thoughts which come to m 
 — which are not, properly speaking our own — which we 
 do not create, do not elaborate ; — flashes of light, glimpses 
 of truth, or of what seems to us such, brighter and sub- 
 limer than commonly dwell in our minds, whiclf we are 
 not conscious of having wrought out by any process of 
 inquiry or meditation. These are frequent and brilliant 
 in proportion to the intellectual gifts and spiritual eleva- 
 tion of the individual : they may well be termed inspira- 
 tions — revelations ; but it is not such as these that we 
 mean when we speak of th3 Revelation by Christ. 
 
 Those who look upon God as a Moral Governor, as well 
 as an original Creator, — a God at hand, not a God afar 
 off in the distance of infinite space, and in the remoteness 
 of past or future eternity, — who conceive of him as ta- 
 
 IS 
 
 king a wa 
 
 world, an 
 
 —believe 
 
 spoken tc 
 
 breathed 
 
 " wi'ough 
 
 communi 
 
 His Spiri 
 
 souls, an( 
 
 These are 
 
 are not v 
 
 made by 
 
 Those, 
 
 of the w( 
 
 wonderfi 
 
 conceive 
 
 material 
 
 different 
 
 with bra 
 
 must I 
 tiuu. 
 
IS CHRISTIANITY A REVEALED RELIGION ? 
 
 299 
 
 Dreover, that 
 fehey were— 
 iiders of the 
 that miracles 
 le and abovt 
 no sufficient 
 Lched by the 
 le have been 
 lesurrection oi 
 pered with toe 
 pceived as un- 
 the dogmatic 
 ^ foreshadow- 
 
 Is we possess 
 not affect the 
 ler great ques- 
 Was Christ a 
 ?" In other 
 as a Religion 
 
 iry theological 
 i Revelation?" 
 vy that "God 
 
 lich come to us 
 vn — which we 
 light, glimpses 
 fhter and sub- 
 whiclf we are 
 any process of 
 t and brilliant 
 piritual eleva- 
 armed inspira- 
 these that we 
 Christ. 
 
 '-ernor, as well 
 ot a God afar 
 he remoteness 
 »f him as ta- 
 
 king a watchful and presiding interest in the affairs of the 
 world, and as influencing the hearts and actions of men, 
 — believe that through the workings of the Spirit He has 
 spoken to many, has whispered His will to them, has 
 breathed great and true thoughts into their minds, has 
 " wi'ought mightily " within them, has in their secret 
 communings and the deep visions of the night, caused 
 His Spirit to move over the troubled waters of their 
 souls, and educed light and order from the mental chaos. 
 These are the views of many religious minds ; — but these 
 are not what we mean when we speak of the Revelation 
 made by God to Christ. 
 
 Those, again, who look upon God as the great artificer 
 of the world of life and matter, ind upon man, with his 
 wonderful corporeal and mental frame, as his direct work, 
 conceive the same idea in a somewhat modified and more 
 material form. They believe that He has made men with 
 different intellectual capacities ; and has endowed some 
 with brains so much larger and finer than those of ordi- 
 nary men, as to enable them to see and originate truths 
 , which are hidden irom the mf jS ; and that when it is His 
 will that mankind should make some great step forward, 
 should achieve some pregnant discovery. He calls into 
 being some cerebral organization of more than ordinary 
 magnitude and power, as that of David, Isaiah, Plato, 
 Shakespeare, Bacon, Newton, Luther, Pascal, which gives 
 birth to new ideas and grander conceptions of the truths 
 vital to humanity. But we mean something essentially 
 distinct from this when we speak of Christ as the 
 Teacher of a Religion revealed to him by his Father. 
 
 When a Christian affirms Ghristianit}' to be a " re- 
 vealed religion," he intends simply and without artifice 
 to declare his belief that the doctrines and precepts which 
 Christ taught were not the production of his own (hu- 
 man) mind,either in its ordinary operations,or inits flights 
 of sublimest contemplation ; but were directly and super- 
 naturally communicated to him from on high.* He means 
 
 * Those who believe that Christ wan God— if any such really exist — 
 must of course hold everything he taught wuh, ipso facto, a divine revela« 
 tiou. With such all argument and inquiry ia necessarily superseded 
 
lu 
 
 300 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 this, or he means nothing definable and distinctive. What 
 gi'oimds have we, then, for adopting such an opinion ? 
 
 It IS evident that if the conclusions to which our pre- 
 vious investigations have led us be correct, our only argu- 
 ments for believing Christianity to be a divine revelation 
 in contradistincti'ii to a human conception, must be 
 drawn from the superhumanity of its nature and con- 
 tents. What human intellect could ascertain, it would 
 be superfluous for God to reveal. The belief of Chiist 
 himself, that his teaching " was not his, but his Father's," 
 — even if we were certain th^.t he used these precise 
 words, and intended them to co.ivey precisely the mean- 
 ing we attach to them, — could not suffice us, for the rea- 
 sons assigned in the first chapter of this work. The be- 
 lief in communications with the Diety has in all ages 
 been common to the most exalted and poetical ordeV of 
 religious minds. The fatit that Christ held a conviction 
 which he shared with tiro great and good of other times, 
 can be no argument for ascribing to him divine communi- 
 cations distinct from chose granted to the great and good 
 of other times. It remains, therefore, a simple question . 
 for our consideration, whether the doctrines and precepts 
 taught by Jesus are so new, so profound, so perfect, so 
 distinctive, so above and beyond parallel, that they could 
 not have emanated naturally from a clear, simple, un- 
 soiled, unwarped powerful, meditative mind, — living 
 four iiundred years after Socrates and Plato — brought up 
 among the pure Essenes, nourished on the wisdom of Solo- 
 mon, the piety ol David, the poetry of Isaiah — elevated 
 by the knowledge, and illuminated by the love, of the 
 one true God 
 
 Now, on this subject we hope our confession of faith 
 will be acceptable to all save the narrowly orthodox. It 
 is difficult, without exhausting superlatives, even to 
 unexpressive and wearisome satiety, to do justice to our 
 intense love, reverence, and admiration, for the character 
 and teaching of Jesus. We regard him not as the per- 
 fection of the intellectual or philosophic mind, but as the 
 perfection of the spiritual character, — as surpassing all men 
 of all times in the closeness and depth of his communion 
 
 IB 
 
 with the ] 
 are holdii 
 Being tha 
 humanitj 
 lowing th 
 us upon € 
 has been 
 ment to i 
 in the w( 
 But tl 
 grounde(3 
 that eith 
 were su| 
 tion of 
 teaching 
 enforce : 
 Ecclesias 
 germs o 
 genius o 
 trine of 
 ably no 
 current] 
 Jesus, aj 
 We ha| 
 powerfj 
 feeling! 
 Tiativei 
 and m 
 and ml 
 reache 
 and tl 
 guish^ 
 by w^ 
 
 * Al 
 Hennel 
 in .Tev 
 Deuts 
 JesuH, I 
 tiau p| 
 owe tlf 
 more 
 enfo ■ 
 
iivc. What 
 pinion I 
 zh. our pve- 
 only argu- 
 I revelation 
 I, must be 
 e and con- 
 n, it would 
 : of Christ 
 is Father's," 
 lese precise 
 Y the mean- 
 for the rea- 
 •k. The be- 
 . in all ages 
 ieal ordeV of 
 a conviction 
 other times, 
 ne communi- 
 eat and good 
 Qple question 
 and precepts 
 so perfect, so 
 tat they could 
 r, simple, un- 
 mind,— living 
 » — brought up 
 isdom of Solo- 
 Aah — elevated 
 le love, of the 
 
 ession of faith 
 r orthodox. It 
 jves, even to 
 justice to our 
 : the charactei 
 net as the per- 
 lind, but as the 
 ■passing all men 
 his communion 
 
 « OBUXSXU..XV . KBVKA.BB B.UO,0. 1 301 
 
 ,, ,,e Father, ^ reading ^ ^l^' -..^S! t^ 
 
 VCA^^ a*Tr »e it have Hse. 
 
 tr*p-natura. endowments »tW ^ 
 
 ^'°V' '\ r vese'td for Hm^o eUcit pubU^ and 
 
 feniuB of Christ ^^f.^^^^^^tt Enforced, perhaps prob- 
 frine of a future rrld thou „t ^'^'/^i^Tof 
 
 ^o^e^l mind, HUed ji*-X:rS:.es d«H»^- 
 feeUngs, and studying the f '•"J" nj^ting^ what waa good 
 
 and noble, and 'ejf <=''"? ^^t the conclusion which Jei.v.8 
 ind mi^ht naturally a»>^e at, w' attributes of God, 
 
 reacS, as to the duties ot man, 'he ; .^ ^^ 
 
 ltd the relation of man to God <^^ ^^ ^^^^^^^ j^an 
 
 ^^t.'T:AlTV:T:^^^^ and ^expansion 
 by what it aaaea — -- g 
 
 •'^ _. ., - , .^. ..;„Vf mode of proving this. »;e 
 
 in Jewish teaching ' ,^f/p„ijn,id, Quart. ■''e'^'f,"'\^,{!' ".^h'many of the Chns- 
 Deutsch-s paper o^ \^„i^t S "^^ ^^^^'^''It^l^i^^^- to him that ire 
 Jisus, ch. 5.1 But It in ^^^ ^ of •''-^ ' '/j^i, teachiu:;, and stiU 
 
 jesws, «"• "-J ""^.r/aiit bt'toro cno i/i^'^- -• .„,.i- .»f hiii teacmu:;, ii"" i 
 
302 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM 
 
 il; 
 
 » ; 
 
 m 
 
 of the best elements of its predecessor. It selects the 
 yrand, the beautiful, the tender, the true, and ignores oi 
 suppresses the exclusive, the narrow, the corrupt, the 
 coarse, and the vindictive. It is Moses, David, Solomon. 
 Isaiah purified, sublimated, and developed. If this be 
 so, then the supposition that Christianity was snper- 
 naturally communicated, idlls to the ground as need- 
 less, and therefore inadmissible. What man could dis- 
 cover naturally, God would not communicate supematu- 
 rally. 
 
 But we may go further. Not only is there no necessity 
 for supposing that Christ's views as to God and duty were 
 supernaturally revealed to him, but there is almost a ne- 
 cessity for adopting an opposite conclusion. If they were 
 the elaboration of his own mind, we may well imagme 
 that they may contain some admixture of error and imper 
 fection. If they were revealed to him by God, this could 
 not be the case. If, therefore, we find that Jesus was in 
 error in any point, either of his practical or his specula- 
 tive teaching, our conclusion, hitherto a probability, be- 
 comes a certainty. It is evident that we Ci^uld treat o 
 this point with far more satisiaction if we w€ re in a posi- 
 tion to pronounce with perlect precision what Christ did, 
 and what ho did not, teach. But as we have seen that 
 many words are put into his mouth which he never uttered, 
 wf^ cannot ascertain this as undoubtedly as is desirable. 
 There must still remain some degree of doubt as to whether 
 the errors and imperfections which we detect, originated 
 with or were shared by Christ, or whether they were 
 wholly attributable to his followers and historians. 
 
 There are, however, some matters on which the general 
 concurrence of the evangelical histories, and their unde- 
 signed and incidental intimations, lead us to conclude 
 that Jesus did share the mistakes which prevailed among 
 his disciples, though, in even going so far as this, we speak 
 with great diflUdence. He appears to have held erroneous 
 views respecting demoniacal possession, the interpretation 
 of Scripture,* his own Messiahship, his secon<l coming. 
 
 • See on 
 t^ luuintciyrotat: 
 
 this eubjoct chap. viii. Perhaps the most Bingular instance " 
 ciyrotatiun of Sci'ix>tui-u ix th^ eorihistical argmueut ascribed tt 
 
 and the 
 held the I 
 evidence! 
 know th( 
 was so inl 
 ble revell 
 Christen! 
 But v^ 
 swered il 
 this chai 
 coverablj 
 be taugl 
 that is, i 
 ment of 
 other w( 
 it could 
 not ; the 
 nated b;; 
 cult to ( 
 which CI 
 to it, an 
 not, in t 
 work 01 
 powers, 
 stateme 
 cess mti 
 truth if 
 approv( 
 and tal 
 afitnei 
 
 Christ, c 
 
 Lord i^aii 
 
 appears i 
 
 to David 
 
 signal vi 
 
 Mesaiah 
 
 * Iti 
 
 be discc 
 
 Saturn 
 
 of the 
 
 future 
 
 already 
 
 ociiurit 
 
IS CHRISTIANITY A REVEALED RELIGION ? 
 
 303 
 
 ft selects the 
 nd ignores 01 
 
 corrupt, the 
 v^id, Solomon 
 If this be 
 
 was super- 
 ind as need- 
 in could dis- 
 e supematii- 
 
 no necessit;^' 
 id duty were 
 almost a ne- 
 If they were 
 ^ell imagine 
 rand imper 
 d, this could 
 Fesus was in 
 his specula- 
 aability, be 
 'uld treat (, 
 re in a posi- 
 ; Christ did, 
 'e seen that 
 ver uttered, 
 s desirable, 
 i to whether 
 , originated 
 they were 
 ians. 
 
 the general 
 'heir unde- 
 > conclude 
 led among 
 1, we speak 
 erroneous 
 rpretation 
 d coming, 
 
 r instance of 
 t aecribed to 
 
 and the approaching end of the world. At least, if he 
 held the views ascribed to him (and the preponderance of 
 evidence is in favour of the assumption that he did), we 
 know that on these topics he was mistaken. Now, if he 
 was so in error, his teaching could not have been an infalli- 
 ble revelation from the God of truth, in the sense in which 
 Christendom employs that phrase. 
 
 But we now come upon another question which if an- 
 swered in the negative, at once closes the inquiry to which 
 this chapter is devoted. " Is the revelation of an undis- 
 coverable truth possible?" That is, "Can any doctrine 
 be taught by God to man — be supernaturally infused, 
 that is, into his mind, which he might not by the employ- 
 ment of his own faculties have discerned or elicited ? " In 
 other words, " Can the human mind receive an idea which 
 it could not originate ? " We think it plain that it can- 
 not ; though the subject is one which may be better illumi 
 nated by reflection than by discussion. At least it is diffi- 
 cult to conceive the nature and formation of that intellect 
 which can comprehend and grasp a truth when presented 
 to it, and perceive that it is a truth, and which yet could 
 not, in the course of time and under idvourable conditions, 
 work out that truth by the ordinary operation of its own 
 powers. It appears to us that, by the very nature of the 
 statement, the faculties necessary for the one mental pro- 
 cess must be competent to the other* If an laea (and a 
 truth is only an jdea, or a combination of ideas, which 
 approves itself to us) can find en '■ranee into the mind 
 and take up its abode there, does not th.s very fact show 
 a fitness for the residence oj that idea ? — a fitness, there- 
 Christ, concerning the supposed address of David to the Messiah. " The 
 Lord said unto my Lord," &c. (Mattb. xxii. 44, and parallel passage.) It 
 appears clear that this Psalm was not composed by David, but was addressed 
 to David by I'J'athan, or some Coui-t Propnet, on the occasion of some.of his 
 signal victories. — See " Hebrew Monarchy," p. 92. David did not ctil the 
 Messiah " Iiord ; " it was the Poet that called David " Lord." 
 
 * It may be objected that externa ^icta may be revealed which could not 
 be discovered. We may be assured by revelation that the inhabitants of 
 Saturn have \ving;s oi have no heads, but then we do not recognize the truth 
 of the assurance. We may be assured by revelation of the existence of a 
 future world ; but could we receive the assurance unless our minds were 
 already so prepared for it, or so constituted, that it would naturally Lave 
 ocuuritid to theui . 
 
304 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 IS 
 
 M- 5 
 
 fore, which would have insured admittance to the idea if 
 suggested in any oi those mental processes which we call 
 thought, or by any of those combinations of occurrences 
 which we call accident — a fitness, therefore, which, as the 
 course of time and the occurrence of a thousand such possi- 
 ble suggesting accidents must almost necessarily have en- 
 sured the presentation of the idea, would also have ensuied 
 its reception t If, on the other hand, the idea, from its 
 strangeness, its immensity, its want of harmony with the 
 nature and existing furniture of the mind, could never have 
 presented itself naturally, would not the same strangeness, 
 the same vastness, the same incompatibility of essence 
 incapacitate the mind from receiving it if presented super- 
 naturally ? 
 
 " Revealed religion," says one of our acutest writers, "is 
 an assumption of some truths, and an ant,icipatio7i or 
 conjivmation of others. . It is obvious that a truth 
 
 which is announced from heaven in one age, may be dis- 
 covered by man in another. A truth is a real and actual re- 
 lation of things subsisting somewhere, — either in the ideas 
 within us, or the objects without us, — and capable there- 
 fore of making itself clear to us by evidence either demon- 
 strative or moral. We may not yet have advanced to the 
 point of view from which it opens upon us ; but a pro- 
 gressive knowledge must bring us to it ; and we shall 
 then see that which hitherto was sustained by authority, 
 resting on its natural support ; we shall behold it, indeed, 
 in the same light in which it has all along appeared to 
 tlie superior Intelligence who tendered it to our belief. 
 Thus revelation is an anticipation only of Science; a fore- 
 cast of future intellectual and moral achievements ; a 
 provisional authority for governing the human mind, till 
 the regularly-constituted powers can be organized." In 
 this case it is evident that the question whether a truth 
 were ' discovered or revealed, depends upon a previous 
 enquiry ; viz, whether the truth were too far before the 
 age to have been discovered by that age .? and if so, 
 whether the teacher ol it were not far enough before his 
 age to make the truth which was hidden from his con- 
 temporaries visible to hira ? It thus becomes a mere 
 
 question 
 revelatioi] 
 tury henc 
 shifting a 
 of revelat 
 Furthe 
 distingmi 
 conceived 
 token, cai 
 to him fi 
 ceive tha 
 he may b 
 tion or m 
 but this ii 
 found an' 
 was brea 
 night, wl 
 therefore 
 what is t 
 municatij 
 unquestic 
 ascendan 
 Shall we 
 in the ore 
 he know 
 human c 
 the voice 
 when it 
 and ieeb 
 by man'i 
 commun 
 not impt 
 veyance 
 really m 
 hear fro 
 speaks i 
 the Sou 
 thesis. 
 
 Ourr 
 the onl 
 
IS CHRISTIANITY -A REVEALED RELIGION ? 
 
 305 
 
 the idea if 
 Iiich we call 
 oceuneiicos 
 hich, as the 
 1 such possi- 
 ily have en- 
 ave ensuied 
 a, from its 
 ly with the 
 never liave 
 Jtrangeness, 
 of essence 
 snted super- 
 writers, "is 
 cipation or 
 hat a truth 
 nay be dis- 
 d actual re- 
 in the ideas 
 )able there- 
 her demon- 
 need to the 
 but a pro- 
 d we shull 
 authority, 
 it, indeed, 
 ppeared to 
 our belief. 
 ice; a fore- 
 ements ; a 
 L mind, till 
 lized." In 
 ler a truth 
 I previous 
 before the 
 ind if so, 
 before his 
 n his con- 
 !S a mere 
 
 (juestion of time and degree ; and what is justly called a 
 revelation now, would be justly called a discovery a cen- 
 tury hence. It is obvious that this is too narrow and 
 shifting a ground to form a safe foundation for a theory 
 of revelation. 
 
 Further, we are at a loss to imagine how a man can 
 distinguish between an idea revealed to him and an idea 
 conceived by him In what manner and by what sure 
 token, can it be made clear to him that a thought came 
 to him from without, not arose within ? He may per- 
 ceive that it is resplendently bright, unquestionably new ; 
 he may be quite unconscious of any process of ratiocina- 
 tion or meditation by which it can have been originated ; 
 but this is no more than may be said of half the ideas of })io- 
 found and contemplative genius. Shall we say that it 
 was breathed into him "in a dream, in a vision of the 
 night, when deep sleep falleth upon man ; " and that, 
 therefore, he assumes that it is not his, but God's ? Yet 
 what is this but to declare that God chooses for his com- 
 munications with the mind of man the period of its most 
 unquestionable imperfection, when the phantasy is 
 ascendant and the judgment is torpid and in abeyance < 
 Shall we say that the thought was spoken to him aloud, 
 in the ordinary language of humanity, and that, therefore, 
 he knows it to have been a divine communication, not a 
 human conception ? But what singular logic is this ! Is 
 the voice ot God, then only, or then most, recognisable 
 when it borrows the language of man ? Is that unprecise 
 and feeble instrument of thought and utterance, invented 
 by man's faulty faculties, God's best and surest mode of 
 communication with the spirit he has created ? Nay, is 
 not imperfect languagv. an impossible medium for the con- 
 veyance of absolute and infinite truth ? And do we 
 really mean that we feel certain it is God's voice which we 
 hear from the clouds, and douhffal that it is His which 
 speaks to us silently, and in the deep and sacred musings ot 
 the Soul ? We cannot intend to maintain this monstrous 
 thesis. 
 
 Our reflections, then, bring us to this conclusion : — that 
 the only certain proof we can have of a revelation must 
 
306 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 '\ 
 
 lie in the tru*^ is it teaches being such as are inaccessible 
 to, and tlierefore incomprehensible by, the mind of man; 
 that if they are such as he can conceive and grasp and ac- 
 cept, they are such £is he might have discovered, and ho 
 has no means ot knowing that he has not discovered them; 
 if they are such as lie could not have discovered, they are 
 such as he cannot receive, such tOj hv could not recoguiso 
 or ascertain to be truth. 
 
 Since, then, we can find no adequate reason for be- 
 lieving Jesus to be the Son of God, nor his doc- 
 trines to be a direct and special revelation to him Irom 
 the Most High — using these phrases in their ordinary 
 signification — in what light do we legard Christ and 
 Christianity ? 
 
 We do not believe that Christianity contains anything 
 which a genius like Chiist's, brought up and nourished as 
 his had been, might not have disentangled for itself. We 
 hold that God has so arranged matters in 'his beautiful 
 and well-ordeicd, but mysteriously-govemrd universe, 
 that one great Tuind after another will arise from time to 
 time, as such are needed , to discover and fiash forth before 
 the eyes of men fhe tiuths that are wanted, and the 
 amount of truth that can bo borne. We conceive that 
 this is effected by endowing them, or (for we pretend 'c 
 no scholastic nicety of expreaaion) by having arranged 
 that Nature and the course of events shall send them 
 into the world endowed, with that superior mental and 
 moral organization, in which grand truths, sublime gleams 
 of spiritual light, will spontaneously and inevitably arise. 
 Such a one we believe was Jesus ol Nazareth, the most 
 exalted religious genius whom God ever sent upon the earth ; 
 in himself an embodied revelation ; humanity in its di- 
 vinest phase, " God manifest in the flesh," according to 
 Eastern hyperbole ; an exemplar vouchsafeii, in an early 
 age of the World, of what man may and should become, 
 in the course of ages, in his progress towards the realisa- 
 tion of his destiny ; an individual gifted with a grand 
 clear intellect, a noble soul, a fine organization, marvel- 
 lous moral intuitions, and a perfectly balanced moral 
 
 IS < 
 
 being; ant 
 further tht 
 
 an earnest 
 what it wi 
 the same i 
 as these n 
 He was, ai 
 ity of the 
 et, inorali.- 
 — ndsrepr 
 friends; i 
 followers 
 in this, th 
 truth as 
 they pass 
 acombs, t 
 islicd, wl 
 have bee 
 standing 
 passions 
 Everythi 
 have in 1 
 still less 
 pie, subli 
 having < 
 minds fa 
 their unc 
 and tarn 
 lection ( 
 only lial 
 grasped 
 
 * "The 
 be laid on 
 life, suffer 
 this seems 
 collected. 
 Pharisees, 
 His loftieE 
 
IS CHEISTIANITY A REVEALED RELIGION ? 
 
 307 
 
 inacces.sillo 
 lind of man ; 
 jrasp and at- 
 ered, and h(! 
 )veredtheni; 
 red, they are 
 lOt reco^'uisc 
 
 ison for be- 
 or his doc- 
 to him lioiii 
 eir ordinary 
 Christ and 
 
 ms anythincr 
 
 nourished as 
 r itself. We 
 his beautiful 
 ird universe, 
 from time to 
 I forth before 
 i-ed, and the 
 jonceiv:; that 
 '■e pretend 'c 
 ng arranged 
 .1 send them 
 
 mental and 
 blime gleams 
 /itably arise, 
 ith, the most 
 on the earth ; 
 ty in its di- 
 according to 
 , in an early 
 •uld become, 
 
 the realisa- 
 dth a grand 
 ion, marvel- 
 need moral 
 
 being ; and who, by virtue of these <»udowmentb, saw 
 further than all other men — 
 
 '* Beyond the verijo of that bhu' Hky 
 Where God's sublimuat secrets lie ; " 
 
 an earnest, not only of what humanity may be, but of 
 what it will be, when the most penoeted races shall bear 
 the same relation to the finest minds oi existing times, 
 as these now boar to the Bushmen or the Esquimaux. 
 Ho was, as Parker beautifully expresses it, "the possi))il- 
 ity of the race made real " He was a sublime poet, proj)h- 
 ot, moralist, and lioro ; and had the usual fate of such 
 — misrepresented by his enemies — misconstrued by his 
 friends ; unhappy in this, that his nearest intimates and 
 followers were not of a calibre to understand him ; happy 
 in this, that his words contained such undying seeds of 
 truth as could survive even the media through which 
 they passed. Like the wheat found in the Egj'^ptian (,'at- 
 acombs, they retain the power of germinating undimin- 
 ished, whenever their a})propriate soil is found. They 
 have been preserved essentially almost pure, notwith- 
 standing the Judaic narrowness o. Peter, the orthodox 
 passions of John, and metaphysical subtleties of Paul. 
 Everything seems to us to confirm the conclusion that we 
 have in the Christianity of Scripture, [not a code of law, 
 still less a system of dogma, but a mass] of beautiful, sim- 
 ple, sublime, profound, not perfect, truths, obscured by 
 having come doAvn to us through the intervention of 
 minds far inferior to that of its Author — narrowed by 
 their uncultivation — marred by their misapprehensions — 
 and tarnished by their foreign admixtures. It is a col- 
 lection of gi-and truths, transmitted to us by men who 
 only half comprehended thoir grandeur, and imperfectly 
 grasped their truth.* 
 
 * I 'The character of the record is such that I see not how any stress can 
 be laid on particular actions attributed to Jesus. That he lived a divine 
 life, suffered a violent death, taught and lived a most beautiful religion — 
 this seems the great fact about which a mass of truth and error has been 
 collected. That he should gather discijiles, be opi)osed by the 1' "ests and 
 Pharisees, have controversies with tln'in -this lay in the nature of things. 
 His loftiest sayings seem to me < 'le most likely to be genuine. The grc.it 
 
308 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 IS 
 
 U li 
 
 The question whether Christ had a special mission- 
 were specially inspired by the Spirit of God — will be de- 
 cided by each man according to the views he may enter- 
 tain of Providence, and to the meaning which he attaches 
 to words which, in the lips of too many, have no definite 
 meaning at all. We are not careful to answer in this 
 matter We believe that God has arranged this glorious 
 but perplexing world with a purpose, and on a plan. We 
 hold that every man of superior capacity (if not every 
 man sent upon the earth) has a duty to perform — a mis- 
 sion to fulfil — a baptism to be baptised with — " and how 
 is he straightened till it be accomplished ! " We feel a 
 deep inward conviction that every great and good man 
 possesses some portion of God's truih, to proclaim to the 
 world, and to fructify in his own bosom In a true and 
 simple, but not the orthodox sense, we believe all the 
 pure, wise, and mighty in soul, to be inspired, and to be 
 inspired for the instruction, advancement, and elevation 
 ' of mankind " Inspiration, like God's omnipresence, is 
 not limited to the few writers claimed by the Jews, Chris- 
 tians, or Mahometans, but is co-ex tensive with the race. 
 . The degree of inspiration must depend upon two 
 things ^ — first, on thf» natural ability, the particular intel- 
 lectual, moral, and religious endowment or genius where- 
 with each man is furnished by God , and next, on the 
 use each man makes of this endowment In one word, 
 
 stress laid on the person of Jesus b,v his followers, shows what the person 
 must have been ; they put the person before the thinj^, the fact above the 
 ide&. liyt ft is not about common men that such mythical stories are told '" 
 — Theodon? Parker, Discourse, p. 188 
 
 [" Les (^vangelistes eux-m6mes, qui nous ont legue I'image de Jdsus, sout 
 si fort au-dissous de celui dont ils parlent que sans cesse ils le di'figurent, 
 faulv d'atteindre a sa hauteur Leurs ecrits sont pleins d'erreurs et do coii- 
 tre-sens. On entrevoit Ji chacque ligrn.' un original d'une beauto diviuo train 
 par des rtJdacteurs qui ne le comprennent i ^s, et qui substituent leur.s pro- 
 pres idetis h, celles qu'ils ne saisissent qu'a demi." — Renan, Vie dc Jesus, v. 
 4C0. 
 
 "The more we conceiv* of Jesus as almost as much over the heads of his 
 disciples and reporters as he is over the heads of so-callt i Chiistians now, 
 the more we see his disciples to have been, as they were, men raised b\- a 
 truer moral susceptiveness above their countrymen, but in intellectual con- 
 ceptions and habits much on a level with them,- -all the more do we make 
 room, so to speak, for Jesus to be inconceivably great and wonderful ; as 
 wonderful as his reporters imagined him to be, though in a diffeont man- 
 ner."— Literature and Doyma, p. 153.] 
 
 it dependsl 
 
 /;/,'/ of ob\ 
 
 natiu-iil en 
 and dcvel(| 
 derrvecs oil 
 loftiest sal 
 same dcgi] 
 character 
 ble intelk 
 endowmei 
 that pcrfd 
 conditions 
 imperfect 
 tain at th 
 is the CO 
 Each mar 
 test. . . • 
 more nati 
 man's nat 
 ited to nc 
 and comn 
 the infar 
 bar God < 
 dotage ai 
 as in the 
 and st or 
 ever a h 
 utter th( 
 hearts oi 
 nsalem, 
 o-ood ma 
 tion is 1 
 o-reat ai 
 tain as 
 heart s( 
 iiresenc 
 This, 
 sentont 
 
[, 
 
 IS CJIHISTIANITY A REVEALED RELIGION ? 
 
 aO!) 
 
 'cial mission— 
 <1— will be de- 
 he may enter- 
 ich he attaches 
 ive no definite 
 mswer in this 
 d this glorious 
 >n a plan, We 
 ' (if not every 
 rform— a mis- 
 h — " and how 
 We feel a 
 md good nian 
 roclaini to tlie 
 In a true and 
 elieve all the 
 fed, and to be 
 md elevation 
 ni presence, is 
 3 Jews, Chris- 
 ^vith the race. 
 ;nd upon two 
 rticnlarintel- 
 ^enius where- 
 next, on the 
 In one word, 
 
 what tlie person 
 le fact above the 
 stories are told " 
 
 re de J,?su8, sont 
 "s le di'figurent, 
 rreurs et cle coii- 
 aiitediviia. trahi 
 ituent leiurt i)ro. 
 Vi^Ue Jeans, p. 
 
 the heads of his 
 (-'hiistiaiiN iKiw, 
 lion nuMed I)\- n 
 ntellectuivl con- 
 >re do we make 
 wonderful ; as 
 diffeorit umii- 
 
 it depends on the man's Quantity Oj Being and his Qimn- 
 tU;/ of Obedience. Now, as men dificr widely in their 
 natural endowments, and much more widely in their use 
 and development thereo , there must of course be various 
 decjrees of inspiration, from the lowest sinner up to the 
 lot ti est saint. All men are not by biith capable o. the 
 same degree of inspiration, and by culture and acquired 
 character they are still less capable of it. A man of no- 
 ble intellect, of deep, rich, benevolent affections, is by his 
 endowments capable of more than one less gifted. He 
 that perfectly keeps the Soul's law, thus fulfilling the 
 conditions of inspiration, has more than he who keeps it 
 imperfectly ; the former must receive all his soul can con- 
 tain at that stage of its growth Inspiration, then, 
 
 is the consequence of a faithful use of our faculties. 
 Each man is its subject — God its source — truth its only 
 
 test Men may call it miraculous, but nothing is 
 
 more natural. It is co-extensive with the faithful use of 
 man's natural powers. . . . Now, this inspiration is lim- 
 ited to no sect, age, or nation. It is wide as the world, 
 and common as God. It is not given to a few men, in 
 the infancy of mankind, to monopolize inspiration, and 
 bar God out of the Soul. You and I are not born in the 
 dotage and decay oi the world. The stars are beautiful 
 as in their prime ; ' the most ancient Heavens are fresh 
 and St oiig' God is still everywhere in nature. Where- 
 ever a heart beats with love — where Faith and Reasoi 
 utter their oracles — there also is God, as formerly in the 
 hearts of seers and prophets. Neither Gerizim, nor Jer- 
 usalem, nor the soil that Jesus blessed, is so holy as the 
 good man's heart ; nothing so full of God. This inspira- 
 tion is not given to the learned alone, not only to the 
 great and wise, but to every faithful child of God. Cer- 
 tain as the open eye drinks in the light, do the pure in 
 heart see God ; and he that lives truly feels Him as a 
 presence not to be put by."* 
 
 This, however, to minds nourished on the positive and 
 sententious creeds of orthodox Chrhtendom, is not 
 
 ''•' Theodore Parker p. 161, et seq. 
 
310 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 eno ^h. Truths that are written by the finger of God 
 upon the heart of man, are not definite enough for them. 
 Views of religion and <kity wrought out by the meditations 
 of the studiou.s, confirmed by the allegiance of the good 
 and wise, stamped as sterling by the response they find 
 in every uncorrupted mind — are not save enough for 
 them. " They cannot trust God unless they have liis 
 bond in hlack and white, given under oatJt, and attested 
 hy witnesses!' They cling to dogmatic certainties, and 
 vainly imagine such certainty to be attainable. It is 
 this feeling which lies at the root of the distaste so gener- 
 ally evinced by orthodox Christians for natural religion 
 and for free and daring theological research ; and the 
 mental defect in which it has its origin is not difficult to 
 discover. It belongs to understandings at once dependent, 
 indolent, and timid, in which the practical predominates 
 over the spiritual, to which external testimony is more 
 intelligible than internal evidence — which preler the ease 
 derived from reposing on authority to the Irbour insepar- 
 able from patient and original reflection. Such men are 
 unwilling to rest the hopes which animate them, and 
 the principles which guide them, either on the deductions 
 of fallible reason, or the convictions of corruptible 
 instincts. This feeling is natural, and is shared by even 
 the profoundest thinkers at some period or other of their 
 progress towards that serenity of faith which is the last 
 and highest attainment of the devout searcher after 
 truth. But the mistake is, to conceive it possible to 
 attain certainty by some change in the process of 
 elaborating knowledge ; — to imagine that any surer 
 foundation can be discovered for religious l)elief than 
 the deductions of the intellect and the convictions of the 
 heart. If reason proves the existence and attributes of 
 God — if those spiritual instincts, which we believe to 
 be the voice of God in the soul, infuse into the mind a 
 sense of our relation to Him, and a hope of future exis- 
 tence — if reason and conscience alike irresistibly point to 
 virtue as th(^ highest good and the destined end and aim 
 of man, — we doubt, we hesitate, we tremble at the possi- 
 bility of a mistake ; we cry out tint this is not certainty, 
 
 IS ( 
 
 and that o 
 
 rest in pei 
 
 certain an( 
 
 tied and n 
 
 ago a sain 
 
 his hearer.s 
 
 manded "v 
 
 reward ; ai 
 
 authorized 
 
 which fal 
 
 narrators 
 
 satisfied a 
 
 unmistakj 
 
 sought ! 
 
 Mytholog; 
 
 resting-pli 
 
 an elepha 
 
 The sa: 
 
 our whoh 
 
 the other. 
 
 we apply 
 
 itself ; in 
 
 the indiv 
 
 But is it 
 
 that reas 
 
 Matthew 
 
 the Sern 
 
 loaves ai 
 
 benevolei 
 
 tants, an 
 
 should w 
 
 standing 
 
 of the 
 
 Miysterio 
 
 the moi 
 
 cieature 
 
 1 have 
 
 uncertai 
 
 careful h 
 
 crej)anci 
 
■ngcr of Ood 
 
 ••h for them. 
 
 meditatioHs 
 
 of the -ood 
 
 ise they find 
 
 enougli for 
 
 W have lii.s 
 
 tyid attested 
 
 tainties, and 
 
 tiable. It is 
 
 ste so gener- 
 
 ural religion 
 
 •ch ; and the 
 
 )t difficult to 
 
 e dependent, 
 
 >redominates 
 
 lony is more 
 
 'Bier the ease 
 
 hour insepar- 
 
 5uch men are 
 
 to them, and 
 
 le deductions 
 
 F corruptible 
 
 ared by even 
 
 )ther of their 
 
 !h is the last 
 
 archer after 
 
 ; possible to 
 
 ! process of 
 
 any surer 
 
 belief than 
 
 ctions of the 
 
 ittributes of 
 
 e believe to 
 
 the mintl a 
 
 future exis- 
 
 ibly point to 
 
 end and aim 
 
 at tlie possi- 
 
 ot certain t\', 
 
 IS CHRISTIANITY A REVEALED RELIGION ? 
 
 811 
 
 and that on anything short of certainty )ur souls cannot 
 rest in peace. But if we are told, on the authority of 
 certain ancient documents, and venerable but still modi- 
 tied and metamorphosed traditions, that some centuries 
 ago a saint and sage came into the world, and assured 
 his hearers that they had one God and Father who com- 
 manded virtue as a law, and promised futurity as a 
 reward ; and that this sage, to prove that he was divinely 
 authorized to preach such doctrines, wrought miracles, 
 which fallible disciples witnessed, and which fallible 
 narrators have transmitted — then we bow our heads in 
 satisfied acquiescence, and feel that we have attained the 
 unmistakable,, unquestionable, infallible certainty we 
 sought! What is this but the very spirit of Hindoo 
 Mythology, which is not contented till it has found a 
 resting-place for the Universe, yet is content to rest it on 
 an elephant, and on a tortoise ? 
 
 The same fallible human reason is the foundation of 
 our whole superstructure in the one case equally as in 
 the other. The whole difference is, that in the one case 
 we apply that reason to the evidence for the doctrine 
 itself ; in the other case we apply it to the credentials oi 
 the individual who is said to have taught that doctrine. 
 But is it possible we can so blind ourselves as to believe 
 that reason can ever give us half the assurance that 
 Matthew is correct when he tells us that Christ preached 
 the Sermon on the Mount and fed 5000 men with five 
 loaves and two fishes — as it gives us that a mighty and 
 benevolent Maker formed the Universe and its inhabi- 
 tants, and made man " the living to praise him ?" What 
 should we think of the soundness of that roan's under- 
 standing, who should say, " I have studied the wonders 
 of the Heavens, the framework of the Earth, the 
 mysterious beauties and adaptations of animal existence, 
 the moral and material constitution of the human 
 creature, who is so fearfully and wondeif ully made ; and 
 1 have risen from the contemplation unsatisfied and 
 uncertain tuhether God is, and wlidt Ho is. But I have 
 carefully examined the four Gospels, weighed their dis- 
 crepancies, collated their reports, and the result is a 
 
SI 2 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 IS 
 
 perfect certainty that Christ was the miraculous Son of 
 God, commissioned to make known His existence, to 
 J J veal His will, to traverse or suspend His laws. It is 
 doubt f til whether a wise and good Being be the Author 
 of the starry heavens above me, and the moral world 
 within me , but it is unquestionable that Jesus walked 
 upon the water, and raised the Widow's --' "i at Nain. I 
 may be mistaken m the one deduction — I cannot be 
 mistaken in the other." Strange conformation of mind ! 
 which ^an find no adequate foundation for its hopes, its 
 worship, it prm'Jiples o action, in the >-:,r-stretchmg 
 universe, in the glorious firmament, in the deep, full soul, 
 bursting with unutterable thoughts, in the vast and 
 rich store-house of the material and moral world — yet 
 can rest all with a trusting simT^licity approaching the 
 sublime, on what a book relates oi the sayings and doings 
 of a man who lived eighteen centuries ago ! 
 
 It the change which resulted - ^ om our inquiries were 
 indeed a descent Irom certainty to probability, it would 
 involve a loss beyond all power of compensation. But it 
 ]s not so. It IS merely an exchange of conclusions founded 
 on one chr.in of reasoning ; jr conclusions lounded on an- 
 other. The ])lain truth, n we dared but look it in the 
 iace, is this, — that absolute certainty on tliose subjects is 
 not attainable, and was not intended. We have already 
 seen that no miraculous revelation could make doctrines 
 credible which are revolting to our ' eason , nor can any 
 i-evelation give to doctrines greater certainty than that 
 which attaches to its own origin and history Now, we 
 cannot conceive the proofs of any miraculous revelation 
 to be so pcrioct, flawless, and cogent, as are the proofs of 
 the great doctrines of our lu-ith, independent of miracle 
 or revelation. Both sets ot proofs must, philosophically 
 speaking, be iraperfect ; but the proof that any particular 
 individual was supernatu rally inspired by God, must al- 
 ways be more imperfect than the proof that Man and the 
 Universe are the production of His fiat ; that goodness 
 is His profoundest essence , that doing good is the noblest 
 
 '~"m. To seek that more cogent and 
 
 rorship 
 
 v^y 
 
 compelling certainty of these truths which orlhodo: 
 
 yearns afi 
 have atta 
 man's inc 
 
 [In tru 
 foundatic 
 certain tl 
 documeni 
 unquestic 
 ineness a; 
 urgently 
 this prop 
 trine, fo: 
 plainly r( 
 in chapte 
 on the N 
 on the S( 
 isolated, 
 gruous. 
 absolute 
 the mor^ 
 creed ho 
 
 In gn 
 shadow 
 has saci 
 matic v{ 
 God, it 
 were 
 Father 
 measure 
 imitate 
 perhaps 
 
 * " Ha^ 
 a liumaa 
 certainly 
 eke ; for ' 
 thinking 
 the other, 
 pleased w 
 adhere to 
 more tha 
 that was 
 beautiful 
 
 in 
 
IS CHRISTIANITY A REVEALED RELIGION ? 
 
 313 
 
 ulous Son of 
 
 existence, to 
 
 laws. It is 
 
 the Autlior 
 
 moral world 
 
 esus walked 
 1 at Nain. I 
 
 I cannot be 
 tion of mind ! 
 
 its hopes, its 
 >^r-stre telling 
 
 eep, full soul, 
 the vast and 
 i\ world — yet 
 )roachiiig the 
 gs and doings 
 
 inquiries were 
 ility, it would 
 iation. But it 
 usions founded 
 ounded on an- 
 
 look it in the 
 lose subjects is 
 3 have already 
 aake doctrines 
 
 , nor can any 
 nty than that 
 •ry Now, we 
 ous revelation 
 ) the proofs of 
 3nt of miracle 
 )hilosophically 
 any particular 
 God, must al- 
 i Man and the 
 that goodness 
 
 is the noblest 
 )re cogent and 
 2h orlhodoxy 
 
 yearns after, is to strive for a shadow ; — to fancy that we 
 have attained it, is to be satisfied with having affixed 
 man's indorsement to " the true sayings of God."* 
 
 [In truth, however, it is not for the sake of these grand 
 foundation-stones of all religion which are so much more 
 certain than the authority or inspiration of any ancient 
 documents or traditions possibly can be, that positive, 
 unquestioning, dogmatic, absolute conviction of the genu- 
 ineness and infallibility of the letter of the Bible is so 
 urgently insisted upon by the orthodox. This conviction, 
 this proposition, is essential to their entire system of doc- 
 trine, for the simple reason (which can never be too 
 plainly realised or kept in mind, and which was discussed 
 in chapter xi.) that this doctrinal system is founded, not 
 on the New Testament narratives as a whole, nor even 
 on the Scriptures as a whole, but on special texts, often 
 isolated, often unharmonizing, often absolutely incon- 
 gruous. Only if the whole Bible is unassailable in its 
 absolute and omnipresent accuracy and authority, can 
 the more difficult and startling doctrines of the popular 
 creed hold their ground.] 
 
 In grasping after this certainty, which can be but a 
 shadow, ordinary Christianity has lost the substance — it 
 has sacrificed in practical more than it has gained in dog- 
 matic value. In making Christ t e miraculous Son of 
 God, it has destroyed Jesus as a human exemplar. If he 
 were in a peculiar manner "the only begotten of the 
 Father," a partaker in his essential nature, then he is im- 
 measurably removed from us ; we may revere, we cannot 
 imitate him. We listen to his precepts with submission, 
 perhaps even greater than before. We dwell upon the 
 
 * " Having removed the offence we took in fancying God speaking with 
 a human voice, and saying, 'This is my beloved Son: hear ye him,' — we 
 certainly do not incline to call that a loss. But we do not lose anything 
 else ; for considering the godliness and iiurity of the life of Jesna, and then 
 thinking of God and his holiness on the one side, and of our destination on 
 the other, we know, without a positive declaration, that God must have been 
 pleased with a life like that of Jesus, and that we cannot do better than 
 adliere to him. We do not lose, therefore, with those voices from heaven, 
 iiujie than is lost by a beautiful picture from which a ticket is taken away 
 that was fastened to it, containing the superfluous :> surance of it* being tk 
 beautiful picture." — Strauw'it Letter to Professor Orelli, p. 20. 
 
314 
 
 THE (JREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 IS C 
 
 excellence of his character, no longer for imitation, but 
 for worship. We read with the deepest love and atliuiia- 
 tion ol his genius, his gentleness, his mercy, his unvveai')'. 
 ilig activity in doing good, his patience with the stupid, 
 his compassion for the afflicted his courage in facing tor- 
 ture, his meekness in enduring wrong ; and then we turn 
 away and say, " Ah ! he was a God ; such virtue is not 
 for humanity, nor ior us." It is useless by honeyed words 
 to disguise the truth. Ij Christ were a man, he is our 
 'pattern ; " the possibility of our race made real." If he 
 were God — a paftaker of God's nature, as the orthodox 
 maintain — then they are guilty of a cruel mockery in 
 speaking of him as a type and model of human excel- 
 lence. How can one endowed with the perfections oi a 
 God be an example to beings encumbered with the weak- 
 nesses of humanity ? Adieu, then, to Jesus as anything 
 but a Propounder of doctrines, an Utterer of precepts ! 
 The vital portion o: Christianity is swept away. His 
 Character — that from which so many in a)^ ages have 
 drawn their moral li.o and strength — that which so irre- 
 sistibly enlists our deepest sympathies, and rouses our 
 highest aspirations — it becomes an irreverence to speak 
 of. The character, the conduct, the virtues of a God !— 
 these are iclt to be indecent expressions. Verily, ortho- 
 doxy has slain the life of Christianity. In the presump- 
 tuous endeavour to exalt Jesus, it has shut him up in 
 the Holy of Holies, and hid him from the gaze ot human- 
 ity. It has displaced him from an object of imitation 
 into an object of worship. It has made his life barren, 
 that his essence might be called divine, 
 
 " But we have no fear that we should lose Christ by 
 being obliged to give up a considerable part of what was 
 hitherto called Christian creed ! He will remain to all ol 
 us the more surely, the less anxiously we cling to doc- 
 trines and opinions thir,t might tempt our reason to 
 forsake him. But if Christ remains to us, and if he 
 remains to us as the highest we know and are capable 
 of imagining within the sphere ol religion, as the per- 
 son without whose presence in the mind no perlect 
 piety is possible ; we may fairly say that in Him do 
 
 we still p< 
 faith."* 
 
 "But," 
 
 becomes o 
 
 uneducatei 
 
 divine rev 
 
 true,— if t 
 
 curate exj 
 
 — what a 
 
 leisure, th 
 
 requisite i 
 
 them and 
 
 themselve 
 
 To this 
 
 be shown 
 
 spiritual i 
 
 dogmas, t 
 
 for the b€ 
 
 Their cree 
 
 not or ca 
 
 the authc 
 
 always d 
 
 doctrines 
 
 these doc 
 
 was a te 
 
 lieve thei 
 
 their trul 
 
 The onlj 
 
 the auth( 
 
 in the ot 
 
 Moreo 
 
 as an ins 
 
 of God, i 
 
 cellent, i 
 
 munion 
 
 need no 
 
 of them 
 
 pels ant 
 
IS CHRISTIANITT A REVEALED RELIGION ? 
 
 315 
 
 imitation, but 
 e and adniiia- 
 his uiivveaiy. 
 th the stupid, 
 in facing tor- 
 then we turn 
 virtue is not 
 oneyed words 
 aan, he is our 
 real." If he 
 the orthodox 
 mockery in 
 human excel- 
 irfections oi a 
 ith the weak- 
 s as anythino' 
 r of precepts ! 
 b away. His 
 i)'' ages have 
 tvhich so irre- 
 id rouses our 
 ence to speak 
 i of a God!— 
 Verily, ortho- 
 the presump- 
 ut him up in 
 tze of human- 
 of imitation 
 Is life barren, 
 
 3se Christ by 
 
 of what was 
 
 nain to all ol 
 
 cling to doc- 
 
 ir reason to 
 
 8, and if he 
 
 are capable 
 
 as the pei- 
 
 l no perlect 
 
 in Him do 
 
 we still possess the sum and substance of the Christian 
 faith."* 
 
 "But," it will be objected, "what, on this system, 
 becomes of the religion of the poor and ignorant, the 
 uneducated, and the busy? If Christianity is not a 
 divine revelation, and therefore entirely and infallibly 
 true, — if the Gospels are not perfectly faithful and ac- 
 curate expositors of Christ's teaching and of God's wilt, 
 — what a fearful loss to those who have neither the 
 leisure, the learning, nor the logical habits of thought 
 requisite to construct out of the relics that remain to 
 them and the nature that lies before them a faith for 
 themselves ! " 
 
 To this objection we reply that the more religion can 
 be shown to consist in the realisation of great moral and 
 spiritual truths, rather than in the reception of distinct 
 dogmas, the more the position of these classes is altered 
 for the better. In no respect is it altered for the worse. 
 Their creeds, i. e., their collection of dogmas, those who do 
 not or cannot think for themselves must always take on 
 the authority of others. They do so now: they have 
 always done so. They have hitherto believed certain 
 doctrines because wise and good men assure them that 
 these doctrines were revealed by Christ, and that Christ 
 was a teacher sent from God. They will in future be- 
 lieve them because wise and good men assure them of 
 their truth, and their own hearts confirm the assurance. 
 The only difference lies in this, — that, in the one case, 
 the authority on which they lean vouches for the truth ; 
 in the other, for the Teacher who proclaimed it. 
 
 Moreover, the Bible still remains; though no longer 
 as an inspired and infallible record. Though not the word 
 of God, it contains the words of the wisest, the most ex- 
 cellent, the most devout men, who have ever held com- 
 munion with Him. The poor, the ignorant, the busy, 
 need not, do not, will not, read it critically. To each 
 of them, it will still, through all time, present the Gos- 
 pels and the Psalms, — the glorious purity of Jesus, the 
 
 * Strauss's Soliloqiiies, p. 67t 
 
Ill' 
 
 316 
 
 THB CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 sublime piety of David and of Job. Those who read it 
 for its spirit, not for its dogmas, — as the poor, the igno- 
 rant, the busy, if tunperverted, will do, — will still find in 
 it all that is necessary for their guidance in life, their 
 support in death, their consolation m sorrow, thf "r rule 
 of duty, and their trust in God. 
 
 A more genuine and important objection to the con- 
 sequences of our views is felt by indolent minds on their 
 own account. They shrink from the toil of working out 
 truth for themselves, out of the materials which Provi- 
 dence has placed before them. They long for the pre- 
 cious metal, but loathe the rude ore out of which it has 
 to be extricated by the laborious alchemy of thought. 
 A ready-made creed is the Paradise of their lazy dreams. 
 A string of authoritative dogmatic propositions comprises 
 the whole mental wealth which they desire. The volume 
 of nature, the volume of history, the volume of life, appal 
 and terrify them. Such men are the materials out of 
 whom good Catholics — of all sects — are made. They 
 form the uninquiring and submissive flocks which rejoice 
 the hearts of all Priesthoods. Let such cling to the faith 
 of their forefathers — if they can. But men whose minds 
 are cast in a nobler mould and are instinct with a diviner 
 life, who love truth more than the rest, and the peace of 
 Heaven rather than the peace of Eden, to whom " a loftier 
 being brings severer cares," — 
 
 " Who know, Man doea not live by joy alone, 
 But by the presence of the power of God,"— 
 
 such must cast behind them the hope of any repose or 
 tranquillity save that which is the last reward of long 
 agonies of thought ;* they must relinquish aH prospect of 
 
 * ♦' Thou ! to whom the weurisome disease 
 Of Past and Present ia an alien thing, 
 ITiou pure Existence ! whose severe decrees 
 I'orbid a living man his soul to bring 
 Into n timeless Eden of sweet ease, 
 Clear-ovod, clear-he-^rted — lay thy loving wing 
 Jndeatrj upon me— i" that way alone 
 Thy B^ttalJ Oraation-thought tnou wilt to me make known." 
 
 R. M. M1LNI8. 
 
 IS C 
 
 any Heave] 
 and portal 
 lamp for a 
 not be ne 
 does not li 
 must build 
 faith, for I 
 
 * Zschokke' 
 interesting. 
 
IS CHRISTIANITY A REVEALED RELIGION ? 
 
 317 
 
 \e who read it 
 ■»oor, the igno- 
 
 f 11 still find in 
 in life, their 
 
 pow, thp'r rule 
 
 »n to the con- 
 linds on their 
 working out 
 which Provi- 
 for the pre- 
 which it has 
 y of thought. 
 _r lazy dreams. 
 ions comprises 
 The volume 
 e of life, appal 
 'terials out of 
 made. They 
 i which rejoice 
 ig to the iaith 
 1 whose minds 
 with a diviner 
 i the peace of 
 hom " a loftier 
 
 any Heaven save that of which tribulation is the avenue 
 and portal ; they must gird up their loins and trim their 
 lamp for a work which cannot be put by, and which must 
 not be negligently done. " He," says Zschokke, " who 
 does not like living in the furnished lodgings of tradition, 
 must build his own house, his own system of thought and 
 faith, for himself."* 
 
 » Zschokke'H Autobioijraphy, p. 29« The .vhole section is mo&t da«plj 
 interesting. 
 
 ne, 
 
 my repose or 
 ward of long 
 iH prospect of 
 
 <• ' 
 
 e known." 
 
CHAPTER XTI 
 
 CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 Christianity, then, not being a revelation, but a concep- 
 tion — the Gospels not being either inspired or accurate, 
 but fallible and imperfect human records — the practical 
 conclusion from such premises must be obvious to all. 
 Every doctrine and every proposition which the Scriptures 
 contain, whether or not we believe it to have come to us 
 unmutilated and unmarred from the mouth of Christ, is 
 open, and must be subjected, to the scrutiny of reason. 
 Some tenets we shall at once accept as the most perfect 
 truth that can be received by the human intellect and 
 heart ; — others we shall reject as contradicting our in- 
 stincts and offending our understandings ; — others, again, 
 of a more mixed nature, we must analyze, that so we may 
 extricate the seed of truth from the husk of error, and 
 elicit " the divine idea that lies at the bottom of appear- 
 ance."* 
 
 I. I value the Religion of Jesus, not as being absolute 
 and perfect truth, but as containing more truth, purer truth, 
 higher truth, stronger truth, than has ever yet been given 
 to man. Much of his teaching I unhesitatingly receive 
 as, to the best of my judgmant, unimprovable and unsur- 
 passable — fitted, if obeyed, to make earth all that a finite 
 and material scene can be, and man only a little lower 
 than the angels. The worthlessness of ceremonial obser- 
 vances, and the necessity oj essential righteousness — "Not 
 every one that saith unto me, Lord! Lord! but he that 
 doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven :" " By 
 their fruits ye shall know them ;" "I will have mercy, 
 and not sacrifice ; " " Be not a slothful hearer only, but a 
 doer of the word ;" " Woe unto ye. Scribes and Pharisees, 
 
 •Fichc. 
 
CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 319 
 
 but a concep- 
 l or accurate, 
 -the practical 
 bvious to all. 
 the Scriptures 
 ve come to us 
 h of Christ, is 
 iny of reason. 
 ! most perfect 
 intellect and 
 icting our in- 
 -others, again, 
 hat so we may 
 : of error, and 
 om of appear- 
 
 3eing absolute 
 fch, purer truth, 
 yet been given 
 irtingly receive 
 ble and unsur- 
 lU that a finite 
 
 a little lower 
 emonial obser- 
 ousness — "Not 
 d! but he that 
 heaven :" " By 
 I have mercy, 
 rer only, but a 
 
 and Pharisees, 
 
 ,„, ye pay «thes of mint an* ^^^:r:r^ 
 t/the^^eighiier »att«« ;tV.e La .^.^^ ^^. 
 
 temperance : — i '"^ ' ; '.' ■, f fj^(^ qovernment oj ii''(^ 
 
 !^}vitv for purity «)/ V^, '^'^.^ 'Z,;;^er« of action— 
 
 V laQnhemies : these are the ^nin„s ^ ^^ ^^ve thy 
 
 neighbour as t^y^el* . ^^ .^^^^ ^nto them, for this is 
 Should do unto you that do ye^x^^^^^^ of injnrws- 
 
 L Law and the P^^^^^^,;! , /them that hate you;pray 
 '•' Love your enemies ; <1« S?^';;^ ^^^ and persecute you , 
 for them which d««Pit^^"7,^'!,J forgive those that tres- 
 ' Forgive us our trespasses as we to . ^^^^ ^^^^^^ 
 
 rwhi;:h a-pitet-ully us^yo- -^^^ tres- 
 
 Foraive us our trespasses '^^ je lo ^ times,but 
 
 ^"^7ainstus;'' "Isaynotuntot^^^^^^^^^ 
 
 L.^«+A.+,imes seven; liyeiov ,^„i.Hcans the 
 
 ' Forgive us uu.^ -f/" ^.^t unto thee,untii seven -—-ove 
 pass against us ; i say noL ^^ ^^^ ^hat love 
 
 Pntils^eventy ti-^« ^^.^^^.^e' do not even V-^^^^^^'";' 
 vou what reward ^f^^/y.^^.,.,iiice in the cause of duty 
 
 thv right hand otfend tnee, cu plough and looking 
 
 No man, having put his ^^^^J?,!^jj^^i!it2/-" Blessed 
 
 bfck S fit for the kingdom of God^^^^ J^.^^ .» « ge 
 
 are the meek, for they «^^^J J^S;"'' He that is great- 
 that humbleth l^f-^fj^^^^^^^ : ''-^f- 'To"o"t 
 
 ;^f almS ore men, to be seen o^^- '...^ - '' When 
 
 prayest, enter into thy closet and s y^ face, that 
 
 ?W fastest, anoint thine ^^^^^'^^^^t-'-all these sublime 
 
 hou appear not unto men to f ^f • ^^^ ,i,^ds, to rec- 
 
 nVeceptsneed no miracle, no voce ^^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^, of 
 
 ommSd them to our ^^^^f f^'^'.aTence by virtue of 
 
 author as Himstii 
 hiaiory. 
 
320 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 II. Next in perfection come tho views which Christian- 
 ity unfolds to us of God in his relation to man, which were 
 })robably as near the truth as the minds of men could in 
 that age receive. God is represented as Our Father in 
 Heaven — to be whose especial children is the best reward 
 of the peace-makers — to see whose face is the highest hope 
 of the pure in heart — who is ever at hand to strengthen 
 His true worshippers — to whom is due our heartiest love, 
 our humblest submission — whose most acceptable worship 
 is righteous conduct and a holy heart — in who.se constant 
 presence our life is passed — to whose merciful disposal we 
 are resigned by death. It is remarkable that, throughout 
 the Gospels, with the exception, I believe, of a single pass- 
 age,* nothing is said as to the nature of the Diety ; — his 
 relation to us is alone insisted on : — all that is needed lor 
 our consolation, our strength, our guidance, is assured to 
 us : — the purely specuk ' -e is passed over and ignored. 
 
 Thus, in the two great points essential to our practical 
 life— viz., our feelings towards God, and our conduct to- 
 wards man — the Gospels, [relieved of their unauthentic 
 portions, and read in an understanding spirit, not with a 
 slavish and unintelligent adherence to the naked letter,] 
 contain little about which men can difler — little from 
 which they can dissent. He is our Father, we are all 
 brethren. This much lies open to the most ignorant and 
 busy, as fully as to the most leisurely and learned. This 
 needs no Priest to teach it — no authority to endorse it. 
 The rest is Speculation — intensely interesting, indeed, but 
 of no practical necessity. 
 
 III. There are, however, other tenets taught in Scrip- 
 ture and professed by Christians, in which reflective 
 minds of all ages have found it difficult to acquiesce. 
 Thus : — however far we may stretch the plea for a liberal 
 interpretation of Oriental speech, it is impossible to dis- 
 guise from ourselves that the New Testament teaches, in 
 the most unreserved manner, and in the strongest lan- 
 guage, the doctrine of the ejfficacy of Prayer in modifying 
 the divine purposes, and in obtaining the boons asked for 
 
 * Grod is a spirit. 
 
 at the thro 
 
 xi. 42) wo 
 
 which Jesv 
 
 markaV)le < 
 
 his disciple 
 
 for person 
 
 told that 
 
 (though M 
 
 peculiar s\ 
 
 to his disc 
 
 stant pray 
 
 iterated tl 
 
 swered. 
 
 l)ut by pr 
 
 sire, wher 
 
 and ye sh; 
 
 what8oev( 
 
 will give 
 
 " Thinkes 
 
 and he si 
 
 of angels 
 
 livered tc 
 
 of the a] 
 
 " Be cons 
 
 him ask 
 
 fectual p 
 
 No or 
 
 others oi 
 
 abound, 
 
 and his ( 
 
 and ans^ 
 
 from Hi 
 
 ever goc 
 
 instarun 
 
 consona 
 
 sequenci 
 
 * " It if 
 Wetstein, 
 phetic int 
 Th»Qksgi 
 
CHRISTIAN ECLBOnCISM. 
 
 321 
 
 Christian- 
 which Were 
 en could in 
 Father in 
 5e.st reward 
 ighest hope 
 strengthen 
 rtiest love, 
 We worship 
 se constant 
 dispovsal we 
 throughout 
 single pass- 
 )iety ;— liis 
 needed lor 
 assured to 
 ignored, 
 ir practical 
 conduct to- 
 nauthentic 
 not with a 
 ked letter,] 
 -little from 
 we are all 
 aorant and 
 aed. This 
 endorse it. 
 ndeed, but 
 
 b in Scrip- 
 reflective 
 acquiesce, 
 r a liberal 
 ble to dis- 
 eaches, in 
 ngest lan- 
 nodifying 
 asked for 
 
 at the throne of grace. It is true that one passage (John 
 xi. 42) would seem to indicate that prayer was a form 
 wliic'li Jesus adopted for the sake of others ; it is also ro- 
 markaV)le that the model of prayer, which ho taught to 
 his disciples, contains only one simple and modest request 
 for personal and temporal good ;* yet not only are we 
 told that he prayed earnestly and for specific mercies 
 (though with a most submissive will), on occasions o' 
 peculiar suffering and trial, but few of his exhoitation;. 
 to his disciples occur more frequently than that to con- 
 stant prayer, and no promises are more distinct or re- 
 iterated than that their prayers shall be heard and an- 
 swered. " Watch and pray ; " " This kind goeth not out 
 but by prayer and lasting ; " " What things soever ye de- 
 sire, when ye pray, believe that ye shall receive them, 
 and ye shall have them ; " " Verily, verily, I say unto you, 
 whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in my name, he 
 will give it you ; " " Ask, and it shall be given you ; " 
 " Thinkest thou that I cannot now pray to my Father, 
 and he shall presently give me more than twelve legions 
 of angels ? " The parable of the unjust Judge was de- 
 livered to enforce the same conclusion, and the writings 
 of the apostles are at least equally explicit on this point. 
 " Be constant in prayer ; " " Pray without ceasi ng ;" " Let 
 him ask in faith, nothing wavering ; " " The fervent ef- 
 fectual prayer of a righteous man availeth much." 
 
 No one can read such passages, and the numberless 
 others of a similar character with which both Testaments 
 abound, and doubt that the opinion held both by Christ 
 and his disciples was that " Jehovah is a God that heareth 
 and answereth prayer ; " — that favours are to be obtained 
 from Him by earnest and reiterated entreaty ; that what- 
 ever good thing His sincere worshippers petition for, with 
 instance and with faith, shall be granted to them, if 
 consonant to his purposes, and shall be gi'anted in con- 
 sequence of their petition ; that, in fact and truth, apart 
 
 * " It is a curious fact that the Lord's prayer maybe reconstructed," says 
 Wetstein, " almost verbatim out of the Talmud, which also contains a pro- 
 phetic intimation that all prayei will one day cease, except the Prayw of 
 Thanksgivicg." (Mackay'a Progress of the lutelleot ii. 379.) 
 
322 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM 
 
 fM 
 
 I 
 
 r-f 
 
 diJ 
 
 from all metaphysical subtleties and subterfuges, the de- 
 signs of God can be modified and swayed, like those of 
 an earthly father, by the entreaties of His chUdren. This 
 doctrine is set forth throughout the Jewish Scriptures in 
 its coarsest and nakedest form, and it reappears in the 
 Christian Scriptures in a form only slightly modified and 
 refined 
 
 Now, this doctrine has in all ages been a stumbling- 
 block to the thoughtful. It is obviously irreconcilable 
 with all that reason and revelation teach us of the di- 
 vine nature ; and the inconsistency has been felt by the 
 ablest of the Scripture writers themselves* Various and 
 desperate have been the expedients and suppositions re- 
 sorted to, in order to reconcile the conception of an im- 
 mutable, all-wise, all-foreseeing God, with that of a father 
 who is turned from his course by the prayers of his 
 creatures. But all such efforts are, and are felt to be, 
 hopeless failures. They involve the assertion and nega- 
 tion of the same proposition in one breath. The problem 
 remains still insoluble ; and we must either be content to 
 leave it so, or we must abandon one or other of the hos- 
 tile premises. 
 
 The religious man, who believes that all events, mental 
 as well as physi al, are pre-ordered and arranged accord- 
 ing to the deci\ es of infinite wisdom, and the philosopher, 
 who knows that, by the wise and eternal laws of the uni- 
 verse, cause and effect are indissolubly chained together, 
 ;ind that one follows the other in inevitable succession, — 
 equally feel that this ordination — this chain — cannot be 
 changeable at the cry of man. To suppose that it can 
 is to place the whole harmonious .system of nature at the 
 mercy of the weak reason and the selfish wishes of hu- 
 manity. If the purposes of God were not wise, they 
 would not be formed : — if wise, they cannot be changed, 
 for then they would become unwise. To suppose that 
 an all-wise Being would alter his designs and modes of 
 pioceeding at the entreaty of an unknowing cniaturc, is 
 to believe that compassion would change his wisdom into 
 
 * " God iH not a muu that he should lie, uor the sou of a miUi, that lid 
 ehould repent." 
 
 * "In 
 
 binds tOr 
 will exui 
 cduditioi 
 not direi 
 stitnti(n 
 had bet 
 is An 
 tlieir 1) 
 and tin 
 last gei 
 t Th( 
 nil this 
 L'onsiwtt 
 L'an dec 
 ceitain 
 occur a 
 and tin 
 oonsidi' 
 luund 
 Hpecia 
 wrili r 
 ^jcllici- 
 than 
 c.xpirs 
 to us ■ 
 
CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 32J 
 
 (iges, the de- 
 like those of 
 fldren. This 
 Scriptures in 
 [pears in the 
 lodified and 
 
 stumbling- 
 reconcilable 
 s of the di- 
 felt by the 
 Vai-ious anrl 
 )position.s re- 
 on of an im- 
 it of a father 
 ■ayers of his 
 ire felt to be, 
 on and nega- 
 The problem 
 be content to 
 jr of the hos- 
 
 vents, mental 
 mged accord- 
 i philosopher, 
 s of the uni- 
 ned together, 
 succession, — 
 1 — cannot be 
 ;e that it can 
 tiature at the 
 /ishes of hn- 
 t wise, they 
 - be change(l, 
 suppose that 
 ,nd modes of 
 [^ cn^aturo, is 
 wisdom into 
 
 f a mui, thul lie 
 
 loolishness. It has been urged that prayer may render 
 a favour wise, which would else be unwise ; but this is 
 to imagine that events are not foreseen and pre-ordered, 
 but are arranged and decided pro re natd ; it is also to 
 igiiore utterly the unquestionable fact, that no event in 
 lite or in nature is isolated, and that none can be changed 
 without entailing endless and universal alterations.* 11 
 the universe is governed by fixed laws, or (which is the 
 same proposition in different language) if all events are 
 pre-ordained by the foreseeing wisdom of an infinite God, 
 then the prayers of thousands of years and generations 
 of martyrs and saints cannot change or mociify one iota 
 of our destiny. The propositio7> is unassailable by the 
 subtlest logic.-f- The weak, fond affections of humanity 
 struggle in vain against the unwelcome conclusion. 
 
 It is a conclusion from which the feelings of almost all 
 of us shrink and revolt. The strongesL sentiment of our 
 nature, perhaps, is that of our helplessness in the hands of 
 fate, and against this helplessness we seek for a resource 
 in the belief of our dependence on a Higher Power, 
 which can control and will interfere with fate. And 
 
 * "Immediate proof of that system of interminable conneotion which 
 binds together the whole human family, may be obtained by every one wlio 
 will examine the several ingredients of his physical, intellectual, and social 
 condition ; for he will not ind one of these circumstances of his lot that is 
 not directly an effect or consequence of the conduct, or character, or con- 
 stitution of his progenitors, and of all with whom he has had to do ; if tfiei/ 
 luid been other than what th^y were, he afso must have been other than he 
 is And then our i)redeces8or8 must in like manner trace the qualities of 
 tlmir being to theirs ; thus the linking ascends to the common parents of all ; 
 and thus must it descend —still spreading as it joes — from the present to the 
 liist generation of the children of Adam." -Nat. Hist, of Enthusiasm, p. 149. 
 
 t The author of the Natural History of Enthusiasm has a singular theory 
 ni this point He is not very clear, l)ecause clearness would niiike his in- 
 ;'on8istency and the strangeness of his position too manifest ; but as far as we 
 lan decii)her his notion, it is tiiis : He divides all events into two classes — the 
 certain and fortuitous. He conceives, as we do, that the great mass of events 
 occur according to established laws, and in the regular process of causation : 
 ;ind these he regards as settled and immutable : but in addition to these he 
 considers that there are many others which are mere fortuities, lit the com- 
 niiuid (if (iod's will and of man's prayers; and that these fortuities are the 
 s])ecial province and mennti of the divine government (chap. vi.). Yet this 
 writer allows that all events and all men's lots are int^xtricably woven to- 
 gether (pp. l;!2, lilt) ; iiow then can one thing hv more furtuitniisor alterable 
 tl)au anather ':? Moreover fortuity, as he elsewhere intiniiites, is merely an 
 expression denoting our ixnoran<'o of caii-'alion: tliat, wiiich seems a ohanoe 
 to us is among the moat settled and certain uf (iod's onlainnicnts. 
 
 El 
 
324 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 Hm<. 
 
 though our reason tells us that it is inconceivable that tlie 
 entreaties of creatures as erring and as blind as we are, can 
 influence the all- wise purposes of God, yet we feel an in- 
 ternal voice, more potent and persuasive than reason, 
 which assures us that to pray to Him in trouble is an ir- 
 repressible instinct of our nature — an instinct which pre- 
 cedes teaching — which survives experience — which deHes 
 philoBophy. 
 
 " For sorrow oft tlie cry of faith 
 In bitter need will borrow. " 
 
 It would be an unspeakable consolation to our human 
 infirmity, could we, in this case, believe our reason to he 
 erroneous, and our instinct true ; but we greatly fear that 
 the latter is the result, partly of that anthropomorphism 
 which pervades all our religious conceptions, which our 
 limited faculties suggest, and which education and 
 habit have rooted so fixedly in our mental constitu- 
 tion, — and partly of that fond weakness which recoils 
 from the idea of irreversible and inescapable decree. 
 The conception of subjection to a law without ex- 
 ception, without remission, without appeal, crushing, 
 absolute, and universal, is truly an appalling one ; 
 and, most mercifully, can rarely be perceived in all its 
 overwhelming force, except by minds which, through stem 
 and lofty intellectual training, have in some degree become 
 (jualified to bear it. 
 
 Communion with Ood^ we must ever bear in mind, is 
 something very different from prayer for specific blessings, 
 and often confers the submissive strength of soul for which 
 we pray ; and we believe it will be found that the higher 
 our souls rise in their spiritual progress, the more does 
 entreaty merge into thanksgiving, the more does petition 
 become absorbed in communion with the " Father of the 
 spirits of all flesh." That the piety of Christ was fast 
 tending to this end is, we think, indicated by his instruc- 
 tions to his disciples (Matt. vi. 7-9) . " When yo pray, \iso 
 not vain repetitions : for your Father knoweth what things 
 ye have need of, hofore ye a^k him. After this manner, 
 therefore, pray ye/' c:c. ; an<l by that last sublime sentence 
 
CHIIISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 325 
 
 able that tl)o 
 s we are, can 
 '^o feel an in- 
 than reason, 
 iible is an ir- 
 t which pre- 
 whieh defies 
 
 > our human 
 reason to he 
 -tly fear that 
 )pomorphism 
 s, wliich our 
 u cation and 
 tal constitu- 
 i'hich recoils 
 oable decree. 
 without ex- 
 a-l, crushing, 
 )alling one ; 
 'ed in all its 
 hrough stem 
 3gree become 
 
 r in mind, is 
 'Jlc hleasvngs, 
 >ul for which 
 •t the higher 
 B more does 
 oos petition 
 ather of the 
 ist was fast 
 his instruc- 
 y«! pray, uso 
 what things 
 his manner, 
 me sentence 
 
 in Gethsomane, uttered when the agonizing struggle of the 
 spirit with the flesh had terminated in the complete and 
 linal victory of the tirst, " Father, if this cup may not pass 
 from me except I drink it, thy will bo done." 
 
 Prayer may be regarded as the form which devotion 
 naturally takes in ordinary minds, and even in the most 
 enlightened minds in their less spiritual moods. The 
 highest intellectual efforts, the loftiest religious contem- 
 plations, dispose to devotion, but check the impulses of 
 prayer. The devout philosopher, trained to the investi- 
 gation of universal system, — the serene astronomer, fresh 
 from the study of the chsngeless laws which govern in- 
 numerable worlds, — shrink from the monstrous iiTation- 
 ality of asking the great Architect and Governor of all to 
 work a miracle in his belialf — to interfere, f or tlie sake of 
 his convenience, or his plans, with the sublime order con- 
 ceived by the Ancient of Days in the far Eternity of the 
 Past; for what is a special providence but an interference 
 with established laws 'i And what is such interference 
 but a miracle ? There is much truth and beauty in the 
 following remarks of Isaac Taylor, but much also of the 
 inconsistency, irreverence, and insolence of orthodoxy. 
 
 "The very idea of addressing j^?e^^<^0')^8 to Him who 
 worketh all things according to the counsel of his own 
 eternal and unalterable will, and the enjoined [)iactice of 
 clothing sentiments of piety in articulate forms of lan- 
 guage, though these sentiments, before they are invested 
 in words, are perfectly known to the Searcher of hearts, 
 imply that, in the terms and mode of intercourse with 
 God and man, no attempt is made to lift the latter 
 above his sphere of limited notions, and imperfect know- 
 ledge. The terms of devotional cotrvmunion rest even on 
 a much lower ground than that which raan, by efforts 
 of reason and imagination, might attain to* Prayer, 
 by its very conditions, supposes not only a condescension 
 of the divine nature to meet the human, but a humbling 
 of the huTnan nature to a lower range than it tnighi 
 
 * Is it not a clear deduction from this, that prayer is a form of devotiot 
 conceded only to oar imi>erfeot npiritiru ciipacitien, and to Ije out^'rowu a* 
 thoMH capacities aro raised ; iid strengtlioned 't 
 

 326 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 'i \ 
 
 II ' 
 
 easily reach. The region of abstract conceptions, of lofty 
 reasonings, of magnificent images, has an atmos'phen 
 too subtle to support the health of true piety ; and in ordui 
 that the warmth and vigour of life may be maintainud 
 in the heart, the common level of the natural affections 
 is chosen as the scene of intercourse between heaven and 
 earth. , . . The utmost distances of the material universe 
 are finite ; but the disparity of nature which separates- 
 man from his Maker is infinite ; nor can the interval be 
 filled up or brought under any process of measurement. . . , 
 Were it indeed permitted to man to gaze upward from 
 step to step and from range to range of the vast 
 edifice of rational existences, and could his eye attain 
 its summit, and then perceive, at an infinite height 
 beyond that highest platform of created beings, the 
 lowest beams of the Eternal Throne — what liberty 
 of heart would afterwards be left to him in drawing 
 near to the Father of Spirits ? How, after such a 
 revelation of the upper world, could the affectionate 
 cheerfulness of earthly worship again take place ? Or 
 how, while contemplating the measured vastness of the 
 interval between heaven and earth, could the dwelleri: 
 thereon come familiarly as before to the Hearer of 
 Prayer ; bringing with them the small requests of theii 
 petty interests of the present life. . . . These spec- 
 tacles of greatness, if laid open to perception, would pro- 
 sent such an interminable perspective of glory, and so 
 set out the immeasurable distance between ourselves and 
 the Supreme Being with a long gradation of splendours, 
 and we should henceforth feel as if thrust down to an 
 extreme remoteness from the divine notice ; and it would 
 be hard or impossible to retain, with any comfortable 
 conviction, the belief in the nearness of Him who is re- 
 vealed as a 'very present help in every time of trouble. 
 . . . Every ambitious attempt to break through the 
 humbling conditions on which man may hold communion 
 with God, must then fail of success ; since the Supreme 
 has fixed the scene of worship and converse, not in the 
 skies, but on the earth. The Scripture models of devo- 
 tion, £ftr from encouraging vague and inarticulate con- 
 
CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 327 
 
 ms, of loffy 
 
 atmosphere 
 ,nd in order 
 
 iiiaintaiiied 
 I affections 
 heaven and 
 ial universe 
 h separates 
 interval be 
 urement. . . . 
 ward from 
 f the vast 
 eye attain 
 nite height 
 beings, the 
 hat liberty 
 in drawing 
 ■tor such a 
 affectionate 
 place ? Or 
 itness of the 
 the dwellers 
 ! Hearer ol 
 ests of their 
 These spec- 
 , would pre- 
 lory, and so 
 urselves and 
 ■ splendours, 
 down to an 
 md it would 
 comfortable 
 1 who is rc- 
 i of trouble.' 
 hrough the 
 communion 
 bie Supreme 
 not in the 
 els of devo- 
 culate con- 
 
 templations, consist of such utterances of desire, hope, and 
 love, as seem to suppose the existence of correlative 
 feelings, and of every human sympathy, in Him to whom 
 they are addressed.* And thoiiglt reason and Script are 
 acsure us that He neitlier needs to he informed of our 
 wants, nor ivaits to he moved by our supplications, yet 
 will He he approached with the eloquence of importunate 
 desire, and He demands, not only a sincere jeweling of 
 indigence and dependence, hut an undissemhled zeal and 
 diligence in seeking i.'ie desired boons hy persevering re- 
 quest. He is to he supplicated with arguments as one 
 who needs to he swayed, and moved, to he vjrought upon 
 and influenced ; nor is any alternative ofJered to those 
 who would present themselves at the throne of heavenly 
 grace, or nny exception made in favour ol superior spirits, 
 ivhose mo e elevated notions oj the divine pcrjectlons may 
 render this accommodated style distastej al. As the Hearer 
 of prayer stoops to listen, so also must the suppliant 
 stoop from heights of philosophical or meditative abstrac- 
 tions, and either come in genuine simplicity of petition, as a 
 son to a father, or he utterly eoccluded froTn the friendship 
 oj his Maker." f 
 
 The expressions in this last paragraph — those par- 
 ticularly which we have italicised — appear to us, we con- 
 fess, monstrous, and little, if at all, short of blasphemy, 
 i. e., speaking evil of God. What ! He, who " both by 
 reason and Scripture " has taught us that He is nx)t 
 moved by our supplications, requires us — " on pain of being 
 utterly excluded from his favour " — to act as if He were ! 
 He, Wi\o has given us the understanding to conceive His 
 entire exemption from all human weaknesses, requires us 
 to proceed as ) we " thought that He was altogether 
 such a one as ourselves ! " He, who has made us to know 
 that all things are ordered by Him from the beginning — 
 " that with Him is no variableness, neither shadow of 
 
 * That is, they are baaed on erroneouR premises, supported hy a natural 
 feeling, the very feeling which, pushed a little further, has originated 
 
 Sayers to Christ in the English Cnurch, and to Sainta and to the Virgin 
 ary in the lionian Communion. 
 t Nat. Hiat. of Enthusiasm, pp. 27-32. 
 
328 
 
 THE CREED OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 turning" — requires us to supplicate, " argue," importune, 
 (U if we believed that supplication, argument, and im- 
 portunity couly sway and turn Him from His purposes,— 
 commands us, in a word, to enact in His august presence 
 a comedy, which He knows, and we know, to be a mock- 
 ery and a protence ' He, who has given us, as His divi- 
 nest gift, to elev )e, tc perfect, and to purify, an intellect 
 bearing some faiiit analogy to His own, — punishes with 
 " exclusion from His friendship," those nobler conceptions 
 of His nature which are the finest achievements of this in- 
 tellect, unless we consent to abnegate and disavow them, 
 or pretend that we do so ! — for this appears to be the sig- 
 nification ol the last sentence we have quoted. Such are 
 the bewildering positions into which Orthodoxy drives 
 its more intellectual disciples ! 
 
 The following remarks are thrown out rather as sug- 
 gestions for thought than as digested reflections, but they 
 may contain a clue to some truth. 
 
 The inadmissibility of the idea of the bond fide efficacy 
 of prayer, would appear to be enforced rather by our con- 
 viction that all things in life are arranged by law, than 
 by a belief in the foreknowledge (which in a supreme 
 Being is equivalent to foreordainment) of the Deity. Tliis 
 latter doctrine, however metaphysically true and probable, 
 we cannot hold, so as to follow it out fairly to its conse- 
 quences. It negatives the free-will of man at least as 
 peremptorily as the efficacy of prayer : — yet in the free- 
 will of man we do believe, and must believe, however 
 strict logic may struggle against it. Why, then, should 
 we not also hold the efficacy of prayer ? — a doctrine, .so 
 far, certainly not more illogical ? Because if, as we can- 
 not doubt, the immutable relation of cause and effect 
 governs everything, in all time, through all space — then 
 prayer — except in tliose cases where it operates as a natural 
 cause — cannot affect the sequence of events. If bodily 
 pain and disease be the legitimate and traceable conse- 
 quence of imprudence and excess — if pleurisy or consumj)- 
 tion follow, by natural law, exposure to inclement weather 
 in weak frames — if neuralgia be the legal progeny of or- 
 ganic decay or shattered nerves — if storms follow laws as 
 
 certain as 
 about the 
 for the rel 
 iUed, man 
 a prayer f 
 Prayer 
 mental in 
 moral ele> 
 endure, 
 and scien( 
 which, ho 
 ignorance 
 us, as mai 
 if heard I 
 unknown 
 be the na 
 " li, howe 
 moved hy 
 agencies i 
 that for I 
 tainmg a: 
 mutable y 
 beings, si 
 possessin 
 prayer m 
 Still, the 
 prayers- 
 best, th( 
 toothach 
 way, th; 
 Onth 
 rest in \ 
 theory, 
 with a c 
 ous in tl 
 our own 
 can frai 
 The coi 
 those fi 
 fain to 
 
>; 
 
 importune, 
 3nt, and im- 
 s purposes,— 
 gust presence 
 io be a mock- 
 as His divi- 
 T, an intellect 
 )unishes with 
 ir conceptions 
 its of this in- 
 isavow them, 
 to be the sig- 
 ed. Such are 
 Ddoxy drives 
 
 •ather as sug- 
 ions, but thev 
 
 djide efficacy 
 er by our con- 
 by law, than 
 in a supreme 
 le Deity. This 
 ! and probable, 
 f to its conse- 
 an at least as 
 5t in the free- 
 ieve, however 
 then, should 
 a doctrine, so 
 if, as we cau- 
 se and effect 
 I space — then 
 s as a natural 
 bs. If bodily 
 rceable conse- 
 f or consuiii})- 
 inent weather 
 irogeny of or- 
 coUow laws as 
 
 CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 329 
 
 certain as the law of gravitation — ^how can prayer bring 
 about the cessation of pain, or the lulling ot the storm, 
 for the reliel '^f the suffering, or the rescue oi the imper- 
 illed, man ? is not the prayer for such cessation clearly 
 a prayer for a miracle ? 
 
 Prayer may be itself a Tiatv/ral cause : — ^it may, by its 
 mental intensity, suspend bodily pain ; — it may, by the 
 moral elevation it excites, confer strength to dare and to 
 endure. Prayer, to a tellow-creature of superior power 
 and science, may induce such to apply a lenitive or a cure 
 which, however, is simply a natural cause, placed by oui 
 ignorance beyond our reach. It, therefore, there be around 
 us, as many think, superior spiritual beings, our prayers, 
 if heard by them, may induce them to aid us by means 
 unknown to ourinlerior powers. But such aid would then 
 be the natural result of natural though obscure causes. 
 " li, however," it may be asked, " superior beings may be 
 moved by prayer to aid us by their knowledge of natural 
 agencies unknown to us, why not Gk)d ?" The answer is: 
 that for Prayer to be a bond fide effective agent in ob- 
 tainmg any boon, it must operate on an impressible and 
 mutable will: — ^therefore, if there be superior intermediate 
 beings, sharing human sympathies and imperfections, but 
 possessing more than human powers and knowledge — 
 prayer may secure their aid; but not that of a supreme God. 
 Still, the question remains much one of fact : — are our 
 prayers — are the most earnest prayers of the wisest, the 
 best, the most suffering — generally answered ? Does 
 toothache or sciatica last a shorter time with those who 
 vray, than with those who only bear ? 
 
 On the whole, however, we are content that man should 
 rest in the Christian practice, though not in the Christian 
 theory, of Prayer — just as we are obliged to rest satisfied 
 with a conception of Deity, which, though utterly errone- 
 ous in the sight of God, and consciously imperfect even in 
 our own, is yet the nearest approach to truth our minds 
 can frame, and practically adequate to our necessities. 
 The common doctrine we cannot but regard as one of 
 those fictions which imperfect and unchastened man is 
 fain to gather round him, to equalize his strength with 
 V 
 
830 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 i 
 
 the requirements of his lot, but which a stronger nature 
 might dispense with ; — one of those fictions which may be 
 considered as the imperfect expression — the approxima- 
 tive formula — of mighty and eternal verities. 
 
 IV. Remotely connected with the doctrine of an inter- 
 posing and influencible Providence, is the fallacy, or rather 
 the imperfection, which lies at the root of the ordinary 
 Christian view of Resignation as a duty and a virtue. 
 Submission, cheerful acquiescence in the dispensation of 
 Providence, is enjoined upon us, not because these dis- 
 pensations are just and wise — ^not because they are the 
 ordinances of His will who cannot err, — but because they 
 are ordained for our benefit, and because He has promised 
 that " all things shall work together for good to them that 
 love Him." We are assured that every trial and afflic- 
 tion is designed solely for our good, for our discipline, and 
 will issue in a blessing, though we see not how ; and that 
 therefore we must bow to it with unmurmuring resigna- 
 tion. These grounds, it is obvious, are purely self -regard- 
 ing ; and resignation, thus represented and thus motived, 
 is no virtue, but a simple calculation of self-interest. This 
 narrow view results from that incorrigible egotism of the 
 human heart which makes each man prone to regard him- 
 self as the special object of divine consideration, and the 
 centre round which the universe revolves. Yet it is un- 
 questionably the view most prominently and frequently 
 presented in the New Testament,* and by all modern 
 divines.*}* It may be, that the prospect of "an exceeding, 
 even an eternal weight of glory," may be needed to sup- 
 port our frail purposes under the crushing afflictions of 
 our mortal lot ; it may be, that, by the perfect arrange- 
 
 » See especially Matt. v. 11, 12 ; xvi. 25-27 ; Romans viii. 18, 28 ; 2 Cor. 
 iv. 17 ; Gal. vi. 9. There is one sublime exception, from the mouth of 
 Christ : — "The cup that my Father has given me, shall I not drink it?" 
 
 t The sublimest and purest genius among modem divines goeo so far as to 
 maintain that, apart from the hope of future recompense, " a deviation from 
 rectitude would become the part of wisdom, and should the path of virtue be 
 obstructed by disgrace, torment, or death, to persevere would be mailuess 
 and foUy." (Modern Infidelity, p. 20, by Kobert Hall.) It is sad to reflect 
 how mercenary a thing duty has become in the hands of theologians. Were 
 their belief in a future retribution once shaken, they woidd become, on their 
 own showing, the lowest of sensualists, the worst o^ sinners. 
 
 just, ai 
 able ;- 
 specia 
 his eh 
 and n( 
 that c( 
 of tht 
 adapt< 
 signs 
 that 
 
pger nature 
 
 rhich may be 
 
 approxinia- 
 
 of an inter- 
 ■cy, or rather 
 ihe ordinary 
 ,nd a virtue, 
 ipensation of 
 |se these dis- 
 they are the 
 because they 
 has promised 
 to them that 
 al and afflic- 
 liscipline, and 
 ow ; and that 
 ring resigna- 
 y self -regard- 
 thus motived, 
 interest. This 
 jgotism of the 
 10 regard him- 
 ation, and the 
 Yet it is un- 
 ad frequently 
 •y all modern 
 an exceeding, 
 leeded to sup- 
 afflictions of 
 rfect arrange- 
 
 dii. 18, 28; 2 Cor. 
 m the mouth oi 
 [ not drink it? ' 
 8 ROeo so far as to 
 ' a deviation from 
 ) path of virtue be 
 rould be madness 
 It is sad to reflect 
 leologians. Were 
 i become, on their 
 
 CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 831 
 
 ments of omnipotence, the suficrings of all may be made to 
 work out the ultimate and supreme good of each ; but 
 this is not, cannot be, the reason why we should submit 
 with resignation to whatever God ordains. His will must 
 be wise, righteous, and we believe beneficent, whether it 
 allot to us happiness or misery : it is His will ; we need 
 inquire no further. Job, who had no vision of a future 
 compensatory world, had in this attained a sublimer point 
 of religion than St. Paul : — "Though he slay me, yet vr'\\\ 
 I trust in him." " What ? shall we receive good at the 
 hand of God, and shall we hot receive evil ?" (Job xiii. 
 15 ; ii. 10). 
 
 To the orthodox Christian, who fully believes all he 
 professes, cheerful resignation to the divine will is com- 
 paratively a natural, an easy, a simple thing. To the re- 
 ligious philosopher, it is the highest exercise of intellect 
 and virtue. The man who has realized the faith that his 
 own lot, in all its minutest particulars, is not only directly 
 regulated by God, — but is so legulatedbyGod as unerringly 
 to work for his highest good, — with an express view to 
 his highest good, — with such a man, resignation, patience, 
 nay, cheerful acquiescence in all suffering and sorrow, ap- 
 pears to be in fact only the simple and practical expres- 
 sion of his belief. If, believing all this, he still murmura 
 and rebels at the trials and contrarieties of his lot, he is 
 guilty of the childishness of the infant which quarrels 
 with the medicine that is to lead it back to health and 
 ease. But the religious Philosopher, — who, sincerely hold- 
 ing that a Supreme God created and governs this world, 
 holds also that He governs it by laws which, though wise, 
 just, and beneficent, are yet steady, unwavering, inexor- 
 able ; — who believes that his agonies and sorrows are not 
 specially ordained for his chastening, his strengthening, 
 his elaboration and development, — but are incidental 
 and necessary results of the operation of laws the best 
 that could be devised for the happiness and purification 
 of the species,— -or perhaps not even that, but the best 
 adapted to work out the vast, awful, glorious, eternal de- 
 signs of the Great Spirit of the universe ; — who believes 
 that the ordained operations of Nature, which have 
 
ll! 
 
 ^i 
 
 lii 
 
 i' 
 
 832 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 / 
 
 brought misery to him, have, from the very unswerving 
 tranquillity of their career, showered blessing and sunshine 
 upon every other path, — that the unrelenting chariot of 
 Time, which has crushed or maimed him in its allotted 
 com'se, is pressing onward to the accomplishment of those 
 serene and mighty purposes, to have contributed to wliich 
 — even as a victim- -is an honour and a recompense :— 
 he who takes this view of Time, and Nature, and God 
 and yet bears his lot without murmur or distrust, because 
 it is a portion of a system, the best possible, because or- 
 dained by God, — has achieved a point of virtue, the high- 
 est, amid passive excellence, which humanity can reach ,- 
 and his reward and support must be found in the reflec- 
 tion that he is an unreluctant and self-sacrificing co-op- 
 erator with the Creator of the universe, and in the noble 
 consciousness of being worthy, and capable, of so sublime 
 a conception, yet so sad a destiny.* 
 
 In a comparison of the two resignations, there is no 
 measure of their respective, grandeurs. The orthodox- 
 sufferer fights the battle only on condition of surviving 
 to reap the fruits of victory : — the other fights on, know- 
 ing that he must fall early in the battle, but content that 
 his body should form a stepping-stone for the future con- 
 quests of humanity .-f 
 
 * *' * Pain is in itself an evil. It cannot be that God, who, as we know, is 
 perfectly good, can choose us to suffer pain, unless either we are ourselves to 
 receive from it an antidote to what is evil in ourselves, or else as such pain in 
 a necessary part in the scheme of the universe, which as a wfiole is good. In 
 either case I can take it thankfully. ... I should not be taken away 
 without it was ordered so. . . . Whatever creed we hold, if we believe 
 that Grod is, and that he cares for his creatures, one cannot doubt that. And 
 it would not have been ordered so without it was better either for ourselves, 
 or for some other persons, or some things. To feel sorrow is a kind of mur- 
 muring against God's will, which is worse than unbelief.' 
 
 " ' But think of the grief of those you leave.' 
 
 " • They should not allow themselves to feel it. It is a symptom of au 
 unformed mind.' " — Shadows of the Clouds, pp. 146, 148. 
 
 This is » somewhat harshly-expressed philosophy, but full of truth. 
 
 t "Is selfishness — 
 
 For time, a sin — spun out to eternity 
 Celestial prudence ? Shame ! oh, thrust me forth. 
 Forth, Lord, from self, until I toil an i die 
 No more for Heaven or bliss, but duty, Lord- 
 Duty to Thee— although my meed should be 
 The Hell which I deserve," 
 
 Suint'4 Traytdif, 
 
 ting 
 
 prize 
 produc 
 haps U 
 secrecy 
 
 * ««■ 
 
 thee cor 
 in the pi 
 bleth hi 
 
 all and I 
 tliat yel 
 shall .sil 
 ing tliel 
 for myf 
 the woti 
 
unswerving 
 land suiisiiini' 
 ig chariot of 
 its allotted 
 lent of tliose 
 itedto which 
 compense :-- 
 re, and God, 
 rust, because 
 'e, because or- 
 ue, the high- 
 can reach ,- 
 in the reHec- 
 dficing co-op- 
 i in the noble 
 of so sublime 
 
 IS, there is no 
 The orthodox 
 . of surviving 
 ;ht8 on, know- 
 t content that 
 he future con- 
 
 'ho, as we know, is 
 we are ourselves to 
 else as such pain in 
 . whole is good. In 
 not be taken away 
 hold, if we believe 
 )t doubt that. And 
 ither for ourselves, 
 7 is a kind of mur- 
 
 3 a symptom of an 
 'uU of truth. 
 
 IB — 
 
 forth, 
 I— 
 
 CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 333 
 
 K/y. 
 
 Somewhat similar remarks may be made with reference 
 to the virtues of action as to those of endurance. It is 
 a matter suggestive of much reflection, that, throughout 
 the New Testament, the loftiest and purest motive to ac- 
 tion — love of duty (is duty obedience to the will of Go<l 
 because it is His will — is rarely appealed to ; one or two 
 expressions of Christ, and the 14th chapter of John, form- 
 ing the only exceptions. The almost invariable language 
 — pitched to the level of ordinary humanity — is, "Do 
 your duty at all hazards, for your Father which seeth m 
 secret shall reward you openly." " Verily, I say unto you, 
 yc shall in no wise lose your reward."* 
 
 Yet this IS scarcely the right view of things. The hope 
 of success, not the hope of reward, should be our stimula- 
 ting and sustaining might Our object, not ourselves, 
 should be our inspiring thought The labours of philan- 
 thropy are comparatively easy, when the effect of them, 
 and their recoil upon ourselves, is immediate and appar- 
 ent But this it can rarely be, unless where the field of 
 our exertions is narrow, and ourselves the only or the chief 
 labourers. In the more frequent cases where we have to 
 join our efforts to thoseof thousands of others to contribute 
 to the carrying forward of a great cause, merely to till the 
 ground or sow the seed lor a very distant harvest, or to 
 prepare the way for the luturo advent of some great 
 amendment ; the amount which each man has contributed 
 CO the achievement oi ultimate success, the portion of the 
 prize which ]ustice should assign to each a?^ his '^special 
 production, can never be accurately ascertain'^d Per- 
 haps few o. those who have laboured, in the patience of 
 secrecy and silence, to bring abou' some political or social 
 
 * " When thou art bidden, take the lowest room that when be that bade 
 thee Cometh, he may say ' Friend go up higher , ' so shall thou have honour 
 m the presence. Oj .hem that sit at meat with thee, " " Every one that hnm- 
 bleth iiimself shall be exalted." "Seek ye first the kingdom of heaven, 
 and aU' these thuigs shall be added unfo you." " Lord, we have left 
 ill! and followed tliee, lohat shali we have therefore. Verily I say unto you, 
 lliat ye whicli liave followed me in the regenoc.ition. when the Son of man 
 Hhall sit in the throne of his glory, ye also <hall nil ujion tw(^1ve thrones, judg- 
 ing the twelve tribes of Israel." "No man that nath left father or mother 
 for my sake but shall receive a hundred fold more in this pi'eient life, and iu 
 the world to come life everlasting. 
 
334 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 ! 
 
 
 rf ■ 
 
 m- 
 
 change which they felt convinced would ultimately 
 prove of vast service to humanity, may live to see the 
 change effected, or the anticipated good flow from it, 
 Fewer still of them will be able to pronounce what appre- 
 ciable weight their several efforts contributed to the 
 achievement ot the change desired. And discouracjiti" 
 doubts will therefore often creep in upon minds in which 
 egotism is not wholly swallowed up by earnestness, as to 
 whether, in truth, their exertions had any influence what- 
 ever — whether in sad and sober fact they have not been 
 the mere fly upon the wheel. With many men these 
 doubts are fatal to active efurt. To counteract them we 
 must labour to elevate and purify our motives, as well as 
 sedulously cherish the conviction — assuredly a true one 
 — that in this world there is no such thing as effort 
 thrown away — that " in all labour there is profit " — that 
 all sincere exertion in a righteous and unselfish cfiuse is 
 necessarily followed, in spite of all appearance to the 
 contrary, by an appropriate and proportiate success — that 
 no bread cast upon the waters can be wholly lost — that 
 no good seed planted in the ground can fail to fructify in 
 due time and measure ; and that, however we may in mo- 
 ments of despondency be apt to doubt, not only whether 
 our cause will. triumph, but whether we shall have con- 
 tributed to its triumph, — there is One who has not only 
 seen every exertion we have made, but who can assign 
 the exact degree in which each soldier has assisted to 
 gain the great victory over social evil.* The Aug£ean 
 stables of the world — the accumulated uncleanness and 
 misery of centuries — require a mighty river to cleanse 
 them thoroughly away : every drop we contribute aids to 
 swell that river and augment its force, into a degree appre- 
 ciable by God, though not by man ; — and he whose zeal is 
 
 ♦ " Yet are therti some to whom a strength is given, 
 A Will, a self -constraining Energy, 
 A Faith which feeds upon no earthly hope, 
 Which never thinks of victory, but content 
 In its own consummation, combating 
 
 Because it ought to combat 
 
 Rejoicing fights, and still rejoicing falls." 
 
 Tlie Combat «/ Life. — R. M. Milnss. 
 
CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM, 
 
 335 
 
 ultimately 
 |e to see the 
 ow from it. 
 what appre- 
 |u_ted to the 
 liscourarfiiiT 
 ids in which 
 [estness, as to 
 "uence what- 
 .ve not lieen 
 men these 
 'act them we 
 'es, as well as 
 [y a true one 
 ng as effort 
 )rofit"— that 
 ilfish cause is 
 ranee to the 
 'success— that 
 |lly lost— that 
 to fructify in 
 e may in mo- 
 only whether 
 all have eon- 
 has not only 
 ho can assign 
 -s assisted to 
 rhe Augsean 
 leanness and 
 '■er to cleanse 
 ribute aids to 
 iegree appre- 
 whose zeal is 
 
 [■ Milnes. 
 
 deep and earnest, will not be over-anxious that his indi- 
 vidual drop should be distinguishablo amid the mighty 
 mass of cleansing and fertilizing waters, far less that, for 
 the sake of distinction, it should flow in ineffective single- 
 ness away. He will not be careful that his name should 
 be inscribed upon the mite which he casts into the trea- 
 sury of God. It should suflice each of us to know that, 
 if we have laboured, with purity of purpose, in any good 
 cause, we must have contributed to its success ; that the 
 degree in which we ha^ ; contributed is a matter of infi- 
 nitely small concern ; and still more, that the conscious- 
 ness of having so contributed* however obscurely and 
 unnoticed, should be our suflScient, if our sole, reward. 
 Let us cherish this faith ; it is a duty. He who sows and 
 reaps is a good labourer, and worthy of his hire. But he 
 who sows what shall be reaped by others who know not 
 and reck not of the sower, is a labourer of a nobler order, 
 and worthy of a loftier guerdon. 
 
 V. The common Christian conception of the pardon of 
 sin upon repentance and conversion seems to us to embody 
 a very transparent and pernicious fallacy. " Who can 
 forgive sins but God only ? " asked the Pharisees. There 
 is great confusion and contradiction in our ideas on this 
 subject. God is the only being who can not forgive sins. 
 ' Forgiveness of sins " means one of two things : — it either 
 means saving a man from the consequences of his sins, 
 that is, interposing between cause and effect, in which 
 3ase it is working a miracle (which God no doubt can do, 
 but which we have no right to expect that He will do, or 
 ask that He shall do) ; or it means an engagement to for- 
 bear retaliation, a suppression of the natural anger felt 
 against the offender by the offended party, a foregoing of 
 vengeance on the part of the injured — in which meaning 
 't is obviously quite inapplicable to a Being exempt and 
 iloof from human passions. When we entreat a fellow- 
 sreature to forgive the offences we have committed against 
 i lira, we mean to entreat that he will not, by any act of 
 his, punish us for them, that he will not revenge nor re- 
 ])ay them, that he will retain no rancour in his breast 
 against us on account of them ; and such a prayer ad- 
 
|4 " 
 
 i 
 
 ti' 
 
 Hi 
 
 ' i 
 
 336 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 di*esaed to a being of like passions to ourselves is rational 
 and intelligible, because we know that it is natural for 
 him to feel anger at our injuries, and that, unless moved 
 to the contraiy, he will probably retaliate. But when we 
 pray to our Heavenly Father to " forgive us our trespas- 
 fcicS, as we forgive those who trespass against us," we over- 
 look the want of parallelism of the two cases, and show 
 that our notions on the subject are altogetl: r misty and 
 confused ; for God cannot be injured by our sins, and He 
 is inaccessible to the passions of anger and revenge. Yet 
 the plain expression of the Book of Common Prayer— 
 " Neither take Thou ve'ffgeance of our sins " — embodies 
 the real signification attadied to the prayer for forgive- 
 ness, by all who attach any definite signification to theii 
 prayers. Now, this expression is an Old Testament or a 
 Pagan expression, and can only be consistently and in- 
 telligibly used by those who entertain the same low ideas 
 of God as the ancient Greeks and Hebrews entertained— 
 that is, who think of Him as an irritable, jet'ous, and 
 avenging Potentate. 
 
 If, from this inconsistency, we take refuge in the other 
 meaning of the Prayer for forgiveness, and assume tha!. it 
 is a prayer to God that he will exempt us from the nat- 
 ural and appointed consequences of our misdeeds, it is 
 important that we should clearly define to our minds what 
 it is that we are asking for. In our view ol the matter, 
 punishment for sins by the divine law is a wholly differ- 
 ent thing and process from punishment for violations oi 
 human laws. It is not an infliction for crime imposed by 
 an external authority and artificially executed by external 
 force, but a natural and inevitable result of the offence — 
 a child generated by a parent — a sequence following an 
 antecedent — a consequence arising out of a cause. 
 
 " The Lord is juat : He made the chain 
 Which binds together guilt and pain." 
 
 The punishment of sin consists in the consequences of 
 sin. These form a penalty most adequately heavy. A 
 sin without its punishment is as impossible, as complete 
 f^ contradiction in terms, as a cause without an effect. 
 
CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 3S7 
 
 ves is rational 
 is natural for 
 unless moved 
 But when we 
 IS our trespas- 
 ' us," we over- 
 uses, and show 
 1: r misty and 
 r sins, and He 
 revenge. Yet 
 oaon Prayer— 
 8 " — einbodies 
 er for forgive- 
 sation to their 
 'estament or a 
 tently and in- 
 ime low ideas 
 entertained— 
 > jet'ous, and 
 
 3 in the other 
 tssume tha^., it 
 from the nat- 
 isdeeds, it is 
 r minds what 
 >i the matter, 
 wholly difier- 
 violations oi 
 e imposed b}' 
 i by external 
 'he offence — 
 following an 
 ause. 
 
 sequences of 
 '' heavy. A 
 as complete 
 -n effect. 
 
 To pray that God will forgive our sins, therefore, 
 appears, in all logical accuracy, to involve either a most 
 unworthy conception of His character, or an entreaty of 
 incredible audacity — viz., that He will work daily mir- 
 acles in our behalf. It is either beseeching Him to 
 renounce feelings and intentions which it is impossible 
 that a Nature like His should entertain : or it is asking 
 Him to violate the eternal and harmonious order of the 
 universe, for the comfort of one out of the infinite myri- 
 ads of its inhabitants. 
 
 It may, perhaps, be objected, that Punishment of sins 
 may be viewed, not as a vengeance taken for in,jiiry or 
 insult committed, nor yet as the simple and necessary 
 sequence of a cause — but as chastiseTnent, inflicted to 
 work repentence and amendment. But, even when con- 
 sidered in this light, prayer for forgiveness remains still 
 a marvellous inconsistency. It then becomes the entreaty 
 of the sick man to his Physician not to heal him. " For- 
 give us our sins," then means, " Let us continue in our 
 iniquity " It is clear, however, that the first meaning we 
 have mentioned, as attached to the prayer for forgiveness 
 of sins, is both the original and the prevailing one ; and 
 that it arises from an entire misconception of the character 
 of the Deity, and of the feelings with which He may be 
 supposed to regard sin — a misconception inherited from 
 our Pagan and Jewish predecessors ; it is a prayer to 
 deprecate the just resentment of a Potentate whom we 
 have offended — a petition which would be more suitably 
 addressed to an earthly foe or master than to a Heavenly 
 Father. The misconception is natural to a rude state of 
 civilization and of theology. It is the same notion from 
 which arose sacrifices (i.e., otierings to appease wrath), 
 and which caused their universality in early ages and 
 among barbarous nations. It is a relic of anthropomor- 
 phism ; — a belief that God, like man, is enraged by 
 neglect or disobedience, and can be pacified by submis- 
 sion and entreaty ; a beliet consistent and intelligible 
 among the Greeks, inconsistent and irrational among 
 Christians, appropriate at applied to Jupiter, unmeaning 
 or blasphemous as applied to Jehovah. 
 
338 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 In 
 
 I 
 
 
 Xi 
 
 I 
 
 We have, in fact, come to regard sin, not as an injury 
 done to our own nature, an offence against our own souls, 
 a disfiguring of the image of the Beautiful and Good, but 
 as a personal affront offered to a powerful and avenging 
 Being, which, unless apologized for, wiK be chastised as 
 such. We have come to regard it as an injury to another 
 party, for which atonement and reparation can be made 
 and satisfaction can be given ; not as a deed which can- 
 not be undone, eternal in its consequences ; an act which, 
 once committed, is numbered with the irrevocable Past. In 
 a word. Sin contains its own retributive penalty as surely, 
 and as naturally, as the acorn contains the oak. Its con- 
 sequence is its punishment, it needs no other, and can 
 have no heavier ; and its consequence is involved in its 
 commission, and cannot be separated from it. Punish- 
 ment (let us fix this in our minds) is not the execution oj 
 a sentence, but the occurrenA^e of am efect It is ordained 
 to follow guilt by God, not as a Judge, but as the Crea- 
 tor and Legislator ol the Universe. This conviction, once 
 settled in our understandings, will wonderfully clear up 
 our views on the subject of pardon and redemption. Ee- 
 demption becomes then, Oi. necessity, not a saving but a 
 regenerating process. We can be saved from the punish- 
 ment ot sin only by being saved from its commission. 
 Neither can there be any such thing as vicarious atone- 
 ment or punishment (which, again, is a relic of heathen 
 conceptions of an angered Deity, to be propitiated by 
 offerings and sacrifices). Punishment, beiiig not the 
 penalty, but the result of sin, being not an arbitrary and 
 artificial annexation, but an ordinary and logical conse- 
 quence, cannot be borne by other than the sinner. 
 
 It is curious that the votaries of the doctrine of the 
 Atonement admit the correctness of much of the above 
 reasoning, saying (see " Guesses at Truth," by J. and A. 
 Hare), that Christ had to suffer for the sins of men, be- 
 cause God could not forgive sin ; He must punish it in 
 some w^ay. Thus holding the strangely inconsistent doc- 
 tiine that God is mo just that Ho could not let sin go un- 
 punished, yet so unjust that He could punish it in the 
 person of the iunocnt. It is for orthodox dialectics to 
 
 oxi^lain h 
 inu' the 
 innocent 
 If the 
 wholeson 
 can be no 
 OT remitt 
 that Go( 
 eonseque 
 shall he 
 retlectioi 
 has deba 
 from, bu 
 deemed 
 bitterer 
 love and 
 the endi 
 loftiest 1 
 what it 
 (as one 
 ceases t( 
 tween tl 
 knew tl 
 turns t( 
 genccs ( 
 Agaii 
 another 
 aaonizii 
 may re 
 after m 
 you lee 
 but wh 
 and an 
 which 
 to wit 
 
 * Ruf« 
 i^iven th 
 
 utvitu'ly, 
 ;iu(l bell 
 Hido, aa 
 
CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 339 
 
 as an injury 
 our own souls, 
 and Good, but 
 and avenging 
 e chastised as 
 iry to another 
 1 can be made 
 ed which can- 
 an act which, 
 3ablePast. In 
 alty as surely, 
 oak. Its eon- 
 ther, and can 
 lyolved in its 
 it. Funish- 
 e execution oj 
 It is ordained 
 as the Crea- 
 pviction, once 
 fully clear up 
 Jmption. Re- 
 saving but a 
 n the punish- 
 commission. 
 arious atone- 
 c of heathen 
 ^-opitiated by 
 iiig not the 
 trbitrary and 
 _ogical conse- 
 inner. 
 
 itrine of the 
 )f the above 
 by J. and A. 
 of men, be- 
 punish it in 
 isistent doc- 
 it sin go un- 
 lah it in the 
 dialectics to 
 
 explain how Divine Justice can be impugned by pardon- 
 ing the guilty, and yet vindicated by punishing the 
 innocent ! 
 
 If the foregoing reflections are sound, the awful, yet 
 wliolesorae, conviction presses upon our minds, that there 
 can be no forgiveness of sins , that is, no interference with, 
 or remittance of, or protection from their natural effects; 
 that God will not interpose between the cause and its 
 consequence ;* — that " whatsoever a man soweth, that 
 shall he also reap." An awful consideratioT> this ; yet all 
 reflection, all experience, contirm its truth. . u sin which 
 has debased our soul may be repented of, may be turned 
 from, but the injury is done : the debasement may be re- 
 deemed by after efforts, the stain may be obliterated by 
 bitterer struggles and severer sufferings, by laith in God's 
 love and communion with His Spirit ; but the efforts and 
 the endurance which might have raised the soul to the 
 loftiest heights, are now exhausted in merely regaining 
 what it has lost. " There must always be a wide difference 
 (as one of our divines has said) between him who only 
 ceases to do evil, and him who has always done well ; be- 
 tween the man who began to serve his God as soon as he 
 knew that he had a God to serve, and the man who only 
 turns to Heaven after he has exhausted all the indul- 
 "•cnccs of Earth." 
 
 Again, in the case of sin of which you have induced 
 another to partake. You may repent— -^/ou may, after 
 agonizing struggles, regain the path of virtue — your spirit 
 may re-achieve its purity through much anguish, and 
 after many stripes ; but the weaker tellow-creature whom 
 you led astray, whom you made a sharer in your guilt, 
 but whom you cannot make a sharer in your repentance 
 and amendment, whose downward course (the first step of 
 which you taught) you cannot check, but are compelled 
 to witness, what "forgiveness" of sins can avail you 
 
 ** llof er to Matt. ix. 2-6. ' ' Whether is it eaaier to say, Thy sins be for- 
 •^'iven theo; or to aay, Arise, take u|) thy bed and walk?" Jesus seems 
 here clearly tu intiin§ito that the vi(i\v taken above (of forgiveness of sins, 
 uiiiiKly, involving an interference with the natural order of sequence, 
 ami being therefore a miracle) is correct. He places the two bide by 
 siilo, as equally difficult. 
 
34.0 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM 
 
 there ? Tliere is your perpe^-ual, your inevitable punish- 
 ment, which no repentance can alleviate and no mercy 
 can remit. 
 
 This doctrine, that sins can be forgiven, and the conse- 
 quences of them averted, has in all ages been a fertile 
 source of mischief Perhaps lew of our intellectual errors 
 have fructil:cd in a vaster harvest of evil, or operated 
 more powerfully to impede the moral progress of our race 
 While it has been a source of unspeakable comfort to the 
 penitent, a healing balm to the wounded spirit, while it 
 ha^s saved many from hopelessness, and enabled those to 
 recover themselves who would otherwise have flung away 
 the remnant oi their virtue in despair; yet, on the other 
 hand . it has encouraged millions, j deling what a safety 
 was in store for them m ultvmate resort, to persevere in 
 their career of folly or crime, to ignore or despise those 
 natural laws which God has laid down to be the guides 
 and beacons of our conduct, to continue to do " that which 
 was pleasant in their own eyes," convinced that nothing 
 was irrevocable, that however dearly thej'^ might have to 
 pay for re-integration, repentance could at any time re- 
 deem their punishment, and undo the past. The doctrine 
 has been noxious in exact ratio to the baldness and. naked- 
 ness with which it has been propounded. In the Catho- 
 lic Church of the middle ages we see it perhaps in its 
 grossest form, when pardon was sold, bargained for, rated 
 at a hxed price ; when one hoary sinner, on the bed of 
 sickness, refused to repent, because he was not certain 
 that death was close at hand, and he did not wish for tlie 
 trouble of going through the process twice, and was loth, 
 by a premature amendment, to lose a chance of any of 
 the indulgences ol sin Men would have been far mo'e 
 scrupulous watchers ^ver conduct far more careful ot 
 their deeds, had they believed that those deeds would in- 
 evitably bear their natural consequences, exempt from 
 after intervention, than when they held that penitence 
 and pardon could at any time unlink the chain ot 
 Hccjuoncos ; just as now they are little scrujjulous of in- 
 dulging in hurtful excess, when medical aid is at hand to 
 remedy the mischief they have voluntarily encountered. 
 
 But wen 
 hope 01 
 they con 
 earnestly 
 parative 
 their coi 
 health, 
 
 Let ai 
 ward on 
 produce" 
 bedded ^ 
 ably— tl 
 mit a de 
 done ; tl 
 to the e\ 
 inscribe! 
 let him 
 the mor 
 convicti 
 Perht 
 which h 
 and you 
 stitutioi 
 through 
 them ; } 
 not hel; 
 but it 
 Nature 
 violate! 
 for tim 
 Agai 
 You gi 
 any s 
 know 
 you." 
 ness o 
 compl 
 ing of 
 powei 
 could 
 
M 
 
 CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 341 
 
 Jvitable punish- 
 s and no mercy 
 
 and the conse- 
 s been a fertile 
 bpllectual errors 
 ^1, or operated 
 'ess of our race 
 
 comfort to the 
 
 spirit, while it 
 labled those to 
 ave flung away 
 i^ on the other 
 ' what a safety 
 to pei"severe in 
 r despise those 
 be the guides 
 o " that which 
 i that nothing 
 might have to 
 t any time re- 
 
 The doctrine 
 588 andnaked- 
 In the Catho- 
 3erhaps in its 
 ined for, rated 
 3n the bed of 
 as not certain 
 t wish for tlie 
 and was loth, 
 nee of any of 
 een far mo'e 
 re careful of 
 3ds would m- 
 Bxempt from 
 lat penitence 
 the chain of 
 »uIouH of in- 
 is at hand to 
 encountered. 
 
 But were they on a desert island, apart from the remotest 
 hope 01 a doctor or a drug, how far more closely would 
 they consider the consequences ot each indulgence, how 
 earnestly would they study the laws of Nature, how com- 
 paratively unswerving would be their endeavours to steer 
 their course by those laws, obedience to which brings 
 health, peace, and safety in its train ! 
 
 Let any one look back upon his past career — look in- 
 ward on his daily life — and then say what efiect would be 
 produced upon him, were the conviction once ^xedly im- 
 bedded in his soul, that everything done is done irrevoc- 
 ably — that even the Omnipotence of God cannot uncom- 
 mit a deed — cannot make that undone which has been 
 done ; that every act rmust bear its allotted fruit according 
 to the everlasting laws — must remain for ever ineffaceably 
 inscribed on the tablets of universal Nature And then 
 let him consider what would have been the insult upon 
 the moral condition of our race, had all men ever held this 
 conviction. 
 
 Perhaps you have led a youth of dissipation and excess 
 which has undermined and enfeebled your constitution, 
 and you have transmitted this injured and enfeebled con- 
 stitution to your children. They suffer, in consequence, 
 through life , suffering, perhaps even sin, is entailed upon 
 them ; your repentance, were it sackcloth and ashes, can- 
 not help you or them. Your punishment is tremendous, 
 but it is legitimate, and inevitable You have broken 
 Nature's laws, or you have ignored them ; and no one 
 violates or neglects them with impunity. What a lesson 
 for timely reflection and obedience is here ! 
 
 Again, — You have broken the seventh commandment. 
 You grieve, you repent, you lesolutely determine against 
 any such weakness in future. It is well. But " you 
 know that God is merciful, you feel that he will forgive 
 you." You are comforted. But no — there is no forgive- 
 ness of sins : the injured party may forgive you, your ac- 
 complice or victim may forgive you, according to the mean- 
 ing of human language ; but the deed is done, and all the 
 powers of Nature, were they to conspire in your behalf, 
 could not make it undone : the consequences to the body, 
 
342 
 
 THE CREED OF CHBISTENDOM. 
 
 the consequences to the soul, though no man may perceive 
 them, are there, are written in the annals of the Past, and 
 must reverberate through all time.* 
 
 But all this, let it be understood, in no degree militates 
 against the value or the necessity of repentance. Repent- 
 ance, contrition of soul, bears, like every other act, ife 
 own fruit, the fruit of purifying the heart, of amending 
 the future, not, as man has hitherto conceived, of effacing 
 the Past. The commission of sin is an irrevocable act, 
 but it does not incapacitate the soul for virtue. Its con- 
 sequences cannot be expunged, but its course need not be 
 pursued. Sin, though it is ineffaceable, calls for no des- 
 pair, but for efforts more energetic than before. Repent- 
 ance is still as valid as ever ; but it is valid to secure the 
 future, not to obliterate the past. 
 
 The moral to be drawn from these reflections is this :— 
 God has placed the lot of man — not, perhaps, altogether 
 of the Individual, but certainly of the Race — in his own 
 hands, by surrounding him vfiih fixed laws, on knowledge 
 of which, and on conformity to which, his well-being de- 
 pends. The study of these, and the principle of obedience 
 to them, form, therefore, the great aim of education, both 
 of men and nations. They must be taught — 
 
 1. The "physical laws, on which God has made health io 
 depend. 
 
 2. The moral laws, on which He has made happiness 
 to depend.f 
 
 3. The intellectual laws, on which He has made knoiv- 
 ledge to depend. 
 
 4. The social and political laws, on which He has made 
 natioTial prosperity and advancement to depend. 
 
 5. T'ue economic laws, on which He has made wealth to 
 depend. 
 
 *[I have left this whole argument just as it was written five-and-twenty 
 years ago; because, though I recognise its painful harshness, I am unable to 
 detect any flaw in the substance of its logic. ] 
 
 + " There is nothing which more clearly marks the Divine Government 
 than the difficulty of distinguishing between the natural and the superna- 
 tural; between the penalty attached to the breach of the written *law, and 
 the consequence, which we call natural, though it is in fact the penalty at- 
 tached to the breach of the unwritten law In the divine law, 
 
 the penalty always grows out of the offence." — State of Man before tlic 
 Promulgation of Christianity, p. 108. 
 
 A. true 
 ceptional 
 mankind 
 — save CJ 
 VI. Tf 
 ted by oi 
 in its fori 
 to Christ 
 the accre 
 mine. 1 
 pels ; an< 
 has reac 
 sound, n 
 assumes 
 doctrine 
 judgraei 
 convicti 
 a work 
 were pl< 
 of this 
 With h 
 hearers 
 their re 
 teachin: 
 tions in 
 for you 
 do corr 
 " What 
 world I 
 in exel 
 first si 
 are on 
 viz., tl 
 great < 
 subdu 
 feeling 
 Th« 
 and ] 
 cheap 
 engag 
 
 i 
 
CHBISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 343 
 
 "lay perceive 
 f the Past, and 
 
 egree militates 
 nee. Repent- 
 other act, its 
 . of amending 
 ^ed, of effacing 
 ■revocable act 
 •'tue. Its con- 
 se need not be 
 lis for no des- 
 'ore. Repent- 
 l to secure the 
 
 ions is this :— 
 ■ps, ^ altogether 
 i — in his own 
 on knowledge 
 vell-being de- 
 le of obedience 
 iueation, both 
 
 nade health to 
 
 de happiness 
 
 3 made knoiu- 
 
 He has made 
 
 )end. 
 
 ade wealth to 
 
 five-and-twenty 
 , I am unable to 
 
 ne Government 
 •nd the superna- 
 ritten-law, and 
 the penalty n,t- 
 the divine law, 
 klan before tlic 
 
 A tme comprehension of all these, and of their unex- 
 ceptional and unalterable nature, would ultimately rescue 
 mankind from all their vice and nearly all their suffering 
 — save casualties and sorrows. 
 
 VI. The ascetic and depreciating view of life, inculca- 
 ted by ordinary Christianity, appear to us erroneous, both 
 in its form and in its foundation. How much of it belongs 
 to Christ, how much to the apostles, and how much was 
 the accretion of a subsequent age, is not easy to deter- 
 mine. It appears in the Epistles as well as in the Gos- 
 pels ; and in the hands of preachers of the present day it 
 has reached a point at which it is unquestionably un- 
 sound, noxious, and insincere. In Christ this asceticism 
 assumes a mild and moderate form ; being simply the 
 doctrine of the Essenes, modified by his own exquisite 
 judgment and general sympathies, and dignified by the 
 conviction that to men, who had so arduous and perilous 
 a work before them as that to which he and his disciples 
 were pledged, the interests, the afiections, the enjoyments 
 of this life must needs be of very secondary moment, 
 With him it is confined almost entirely to urging his 
 hearers not to sacrifice their duties (and by consequence 
 their rewards) to earthly and passing pleasures, and to 
 teaching them to seek consolation under present priva- 
 tions in the prospect of future blessedness. " Lay not up 
 for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust 
 do corrupt, and where thieves break through and steal." 
 " What snail it profit a man if he should gain the whole 
 world and lose his own soul ? or what shall a man give 
 in exchange for his soul ? " Luke xiv. 26, 33, appears at 
 first sight to go further than this ; but even these verses 
 are only a hyperbolical expression of a universal truth 
 viz., that a man cannot cast himself with effect into any 
 great or dangerouH achievement, unless he is prepared to 
 subdue and set at nought all interfering interests and 
 feelings. , 
 
 That the apostles, called to fight against principalities 
 and powers, obliged to hold life and all its affections 
 cheap, because the course of action in which they were 
 engaged perilled these at every step, finding the great ob- 
 
344 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 stacle to their success in the tenacity with which their 
 hearers clung to those old associations, occupations, and 
 enjoyments, which embracing the new faith would oblige 
 them to forswear, — impressed, moreover, with the solemn 
 and tremendous con\ iction that the world was falling to 
 pieces, and that their own days and their own vision 
 would witness the final catastrophe of nature ; — that the 
 apostles should regard with unloving eyes that world of 
 which their hold was so precarious and their tenure so 
 short, and should look with amazement and indignation 
 upon men who would cling to a doomed and perishing 
 habitation, instead of gladly sacrificing everything to ob- 
 tain a footing in the new Kingdom was natural, and, 
 granting the premises, rational and wise. 
 
 But for Divines in this day, when the profession of 
 Christianity is attended with no peril, when its practice 
 even demands no sacrifice, save that preference of duty 
 to enjoyment which is the first law of cultivated hu- 
 manity, to repeat the language, profess the : ^elings, incul* 
 cate the notions of men who lived in daily dread of such 
 awful martyrdom, and under the excitement of such a 
 mighty misconception ; to cry down this world, with its 
 profound beauty, its thrilling interests, its glorious works, 
 its noble and holy aflections ; to exhort their hearers, 
 Sunday after Sunday, to detach their hearts from the 
 earthly life as inane, fleeting, and unworthy, and fix it 
 upon Heaven, as the only sphere deserving the love of 
 the loving or the meditation of the wise, — appears to us, 
 we confess, frightful insincerity, the enactment of a wicked 
 and gigantic lie. The exhortation is delivered and 
 listened to as a thing of course ; and an hour afterwards 
 the preacher, who has thus usurped and profaned the 
 language of an apostle who wrote with the faggot and 
 the cross full in view, is sitting comfortably with his 
 hearer over his claret ; they are fondling their children, 
 discussing public affairs or private plans in life with pas- 
 sionate interest, and yet can look at each other without 
 a smile or fi blush for the sad and meaningless farce they 
 have boon acting ! 
 
 Ygt tha closing of our connection with this earthly 
 
 scene is a 
 to the a J 
 world wa 
 tion on tl 
 and insin 
 ervoncouf 
 of <uir re 
 oidinaril 
 bation ai 
 (if rei-'ar* 
 attempt 
 the sutte 
 them ; t( 
 weaknesi 
 learned i 
 on the c 
 that thi 
 sphere, 1: 
 we are r 
 of actioi^ 
 firmly b( 
 in it, to < 
 to make 
 which 1: 
 Spartan 
 a house, 
 this hou 
 in its w 
 let him 
 to that 
 tions, h 
 sured tJ 
 hanker; 
 which 1 
 his dut 
 lies in 
 elevate 
 those V 
 tormen 
 press i 
 
CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 345 
 
 1 which their 
 iupations, and 
 I would oblige 
 th the solemn 
 was falling to 
 ir own vision 
 re ; — that the 
 that world of 
 eir tenure so 
 indignation 
 .nd perishing 
 ything to ob- 
 natural, and, 
 
 profession of 
 fi its practice 
 'ence of duty 
 ultivated hu- 
 
 elings, incul. 
 Iread of such 
 iut of such a 
 orld, with its 
 orious works, 
 iheir hearers, 
 rts from the 
 y, and fix it 
 ; the love of 
 ppears to us, 
 it of a wicked 
 livered and 
 r afterwards 
 )rofaned the 
 
 faggot and 
 bly with his 
 eir children, 
 fe with pus- 
 her without 
 is farce they 
 
 his earthly 
 
 scene is as certain and probably as near to us as it was 
 to the apostles. Death is as close to us as the end of the; 
 world was to them. It is not, therefore, their misconcep- 
 tion on this point which makes their view of life unsound 
 and insincere when adopted by us. We believe it to be 
 eiioncous in itself, and to proceed upon false conceptions 
 of our relation to time and to futurity. The doctrine, as 
 oi'dinarily set forth, that this world is merely one of pro- 
 bation and preparation, we entirely disbelieve. The idea 
 (tf rei,farding it as merely a portal to another is simply an 
 attempt to solve the enigma of life ; a theory to explain 
 the sufferings of man, and to facilitate the endurance of 
 them ; to supply the support and consolation which man's 
 weakness cannot dispense with, but which he has not yet 
 learned to draw from deeper and serener fountains. We, 
 on the contrary, think that everything tends to prove 
 that this life is, not perhaps, not probably, our only 
 sphere, but still an integral one, and the one with which 
 we are meant to be concerned. The present is our scene 
 of action — the future is for speculation, and for trust. We 
 firmly believe that man was sent upon the earth to live 
 in it, to enjoy it, to study it, to love it, to embellish it — 
 to make the most of it, in short. It is his country, on 
 which he should lavish his aflfections and his efforts. 
 Spavtam nactus es — hanc exoma. It should be to him 
 a liouse, not a tent — a home, not only a school. If, when 
 this house and this home are taken from him, Providence 
 in its wisdom and its bounty provides him with another, 
 let him be deoply grateful for the gift — let him transfer 
 to that future, when it has become his present, his exer- 
 tions, his researches, and his love. But let him res* as-' 
 sured that he is sent into this world, not to be constt atly 
 hankering after, dreaming of, preparing for, another 
 which may, or may not, be in store for him — but to do 
 his duty and fulfil his destiny on earth — to do all that 
 lies in his power to improve it, to render it a scene of 
 elevated happiness to himself, to those around him, to 
 those who are to come after him. So will he avoid those 
 tormenting contests with Nature — those struggles to sup- 
 pre.ss affections which God has implanted, sanctioned, 
 w 
 
340 
 
 TiiE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 m 
 
 ill 
 
 II 
 
 and endowed with irresistible supremacy — those agonies 
 of remorse when he finds that God is too strong for him 
 — which now embitter the lives of so many earnest and 
 sincere souls : so will he best prepare for that future 
 which we hope for — if it come , — so will he best have 
 occupied the present, u the present oe his all. To de- 
 mand that we shall love Heaven more than Earth — that 
 the Unseen shall hold a higher place in our afloctions 
 than the Seen and the Familiar — is to ask that whicli 
 cannot be obtained without subduing Nature, and 
 inducing a morbid condition of the Soul. The very law 
 of our being is love of life and all its interests and adorn- 
 ments. 
 
 This love of the world in which our lot is cast, this 
 engrossment with the interests and aftections of Earth, 
 has in it nothing necessarily low or sensual It is wholly 
 apart ixom love o^ wealth, of lame, oi ease, of splendour, 
 of powei-, of what is commonly called worldliness. It is 
 the love of Earth as the garden on which the Creator 
 has lavished such miracles ot beauty, as the habitation 
 of humanity, the arena ol its conflicts, the scene ot its 
 illimitable progress, v-he dwelling-place oi the wise, the 
 good, the active, the loving, and the dear. 
 
 " It is not the purpose and end oi this discourse, to 
 raise such seraphical notions of the vanity and pleasures 
 of this world, as it they were not worthy to be considered, 
 or could have no relish with virtuous and pious men. 
 They take very unprofitable pains who endeavour to per- 
 suade men that they are obliged wholly to despise this 
 world and all that is in it, even whilst they themselves 
 live here : God hath not taken all that pains in forming, 
 and framing, and tarnishing, and adorning the world, 
 that they who were made by Him to live in it should de- 
 spise it ; it will be enough it they do not love it so im- 
 moderately as to prefer it before Him who made it : nor 
 shall we endeavour to extend the notions of the Stoic 
 Philosophers, and stretch them further by the help of 
 Christian precepts, to the extinguishing all those afiec- 
 tions and passions which are and will always be insepar- 
 able from human nature. As long as the world lasts, and 
 
CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 o47 
 
 -those aphonies 
 strong for him 
 ly earnest and 
 ^r that future 
 
 he best have 
 IS all. To de- 
 n Earth — that 
 
 our afl actions 
 }k that which 
 
 Nature, and 
 
 The very law 
 Bsts and adorn- 
 
 is cast, this 
 ions of Earth, 
 It is wholly 
 , of splendour, 
 Idliness. It is 
 the Creator 
 bhe habitation 
 he scene ol its 
 the wise, the 
 
 is discourse, to 
 and pleasures 
 be considered, 
 nd pious men, 
 leavour to per- 
 to despise this 
 ey themselves 
 ins in forming, 
 ng the world, 
 n it should de- 
 love it so im- 
 > made it : nor 
 IS of the Stoic 
 oy the help of 
 A\ those atiuc- 
 lys be insepar- 
 mrld lasts, and 
 
 honour, and virtue, and industry have reputation in the 
 world, there will be ambition and emulation and app^itite 
 in the best and most accomplished men in it ; if there 
 should not be, more barbarity and vice and wickedness 
 would cover every nation of the world, than it yet suffers 
 under."* 
 
 It is difficult to decide whether exhortations to ascetic 
 undervaluing of this life, as an insignificant and unworthy 
 portion of existence, have done most injury to our virtue, 
 by demanding feelings which are unnatural, and which, 
 therefore, if attained, must be morbid, if merely 'professed, 
 must be insincere — or to the cause of social progress, by 
 teaching us to look rather to a future life for tl^ com- 
 pensation of social evils, than to this life for their cure. 
 It is only those who feel a deep interest in and affection 
 for this world, who will work resolutely for its ameliora- 
 tion ; — those whose affections are transferred to Heaven 
 acquiesce easily in the miseries of earth ; give them up 
 as hopeless, as befitting, as ordained ; and console them- 
 selves with the idea of the amends which are one day to 
 be theirs.f If we had looked upon this earth as our only 
 scene, it is doubtful if we should so long have tolerated 
 its more monstrous anomalies and more curable evils. 
 But it is easier to look to a future paradise than to strive 
 to make one upon earth ; and the depreciating and hol- 
 low language of preachers has played into the hands both 
 of the insincerity and the indolence of man. 
 
 I question whether the whole system of professing 
 Christians is not based in a mistake, whether it be not 
 an error to strive after spirituality — after a frame of 
 mind, that is, which is attainable only by incessant con- 
 flict with the instincts of our unsophisticated nature, by 
 macerating the body into weakness and disorder ; by dis- 
 paraging what we see to be beautiful, know to be won- 
 
 * Lord Clarendon's Essay on Happiness. 
 
 + *'* I sorrowfully admit, that when- I count up among my personal ac- 
 quaintance's all whom I think to be the most decidedly given to spiritual 
 contemplati^'U, and to make religion rule in their hearts, at lea.st three out 
 of four appear to have been apathetic towards all improvement of this 
 world's eyatemiij and a majority have been virtual conservatives of evil, and 
 hostile to poli ical and social reform as diverting mens energies from 
 Eteral^." - Note by a Friend. 
 
348 
 
 THE CR£ED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 
 {|i 
 
 ■ill 
 
 i 
 
 derful, feci to be unspeakably dear and fascinating ; by (in 
 a word) putting down the nature which God lias given us, 
 to struggle after one which He has not bestowed. Man is 
 sent into the world, not a spiritual, but a composite boinff 
 a being made up of body and mind — the body havini;, as 
 is fit and needful in a material world, its full, rightful, 
 and allotted shai-e. Life should be guided by a full rec- 
 ognition of this fact ; not denying it as we do in bold 
 words, and admitting it in weaknesses and inevitable iail- 
 ings. Man's spirituality will come in the next stage o 
 his being, when he is endowed with the o-w/xa Trvev/iariKov. 
 Each in its order : " first, that which is natural ; after- 
 ward^ that which is spiritual." The body will be dropped 
 at death : — till then God meant it to be commanded, but 
 never to be neglected, despised, or ignored, under pain of 
 heavy consequences. 
 
 The two classes of believers in future progress — those 
 who believe in the future perfection of the individual, and 
 those who believe in the future perfection of the race- 
 are moved to different modes of action. Perhaps they 
 ought not to be ; but from the defects of our reason, and 
 from personal feelings, they generally are. It is a ques- 
 tion, however, whether the world, i.e., the human race, 
 will not be more benefited by the labours of those who 
 look upon Heaven as a state to be attaii ed on earth by 
 future generations, than by those who regard it as the 
 state to be attained by themselves after death, in another 
 world. The latter will look only, or mainly, to the im- 
 provement of their own character and capacities ; — the 
 former will devote th^ir exertions to the amelioration o; 
 their kind and their habitation. The latter are too easily 
 induced to give up earth as hopeless and incorrigible ; — 
 the former, looking upon it as the scene of blessed exist- 
 ence to others hereafter, toil for its amendment and em- 
 bellishment. There is a vast fund of hidden selfishness, 
 or what, at least, has often the practical eftect of such, in 
 the idea of Heaven as ordinarily conceived ; and much of 
 the tolerated misery of earth may be traced to it.* 
 
 * See 8ome very interesting refltctioiis on this subject (with which, how- 
 ever, I do not ata]l agree), by Sir James Mackintoah (Life, 120-122). Sea 
 
CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 349 
 
 lating ; hy (in 
 has given us, 
 >we(l. Man i.s 
 nposite being, 
 dy haviiiir, as 
 full, riohtfui 
 by a full ree- 
 ve do in bold 
 levitable uil- 
 next stmjeo 
 
 fj.a TrvevfiariKov. 
 itural ; after- 
 ill be dropped 
 umanded, but 
 mder pain of 
 
 )^ress— those 
 dividual, and 
 of the race — 
 ^erhaps they 
 r reason, and 
 It is a q lies- 
 human race, 
 of those who 
 on earth by 
 a-rd it as the 
 h, in another 
 ^ to the im- 
 acities ; — the 
 elioration o; 
 re too easily 
 corrigible ;— 
 lessed exist- 
 ent and em- 
 1 selfishness, 
 t of such, in 
 md much of 
 o it.* 
 
 ith which, how- 
 , 120-122). Sea 
 
 Do we then mean that our future pro.spects have no 
 claim on our attention here 1 Far from it. The fate of 
 the Soul after it loaves those conditions under which 
 alone we have any cognizance ot its existerice, the possi - 
 bility of continued and eternal being, and the character 
 of the scenes in which that being will be developed, must 
 always iorm topics of the profoundest interest, and the 
 most ennobling and refining contemplation. These great 
 matters will o necessity, from their attractions, and 
 ought, from their purixying tendencies, to occupy much 
 of the leisure of all thinking :md aspiring minds. Those 
 whose affections are ambitious, whose conceptions are 
 lofty, whose imagination is vivid, eloquent, and daring — 
 those to whom this life has been a scene of incessant fail- 
 ure — those 
 
 " Whom Life hath wearied in its race of hours," 
 
 who, harassed and toil-worn, sink under the burden oi 
 their three-score years — those who, having seen friend, 
 parent, child, wife, successively removed from the homes 
 they beautified and hallowed, find the balance of attrac- 
 tion gradually inclining in favour of another life, — all 
 such will cling to these lofty speculations with a tenacity 
 of interest which needs no injunction, and will listen to 
 no prohibition. All we wish to suggest is, that they should 
 be regarded rather as the consoling privilege of the aspi- 
 ring, the way -worn, the weary, the bereaved, than as the 
 inculcated duiy of youth in its vigour, or beauty in its 
 prime. 
 
 Yet, having said thus much by way of combating an 
 erroneous view of life which appears to lead to a perilous 
 and demoralizing insincerity, I would not be thought in- 
 capable of appreciating the light which the contemplation 
 of the future may let in upon the present, nor the effect which 
 that contemplation is fitted to produce on the development 
 Oj. the higher portions of our nature. One of the most diffi- 
 cult, and at the same time the gravest, of the practical 
 problems > )t life, is the right adjustment of the respective 
 
 also some curi(, us speculations by a Communistic Frenchman, Pierre Leroux, 
 in liis w ork 1)» 1' Humanite. 
 
350 
 
 THE CREED OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 i: 
 
 Mil 
 
 claims of heaven and earth upon the time and thought of 
 man . — how much should be given to performing the du- 
 ties and entering into the interests of the world, and how 
 much to preparation for a better ; — ^how much to action, 
 and how much to meditation ; — how much to the culti- 
 vation and purification of our ovm character, and how 
 much to the public service ot our fellow-men Nor is this 
 nice problem adaquately solved by sajdng that Heaven is 
 most worthily served, and most surely won, by a scrupu- 
 lous discharge of +he duties of our earthly station , and 
 that constant labour for the good of others will af- 
 lord the best development ior the purer portions of our 
 own character. There is much truth in this ; but there is 
 not complete truth. The man whose whole life is spent 
 in discharging with diligence and fidelity the toils of his 
 allotted position in society, or whose every hour is devoted 
 to the details of philanthropic exertions, is in a rare de- 
 gree " a good and faithful servant ; " yet it is impossible 
 not to perceive that he may pass through life with many 
 depths of his being altogether unsounded, with the ricli- 
 est secrets of the soul undiscovered and unguessed, with 
 many of the loftiest portions of his character still latent 
 and unimproved ; and that when he passes through the 
 portals ot the grave, and reaches the new Existence, he 
 will entej* it a wholly unprepared and astonished stranger. 
 Much quiet meditation, much solitary introspection, which 
 the man involved in the vortex of actwe and publi- , life 
 has rarely leisure to bestow, seem requisite to gain a clear 
 conception of the true objects and meaning of exist .nee — 
 oi the relation which our individual entities hold with 
 the Universe around us and the Great Spirit which per- 
 vades it. Without this drap and solitary communing 
 with our inner Nature, the most energetic and untiring 
 Philanthropist or Duty-doer among us appears little more 
 than an instrument in the hands of the Creator — a 
 useful and noble one, certainly, yet still an instrument — 
 for the production of certain results, but scarcely to ha>'c 
 attained to the dignity of a distinct and individual Intelli- 
 gence — an agent who comprehendn himself and the nature 
 
 of tbc w| 
 routine 
 
 Aii;ainl 
 adiuivabl 
 thattheil 
 which a I 
 unavoichl 
 tites.the] 
 
 not f avol 
 Onthl 
 an insigi 
 of Being 
 significa 
 as entire 
 If we V 
 ible," th 
 formed, 
 that we 
 realize 
 should 1 
 state. 
 
CHRISTIAN ECLECTICISM. 
 
 351 
 
 id thought of 
 'ming the du- 
 orld, and how 
 uch to action, 
 to the culti-' 
 5ter, and Iiow 
 J^oristhis 
 at Heaven is 
 by a scrupu- 
 station , and 
 'ers will af- 
 •rtions of our 
 I but there is 
 life is spent 
 e toils of his 
 p is devoted 
 in a rare de- 
 s impossible 
 ' with many 
 1th the rich- 
 lessed, with 
 f still latent 
 through the 
 xistence, he 
 3d stranger, 
 tion, which 
 Publi'lifo 
 gain 8 clear 
 >xist.nce— 
 bold with 
 w'hich per- 
 onfjuiuning 
 d untiring 
 ittle more 
 eator — a 
 rument— 
 y to haAe 
 al Intelli- 
 ^e nature 
 
 of the work in which he is engaged, as well as the mere 
 routine of its performance. 
 
 A^ain, notwithstanding all that has been said as to the 
 admirable effect of action on the character, it is certain 
 that there are many points of personal morality from 
 which a life of busy and even meritorious activity almost 
 unavoidably diverts our attention. The temper, the appe- 
 tites, the passions, require a ceaseless and guarded watchful- 
 ness, to which incessant exertion is, to say the least, certainly 
 uot favourable. 
 
 On the other hand, too frequent a reflection, too deep 
 an insight — too vivid a realization of the great mysteries 
 of Being, would be apt to shrivel up into microscopic in- 
 significance all the cares, toils, and interests of this life, 
 as entirely to paralyze our zeal andjenergy concerning them. 
 If wo were literally to " live as seeing Him who is invis- 
 ible," the common works of earth could no longer be per- 
 formed, save as a duty, and in a dream. It is well for us 
 that we " walk by faith, and not by sight." If we could 
 realize both the nearness and fulness of Eternity, we 
 shoukl be unfitted for the requirements of this earthly 
 state. 
 
CHAPTER XVII. 
 
 THE GREAT EKIOMA. 
 
 We are accustomed to say that Christ brought life and 
 immortality to light by his Gospel ; by which we mean,— 
 not that he first taught the doctrine of a future life,- 
 scarcely even that he threw any new light on the nature 
 of that life; for the doctrine was held, long before 
 he lived, by many uncivilized tribes ; it was the received 
 opinion of most, if not all, among the Oriental nations ; 
 and it was an established tenet of the most popular and 
 powerful sect among the Jews ; — but that he gave to the 
 doctrine, for the first time, an authoritative sanction ; he 
 announced it as a direct revelation from the Deity ; and 
 as it were, exemplified and embodied it in its own resurrec- 
 tion. But, as we have already come to the conclusion 
 that Christianity was not a Revelation in the ordinary 
 sense of the word, Christ's inculcation of the doctrine 
 becomes simply the added attestation of the most pious 
 and holy man who ever lived, to a faith which has been 
 cherished by the pious and the holy of all times and of 
 all lands. 
 
 In this view of Christianity, a future life becomes to 
 us no longer a matter of positive knowledge — a revealed 
 fact— but simply a matter of faith, of hope, of earnest 
 desire ; a sublime possibility, round which meditation and 
 inquiry will collect all the probabilities they can. 
 Christianity adds nothing certain to our convictions or to 
 our knowledge on the subject, however rich it may be in 
 suggestions of the truth. Let us, therefore, by a short 
 statement of its views of futurity, see how far they are 
 such as can be accepted by a cultivated and i quiring 
 age. 
 
 It may seem to many a strange observation, but we 
 greatly question whether the views of Christ regarding 
 the future world (so far as wo can gather thoni from the 
 
 more imn 
 
 God, who 
 
 in He,.ive: 
 
 lying ext( 
 
 Christ vis 
 
 tinct and 
 
 ence of G 
 
 ed, and n 
 
 the New 
 
 Job. Th 
 
 affectionj 
 
 pomorph 
 
 vague, n 
 
 gospel i( 
 
 eminent] 
 
 bear sen 
 
 consciou 
 
 necessar 
 
 our facu 
 
 obviousl 
 
 to be su 
 
 2. Th 
 
THE GBEAT ENIGMA. 
 
 353 
 
 ught life and 
 1 we mean,— 
 I future life- 
 n the nature 
 
 long before 
 the received 
 ital nations; 
 popular and 
 > gave to the 
 3anetion ; he 
 
 Deity; and 
 >wn resurrec- 
 3 conclusion 
 he ordinary 
 'hq doctrine 
 
 most pious 
 ch has been 
 imes and of 
 
 becomes to 
 -a revealed 
 
 of earnest 
 itation and 
 
 they can. 
 ctions or to 
 
 may be in 
 by a short 
 they are 
 quiring 
 
 jn, but W(» 
 / regai-din^' 
 n from tl\c! 
 
 imperfect and uncertain records of his sayings, which 
 alone we have to go by) were not less in advance of those 
 current in his age and country, than his views upon any 
 other topic. The popular opinion — that he made that a 
 matter of certainty which before was only a matter of 
 speculation — has blinded our perceptions on this point. 
 When we put aside this common misconception, and 
 come to examine what the notions inculcated by the 
 gospel concerning the nature of this futurity really 
 were, we shall be surprised and pained to find how little 
 they added, .ind how little they rose superior, to those 
 current among the Pharisees and the Essenes at the date 
 of its promulgation ; and perhaps even how far they fell 
 short of those attained by some pious Pagans of an 
 earlier date. 
 
 The scriptural idea of Heaven, so far as we can collect 
 it from the Gospels, seems to have been : — 
 
 1. That it was a scene hallowed and embellished by the 
 more immediate, or at least more perceptible, presence of 
 God, who is constantly spoken of as " Our Father who is 
 in Htaven." It is the local dwelling-place of the Creator, 
 lying exterior to and above the Earth, and into which 
 Christ visibly ascended. Indeed, notwithstanding the dis- 
 tinct and repeated assertions of the perpetual superintend- 
 ence of God, He is depif^tod much more as a local and limit- 
 ed, and much less as a pervading and spiritupl Being, in 
 the New Testament than in many of tne Psalms and in 
 Job. The delineations of the former are far more simple, 
 affectionate, and human — far more tinged with anthro- 
 pomorphism, in the tone at least ; those of the latter more 
 vague, more sublime, more spiritual. In this point, the 
 gospel idea of one of the attributes of Heaven, though 
 eminently beautiful, natural, and attractive, will scarcely 
 bear scrutiny. That in a future state we shall bo more 
 conscious of God's presence, is not only probable, but is a 
 necessary consequence of the extension and purification of 
 our faculties : — that He dwells there more than here is an 
 obviously untenable conception. The notion may be said 
 to be subjectively true, but objectively false. 
 
 2. That Heaven would be a scene of retribution for the 
 
354 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM 
 
 m 
 
 deeds and charactei-s of earth has been the view of its 
 essential nature taken by nearly all nations which have 
 believed in its existence : to this idea the gospel has added 
 nothing new. That it would also be a state of competisa- 
 tion, to rectify the inequalities and atone for the sufferings 
 of our sublunary life, has long been the consolatory notion 
 of the disappointed and the sorrow-stricken. This idea 
 Christianity especially encourages ; nay, unless we tire to 
 allow an unusually free deduction for the hyperbolical 
 language which the New Testament habitually employs, 
 it would appear to carry it to an extent scarcely reconcil- 
 able with sober reason or pure justice; almost countenan- 
 cing the notion — so seducing to the less worthy feelings of 
 the discontented and the wretched — not only that their 
 troubles will be compensated by proportionate excess of 
 future joy, but that earthly prosperity will, per se, and 
 apart from any notion of moral retribution, constitute a 
 title to proportionate suffering hereafter — that, in truth, 
 Heaven will be the especial and exclusive patrimony of 
 the poor and the afflicted. " Blessed are they that mourn, 
 for they shall be ccmforted." '' Blessed be ye poor, for 
 yours is the kingdom oc God. Blessed are ye that hunger 
 now, for ye shall hvt filled. Blessed are ye that weep now, 
 for ye shall laugh. But woe unto ye that are rich, for ye 
 have received your consolation. Woe unto ye that are 
 full, for ye shall hunger. Woe unto ye that laugh now, 
 for ye shall weep." The parable of Dives and Lazarus 
 inculcates the same notion. " Son, remember that thou in 
 thy lifetime receivedst thy good things, and likewise Laz- 
 arus evil things; but now he is comforted, and thou art tor- 
 mented." It is very difficult to discover on what worthy 
 conception of Divine Providence the ideas inculcated in 
 these last quotations can be iustified, or how they can be 
 reconciled with the doctrine of a just moral retribution ; 
 and it is equally difficidt to shut our eyes to the encour- 
 agement they may give and have given to the envious 
 and malignant feelings of grovelling and uncultured '.xliids.* 
 
 ♦ See Eugene Aram, chap, viii., for an illustration. A CalviniBt peaflant 
 ■wnsidereil that the choictf^t bliaa of Heaven would be "to look down intt- 
 ck« other piao*, and iee the folk griU." Tertullian has a pausage, part uf 
 
 . 3. Th( 
 we believi 
 of the doc 
 sary one, 
 versal ad( 
 has added 
 our moral 
 the unchc 
 We atten 
 dence tha 
 rtrogress- 
 purifying 
 and impri 
 doctrine 
 it clearly 
 ever at tl 
 both Pagi 
 of the et 
 itself to c 
 ories : it 
 ments, in 
 the revol 
 felt, that 
 has been 
 the docti 
 ought to 
 is difficu 
 Scriptur< 
 taken as 
 
 ' apostles 
 yet madi 
 and mer 
 human 1 
 for the 
 belief th 
 That 
 man, th? 
 
 whicn Uib 
 as horribl 
 iMt. 
 
THE GREAT ENIGMA. 
 
 355 
 
 view of its 
 i which have 
 
 )el has added 
 3f compensa- 
 the sufferings 
 latory notion 
 This idea 
 ess we are to 
 
 hyperbolical 
 illy employs, 
 cely reconcil- 
 st countenan- 
 hy feelings of 
 ly that their 
 late excess of 
 1, per se, and 
 
 constitute a 
 hat, in truth, 
 patrimony of 
 ^ that mourn, 
 
 ye poor, for 
 re that hunger 
 lat weep now, 
 re rich, for ye 
 
 ye that are 
 it laugh now, 
 
 and Lazarus 
 
 sr that thou in 
 
 likewise Laz- 
 
 i thou art tor- 
 
 what worthy 
 
 inculcated in 
 y they can be 
 
 1 retribution; 
 ;o the encour- 
 ) the envious 
 tured cxiiids.* 
 
 Calvinist peasant 
 to look down inti. 
 I pfwsa^e, part of 
 
 3. The eternal duration of the future existence has, 
 we believe, with all nations formed a constituent element 
 of the doctrins ; though it is so far from being a neces- 
 sary one, that it is not easy to discover wt.ence its uni- 
 versal adoption is to be traceu. To this idea Scripture 
 has added another, which presents a stumbling-block to 
 our moral and our metaphysical philosophy alike — viz., 
 the unchanging character of both its pains and pleasures. 
 We attempt in vain to trace in the gospel the least evi- 
 dence that the future state is to be regarded as one of 
 y)rogres8 — that its sufferings are to be probationary and 
 purifying, and therefore terminable ; or its joys elevating 
 and improving, and therefore ever advancing. If any 
 doctrine be distinctly taught by Scripture on this point, 
 it clearly is, that the lot of each individual is fixed for 
 ever at the judgment day. In this it stands below some 
 both Pagan and Oriental conceptions. The gospel view 
 of the eternity of the future life, which fully approves 
 itself to our reason, is one which it shares with all the- 
 ories : its conception of the eternity of future punish- 
 ments, in which probably it stands almost alone, is one, 
 the revolting character of which has been so strongly 
 felt, that the utmost ingenuity both of critidiism and logic, 
 has been strained for centuries — the first, to prove that 
 the doctrine is not taught, the se jond, to prove that it 
 ought to be received. Neither have quite succeeded. It 
 is difficult to maintain that the doctrine is not taught in 
 Scripture,- if the clear language of special texts is to be 
 taken as our guide ; and it was probably held by the 
 ' apostles and the first Christians ; and all the attempts 
 yet made to reconcile the doctrine with divine justice 
 and mercy are calculated to make us blush alike for the 
 human heart that can strive to justify such a creed, and 
 for the human intellect which can delude itself into a 
 belief that it has succeeded in such justification. 
 
 That would be a great book, and he would be a great 
 man, that should detect aud eliminate the latent and dis- 
 
 
 whicn bribbon quotes (c. nv. ), expressing the same ide* in language quite 
 OH horrible. We believe there is a similar passage in Baxter's Saints* 
 i«et. 
 
356 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 figured truth that lies at the root of every falsehood ever, 
 yet believed among men. In Scripture we meet with 
 several doctrines which may be considered as the approxi- 
 Tnate fo^nula, the imperiect, partial, and inaccurate ex- 
 pression, of certain mighty and eternal verities. Thus. 
 the spirituality of Christ's character and the superhuman 
 excellence of his liie, lie at the bottom of the dogma oi 
 the Incarnation ; which was simply " a mistake of the 
 moially lor the physically divine," an idea carnalized 
 into a fact. In the same manner, the doctrine of the 
 eternity of future punishments, false as it must be in its 
 ordinary signification, contains a glimpse of one of the 
 most awful and indisputable truths ever presented to the 
 human understanding — viz., the eternal and ineftaceable 
 consequences of our every action, the fact that every 
 word and every deed produces efiects which must, by the 
 very nature of things, reverberate through all time, 8o 
 that the whole of iaturity would be difierent had that 
 word never been spoken, or thnt deed enacted.* 
 
 * " The pulsations of the air, once set in motion by the human voice, 
 cease not to exist with the sounds to which they gave rise. Strong and au- 
 dible as they may be in the immediate neighbourhood of the speaker, and at 
 the immediate moment of utterance, their quickly-attenuated force soon 
 becomes inaudible to human ears. But the waves of air thus raised peram- 
 bulate the earth's and ocean's surface, and in less than twenty hours every 
 atom of its atmosphere takes up the altered movement due to that infini- 
 tesimal portion of primitive motion which has been conveyed to it throu^b 
 countless channels, and which must continue to influence its path through- 
 out its future existence. 
 
 " But these aerial pulses, unseen by the keenest eye, unheard by the 
 acutest ear, unperceived by human senses, are yet demonstrated to exist by hu- 
 man reason ; and in some few and limited instances, by calling to our aid the 
 most refined and comprehensive instrument of human thought (mathemati- 
 cal analysis), their courses are traced, and their intensities measured. . . . 
 Thus considered, what a strange chaos is this wide atmosphere we breathe ! 
 Every atom impressed with good and with ill, retains af once the motions 
 which philosophers and sages have imparted to it, mixed and coml)ine(l in 
 ten thousand ways with all that is worthless and base, The air itself is one 
 vast library, on whose pages is forever written all that man has ever said or 
 even whispered. There, in their mutable, but unerring characters, mixed 
 with the earliest as well as the latest sighs of mortaaty, stand for ever 
 recorded, vows unredeemed, promises unfulfilled, perpetuating, in the 
 united movements of each particle, the testimony of man's changeful 
 will 
 
 •• J3ut if the air we breathe is the never-failing historian of the sentiments 
 we have uttered, earth, air, and ocean, are in like manner the eternal wit- 
 nesses of the acta we have done Ne motion impressed by natu- 
 ral causes or by human agency ia ever obliterated. The track of e\ ery 
 
 There ': 
 tnre puni: 
 if that ve 
 whifh eni 
 consequei 
 render ou 
 quences t 
 superior ] 
 action — \ 
 action ioi 
 self ages 
 will be t( 
 i-esOurces 
 veil the 1 
 
 4. It ii 
 the delig 
 in the e: 
 tions, the 
 physical. 
 teJlect ai 
 the body 
 sit at th( 
 unquenc 
 
 canoe whic 
 registered i 
 cupy its plf 
 
 "Whilst 
 timents we 
 globe, bear 
 the Almigl 
 indelible n 
 succeeding 
 crime ; foi 
 severed pi 
 every com 
 by which t 
 Treatise, < 
 
 "If we 
 organ of h 
 iutiuitesin 
 all the aci 
 fall at on 
 still vibra 
 turios bef( 
 —Ibid. c. 
 
THE GREAT ENIGAIA. 
 
 857 
 
 falsehood ever. 
 
 we meet with 
 
 .s the approxi- 
 
 inaccurate ex- 
 
 erities. Thus. 
 
 16 superhuman 
 
 the dogma oi 
 
 listake of the 
 
 lea carnalized 
 
 octrine of the 
 
 must be in its 
 
 of one of the 
 
 "esented to the 
 
 id inefldceable 
 
 .ct that every 
 
 h must, b)' tlie 
 
 :h all time, so 
 
 rent had that 
 
 ted.* 
 
 ■ the human voice, 
 e. Strong and au- 
 the speaker, and at 
 snuated force soon 
 thus raised peram- 
 wenty hours every 
 due to that iiifini- 
 'eyed to it throiif,'li 
 } its path through- 
 
 3, unheard by the 
 •ated to exist by liu- 
 dlingtoouraidthe 
 uught (matheiuati- 
 8 measured. . . . 
 phere we breathe ! 
 I once the motions 
 I and combined in 
 rhe air itself is one 
 a.n has ever said or 
 characters, ini.xed 
 y, stand for ever 
 'petuating, in the 
 man's chauyefnl 
 
 I of the sentiments 
 ir the eternal wit- 
 mpressed by natii- 
 he track of e\ery 
 
 There is therefore a sense in which the eternity of fu- 
 ture punishment may be irrefragably and terribly true — 
 if tliat very enhancement of our faculties in a future life 
 whicli enables us to perceive and trace the ineffaceable 
 consequences of our idle words and our evil deeds, should 
 render our remorse and grief as eternal as those conse- 
 quences themselves. No more fearful punishment to a 
 •superior Intelligence can be conceived than to see still in 
 action — with the consciousness that it must continue in 
 action ior ever — a cause of wrong put in motion by it- 
 self ages before. Let us trust either that our capacities 
 will be too limited for this awful retribution, or that the 
 lesOurces of Omnipotence may be adequate to cancel or to 
 veil the Past. 
 
 4. It is remarkable that while in the New Testament 
 the delights of Heaven are always depicted as consisting 
 in the exercise and development of the spiritual affec- 
 tions, the pains of Hell are as constantly delineated as 
 physical. The joys of the one state are those of the in- 
 tellect and the Soul ; the sufferings of the other those of 
 the body only. In the gospel pictures, Heaven is " to 
 sit at the right hand of the Father ; " Hell is " to burn in 
 unquenchable fire." Unless there be some deep meaning 
 
 canoe which has yet disturbed the surface of the ocean, remains for ever 
 registered in the future movements of all succeeding particles which may oc- 
 cupy its place. 
 
 " Whilst the atmosphere we breathe is the ever-living witness of the sen- 
 timents we ha\ j utter! d, the waters and t'le more solid materials of the 
 globe, bear equally endurng testimony of the ac ts we have committed. If 
 the Almighty stamped on the b; jw of the earliest murderer the visible and 
 indelible mark of f'.s guilt, he has also established lav> i by which every 
 succeeding criminal is no!; less irrevocably chainoj to the testimony of his 
 crime; for e\oiy atom of his mortal frame, through whatever changes its 
 severed particles may migrate, will still retain, adhering to it through 
 every combination, some movement derived from that very muscular effort 
 by which the cx'ime itself was perpetrated." — Babbage, Ninth Bridgewater 
 Treatise, c. ix. 
 
 " If we imagine the soul in an after stage of existence, connected with an 
 organ of hearing so sensitive as to vibi.'te with motions of the air, even of 
 infinitesimal force, and if it be still within the i)recinctsof its ancient abode, 
 all the accumulated words pronounced fr.ym the creation of mankind will 
 fall at once on that ear ; . . . . and the punished offender may hear 
 still vibrating on his ear the very words uttered perhaps thousands of cen- 
 turies beforj, which at once caused and registered his own condemnation." 
 —Ibid. c. xii. 
 
3.')3 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 1' 
 
 hidden under this apparent inconsistency ; unless it h ordmaii y 
 iint'^nded to intimate to us that the blessed will be mad( ^Pl'^^^^ 
 pu ./y spiritual, and that the damned will be wholly a> i^^^^^" ?° 
 sorbed in their corporeality — an idea which it is ditiicu 
 to admit ; it seems strange that the description of Hoj 
 ven as consisting in communion with God and with th 
 Just made perfect, should not have suggested the conel 
 ative idea that Hell must consist in " living wdth tht 
 Devil and his angels ; " in fact, what more horrible con- 
 ception of it could be formed ? 
 
 5. But perhaps the most imperfect and inadmissible 
 point in the Scriptural conception of the Future World 
 is that which represents it as divided into two distine 
 states, separated by an impassable barrier, decidedly o; 
 one or other side of which the eternal destiny of ever 
 one is cast. Such an arrangement, it is obvious, is in 
 compatible with any but the rudest idea of righteous re 
 tribution, and could only be the resource of imperfec 
 justice and imperfect power. For as in this world therel 
 is every possible gradation of virtue and of vice, which 
 
 trrounds on 
 
 Subsequent 
 
 jlng there, \ 
 
 it," has sun 
 
 conceivabl 
 
 supports I 
 
 they are ] 
 
 tween the 
 
 mind (em 
 
 and to nei 
 
 build it u 
 
 establish i 
 
 i.e., infere 
 
 the other 
 
 trine is a 
 
 tiveness i 
 
 made to 1 
 
 run into each other by the most imperceptible degrees,! ^^^v > ^^ 
 
 and are often only distinguishable by the minutest shadel ^^^ \,- 
 — so in the next world there must be every possible gra-" ^^^® ^^ J 
 dation of reward and punishment. A trenchant line oi 
 demarcation, which from its nature must be arbitrary, 
 and which every one who overpasses by a hair's-breadth 
 must overpass by a great gulf, could only be the inven- 
 tion of a judge of finite and imperfect capacity, for the 
 more convenient dispatch of judgment. That, of two in- 
 dividuals whose degree of virtue is so similar that the 
 question of precedence can neither be decided by the 
 keenest human insight, nor expressed by the finest min- 
 utiae of human language, one should be rewarded with 
 eternal joy, and the other condemned to everlasting tor- 
 ment, is assuredly among the rudest of religious concep- 
 tions. Yet, to all appearance, such is the notion of future 
 retribution held by the New Testament writers. 
 
 The doctrine of a future life has been firmly held in 
 all ages and by 'every order of minds. The reasonings 
 
 suggests 
 grave ; I 
 
 « The rei 
 
 are raised, 
 
 God of Ab: 
 
 not a God 
 
 %s anythin 
 
 1 Thess. i\ 
 
 well- know 
 
 mens exta 
 
 185 ; Busl 
 
 In one ] 
 
 lemarkab 
 
 those of t 
 
 tians, T 
 
 a,'ain ; tl 
 
 finis Tac 
 
 placet, n( 
 
 nect. ,- ■ 
 
 tumque ; 
 
 Anastasi 
 
 shall be 
 
Icy ; unless it k 
 ped will be madf 
 fill be wholly al 
 Jhich it is di/Hcu 
 Iseription of Ho.- 
 wd and with th 
 rested the eoirel 
 living with thi 
 [lore horrible con 
 
 land inadmissible 
 ^e Future World 
 into two distincl 
 ier, decidedly o] 
 destiny of even 
 is obvious, is in' 
 a of righteous re. 
 rce of imperfec 
 this world there 
 id of vice, which 
 rceptible degrees, 
 e minutest shade 
 'ery possible gra- 
 trenchant line oi 
 1st be arbitrary, 
 a hair's-breadth 
 iy be the inven- 
 capacity, for the 
 That, of two in- 
 similar that the 
 decided by the 
 '■ the finest min- 
 rewarded with 
 everlasting tor- 
 eligious coucep- 
 notion of future 
 Titers. 
 
 ' firmly held in 
 The reasonin£>s 
 
 THE GREAT ENIGMA. 
 
 359 
 
 ordinarily adduced in proof of this doctrine have always 
 appeared to me deplorably weak and inconclusive ; so 
 jnuch so as clearly to indicate that they do not form the 
 (Trounds on which it has been believed, but are merely 
 Subsequent attempts to justify that belief. The ■ sed be- 
 ing there, human reason, in the endeavour to ace >ur; for 
 it, has surrounded it with props and crutches of o v )ry 
 conceivable degree of weakness ; and these pr.st-dated 
 supports have been mistaken for the foundation. But 
 tliey are not so; and we must at once distinguish be- 
 tween the conviction and the arguments ' -^ which the 
 mind {erroTiecmsly supposing it to he based on, argv merit, 
 and to need argument for its justification) has sought to 
 build it up. Logic never originated it, logic can never 
 establish it. All that can properly be called reasoning, 
 i.e., inference deduced from observation, appears to point 
 the other way. It is remarkable, too, that while the doc- 
 trine is announced with the utmost clearness and posi- 
 tiveness in the New Testament, all the attempts there 
 made to bring arguments in its favour, to prove it logi- 
 cally, or even to establish a reasonable probability for it, 
 are futile in the extreme.* Nature throws no light upon 
 the subject ; the phenomena we observe could never have 
 suggested the idea of a renewed existence beyond the 
 physiological science, as far as it speaks at all, 
 
 grave 
 
 * The reasoning ascribed to Jesus (Luke xx. 37) — " Now that tlie dead 
 are raised, even Moses showed at the bush, when he called the Lord the 
 God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob. For he is 
 not a God of the dead, but of the living" — it is scarcely possible to regard 
 as anything but a verbal ingenuity. Paul's logic (Rojnans viii. 16, 17 ; and 
 1 Thess. iv. 14) is, to say the least of it, feeble and far-fetched. While the 
 well-known passage in 1 Cor. xv. 12-16, i» ciio oi the most marvellous speci- 
 mens extant of reasoning in a circle. On this, see Newman on the Soul, p. 
 185 ; Bush's Anastasis, p. 170. 
 
 In one point of the view of a future existence there would appear to be a 
 lemarkable coincidence between the notions of To Pagan philosophers and 
 those of the more enlightened among the Jews and some of the early Chris- 
 tians. The Ancients seem to have imagined that only the Great would live 
 ivjiain ; that the mass of souls, the oi troAAot, were not worth resuscitating, 
 i'luis Tacitus (Vit. Agr.), "Si qaia phvum manibus locus, si,utsapientibu^ 
 |)lacet, non cum corpore extinguuntur magruK animie," &c. Cicero de Se- 
 nect.,- " O praeclaram diem, cum ad illud divinum ajimorwm concilium ca;- 
 turaque proficisear," &c. See the above passages in the Epistles. Also 
 Anastasis, 169, 25 ".i ; in Luke xx. 35 ; remarkable expression, " They which 
 shall be accounted worthy," &c. 
 
3G0 
 
 THE CKEED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 distinctly negatives it. Appearances all testify to tlit 
 reality and permanence of death ; a fearful onus of prool 
 lies upon those who contend that these appearances art 
 deceptive. When we interrogate the vast universe of or 
 ganization, we see, not simply life and death, but grad 
 ually growing life, and gradually 'approaching deatl 
 After death, all that we ha\e ever known of a man is 
 gone;* all we have ever seen of him is dissolved into its 
 component elements; it does not disappear, so as to 
 leave us at liberty to imagine that it may have gone to 
 exist elsewhere, but is actually used up as materials for 
 other purposes. So completely is this the case that, as 
 Sir James Macki iitosh observes, " the doctrine of a resur- 
 rection could scarcely have arisen among a people who 
 buried theii- dead." Moreover, the growth, decay, and 
 dissolution we observe, are, to all appearance, those oi 
 the mind as well as the body. We see the mind, the 
 affections, the Soul (if you will), gradually arising, form- 
 ing (for no other expression adequately describes the 
 jjhenomenon), as the body waxes, sympathizing in all the 
 permanent changes and temporary variations of the body, 
 diseased with its diseases, enfeebled by its weakness, dis- 
 ordered by dyspepsia or suppressed gout, utterly meta- 
 morphosed past recognition by cerebral affection, hope- 
 
 * [A modification of this phrase would seem to be necessary. " There is 
 one indication of immortality which must not be left out of consideration, 
 though, of course, its value will be very differently estimated by different 
 minds. I refer to that spontaneous, irresistible, and perhaps nearly univer- 
 sal feeling we experience on watching, just after death, the body of one we 
 have intimately known ; the conviction, I mean (a sense, a consciousness, 
 an impression which you have to fight against if you wish to shake it off), that 
 the form lying there is somehow not the ego you have loved. It does not 
 produce the effect of that person's personality. You miss the Ego, though 
 you have the frame. The visible Presence only makes more vivid the sense 
 of actual absence. Every feature, every substance, every phenomenon la 
 there— and is unchanged. You have eeen the eyes as firmly closed, the 
 limbs as motionless, the breath almost as imperceptible, the face as fixed 
 and expressionless, before, in sleep or in trance— without the same peculiar 
 sensation. The impression made is indefinable, and is not the result of any 
 conscious process of thought, that that body, quite unchanged to the eye, is 
 not, and never was, your friend — the Being you were conversant with — that 
 his or her individuality was not the garment before you plus a galvanic cur- 
 rent ; that, in fact, the ego you knew once, and seek still, was not that — is 
 not there. And if not there, it must be elsewhere or noioha-e, and ' nowhere,' 
 I believe modern science will not suffer us to predicate of either force or 
 substance that ouce ha^ been. " — Enigmas of Life, Preface vii.] 
 
 lossly der 
 
 aotually s 
 
 ^Mvssion, 
 
 into imb 
 
 Tlio sudd 
 
 cidont, at 
 
 vioour, n 
 
 to other i 
 
 Power — ■ 
 
 and men 
 
 infant tl 
 
 wo say r 
 
 hour or j 
 
 inmate 1 
 
 separatic 
 
 moment 
 
 be a me] 
 
 upon wl 
 
 it first 8 
 
 tality — 
 
 — hang 
 
 or a clu 
 
 to whic 
 
 a glooi 
 
 escape 
 
 "Adi 
 nomens 
 terialis; 
 difficul 
 surely 
 anothe 
 merely 
 a rene^ 
 is our 
 
 there i 
 frame, 
 which 
 
 * Lif 
 
THK GREAT ENIGMA. 
 
 nni 
 
 lessly deranjTed by a spicula of bono penetrating tlic brain, 
 aotually suppressed by a vascular eftusion or a cranial dp ■ 
 piession, wearied as the body aiijcs, and gradually sink'nL;- 
 into imbecility as the body dies away in lielplcssnt's. 
 Tlio sudden destruction of the corporeal frame by an ac- 
 cident, at a moment when the mind was in its fullest 
 vigour, might possibly suggest the idea of a transference 
 to other scenes of so manifest an Entity, so undeniable a 
 Powder — the slow and synchronous extinction of the bodily 
 and mental faculties never could. Look, again, at an 
 infant three years old — two years old — one year old : 
 wo say it has a Soul. But take a new-born babe, an 
 hour or a minute old : has it a soul, an immortal part or 
 inmate ? If so, when does it come to it ? at the time of its 
 separation from the Mother's life ? or a moment before, or a 
 moment after ? Does the awful decision whether it is to 
 be a mere perishable animal or a spiritual being depend 
 upon whether it dies an instant before or an instant after 
 it first sees the light ? Can the question of its immor- 
 tality — of its being an embryo angel, or a senseless clod 
 — hang upon such an accident as a maternal movement, 
 or a clumsy accoucheur ? Inquiries these, our answers 
 to which can only display either hopeless acquiescence in 
 a gloomy conclusion, or equally hopeless struggles to 
 escape from it. 
 
 " Admitting all this," urges one reasoner, " the phe- 
 nomena of life and death, nay, even the doctrine of ma- 
 terialism in all its nakedness, need present no insuperable 
 difficulty; for the same power which bestowed life is 
 surely competent to restore it under another form and in 
 another scene." Unquestionably ; but if we are material 
 merely — if our inferences from observation are correct — 
 a renewed existence must be a new creation ; where then 
 is our identity ? We are not continued, but succeeded* 
 
 " But," says another speculator, " how can you tell that 
 there is not some unascertained portion of the human 
 frame, infinitesimal, indeed, and evanescent to our senses, 
 which does not perish with the rest of the corporeal fabric. 
 
 * Life of Sir James Mackintosh, ii. 120, 121. 
 

 I 
 
 362 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 but forms the germ which is expanded into the new ex- 
 istence V* It may be that there is such ; but no 
 shadow of a probability can be adduced for such an as- 
 sumption. It is at best only a mode of conceiving tk 
 poasihility of that which, on other grounds, or witliout 
 grounds, we have decided to believe. It offers no escape 
 from the overwhelming weight of inference drawn from 
 natural appearances. 
 
 The philosophical value of the arguments ordinarily 
 adduced to demonstrate the reality, or at least the high 
 probability, of an existence after death, will be variously 
 estimated by different minds. That they possess, accu- 
 rately speaking, no logical cogency, will be admitted by 
 all candid and competent reasoners ; to us, we confess, 
 they appear lamentably feeble and inadequate. 
 
 By some we are told that the soul is immaterial, and 
 that by reason of its immateriality it cannot die. How 
 can human beings, professing to have cultivated their un- 
 derstandings, be content to repeat, and rest in, such 
 wretched inanities as these ? — at best but the convulsive 
 flounderings of an intellect out of its depth, deluding itself 
 into the belief that it has grasped an idea, when it has only 
 got hold of a word. That the immaterial must of neces- 
 sity be immortal seems to us an unmeaning assertion on 
 a matter of which we know absolutely nothing. Of the 
 nature of the Soul, science has taught us, indeed, little- 
 far too little to allow us to decide and dogmatize ; but 
 honesty must admit that the little it has taught us all 
 points to an opposite conclusion. Alas ! for the Spirit's 
 immortal trust, if it rested on such scholastic trivialities 
 as these ! 
 
 * The ancient Jews held the existence of such a nucleus. ' ' They con- 
 tended that there was an immortal bone in the human body (called by tliem 
 ossiculum Luz) which is the germ of the lesurrection-body. This bone, they 
 held, one might bum, boil, bake, pound, bruise, or attempt to bruise, by 
 putting it on the anvil and submitting it to the strokes of the sledge-hammer ; 
 but all in vain. No effect would be produced upon it. It was indestructible 
 — incorruptible — ^immortal." — Bush's Anastasis, p. 177. The author of the 
 " Physical Theory " seems to imagine that the body contains some imperisha- 
 ble nucleus, or particle, or element, in which soul or life resides ; something 
 as imponderable as light, as imperceptible as electricity, which does not 
 perish vidth the coarser elements of our frame, but assumes a higher life, 
 and collects about it, or evolves, a nobler and subtler organization. 
 
 Ajrain. 
 drawn f 
 consider 
 how easi 
 of lunnai 
 from this 
 state is c 
 Man, for 
 love of 1 
 stinct wl 
 joys and 
 existence 
 into a pa 
 less exiai 
 hope, the 
 speedily 
 and com] 
 other sid 
 arose. 1 
 tality; o 
 of realizi 
 of a Hei 
 the Uni^ 
 it falL^ t 
 any ble?^ 
 convicti( 
 
 Itist 
 prolongc 
 in a futi 
 of a coi 
 physica 
 here a p 
 for thos 
 they an 
 still ren 
 tence a 
 ti-ansfer 
 how th 
 under tl 
 
 Itwi 
 
 11 
 
THE GREAT ENIGMA. 
 
 303 
 
 to the new ex- 
 such; but no 
 for such an as- 
 conceiving tk 
 ids, or without 
 )ffer,s uo escape 
 je drawn from 
 
 3nts ordinarily 
 least the high 
 ill be variously 
 possess, accu- 
 se admitted by 
 IS, we confess, 
 uate. 
 
 mmaterial, and 
 mot die. How 
 vated their un- 
 rest in, such 
 the convulsive 
 , deluding itself 
 rhen it has only 
 must of neces- 
 ng assertion on 
 (thing. Of the 
 indeed, little- 
 dogmatize; but 
 ,s taught us all 
 for the Spirit's 
 istic trivialities 
 
 tcleus. "They con- 
 tody (nailed by them 
 ly. This bone, they 
 ttempt to bruise, by 
 the sledge-hamiuer ; 
 [t was indestructible 
 The author of the 
 *ins some imperisha 
 I resides ; something 
 ty, which does not 
 jsumes a higher hfe, 
 gauizatiou. 
 
 Ajrain, Much stress is laid on the inference to be 
 drawn from the general belief of mankind. But this 
 consideration will lose nearly all its force when we r^'Hect 
 how easily, in the fond, tender, self-deceptive weaknes? 
 of humanity, a belief can grow out of a wish. Regarded 
 from this point of view, the universal belief in a future 
 state is only the natural result of universal love of life 
 Man, for his preservation, is endowed with an instinctive- 
 love of life, an instinctive horror of destruction — an in- 
 stinct which is strengthened every hour by the mainifold 
 joys and interests of existence. The prolongation of this 
 existence becomes a natural desire, which soon ripens 
 into a passion , in earlier times, the possibility of a death- 
 less existence upon earth was, we know, the dream, the 
 hope, the pursuit of many ; but as accumulated experience 
 speedily dissipated^this foim of the longings of nature, 
 and compelled men to transfer their aspirations to the 
 other side of the grave, the notion of an invisible futurity 
 arose. The first natural desire was for an earthly immor- 
 tality ; out of the reluctantly acknowledged impossibility 
 of realizing this, may have sprung the glorious conception 
 of a Heavenly existence. If this view of the genesis of 
 the Universal Creed be correct, the argument drawn from 
 it falli- to the ground ; since the fact of our desire for 
 any ble-^sing, even when that desire has grown into a 
 conviction, can offer no proof that it will be bestowed. 
 
 It is true that now, thousands who have no wish for a 
 prolonged existence upon earth, yet long for and believe 
 in a future life elsewhere. But this is the result partly 
 of a conviction that the weariness and decay of both 
 physical and moral powers would make continued life 
 here a penalty and not a blessing, and partly of a desire 
 for those higher capacities and nobler pursuits which 
 they anticipate hereafter. The origin of the aspiration 
 still remains the same : it is the desire for a happy exis- 
 tence after their conceptions of happiness ; and they 
 tiansfer the scene of it to heaven, because tiny do not see 
 how these conceptions could be realized on earth, i.e., 
 under the ordinary conditions of humanity. 
 
 It will be ursred that the belief is stron-iost in the most 
 
364 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM 
 
 Mi 
 
 spiritual and religious minds, that is, in those which 
 dwell most constantly on unseen and superhuman reali- 
 ties. This is true • and we cannot venture to say that to 
 such minds, raised and purified by heavenly contempla- 
 tions, may not be given a deeper insight into divine 
 truths than can be attained by those occupied with the 
 things of earth and time Still, the iact will admit of 
 another and more simple explanation , since it is a well- 
 known law of our intellectual constitution that topics 
 and scenes on which the mind habitually and intently 
 dwells, acquire, iipso facto, an increasing degree of reality 
 and permanence in our mental vision out of all propor- 
 tion to their certainty or actuality There is no fancy, 
 however baseless — no picture, however shadowy and un- 
 real — ^to which constant and exclusive contemplation will 
 not impart a consistence, substance, and tenacity, sufficient 
 to render it unassailable by reason, by experience, and 
 almost by the information of the senses. And it cannot 
 be doubted that, however inadequate were the original 
 grounds for the belief in a iuture state, yet when once it 
 was assumed as an article of faith, daily meditation would 
 soon inevitably confer upon it a firmness and solidity witli 
 which the most demonstrable truths of exact science 
 would compete in v^in. 
 
 Much, and as it appears to us undeserved, stress is laid 
 on the argument derived from the unequal, and appar- 
 ently unjust, apportionment of human lots 
 
 A future life, it is said, is needed to redress the inequal- 
 ities of this. But it is evident that this argument 
 proceeds upon two assumptions, one oi which is clearly 
 untenable, and the other at least questionable It assumes 
 that the Presiding Deity is bound to allot an equa 
 portion of good to all his creatures , that to permit th( 
 condition of one human being to be happier than that oi 
 another, is to perpetrate an injustice, — a positioxi foi 
 which it is difficult to imagine any rational defence, anc 
 which must probably be assigned to the unconsciouf 
 operation of one of the least worthy passions of ou) 
 nature — envy. What possible law can that be whicl 
 shall make it the duty of Him who conlers his unpm 
 
 chased g 
 
 sovereign 
 
 tion of hi 
 
 confutes 
 
 justice ai 
 
 created i 
 
 career, h 
 
 existence 
 
 what pel 
 
 attributa 
 
 individuj 
 
 to assert 
 
 tions to 
 
 ponderat 
 
 whether 
 
 culably i 
 
 the argu 
 
 But ai 
 
 piness tl 
 
 jjenerall 
 
 wishing 
 
 arguing 
 
 not at tl 
 
 vated a 
 
 —the o 
 
 known 
 
 known 
 
 perils a: 
 
 in pea( 
 
 wealthy 
 
 smiles, 
 
 man \v 
 
 to who 
 
 who is 
 
 life is I 
 
 unbrok 
 
 it»sight 
 
 izes th 
 
 pensat 
 
 spirit 
 
THE GREAT ENIGMA. 
 
 365 
 
 m those which 
 >erhuman reali- 
 •e to say that to 
 inly contcmpla- 
 ;ht into divine 
 supied with the 
 |ct will admit of 
 nee it is a well- 
 ion that topics 
 ly and intently 
 legree of reality 
 t of all proper- 
 iere is no fancy, 
 hadowy and un- 
 ntemplation will 
 nacity, sufficient 
 experience, and 
 And it cannot 
 rere the original 
 'et when once it 
 aeditation would 
 md solidity with 
 )f exact science 
 
 'ed, stress is laid 
 Ljual, and appai- 
 ts. 
 
 ress the inequal- 
 this argument 
 ;vhich is clearly 
 ible It assumef 
 allot an equa 
 b to permit th( 
 >ier than that oi 
 -a position foi 
 lal defence, anr 
 he unconsciou! 
 Dassions of oil) 
 that be whicl 
 ilcrs his unpni 
 
 chased gifts " with a mysterious and tmcontrollahlc 
 sovereignty " to mete out to every being an equal propor- 
 tion of his boons ? The very statement of the proposition 
 confutes it. All that the creature can demand from the 
 justice and the love of his Creator, is, that he shall not be 
 created for wretchedness — -jthat, on the average of his 
 career, happiness shall predominate over misery — that 
 existence shall, on the whole, have been a blessing — or, 
 what perhaps is the same thing, that it shall be fairly 
 attributable to the voluntary fault — the option — of the 
 individual, if it be not so. Now, without going so far as 
 to assert that there are not, and never have been, excep- 
 tions to the general fact that life presents to all a pre- 
 ponderating average of enjoyment, we may well question 
 whether there are such ; we are sure they must be incal- 
 culably few ; and it is to these exceptional cases only that 
 the argument can have any application. 
 
 But are human lots as unequal in the amount of hap- 
 piness they confer as at fii-st sight would appear ? It is 
 generally acknowledged that they are not. Without 
 wishing to maintain even an apparent paradox ; without 
 arguing that the aggregate balance of enjoyment may 
 not at the end of life be widely different with the culti- 
 vated and the brutish — the intellectual and the sensual 
 — the obtuse and the sensitive — the man who has never 
 known a day's sickness, and the man who has never 
 known a day's health — the savage who lives beset with 
 perils and privations, and the noble who lives embosomed 
 in peace and luxury — the wretched pauper, and the 
 wealthy millionaire — the man on whom fortune always 
 smiles, and the man on whom she always frowns — the 
 man whose children are a glory and a blessing, and him 
 to whom they are a plague and a reproach— the man 
 who is hated, and the man who is loved — the man whoso 
 life is a ceaseless struggle, and the man whose life is an 
 unbroken sleep ; — it is not to be denied that every fresh 
 insight we obtain into the secr(^ts of (!aeh man's lot, equal- 
 izes them more and more; discovers undi'(famed-of com- 
 pensations for goinl and for evil; disclosoH a vigorous 
 spirit oi enjoyment <imong the most obviously unfortun- 
 
 
36b 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 n 
 
 sj :v. 
 
 ate, and a dark cloud of care brooding over the prosper- 
 ous, which go far to rectify our first hasty judgment ot 
 the inequality of their condition. The inner life of ever}- 
 man is hidden from his fellows by a thick veil : whenever 
 accident draws this partly aside, are we not invariably 
 amazed at the unexpected incongruities it lays bare ? Ak 
 we not on such occasions made aware that we are habitu- 
 ally xjrming the most egregiously mistaken estimates o 
 the essential condition of those around us ? For myself I 
 can truly say that whenever circumstance has made me 
 intimately acquainted with the deeper secrets of my 
 fellow-men, I have been utterly confounded at the un- 
 looked-for nature of the revelations. Among the low- 
 est I have found "seeds of almost impossible good;" 
 among the most virtuous in appearance (and in some res- 
 pects in reality), guilt or frailty ^hat scarcely any evidence 
 could make credible ; among the most wretched in out- 
 ward condition, either strange insensibility to suffering, 
 or an inextinguishable spirit of delight ; among the most 
 favoured of the children of fortune, some inchoate, or 
 acted, tragedy hanging like a black thunder-cloud over 
 their path. 
 
 Compensation is the great law everywhere inscribed on 
 the procedures of Nature. It prevails likewise over hu- 
 man destinies in uiis lite, not perhaps — not probably-- 
 altogether to the extent of equalization, but to an extent 
 that certainly approaches nearer and nearer to this point, 
 the wider our knowledge and the deeper our meditation.* 
 Still, I do not wish to push this argument too far : I merely 
 
 I 
 
 *• The clasf) whose destiny is by far the moet perplexing to the thinker, is 
 that whose element, whose atmosphere, whose almost necessary condition, we 
 may say, is that of vice ; the ctaases danga-euses of lai-ge towns, who are bom 
 and bred in ^squalor and iniquity, and never have a chance affort'ed them to 
 rise out of it. Their intellect and moral sense are seldom ; v^fficiently devel 
 oped to afford them the compensation these bring to others. The apparently 
 hopeless, objectless, noxious existence of these beings, and their fearful 
 power of mischief and of multiplication, have always been, and fltill remain 
 tome, "God's most disturbing mystery. '' Still we do not know that, on 
 the whole, even they are miserable. If, b^'vever, they are, it would rather 
 drive us to the startliny conclusion UmI thos^ hare most claim on a futv^e lift 
 who are least fit ^or it — that the least intellectual, the least moral, the leust 
 spiiltual of the r^pecies, are the aurest deuizens uf Heaven i 
 
THE GREAT ENIGMA. 
 
 367 
 
 wish to show h<>'V invalid a foundation it must be for 
 such a superstructure as we build upon it. 
 
 " But the ideal of moral retribution (we are told) neces- 
 sitates a future state. God is a righteous Judge, who will 
 recompense virtue and punish sin. In this life virtue, we 
 know, often goes witho^it its reward, and vice without its 
 punishment : — there must therefore be a future I'fe in 
 which these respectively await them." Such is the syl- 
 losfism on which reason most relies for the establishment 
 of the Great Tenet. I do not dispute the conclusion : — I 
 question the soundness of the premisses. 
 
 It is evident that the whole cogency of the above syl- 
 logism depends upon the correctness of the assumption 
 that virtue and vice are not equitably recompensed in this 
 life. It assumes, j^rs^, that we can read the heart and the 
 circumstances, and see where virtue and vice — merit and 
 demerit — really lie ; — and, secondly, that we can look into 
 •the lot, and discern where there is, or is not, retribution ; 
 — that guilt and innocence are what w^e deem such, and 
 that Nemesis executes no sentences but such as meet our 
 eye. Alas ! for the argument that rests on two postulates 
 «so disputable as these. 
 
 What do we know — what can we predicate — of the sin- 
 fulness of any fellow-creature ? Can we say, " this man 
 
 IS more 
 
 IS 
 
 guilty than that ; " or even, " this man 
 very wicked ? " We may, indeed, be able to say, "this 
 man has lied, has pilfered, has forged ; and that man has 
 apparently gone through life with clean hands." But can 
 we say that the first has not struggled long, though un- 
 successfully, against temptations under which the second 
 would have succumbed without an effort ? We can say which 
 has the cleanest han' s before man ; — can we say which 
 has the cleanest soul before God ? We may be able to say, 
 " this man has committed adultery, and that man has 
 never been guilty of unchastity ;" — but can we tell that 
 the innocence of the one may not have been due to the 
 coldness of his heart— \o the absence of a motive — to the 
 presence of a fear ? And that the fall of the other may 
 not have been preceded by the most vehement self-con- 
 test — caused by the most over-mastering phrenzy — and 
 

 368 
 
 THE CREED OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 ii- I 
 
 
 <l',|. 
 
 
 atoned for by the most hallowing repentance ? We know 
 that one man is generous and open-handed, and another 
 close, niggardly , and stern ; but we do not know that the 
 generosity of the one as well as the niggardliness of the 
 other may not be a mere yielding to native temperament. 
 In the eye of Heaven, a long life of beneficence in the one 
 may have cost less exertion, and may intlicate less virtue, 
 than a lew rare hidden acts of kindness vn ung by duty 
 out of the reluctant and unsymjjathizin;^ mature of the 
 other. There may be more real merit — mf »i.e self -sacrific- 
 ing effort — more of the noblest struggles of moral grandeur 
 in a life of failure, sin, and shame, than in a career, to our 
 eyes, of stainless integrity. " God seeth not as man seetb." 
 Let this be a consoling thought to the sinner who, black 
 as he may be before the world, has yet ^.ontrived to keep 
 some little light burning in his own soul ; — a humbling 
 and a warning thought to many who now walk proudly 
 in thf^ sunshine ol 'r. "maculate fame. ' 
 
 But do we kn:)w e /en the outside life of men ? Are we 
 competent to pronuiuice even on their deeds? Do we know 
 half the acts ol wickedness or oi virtue even of our most 
 immediate fellows ? Can we say with any certainty, even 
 of our nearest friend, " this man has, or has not, committed 
 such a sin — broken such a commandment " ? Let each 
 man ask his own heart. Ol ho v>^ .nany of our best and of 
 our worst acts and qualities are our most intimate asso- 
 ciates utterly unconscious ? How many virtues does the 
 world give us credit for that we do not possess ? How 
 small a portion of our evil deeds and thoughts ever come 
 to light ? Even of our few redeeming goodnesses, how 
 large a portion is known to God only ! Truly, we walk 
 in a vain show ! * 
 
 " Or whiit if Heaven for once its searching i^jiii 
 Sent to some partial eye, disclosing all 
 The rude, bad thoughts, that in onr bosom's nigl 
 Wander at large, nor heed Love's gentle thrall 
 
 " Who would not shun the drerfiy uncouth place ? 
 As if, fond leaning wheie her iiifant slept, 
 A mother's arm a serpent should embrace ; 
 So might we friendless live, and die unwep' 
 
 • ' Thou keei» the softening veil in mercy drawn, 
 
 Thou who canst love us, though Thon read us true." 
 
 KiheVs Christ id I) Yrrr. 
 
 When 
 overtakor 
 dispensat 
 heart, i)ei 
 nay, ofte 
 suffering 
 upon us _ 
 he has li 
 if the w 
 deem su( 
 iniquities 
 with oth 
 with th 
 merited ; 
 heavier i 
 at a losf: 
 the conn 
 We ai 
 tion is d 
 retributi 
 to us, w 
 can we 1 
 fall, nor 
 a man's 
 at all — 
 probabl 
 that tal 
 would 1 
 idle — ii 
 iriitabl 
 benevo 
 the pa 
 which 1 
 of reti 
 Deeds 
 conseq 
 actiom 
 with t 
 would 
 
THE GREAT ENIGMA. 
 
 S69 
 
 ? We know 
 
 and canotlier 
 
 now tliat the 
 
 linf^ss of the 
 
 emperainent. 
 
 ice in the one 
 
 te less viitue, 
 
 uug by duty 
 
 ature of the 
 
 self-saciitlc- 
 
 'I'al grandeur 
 
 career, to our 
 
 s man seeth." 
 
 sr who, black 
 
 •ived to keep 
 
 -a humbling 
 
 *^alk proudly 
 
 aen ? Are we 
 Do we know 
 I of our most 
 srtainty, even 
 )t, committed 
 ? Let each 
 ir best and of 
 itimate asso- 
 iues does the 
 isess ? How 
 is ever come 
 inesses, how 
 ily, we walk 
 
 When we see one whom we know only as a good man 
 oveitaken by a strange calamity, we call it a perplexing 
 dispensation. But in the secret recesses of that man's 
 heart, perhaps, how well does he feel to have deserved it, 
 nay, often, how precisely can he trace back the open 
 suffering to the secret sin ! Sorrow and darktiess come 
 upon us ; and the World pities us and says, " Poor man ! 
 he has little deserved such a fate." But ive know that 
 if the world knew us as we know ourselves, it would 
 deem such fate far too light a chastisement for our 
 iniquities. If it be so with ourselves, may it not be so 
 with others ? Men accustomed to self -study, and honest 
 with themselves, often think their prosperity un- 
 merited ; rarely indeed do they think their calamities 
 heavier than their demerits ; — though they may be often 
 at a loss — though it may often be impossible — to trace 
 the connection between them. 
 
 We are wholly in the dark, then, as to what retribu- 
 tion is deserved : — we are equally in the dark as to what 
 retribution is awarded. We could not tell, if it were left 
 to us, where to reward and where to punish: — neitlxr 
 can we tell where reward and punishment now actually 
 fall, nor in what proportion. The retribution m y be in 
 a man's heart or in his lot. In the one case we see it not 
 at all — in the other we see it very imperfectly. But it is 
 probable that could we see even half the retribution 
 that takes place in life, the argument we ar considering 
 would never have arisen. In the weary s.^tiety of the 
 idle — in the healthy energy of honest labour ; — in r.he 
 irritable temper of the selfish — in the serene peace of the 
 benevolent ; — in the startling tortu^s of the Soul where 
 the passions have the mastery — in the calm Elysium 
 which succeeds theirsubiugation;— may be traced materials 
 of retribution sufficient to satisfy the seve; st justice. 
 Deeds and states of mind are their own aven^ ens. "^f"^' * 
 conse(iaence of an act is its reward or punishment. Our 
 actions in the long run carry their own retribution along 
 with them. If it were not so, the arrangements of natuie 
 would be at fault. * 
 
 i 
 
 ue." 
 Vrrr. 
 
 * " Men call the oircumstanco the retribution. The causal retribution iu 
 
370 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 llJll 
 
 ilili 
 
 fi 
 
 
 PI 
 
 " What did the preacher mean by assuming that 
 judgment is not executed in this world ; by saying that 
 the wicked are successful, and the good are miserable, in 
 the present life ? Was it that houses and lands, offices, 
 wine, horses, dress, luxury, are had by unprincipled men, 
 whilst the saints are poor and despised ; and that a com- 
 pensation is to be made to these last hereafter, by giving 
 them the lik«) gratifications another day — bank stock and 
 doubloons, venison and champagne ? This must be the 
 compensation intended, for what else ? Is it that they 
 are to have leave to pray and praise ? to love and serve 
 men ? why, they can do these now. The legitimate 
 inference the disciple would draw, was, ' We are to have 
 such a good time as the sinners have now ;' — or, to push 
 it to its extreme import, ' You sin now ; we shall sin 
 by-and-by ; we would sin now if we could ; — not being 
 successful, we expect our revenge to-morrow.' 
 
 " The fallacy lay in the immense concession that the 
 bad are successful, that justice is not done now. The 
 blindness of the preacher consisted in deferring to the 
 base estimate of the market of what constitutes a manly 
 success, instead of confronting and convicting the world 
 from the truth , announcing the presence of the Soul ; the 
 omnipotence of the will, and so establishing the standard 
 of good and ill, of success and falsehood, and summoning 
 <he dead to its present tribunal"* 
 
 Our false view of the whole subject arises from the 
 ii Id still possessed over our minds by the old Jewish 
 notion, that the good things of this life are the fitting and 
 the promised recompense of virtue, — that virtue and 
 prospeiity, vice and poverty, are linked together by the 
 decrees of divine justice. This unacknowledged fallacy 
 lies at the root of much of our disappointment, and much 
 
 in the thing, and is seen by the Soul. The retribution in the circumsitance 
 is seen by the understanding ; it is inseparable from the thing, but is 
 often spraad over a long time, and so does not become distinct for many 
 
 ? fears. The specific stripes may follow late after the offence, but tliey 
 ollow because they n<:company it. Crime and pimishmeut grow out (if 
 one t'tem. Punishment is a fruit that, uns"8pected, ripens within the 
 flower of the pleasure that concealed it. — Emerson, Essay iii. 
 * Emerson's Essay on Oompensatiou. 
 
tsuming that 
 ■ saying that 
 miserable, in 
 lands, offices, 
 •incipled men, 
 i that a com- 
 [ter, by giving 
 Hnk stock and 
 must be the 
 it that they 
 've and serve 
 'he legitimate 
 e are to have 
 ' — or, to push 
 ; we shall sin 
 d ; — not being 
 w.' 
 
 3sioE that the 
 tie now. The 
 ferring to the 
 itutes a manly 
 ing the world 
 ' the Soul ; the 
 J the standard 
 id summoning 
 
 •ises from the 
 e old Jewish 
 he fitting and 
 t virtue and 
 gether by the 
 edged fallacy 
 mi, and much 
 
 THE GREAT ENIGMA. 
 
 3/1 
 
 the circiimtitance 
 ;he thing, Iwt is 
 istinct for many 
 offence, but tliey 
 lent grow out (if 
 ipens within the 
 ii. 
 
 of our surprise and perplexity at the dispensations of 
 Providence. There is much sound wisdom on this subject 
 in Mrs. Barbauld's Essay on " Inconsistency in our 
 Expectations;" still more perhaps in Pope's "Essay on 
 Man."* 
 
 Much reliance is placed upon the assertion that Man 
 possesses faculties which can find no fitting aliment, and 
 can attain no adequate development, on earth ; and which, 
 therefore, are supposed to indicate the necessity of a fu- 
 ture scene for their perl action. Many of our powers, we 
 are told, do not ripen till the close of life ; and reach their 
 acme just as the approach of death renders them, if this 
 life be all, of no further use to us. It is contradictory to 
 all the analogies of nature, it is said, to imagine that Prov- 
 idence has bestowed any capacities or desires for which 
 an appropriate scope and object have not been appointed. 
 I confess I do not appreciate the force of this argument ; 
 it appears to me as if its setters-forth had satisfied them- 
 selves too easily with mere words. It is not true that our 
 powers — our active powers at least — whether physical or 
 intellectual, reach their highest development as life draws 
 to a close. On the contrary, they commonly attain their 
 leight in middle life, and gradually weaken and decay as 
 ige creeps over the frame. Wisdom, indeed, may be said 
 m well-constituted minds to increase to the end of life^ 
 but wisdom is but the accumulated inference from our 
 experience and our reflection, and will naturally augment 
 vvith the perpetual increase of its materials. But memory, 
 
 * " But is it not some reproach on the economy of Providence that such a 
 me, who is a mean, dirty fellow, should have amassed wealth enough to buy 
 aalf a nation? Not in the least He made himself a mean, dirty fellow, 
 for that very end. He has paid his health, his conscience, his liberty for it ; 
 md will you envy him his bargain T—Barbauld, i. 187 
 
 " But sometimes Virtue starves, while Vice is fed ; 
 What then ? Is the reward of Virtue bread ! 
 That, Vice may merit ; 'tis the price of toil ; 
 The knave deserves it when he tills the soil. 
 The good man may be weak, be indolent; 
 Nor is his claim to plenty, but content. 
 What nothing earthly gives, or can destroy, 
 The Soul's calm sunshine, and the heartfelt joy, 
 Is Virtue's prize." 
 
 Pope, Jjiasay iv. 
 
372 
 
 THE CREED OP CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 1 
 
 '} 
 
 imagination, the power of acqmsition, the power of intel- 
 lectual creation, unquestionably do not continue to ri]»rn 
 and strengthen after maturity is passed. Nor is it easy 
 to discover what those faculties are, for which this earth 
 may not aftord a fitting field and ample occupation. Love, 
 Hope, Fancy, are probably the noblest endowments of 
 Uian's moral Being. Cannot Love — even in its richest 
 profusion and its tenderest refinements — find adequate 
 exercise amid the varied relations of our mortal existence, 
 in soothing sorrow, in conferring good, in brightening all 
 the dark passages Ox life, and turning earth into an anti- 
 cipated Paradise ? Will any one who has once loved a 
 fellow-creature with all the passionate energy of an earn- 
 est soul, or who has once melted into rapture with genuine 
 gratitude to the God who has bestowed such happiness, 
 dare to say that Love finds no aiiiple development, and 
 reaps no teeming harvest here ? And Hope ; — is not hope 
 the spring of all exertion — the origin of all progress — the 
 conferrer of all strength — along the toilsome and dusty 
 pathways of the world ? And can it find no woithy ob- 
 ject in the dream of what Humanity, through the etforts 
 which it stimulates and rewards, may yet become ? And 
 is Imagination entitled to complain Oi the narrow field in 
 which it is permitted to expatiate, because Time and 
 Space are the allotted limits of its range, so long as it has 
 the mighty possibilities of human destiny before it, and 
 Suns and Systems and Firmaments — countless, infinite, 
 inscrutable — above it ? 
 
 " But (it is said) the character, at least, continues grow- 
 ing till the end of life, and many of our best virtues are 
 the fruit only of the discipline Oj. Life, especially humili- 
 ty, forbearance, resignation, and contentment. Shall then 
 existence terminate just when the human being is most 
 fitted to appreciate it, to understand it, to fulfil its aims ? 
 Is its sucCess to be the signal for its extinction ? Is su- 
 preme excellence to be achieved only to be eclipsed for 
 ever ? J.-s our goal to be our grave ? " I feel the weight 
 of thest considerations, and have nothing to urge agpinst 
 them. 
 
 But, in truth, all these arguments wc have been con- 
 
THE GREAT ENIGMA. 
 
 373 
 
 sideling are to be taken, not S(j much as proofs cf the 
 doctrine of a future life, as proofs of man's resolution to 
 h()\A that doctrine. They are inadequate to demonstrate 
 its soundness; but amply sufficient to show that the be- 
 lie] being in maris mind, he knows not how nor whence, 
 he is determined to maintain it, curiou to account for it. 
 anxious to justify it. Erroneou.sly conceiving that it must 
 be a product oi reason, he diligently looks about to dis- 
 cover the logical processes which have generated it , and 
 clings to the shallowest crudities rather than surrender 
 (as he conceives) the title-deeds of his I'aith . 
 
 The truth we believe to be, that a future existence is, 
 and must be, a matter of information or intuition not of 
 injerence. The intellect may imagine it, but could never 
 Jiave discovered it, and can never prove it — the Soul must 
 iiave revealed it ; must, and does, perpetually reveal it. 
 It is a matter which comes properly within the coofnizance 
 ',)i the Soul* — 0, that spiritual sense, to which on such 
 topics we must look for information, as we look to our 
 bodily senses lor information touching the things of earth 
 — things that lie within their province We never dream 
 ol doubting Avhat they tell us of the external world, though 
 a Berkeley should show us that their teaching is at vari- 
 ance with, or indefensible by logic. We therefore at once 
 cut the Gordion knot by conceding to the Soul the privi- 
 lege of instructing us as to the things of itself ; — we apply 
 to the spiritual sense for information on spiritual things. 
 We believe that there is no other solution of the question. 
 To the man who disbelieves the Soul's existence, this will 
 
 '■' ' ' That a purely historical is as unsatisfactory aa a metaphysical basis 
 for a spiritual doctrine is obvious ; indeed Paul gives us clearly to under- 
 stand tnat the future hopes of the soul were to be discmed by the soul it- 
 self, for itself ; and did not depend upon man's wisdom, as a question of hia- 
 cory does and must. . Paul may have had more of direct inrn^'ht into 
 
 ilii.^ deepest of subjects than the passages quoted denote : God fm-l)iJ that 
 I should presumptuously limit the insight enjoyed by his most favoured ser- 
 vants. Yet his light does us little or no good, while it is a light outside of 
 us so long we are depending on the soundness of Paul's faculties. If he in 
 any way confused the conclusions of hi ■ logic (which is often extremely in- 
 consequent and mistaken) u ith the perceptions of his divinely-illuminated 
 soul, our belief might prove baseless. Faith by proxy is really no faith at 
 all, and certainly is not what Paul would have over recommended." — iVev> 
 man on the Soul, pp. 187-9. 
 
874 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 If ' 
 
 111 
 
 of course appear an unwarrantable and illogical admission. 
 To him the Soul has not spoken. My sources of informa- 
 tion are unavailable to him. My soul can tell hvm nothing. 
 Providence has denied to him a sense which has been 
 granted to me ; and all the knowledge which comes to 
 me through the avenues ot that sense must seem foolish- 
 ness to him. 
 
 The only occasions on which a shade of doubt ha.s 
 passed over my conviction of a future existence, have 
 been when I have rashly endeavoured to make out a case, to 
 give a reason for the faith that is in me, to assign osten- 
 sible and logical grounds for my belief. At such times, 
 and still more when I have heard others attempting to 
 prove the existence of a future world by arguments which 
 could satisfy no one by whom arguments were neeeded, I 
 confess that a chill dismay has often struck into my heart, 
 and a fluctuating darkness has lowered down upon my 
 creed, to be dissipated only when I had again left inference 
 and induction far behind, and once more suffered the Soul 
 to take counsel with itself. 
 
 This appears to me the only foundation on which the 
 belief in a future life can legitimately rest, to those who 
 do not accept a miraculous external revelation. Et tihi 
 magna satis. It is a belief anterior to reasoning, inde- 
 pendent of reasoning, unprovable by reasoning; and 
 ye't as no logic can demonstrate its unsoundTiess, or can 
 bring more than negative evidence to oppose to it— I can 
 hold it with a simplicity, a tenacity, an undoubting faith, 
 which is never granted to the conclusions of the under- 
 standing. " Ld, oil jinit le raisonnement, commence li 
 veritable certitude." It is a kind provision in man's 
 moral nature that he is not made dependent on the tardy, 
 imperfect, fallible, and halting processes of logic, for any 
 convictions necessary either to happiness or action.* 
 
 * " There are instances of common convictions— firm ones too — which you 
 cannot put to proof in a logical form. There ia our reliance on permanency o< 
 the laws of Mature. One of the ablest reasoners, and with no bias towards 
 Christianity, or any particular form of religion, in his mind, has found him- 
 self unable to account for this reliance but by terming it a human instinct, 
 something analotyous to the instincts of animals. That the Sunrose to-day 
 is no loji-ical pi juf that he will rise tomorrow. That the grain grew last 
 
 II ' 
 
THE GREAT ENIGMA. 
 
 375 
 
 These are all instinctive, primary, intuitive. Reason 
 examines ti em, combines them, confirms them, questions 
 them ; but there they remain, heedless alike of her hos- 
 tility ; — " asking no leave to shine of our terrestrial 
 star." 
 
 It is an immense advantage gained, when we have dis- 
 covered and decided that it is not from the logical faculty 
 that our knowlcdore on spiritual topics is to be gained. 
 We can then afford to be honest — to give reason and 
 analysis fair play — to shrink from no conclusion, how- 
 ever unwelcome to our speculations, which they may force 
 upon us ; for after they have done all they can to correct, 
 to negative, to ascertain, we feel that their function is 
 critical merely — that our light comes to us from elsewhere. 
 
 There are three points especially of religious belief, 
 regarding which, intuition (or instinct) and logic are at 
 variance — the efficacy of prayer, man's free will, and a 
 future existence. If believed, they must be believed, the 
 last without the countenance, the two former in spite of 
 the hostility, of logic. Hence the belief in them is more 
 
 resolute and undoubting the nearer men and nations 
 
 never 
 men in the 
 
 approach to the instinctive condition* Savages 
 doubt them ; sufferers never doubt them 
 
 year does not argue, by a syllogistic deduction, that it will grow next year. 
 Yet where is there a confidence stronger than this ? — where a belief more 
 firm? Our conviction of the reality of external nature is another instance 
 of the same description. That, too, baffles the logician. You cannot show 
 that there is matter, or existence at all, beyond yourself ; and yet you 
 believe it, rely upon it, act upon it. It may all be only impression on our 
 consciousness. The Berkeleian can dispose of the whole material universe 
 in this way with the greatest ease. There may be no stars shining in hea- 
 ven, no trees growing in the forest — all may be but sensation, thought, in us ; 
 still, who does not rest upon, who does not act upon, the reality of something 
 which is out of us, with an assurance as strong as that of our belief in our 
 own existence ? Those who require direct agencies of demonstration in 
 such matters as these — who contend that belief and the logical form of 
 proof have an inseparable union — must find their way out of this dilemma 
 as well as they can. "—Fox, on the Religious Ideas, p. 20. 
 
 * This is the idea which lies at the root of Wordsworth's sublimest poem 
 — The Ode on the Intimations of Immortality. 
 
 " Heaven lies about us in our Infancy ! 
 Shades of the prison-house begin to close 
 
 Upon the growing boy, 
 But he beholds the light, and whence it flows, 
 He sees it in his joy ; 
 

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 THE CllEED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 \l i 
 
 excitement of vehement action never doubt them. It is 
 the quiet, even tenour of comfortable and refined exis- 
 tence — it is tlie fireside, the library, the arm-chair that 
 doubt, that question, that speak of darkness, that ask % 
 proofs, j-i 
 
 We have already intimated that we think it question- 
 able whether the doctrine of a future life has been of 
 that practical service to mankind, either in kind or degree 
 which is commonly assumed. Of its inestimable value, 
 as a consolation to the sorrowing, as a hope to the aspir- 
 ing, as a rest to the weary and heavy-laden, it is not 
 easy to speak in language strong enough tor the occasion. 
 But we incline to doubt whether it exercises much in- 
 fluence on the actual morals of mankind at larfre— 
 whether, except in isolated instances, the expectation of 
 futuro retribution operates strongly to deter from crime 
 or to stimulate to virtue.* And, as we said in the last 
 section, it is more than doubtful whether the happiness 
 and social progress of mankind has not rather been 
 retarded than promoted by the doctrine. 
 
 The youth who daily further from the East 
 
 Must travel, still is Nature's Priest, 
 
 And bjr the vision splendid 
 
 Is on his way attended ; 
 At length the Man perceives it die away, 
 And fade into the light of common day." 
 
 " Mighty Prophet ! Seer blest ! 
 On whom those truths do rest, 
 Which we are toiling all our lives to find. 
 In darkness lost, the darkness of the grave ; 
 Thou; over whom thine immortality 
 Broods like the day, a Master o'er a Slave, 
 A Presence which ia not to be put by ; 
 Thou little child 1" 
 
 * " Such remarks, I fear, may be felt as exceedinglv painful by those 
 who are accustomed to regard a fixed logical dogma on this subject to be of 
 first-rate importance, and even of necessity ; but a little reflection as to the 
 high tone of spiritual elevation maintained by the Hebrew bards ought to 
 suffice to show that that ' necessity ' is extremely exaggerated. But thia in 
 not all. Need we ask what sort of influence the current viewn exert over tli« 
 irreligious ? Are they less profane for the dreadful doctrine of an eternal 
 Hell? .... 'J'hat a firm belief of immortality, aritiny out of insight, must 
 have very energetic force, I regard as an axiom ; but as an external dogma, I 
 cannot but think that its efficacy is prodigiously over-rated." — Newman o/t 
 the Ooul. 
 
 But as 1 
 
 to every b 
 
 Speculatic 
 
 istence, ai 
 
 here may 
 
 engross ir 
 
 this latter 
 
 Biblical C 
 
 sunie. B 
 
 the Gondii 
 
 the outset 
 
 that, by a 
 
 Soul will 
 
 to misery 
 
 ment will 
 
 The Chrii 
 
 its Make] 
 
 which wi 
 
 great gul 
 
 the space 
 
 quickene 
 
 clouded ■' 
 
 bodied s] 
 
 able Hel 
 
 the aspii 
 
 the tarn 
 
 other cr( 
 
 versible 
 
 We a 
 
 give us 
 
 Heaven. 
 
 If we cc 
 
 And ho^ 
 
 perienct 
 
 wekno^ 
 
 and un 
 
 necessa: 
 
 happim 
 
 That 
 
 someth 
 
THE GREAT ENIGMA. 
 
 377 
 
 But as to the deep paramount interest of the doctrine 
 to every believer, there can be no difierence of opinion. 
 Speculation as to the nature of that strange and new ex- 
 istence, and as to the influence which our proceedings 
 here may exert upon our position there, cannot fail to 
 engross much of the thoughts of the serious mind. On 
 this latter point the philosophical Theist and the mere 
 BibUcal Christian differ less than either is willing to as- 
 sume. Both believe that actually, and by some operation, 
 the condition of the Soul on earth must determine at least 
 the outset of its future destiny. The Christian conceives 
 that, by a formal decree of the Most High, the virtuous 
 Soul will be assigned to happiness, and the vicious Soul 
 to misery. Tlie Theist conceives that this precise allot- 
 ment will result from the very nature of the Soul itself. 
 The Christian believes that, as each Soul appears before 
 its Maker, it will receive from His lips the dread sentence 
 which will fix it for ever on one sidt or other of that 
 great gulf which separates the space where He is from 
 5ie space where He is not The Theist believes that the 
 quickened perceptions, the intensified faculties, the un- 
 clouded vision, which we imagine as proper to the disem- 
 bodied spirit, will constitute its sure Heaven or its inevit- 
 able Hell. The one creed is, that the pure, the loving, 
 the aspiring Soul, must be happy ; and that the grovelling, 
 the tarnished, the malignant Soul, cannot be so. The 
 other creed is, that God will pronounce to them this irre- 
 versible fiat at the last great day. 
 
 We cannot agree with those who say that Earth can 
 give us no conception, no toretaste, of the felicities of 
 Heaven. How then can we aftect honestly to desire it ? 
 If we could not conceive of it, how could we long tor it ? 
 And how can we conceive of it, but from the basis of ex- 
 perienced feelings ? " What can we reason but from what 
 we know?" Why should we regard this life as so wretched 
 and unworthy that the happiness of Heaven must 
 necessarily be composed of distinct ingredients from the 
 happiness of Earth ? God made it too. 
 
 That something will .yet remain to be superadded — 
 something entirely new — in that future existence, I caD 
 
■ * 
 
 378 
 
 THE CREED OF CHRISTENDOM. 
 
 vvell believe. Though God will be — can be — no nearer to 
 us there than here — yet as our perceptions ot His presence 
 will be clearer, and our insight into His nature incalcu- 
 lably deeper, it may be that at length— when the course 
 of those endless gradations of progress through which our 
 spiritual faculties will attain their full development, we 
 shall have begun to know Him with something of the 
 same cogni^^ance with which we know our fellow-creatures 
 here — we shall learn so to love Him, that that love will 
 absorb into itself all the other constituents of the Beatific 
 Life. But I can conceive of this only as the result of the 
 most ultimate and Seraphic knowledge : to expect it soon, 
 or to affect it here, seems to me equally irrational and 
 insincere. 
 
 It is unreasonable to expect so entire a change in the 
 character of the Soul, by the mere event of death, as 
 would entitle it, or enable it to enter at once on the en- 
 joyment of supreme felicity. With the shuffling oft this 
 mortal coil, we may indeed hope to lay down at once and 
 for ever all those temptations with which in this life the 
 senses beset the soul, all that physical weakness which 
 has clogged and bounded the exertions of the intellect, all 
 that obscurity with which our material nature has too often 
 clouded our moral vision. But that the Spirit which has 
 been angry, narrow, or infirm Jjere, should suddenly be- 
 come large, strong, and placid there, is a miracle which 
 the analogies of God's workings give us no ground to an- 
 ticipate. We believe that according to the goal which 
 each soul has reached on earth, will be his starting-point In 
 Heaven — that, through long ages of self -elaborating effort, 
 it must win its way up nearer and nearer to the Throne of 
 God — and that occupation can never fail, nor interest 
 ever flag, even through everlasting being ; for, infinite as 
 may be its duration, will it not be surpassed by the infi- 
 nitude of the created universe ? When we reflect that 
 during a life of seventy years, the wisest of the sons of 
 ijien, though aided by all the knowledge that preceding 
 generations have bequeathed to them, can penetrate only 
 an insignificant portion of tlio wonders of this little earth, 
 we need not fear that Eternity will exhaust the contem- 
 
 plations 
 terns an( 
 that lar^ 
 cannot t 
 "But 
 asked, 
 we can ( 
 having 
 and the 
 world in 
 alone — \ 
 the selfi 
 cleared _; 
 tion, in 
 feeling t 
 those tl 
 from th 
 lie, a toi 
 the rep 
 tamenes 
 hard, wl 
 these, if 
 a sulphi 
 and ean 
 
THE QBEAT EMIOHA. 
 
 879 
 
 s — no nearer to 
 )f His presence 
 ature incalcu- 
 len the course 
 ugh which our 
 vrelopment, we 
 lething of the 
 illow-creatures 
 that love '.vill 
 of the Beatific 
 16 result of the 
 expect it soon, 
 irrational and 
 
 change in the 
 it of death, as 
 Qce on the en- 
 iffling off this 
 '^n at once and 
 in this life the 
 eakness which 
 le intellect, all 
 -e has too often 
 •irit which has 
 I suddenly be- 
 miracle which 
 ground to an- 
 le goal which 
 ii-ting-point in 
 •orating eff'ort, 
 
 the Throne of 
 [, nor interest 
 for, infinite as 
 jd by the inli- 
 ne reflect that 
 of the sons of 
 hat preceding 
 )enetrate only 
 lis little earth, 
 it the contem- 
 
 plations of him to whom will lie open, not only the sys- 
 tems and firmaments we read of and can dimly see, but 
 that larger, remoter, more illimitable universe which we 
 cannot even dream of here. 
 
 " But the punishments of the next World ? " we hear it 
 asked. Well ! is our imagination so poor and barren that 
 we can conceive of no adequate and ample ones, without 
 having recourse to the figures of the worm that dieth not, 
 and the fire that is not quenched ? Must not a future 
 world in itself — the condition of " spiritual corporeity " 
 alone — bring with it dreadful retribution to the wicked, 
 the selfish, and the weak ? In the mere fact of their 
 cleared perceptions, in the realization of their low posi- 
 tion, in seeing themselves at length as they really are, in 
 feeling that all their work is yet to do, in beholding all 
 those they loved and venerated far before them, away 
 from them, fading in the bright distance, may lie, must 
 lie, a torture, a purifying fire, in comparison with which 
 the representations of Dante and Milton shrivel into 
 tameness and inadequacy. To the base, the sensual, the 
 hard, who have no notion of a mental torment, translate 
 these, if you will, by the image of a quenchless flame and 
 a sulphurous lake ; but seek not to embody such coarse 
 and earthly conceptions in the theology of better natures. 
 
 THE ENIX 
 
*• 
 
 A.BARBAr 
 spiration, 
 Aberglaube, 
 
 22. 
 
 A.brahain, b 
 
 deity a 1 
 
 born chile 
 
 Acts of the 
 
 {orm\ila i 
 
 mentione 
 
 wholly re 
 
 companio 
 
 1S5; itB 
 
 -35-6 ; a 
 
 lentiles, 
 
 servances 
 
 conversio 
 
 Adam, gen 
 
 Adultery, 
 
 Mosaic I 
 
 ^schylus, 
 
 Agnosticisi 
 
 Fichte o] 
 
 Agrippa, 
 
 Alexander 
 
 in his ■ 
 
 Pamphy 
 
 Alexandni 
 
 Fourth ( 
 
 AUegorjN/ 
 
 Alms-givi] 
 
 Altruism, 
 
 ^19. 
 Amos, pro 
 not fulf 
 Amphora, 
 Anachron 
 Ananias, i 
 Angels, a 
 Jesus, 2 
 Anglicam 
 
 231 n. 
 Anoihilat 
 
 231. 
 
 Annuncia 
 
 201-204 
 
 AntediluA 
 
 age, 11? 
 
 Anthropt 
 
 Jews, ■ 
 
 ment, ^ 
 
 ■^..- 
 
ilSDEX. 
 
 «mU' r- 
 
 ; 
 
 \BABBANEL on degrees of in- 
 spiration, 79 n. 
 
 Aberglaube, Matthew Arnold on, 19- 
 22. 
 
 A.braham, his monotheism, 146 ; his 
 deity a family god, 147-8; late- 
 born child of, 203. 
 
 Acts of the Apostles, the baptismal 
 formula in, 191 ; Incarnation not 
 mentioned, 229 ; faithful, but not 
 whoUy reliable, 235 ; written by a 
 companion of Paul, probably Luke, 
 %35 ; its discourses manuf <iotured, 
 .35-6; as io preaching gospel to 
 Tentiles, 239-40 ; as m Judaic ob- 
 servances by Grentiles, 251-2 , on 
 conversion of Paul, 269-262. 
 
 Adam, genealogy from, 113-14 
 
 Adultery., yunished with death by 
 Mosaic Law, 85. 
 
 yEschylus, how far inspired, 103. 
 
 Amosticism, 59-60, fi5-70, 303-6, 312 ; 
 Fichte on, 66-7. 
 
 Agrippa, Paul's address to, 269-60. 
 
 Alexander, Babylon a flour shing city 
 \a his time, ^ 29-30 ; passage of 
 Pamphylian Sea hy, 280. 
 
 Alexandrian ideas, influence of. on 
 Fourth Gospel, 216, 230. 
 
 Allegorj% in Old Testament, 80-1 n. 
 
 Alms-giving, 43-6 : noxious, 55. 
 
 Altruism, enjoined by Ohriatianity, 
 319. 
 
 Amos, prophecy against Jeroboam II. 
 not fulfilled, 1^ ; his date, 131 n. 
 
 Amphora, a Roman measure, 222 n. 
 
 Anachronism, in Gospels, 209 n. 
 
 Ananias, story of, 63. 
 
 Angels, appearance of, at birth of 
 Jesus, 204. 
 
 Anglicanus, on Future Punishment, 
 231 n. 
 
 Annihilation, soriptura. doctrine of, 
 231. 
 
 Annunciation, Luke's account of, 
 201-204. 
 
 Antediluvian patriarchs, their great 
 age, 119 n. 
 
 Anthropomorphism, 60, 69-70 ; of 
 Jews, 146-63, 33'i ; in New Testa- 
 ment, 363. 
 
 Antioch, Paul and Barnabas at, 251. 
 
 Antiochus Epiphanes, 12%n, 133. 
 
 Apocalypse, its doubtful canonicit^, 
 89 n, 93 ; Luther pronounced it 
 spurious, 93. 
 
 Apocryphal Scriptures, quoted by 
 Fathers as canonical, 89 ; legenrls 
 as to 'crucifixion and resurrection, 
 182 ; tone of, 202-3 n, 229 ; miracles 
 therein, 221, 222. 
 
 ApoUos, disciplen of, gifted with 
 tongues, 246. 
 
 Apostles, on inspiration of Old Tes- 
 tament 77, 84-^; arid New, 88, 
 91-3 their errors, 93, 94, 237-62 ; 
 their disputes, 92, 237-53 ; promise 
 of hrones to, 200 ; ignorant of In- 
 'iamation, 205 n, 229 ; looked <tn 
 Christ as Messiah, 238-9, 257 n • 
 spoke Hebrew or Greek, 244 ; 
 speaking with tongues by, 242-50 : 
 their morbid religious enthusiasm, 
 247 50 ; tone of teaching Judaic 
 and different from Christ's, 256-62 , 
 not adequate expounders of his 
 doctrines, 34, 56, 257, 298, 307-8 n ; 
 power to work miracles, 270 ; silent 
 as to seeing Christ after resurrec- 
 tion, 22, 284-6 ; belief in /esurrec- 
 tion, 23, 284 n, 291-2; their ere- 
 dulity,291n and fallibility, 298; in 
 error as to second coming 9.3 n , 254. 
 
 Apostles' Creed, Matthew Arnold on, 
 21 ; Strauss on, 32 , is it a faithful 
 embodiment of Christianity? 33, 
 34 n. 
 
 Apostolic writings. See Epistles. 
 
 Apparitions, strong evidence in proof 
 of 290. 
 
 Aquinas, St. Thomas, and miraculous 
 voice from crucifix, 280. 
 
 Arabia, Greek cities in, 244 n ; Paul's 
 sojourn in, 260 n. 
 
 Aranian version of Pentateuch, more 
 spiritual than the Hebrew, 147 n. 
 
 Aramaic, Christ spoke in, 56 ; Jew- 
 ish poems in, 202 ; apostles spoke 
 in, 244. 
 
 Aramaic Gospel, supposed, 163. 
 
 ^ .iraanes, his power to work mira- 
 cles, 266. 
 
382 
 
 INDEX. 
 
 Arnold, Dr., on inspiration of New 
 Testament, 91 n ; of Paui, 92, 98- 
 9^ of Bible. 99 ; on Thucydides, 95; 
 his theory of inspiration, 97-101 ; 
 on degrees of inspiration, 99-100 ; 
 on Biblical interpretation, 125 n ; 
 on Bpuriousness of Daniel, 133-4 n ; 
 on supposed prophecies as to Christ, 
 135 n, 196 n ; on prophecy, 138-44 ; 
 on miracles as evidence of doctrine, 
 267. 
 
 Arnold, Matthew, his " Literature 
 and Dogma," 10, 18-22 ; on Colenso, 
 20-1 ; on resurrection of Jesus, 24 ; 
 his ' ' stream of tendency that makes 
 for righteousness," 60 ; on credulity 
 of Fathers, 89 n ; on inspiration, 
 92 n ; on propheciesj 136 n ; on dis- 
 ingenuous interpretion of, 136-7 n ; 
 on mistranslations of Scripture, 19, 
 136-7 n, 176; on Roman Catholic 
 and Bible miracles, 279-80; on 
 character of Jesus, 308 n. 
 
 Ascension, of Christ, 25 ; was bodily, 
 27 ; discrepancy as to time of, 
 288 n; effects of belief in, 249-50, 
 257 n ; of St. Fructuosus and Eulo- 
 gius, 279-80. 
 
 Asceticism, 50-3, 343-51 ; its profess- 
 ion now an insincerity, 344 j Claren- 
 don on, 346-7 ; evil effects of, 347 n. 
 
 Asia Minor, Greek cities in, 244 n. 
 
 Astronomy, its conflict with B cripture, 
 119, l2a-4. 
 
 Athanasian Creed, Matthew Arnold 
 on, 21-2 ; its scholasticism, 30. 
 
 Atheism, charges of, 69. 
 
 Atonement, shght foundation of doc- 
 trine, 232; its immoral nature, 33- 
 4 n, 338-9. 
 
 Augustine, St., on searching for truth, 
 72. 
 
 Authority, its office in religion, 315. 
 
 BABBAGE, on miracles, 264-5 ; on 
 quantity of evidence required to 
 prove, 272 ; on eternal consequences 
 of our actions, 356-7 n. 
 
 Babylas, 279. 
 
 Babylon, prophecy against not fulfill- 
 ed, 129-30. 
 
 Bacon, Lord, how far inspired, 299. 
 
 Balaam, 269. 
 
 Baptism, of Jesus, 205-7. 
 
 Baptismal formula, in Matthew spur- 
 ious, 191 ; in Acts andEpistle8,191. 
 
 Barbauld, Mrs., essay on "Inconsis- 
 tency in our Expectations," 371 ; on 
 nmaHsiog wealth, 371 n. 
 
 passage of 
 Alexander. 
 
 Barnabas, on Mosaic law and Gen- 
 tiles, 261. 
 
 Barnabas, Epistle of, its canonicity, 
 89. 
 
 Baruch, scribe to Jeremiah, 133. 
 
 Bath, a Hebrew liquid measure, 222 n. 
 
 Bauer, on Pentateuch, 113 n; on 
 polytheism of Jews, 146, 147 ; on 
 Samaritan and Arabian versions of 
 Pentateuch, 147 n. 
 
 Baxter, Mr., on the Irvingite delu- 
 sion, 248 n. 
 
 Baxter, Richard, on the joys of 
 heaven, 355 n. 
 
 Beaufort, Admiral, on 
 Pamphylian Sci* by 
 280. 
 
 Belief. See Faith. 
 
 Bellarmine, on Biblical interpreta- 
 tion, 121. 
 
 Bentham, on miracle, 278 n. 
 
 Berkeley, Bishop, on the reality of the 
 external world, 373, 375 n. 
 
 Bertholdt, on discourses of Jesus in 
 the Fourth Gospel, 21.5. 
 
 Bertrand, on religious enthusiasm, 
 248 n. 
 
 Bethlehem, was it the birthplace of 
 Jesus? 175-6,204. 
 
 Bethsaida, 276. 
 
 Bible, The, inspiration of, 75-95 ; a 
 record not a revelation, 95, 104-5; 
 modem views of inspiration of, 96- 
 105, Dr. Arnold's views, 97-101, 
 Coleridge's, 1 Oi-4 ; as a teacher of 
 science, 123-4 ; its hidden beauties 
 125; its truecharacterand use, 315-6. 
 
 Bible, Contradictions in the, Colenso 
 on, 10-12 ; between Synoptists and 
 Fourth Gospel, l;i-14 ; as to resur- 
 rection of Jesus, 24-8, 24;J-4, 282-4, 
 286-90: teachings of Moses and 
 Jesus, 85-6 ; among the apostles, 02; 
 as to Book of Law, 110 ; the creation, 
 113 ; the genealogy from Adam, 113- 
 4 ; the Flood, 114 ; the seizure of 
 Sarah, 114 ; the prophecy .is to 
 Judah, 128 ; in chronology of Kings 
 and Chronicles, 129 n ; in Hosea as 
 to Ephraim, liM) ; as to the test of a 
 prophet, 130 ; between Daniel and 
 Jeremiaih as to Nebuchadnezzar, 
 134 ; as to the nat\ire of God, 149- 
 52 ; sacrifices, 152 ; the genealogy of 
 Je.suH, 170-3 ; his Incarnation, 171- 
 3, 229; his birthidace, 175; lii'« 
 riding on one or two asses, 176 7 ; 
 •Judas and the price of blood, 177 n ; 
 the healing uf demoniacs and blind 
 
 I 
 
aic law and Gen- 
 
 of, its canonicity, 
 
 eremiah, 133. 
 
 iiid measure, 222 n 
 
 euch, 113 n; on 
 
 )W8, 146, 147; on 
 
 irabfan versions of 
 
 n. 
 
 le Irvinpite delu- 
 
 on the joys of 
 
 on passage of 
 by Alexander, 
 
 iblical interpreta- 
 
 cle, 278 n. 
 
 on the reality of the 
 373, 375 n. 
 sourses of Jesus in 
 ?el, 215. 
 gions enthusiasm, 
 
 i the birthplace of 
 H. 
 
 •ation of, 75-95 ; a 
 elation, 95, 104-5; 
 ■ inspiration of, 96- 
 Id'a views, 97-101, 
 -4 ; as a teacher of 
 ts hidden beauties 
 acterand use, 315-6. 
 Dns in the, Colenso 
 sen Synoptists and 
 13-14 ; as to resur- 
 24-8, 24;j-4, 282-4, 
 gs of Moses and 
 ng the apostles, 92; 
 i^, 110 ; the creation, 
 :y from Adam, 113- 
 14; the seizure of 
 ( prophecy as to 
 ironology of Kings 
 L29 n ; in Hosea as 
 ; as to the test of a 
 tween Daniel and 
 Nebuchadnezzar, 
 iture of God, 149- 
 ! ; the genealogy of 
 I Incarnation, 171- 
 ;hj)lace, 175; his 
 • two asses, 176-7 ; 
 ce of blood, 177 n ; 
 iioniacs and blind 
 
 INDEX. 
 
 . 383 
 
 men, 178-9 • theTniracnlous feeding, 
 179-80 ; the second coming, 197 n ; 
 judging the twelve tribes, 200 n ; 
 in the early chapters of Matthew 
 and Luke, 201 ; as to the Baptist's 
 knowledge of Jesus, 202 ; the annun 
 ciation and Mary's ^render at Sim- 
 eon's sonii, 204-5 Luke's account 
 of the baptism of Jesus ^nd the 
 Baptist's subsequent enquiry^ 205 ; 
 the riastSupper,219n;intheFourth 
 Gospel and Acts an to the Baptist's 
 testimony to Tesus, 221 ; as to the 
 gift of the Holy Spirit to the apos- 
 tles, 244; between the Acti <ind 
 I'aul's Epistles, 244 n ; as to Judaic 
 observances by the Gentiles, 251-2 ; 
 in the apostles' views of Christ's 
 character and mission, 253, as to 
 marriage, 253 ; justiRcatior byfaith, 
 253 n ; the conduct of the crucifieil 
 thieves, 282 ; the resurrection, 24- 
 8, 282-4, 286-90 ; the ascension 
 288 n. 
 
 Bibliolatrv, evils of, 6-3-4. 
 
 Bigotry, defined as exemplified in the 
 Fourth Gospel, 217 n. 
 
 Blind, discrepant accounts r* healing 
 of, 179. 
 
 Bone, the immortal, Jewish belief in, 
 362 n. 
 
 Book of Law. See Pentateuch. 
 
 Brazen serpent, 116. 
 
 Bretschneider, on authorshii) of 
 Fourth Gospel, 160. 
 
 Buckland, Dr., on the relations of 
 Geology and Scripture, 120, 121-4. 
 
 Buddhism, spread of, 30. 
 
 Bu'iwer* Lytton, ideas of heaven in 
 " Eugene Aram," 354 n. 
 
 Bush, Prof., on Christ's mode of 
 teaching, 70 n ; on resurrection of 
 body, 182 n ; on Paul's vision, 286 
 n ; on apparitions, 290 n ; on a future 
 life, 359 n ; on the soul-germ and 
 immortal bone, 362 n. 
 
 Buttmann, on genealogies of Adam 
 and Enos, 114 n. 
 
 BjTon, how far inspired, 103. 
 
 CABBALISTS, their views of inspir- 
 ation, 101. 
 
 Caesar, Julius, prodigies at his death, 
 :82 n. 
 
 Calvinists, their distortion of Christi- 
 anity, 33-5, 61, 223; on joys of 
 heaven, 354-5 n. 
 
 Cana. in Galilee, miracle at apocry- 
 phal, 221-2. 
 
 Canaanitish woman, story of, 200, 242. 
 
 Canon, New Testament, formation 
 and date of, 88-9. 
 
 Canon, Old Testament, 77-80; De 
 Wette on, 78-9 ; its three divisions, 
 79. See Old Testament. 
 
 Captivity, its duration, 129. 
 
 Carlvle, his "Immensities" and "Etur- 
 nities," 60. 
 
 Causation, prayer and, 322, 323 n, 
 328-9; sin and its consequences, 
 330, 340-2. 
 
 Cerebral exaltation, in religion, 127- 
 8, 245-50; in case of Paul, 35, 261-2. 
 
 CJeremonialism, discountenanced by 
 Christ, 61 ; its worthlessness, 318-9. 
 
 Cerinthus, his views of God and 
 Christ, 210-1. 
 
 Cevennes, ecstatics of the, 248 n. 
 
 Chaldseans, destruction of Jewish na- 
 tion and capital by, 133. 
 
 Chorazin, 276. 
 
 Christ. See Jesus. 
 
 Christian Life, is it feanible? .37-58, 
 
 C/hristianity, causes of its spread, 29- 
 31, 71 ; of Christ, not dogmatic, 
 33-7, 60-2, 223-34, 307 ; its various 
 phases, 226; not a revealed religion, 
 297-317, 318 ; before Christ, im n, 
 321 n ; how distinguished from 
 Judaism, 301 ; a piuified Judaism, 
 302 ; the supernatural theory super- 
 fluous, 301-2; not perfect, 6.5-71, 
 .307, 378-9 ; nan-owness of orthodox, 
 309-11; its fundamental nature, 
 318-20 ; its moral code, 37-58, 318- 
 9 ; its views of God, 320 ; some of 
 its teachings mercenary, .330-5 ; its 
 doctrine of pardon for sin, 335-43 ; 
 its tendency tc asceticism a d de- 
 preciation of tills life, 343-5JL. 
 
 Christians, are wt- yet? 31-7. 
 
 Christians, Early, had all things in 
 common, 53 ; A»^eak and imagina- 
 tive, 247-50, 291 1. 
 
 Christs, False, 269. 
 
 Chronicles, Book ol, its chronology 
 disagrees with Kings, 129 n ; its 
 date, 131. 
 
 Chronology, Biblical, 11, 118-9 n ; of 
 Kings and Chronicles discrepant, 
 129 n. 
 
 Chrysostom, on authorship of First 
 
 Gospel, 155 n. 
 Church, use of word betrays a late 
 origin, 188; occurs only twice in 
 Gospels, 1 88 and note. 
 (!hurcn of Jerusalem, had all things 
 in common, 53. 
 
384 
 
 INDEX. 
 
 
 I 
 
 Cicero, on a future life, 389 n. 
 
 CircumoiHion, uf OentileH, diapntea as 
 to. 251-2. 
 
 (JiareniIon,Lord,on aacetioiiiin, 346-7. 
 
 Clement, Epistle of, its canonicity, 
 89, 
 
 Clement of Alexandria, on inspira- 
 tion of Nev TestAinent, 89 ; quotes 
 apocryphal scriptures as canonical, 
 89 ; on authorabip of Second Gos- 
 pel, 159. 
 
 Clement of Rome, quotes apocryphal 
 scriptures as canonical, 89. 
 
 Cleopas, appearance of Jesus to, after 
 resurrec'ion, 27, 287, 289 n. 
 
 Colenso, Lishop, on the Pentateuch, 
 10-12; Matthew Arnold's attack on, 
 2C'r 
 
 Colerioife, a Trinitarian, 80 n ; on 
 inspii.tion of the O'd Testament, 
 80, 81-2, 86-7 ; of New Testament, 
 91 n ; his theory of inspiration, 97, 
 101-4; on moral value of Scrip- 
 tures, 125. 
 
 Commentary, the Speaker's, 11, 21 
 82. 
 
 Communion with God, is not prayer, 
 324-6. 
 
 Communism, Christ's teaching as to 
 and practice of early Chnstions, 
 SS-S; 57, 58 ; impracticable and 
 noxious, 55. 
 
 Compensation, the law of nature, 
 366-7 ; Emerson on, 870. 
 
 Comte, Auguate, his "Humanity," 
 60. ^ 
 
 Conception. See Miraculous. 
 
 Confusion of tongues, Mr. Kenrick 
 on, 118. 
 
 Coniah, curse against, 128. 
 
 Constantine, quells Quarto-deciman 
 Controversy, 219 n. 
 
 Conversion, 214, of Paul, 259-62. 
 
 Convultionnaires, of St. MMard, 
 248 n. 
 
 Cooper, Rev. E. on f u fil nent of pro- 
 phecy of Daniel, 12'i n 
 
 Corinthians, Epistles to the, date of, 
 22 n, 288 ; on gifts and miracles, 
 246-7. 
 
 Cornelius, his vision, 239, 242-3, 246. 
 
 Cosmogony, Mosaic, its relation to 
 science, 118-24. 
 
 Creation, accounts of, in Genesis, 
 Speaker's Commentary on, 11 ; alle- 
 sorical, 81 n ; and discrepant, 113 ; 
 Mr. Kenrick on, 118 ; summary of 
 the Biblical account. 122-3 ; its re- 
 latku to sdence, 118-24. 
 
 Creator, Gnostic views as to, 211, 
 230 ; Jesus not the, 231. 
 
 Credner, on authorship of First Gos- 
 pel, 1.57 ; of Second, 159 n. 
 
 Creeds of Christendom, a marvellnus 
 outgrowth from life and teadiiu^'g 
 of Jesus, 33-7, 60-2 ; accei)teil on 
 authority, 315-6 ; the Apostles', 
 21, 32, 33, 34 n ; the Nicene, 21, 
 33 ; the Athnrasian, 21-2 ; 30. 
 
 Criticism, Jiiblical, 109. 
 
 GrucifiAion, theories as to, 25-6, 290; 
 miracles during, 181-2 ; Christ's 
 predictions of, 192-6 ; not expected 
 by disciples, 193-5 ; conduct of the 
 two thieves at, 282. 
 
 Cumming, Dr., Matthew Arnold on, 
 136-7 n. 
 
 Cush, 113 n. 
 
 Cyrus, 132. 138. 
 
 DAMASCUS, prophecy against, not 
 
 fulfiUed, 130; Paul at, 269, 260 n. 
 Damnation. See Hell. 
 Daniel, refeiTed to bv Ezekiel, 133 ; 
 
 his miraculous dumbness, 204. 
 Daniel, Book of, its authorship and 
 
 date, 79, 133-4 ; of ' ite origin, IM ; 
 
 Matthew Arnold on prophecies in, 
 
 135 n. 
 David, prophecies as to, 128 ; how far 
 
 he was inspired, 299 ;his piety, 316. 
 Davidson, on a prophecy o^. Zecha- 
 
 riah, 12^ n. 
 Day, meaning of word, in Bible, 122. 
 Decalogue, two discrepant versions 
 
 of, 11; quoted by Cnrist an from 
 
 God, 85 ; one of its commands su- 
 perseded by Christ, 86. 
 Deity. See God. 
 Deluge, two accounts of, in Genesis, 
 
 11, 114 ; Dr. Kenrick on, 118 ; the 
 
 Biblical account of, 124. 
 Demoniacal possession, 248 n, 269, 
 
 274. 
 Demoniacs, discrepant accounts of 
 
 cure of, 178 ; coi^essionof Messiah 
 
 by, 207-8 ; no mention of, in the 
 
 Fourth Gospel, 208 n. 
 De Stael, Madame, how far inspired, 
 
 103. 
 Deuteronomy, Book of, authorship 
 
 of. 111 ; date of, 112, 116; on false 
 
 prophets, 130. 
 Deutsch, Emmanuel, on the Talmud 
 
 and on Christianity before Christ, 
 
 301 n. 
 Devil, The, said to be the source of 
 
 the Irvingite delusion, 248 n ; bis 
 
INDEX. 
 
 385 
 
 power to work miraoleB, 286, 269- 
 70. 
 De Wette, on Hebrew Canon, 78-9 ; 
 on inspiration of the Old Testa- 
 ment, 86 n ; and New, 89 ; on the 
 authority ol the Mosaic writinars, 
 107 n ; on their authorship, 109 n, 
 110 n, 113 n, 117 n ; on changes in 
 the fiebrew language. 111 n ; on 
 Book of Jasher, 112 n ; on date of 
 Deuteronomy, 112 ; on meaning of 
 phrase "the house of Jehovah," 
 116; on the prophecies, 131 n ; on 
 date and autnorshipof Isaiah, 132 ; 
 Jeremiah, 133; Ezekiel^SS ; Daniel, 
 1334 ; on language of First Gospel, 
 
 154 n ; on ita authorship, 157 ; on 
 last chapter of Fourtn Gospel, 
 159 n : on Second and Third Epis- 
 tles of John, 159 n ; on authorship 
 of Fourth Gospel, 160 ; on date of 
 Second Gospel, 164 ; on Fourth 
 Gospel, 210 n ; on the Epistles, 
 237 n. 
 
 Diotrephes, 258 n. 
 
 Disciples, aometime? misunderstood 
 Christ, 84, 56, 256-7, 298, 307-8 n. 
 
 Dives, parable of Lazarus and, 50, 
 354. 
 
 Doctrine, not provable by miracles, 
 263, 266-71, 271-80. 
 
 Dogmatic Christianity, an amazing 
 outgrowth from the words and life 
 of Jesus. 33-7, 60-2 ; Scholten on, 
 34-5 n ; foimded on isolated texts, 
 224-234 ; destructive of true Chris- 
 tianity, 309-316. 
 
 Dunston, 226. 
 
 Duty, Christian view of, sometimes 
 mercenary, 330 n, 333-5; towards 
 this life, 345-51. 
 
 EARLY Christians, practised com- 
 munism, 53 ; their morbid religious 
 enthusiasm, 247-50 ; and credulity, 
 29X11. 
 
 East, The, almsgiving in, 44. 
 
 Ebionites, possessed a Hebrew Gos- 
 pel, 164-155 n; an heretical sect, 
 
 155 n ; as to identity of their Gos- 
 pel with Matthew's 154-6 n. 
 
 " Ecce Homo," 10, 15-18. 
 
 Ecclesiastes, date of, 79 ; its Christ- 
 ian tone, 301. 
 
 Eclecticism, Christian, 318-51. 
 
 Ecstasy, religious, 35, 127-8, 245-50, 
 261-2. 
 
 Ecstatics of Cevennes, 248 o. 
 
 Eden, Garden of, 113. 
 
 Edict of Nantes, 248 n. 
 
 Edinburgh Bet tew, on allegory in Old 
 Testament, 80-1 n. 
 
 Egypt, antiquity of its records, 118-9 
 n ; prophecies against, not fulfilled, 
 129 ; Christ's supposed sojotirn in, 
 17;i-4 ; numeroiui Greek cities in, 
 244 n ; ma^cians of, 269. 
 
 Egyptians, Gospel for the, its canon- 
 icity, 89. 
 
 Eichhom, on language of T'st Gos- 
 pel, 154 n ; on the origiu of the 
 Synoptic Gospels, 163 ; as to the 
 Zacharias of Josephus, 190. 
 
 Elect, The, a phrase unknown in 
 Christ's time, 198 ; their liability 
 to be deceived by false miracles, 
 269. 
 
 Eli, prophecy as to, 128. 
 
 Elizabetn, her song in Luke, 202 . 
 consanguineous with Mary, 202: 
 advanced in yeara, 203. 
 
 Elohim, meaning of the word, 113 ; 
 as a miracle worker, 279 n. 
 
 Elohistic portions of Pentateuch, 
 112-6, 117 n. 
 
 Emerson, on compensation, sin, aa^ 
 punishment, 369-70 n. 
 
 Emmaus, appearance of Jesus at, 25, 
 27, 194, 289. 
 
 England, alms-giving in, 44. 
 
 Enigma, The great, 352-79. 
 
 Enthusiasm, morbid religious, 35, 
 127-8, 245-50, 261-2. 
 
 Ephraim, Hosea's prophecy as to, not 
 fulfilled, 130. . 
 
 Lpiphanius, on First Grospel, 154. 
 155 n ; on Fourth Gospel, 210 n. 
 
 Epistles, date of, 22, 91, 288 ; theii 
 claims to inspiration, 91 ; baptism&l 
 formula in, 191^ chief foundation oi 
 dogma of Christ's divinity, 229; 
 Incarnation not referred to in, 205, 
 229 ; their number and authorship, 
 236-7. 
 
 Erasmus, on language of First Gocpel. 
 154 n. 
 
 Eschatology, erroneous views of apos- 
 tles as to, 93 n, 253-6 ; in Gospels, 
 231-2. 
 
 Esseues, Jesus brought up amongst, 
 300 ; their asceticism, 343 ; theii 
 views of a future life, 353. 
 
 Essential Inspiration, 75. 
 
 Ethiopia, 113. 
 
 Eucharist. See Last Supper. 
 
 " Eugene Aram," ideas of Heaven in 
 354 n. 
 
 Eulogius, his ascension, 280, 
 
386 
 
 INDEX. 
 
 ii' 
 
 m 
 
 EuReMnfl, on New TeHtament Canon, 
 89 n ; on authorship of First Gospel, 
 155 n ; his account of Papias, 168 n, 
 199 ; on Second and Third Epistles 
 of John, 159 n ; on relation of Mark, 
 to Peter, 244 n. 
 
 Evangelists, did not always compre- 
 hend CHirist's sayings, 34, 56, 256-7, 
 298, 307-8 n. 
 
 Evidence, miracles as, 266-80 ; quan- 
 tity requisite to prove miracles, 
 272-3, 284, 291 n ; the characteris- 
 tics of honest, 153 n, 282. 
 
 Exorcists, their power to work mira- 
 cles, 274, 277. 
 
 Ezekielj takes liberties with Mosaic 
 doctrine, 107 n; non-fulfilment of 
 prophecies by, 129: on false pro- 
 phets, 130 n ; carried into exile, 133. 
 
 Esekiel, Book of, date and authorship 
 of, 133 ; refers to Daniel, 133, 
 
 Ezra, legends as to formation of Old 
 Testament Canon under his author- 
 ity, 78. 
 
 FAITH, signs of, 243 n ; Dr. Arnold 
 on faith without reason, 267 ; its 
 instinctive nature, 37^^-6 ; salvation 
 by, slight scriptural foimdation for 
 the doctrine, 225-6; an immoral 
 doctrine, 334 n, 227-8 ; discrepant 
 views of Paul and James as to jus- 
 tification by, 253 n. 
 
 False prophets, put to death under 
 Mosaic Law, 94 n, 269 ; Hebrew 
 nation inundated with, 130-1. 
 
 Fanaticism, l27-8, 247-50, 261-2. 
 
 Fathers, Christian, on the inspir tion 
 of the New Testament, 88-9 ; their 
 credulity 89 ; on authorship of First 
 Gospel, 153-6. 
 
 Feeding, the miraculous, 179-80; 
 theory of two abandoned by most 
 divines. 180, 187. 
 
 Fetichism, progress to theism in three 
 stages, 146 ; of Laban, 147-8. 
 
 Fichte, on the limits of human intel- 
 ligence, 66-7. 
 
 Firmament, Jewish meaning of, 122. 
 
 Flood. See Deluge. 
 
 Fore-knowledge of God, 322-3, 325-7, 
 328. 
 
 Fore-ordination,andprayer,322-S,328. 
 
 ForgivennesB. iSee Sin. 
 
 Fortnightly Review, on " Are we 
 Christians?" 32. 
 
 Fourth Gobpel. See Gospel, Fourth. 
 
 Fox, on bebefs beyond logical proof, 
 374-5 n. 
 
 Free-will, and foreordainment, .328 
 belief in, 375. 
 
 French, peasantry, frugality of, 47. 
 
 irurness, on tlie resurrection of Jogug, 
 289 n. 
 
 Future Life, Jewish ideas as to, 291 n, 
 301, 359n, 362 n ; Pearson on, 2%n: 
 selfishness of ordinary view, 347 n, 
 348, 354 ; its claims, 349-51 , argu- 
 ments for and against, 352-70 ; a 
 pre-Christian doctrine, 352, scrip- 
 tural ideas of. 353-8, 359 n, 377 ; its 
 unchanging cnaracter, 355 , cannot 
 be proved by loj^c, 359 ; Pagan 
 ideas of, 369 n , logical ar;;umeuts 
 for, 358-61 : philosophical tirgu- 
 ments for, 361-2 general beliif o{ 
 mankind in, .363-4 ; inequalities ot 
 this lift), 364-71 , man's faculties no 
 fitting aliment in this life, 371-2 ; 
 weakness of all arguments for, 
 372-3 ; belief in, a matter of infor- 
 mation or intuition, not inference, 
 373-5 ; Wordsworth on, 375-6 n ; it 
 a belief in, valuable? 347 n, ;M8, 
 351, 376 ; F, W. Newman on, 37Gni 
 as to chaiige of character on death, 
 378. 5ec Heaven, Hell. 
 
 Future Punishment. See Hell. 
 
 GABBIEL, annunciation by the an> 
 gel, 201. 
 
 Galilee, materials for Synoptic Gos- 
 peln collected in, 167, 165 n, no 
 prophet out of, 176 ; apostles came 
 from, 246. 
 
 Gamaliel, his speech in Acts manu- 
 factured, 186 n, 236. 
 
 Gehenna, meaning of, 231. 
 
 Genealogies, from Adam, discrepan- 
 cies in, 113-4 n ; of Christ, discrep 
 ancies in, 170-3, 229; not men- 
 tioned in Mark, 199 ; Luke's prob- 
 abljr correct though perplexea, 205. 
 
 Genesis, Book of, records events long 
 prior to Moses, 109 ; I.Jr. Kenrick 
 on, 117-8 ; its authority, 119 ; ita 
 language clear, 120 n ; non-fulfil- 
 ment of prophecy in, 130. Set 
 Pentateuch. 
 
 Grentiles, as to preaching the gospel 
 to, 200, 237-42, 246 n, 250 ; as to 
 observing Judaic law, 251-2. _ 
 
 Geology, its conflict with Scripture, 
 119-24. 
 
 Gethsemane, arrest of Jesus in, 194. 
 
 Ghost, Holy. See Holy Spirit. 
 
 Ghosts, strong evidence tor appear- 
 ances of, 290. 
 
INDEX. 
 
 387 
 
 krdalnment, 328 
 
 ■frugality of, 47 
 Irrection of Josui, 
 
 ideas as to, 291 n 
 
 Pearson on, 296 n' 
 
 Inary view, J}47n, 
 
 fis, 349-61 , anru- 
 
 kamst, 352-79- a 
 
 -8.359n 377;4 
 ter, 355, cannot 
 I0C, 359; Pajran 
 logical arguments 
 ilosophical argu- 
 general beli.f of 
 4 ; inequalities ol 
 'i^.* /acuities no 
 I this hfe, 371-2 • 
 ailments for' 
 a matter of infor-' 
 5n, not inference, 
 th on, 376-6 n ; ii 
 :We?347n, m 
 rewnianon,37Cn: 
 aracter on death, 
 , Hell. 
 See Hell. 
 
 nation by the an- 
 
 "■ Spoptic Gos- 
 
 157, 166 n, no 
 
 b ; apostles came 
 
 I in Acts manu- 
 
 f, 231. 
 
 aa™.,<l>8crepan- 
 t Christ, discrep 
 229 • not men. 
 9; -Luke's prob- 
 1 perplexed; 205. 
 ords events long 
 '; r.Jr. Kenrick 
 lonty, 119; ita 
 On; non-fulfil- 
 in, 130. Set 
 
 ling the gospel 
 5 n, 250 J as to 
 ^ 251-2. 
 I'ith Scripture, 
 
 Jesus in. 194. 
 
 ly Spirit. 
 
 36 for appear- 
 
 (Jibbon, often TertulUan on thejoya 
 ni benven, 354-5 n. 
 
 (iiesler, on origin of Synoptic Gos- 
 pel. 103. 
 
 ( ;no8ticism, 210-11, 2.10-1. 
 
 ( .'o(I, dogmatinm as to bis nature, 59- 
 00 : personality of, 60 ; conceptions 
 of, necessarily vary, 68-;>, 70 ; popu- 
 l.ir ideas as to his dealings with the 
 Jews, 100 ; representations of, in 
 Old Testament, 107-8; ideas of 
 .Jews as to, 145-52, 3;56, .S37 ; three 
 stages in their ideas of, 140; !i)>- 
 pearances of, to patriarchs, 147 ; 
 discrepant views of, in Bible, 14!)- 
 r}'2 ; Gnostic views of, 211 ; as a 
 mo.-al governor, 298-!) ; Parker on 
 universality of his inHuence, 308-9 ; 
 the Chriutian view of, 320 ; cannot 
 forgive sins, 335 ; governs by fixed 
 laws, 322-5, 328-9, 331-2, m, 342-3 ; 
 New Testament views of, less spirit- 
 >ial than those of Job and Psalms, 
 .■|"i3 ; as to his duty towards his crea- 
 tures, 364-5 ; a righteous judge,36r. 
 
 Gospel, Fourth, on resurrection of 
 •Tesus, 25, 27, 284-6 ; Renan on 
 the authenticity of, 13, 14, 160 ; on 
 inspiration of High-Priest, 79 ; on 
 witnessing to self, 81 n ; authorship 
 and date of, 159- 162, 219 and note, 
 273 n, 282-3 ; last chapter doubtful, 
 159 n, 284-6, 289; materials collected 
 in Judea, 166 n ; as to bestowal of 
 name " Peter " and power of keys, 
 188 ; Christ's prediction of his 
 death, 192-3 ; no mention of de- 
 moniacs, 208 n, 219 ; its claims ex- 
 •imined, 210-222 ; its tone non- 
 Judaic, 101-2, 210, 219-20 ; and dif- 
 ferent from that of the Synoptics, 
 208 n, 212, 214, 217 n, 219, 277 ; a 
 polemic, not a history, 210, 211, 
 212 ; directed against Cerinthus 
 iind Nicolaitans, 210 ; its character 
 of Jesus, 212-4 ; its mystical and 
 enigmatic language, 192-3 n, 214 ; 
 its discourses of J esus, 213-6, 229 ; 
 evidences of Greek or Alexandrian 
 culture in, 161, 208 n, 216 ; exalts 
 dogtr:a over morality, 216-8 ; minor 
 peculiarities, 219-22 ; miracle at 
 Cana apocryphal, 221-2 : proclaims 
 salvation to believers, 225-0; on 
 divinity of Jesus, 228-9, 230-1 ; no 
 narrative of Eucharist, 219-20 n, 
 232. 
 (iospels. The, date of, 22 n, -^e, 153, 
 164, 198, 288 ; how they assumed 
 
 their pnnmt shape, 56-7 ; authors 
 of, did not always understand 
 Christ, 34, 66, ;i07-8 n ; not ]^t- 
 fectly faithful records, (»6, 90; 
 make no claim to inspiration, 91 ; 
 written after the Epistles, !»1 ; ori- 
 gin of, l");i-67 ; Schleiamiacher on. 
 156 n ; composition of, 102-7 ; dis- 
 crepancies m, 1()2 ; discussion as 
 to their fidelity, l(>8-234 ; are com- 
 compilations, 108, 282-3 : spurious 
 and doubtful passages in, 109 ; con 
 tain much not authentic, 223-4, 
 297-8 ; not contemporaneous annals, 
 !i78 ; their discrepancies as to re- 
 surrection, 24-5, 26-9, 282-4, 286- 
 90. A're Synoptic Gospels, Matthew, 
 Mark, Luke. 
 
 Gospels, the Apocryphal, quoted by 
 Fathers as canonical, 89 ; as to 
 miracles at cnicifixion, 182; tone 
 of, 202-3 n, 229; miracles in,221,222. 
 
 Greek cities, numerous throughout 
 the East, 244 n. 
 
 Greek language, in common use 
 throughout the East, 244. 
 
 Greek tliought, influence of, on Fourth 
 Gospel, 101, 208 n, 216, 
 
 Greeks, their credulity, 107 ; their 
 low ideas of God, 336. 
 
 Griesbach, on date of Second Gos- 
 pel, 164 ; on rising of bodies of 
 saints at Christ's resurrection, 181 ; 
 on Peter's language as to Christ's 
 resurrection, 285 n. 
 
 Grote, on Tyre, 129 n. 
 
 Guardian, Tne, its definition of Chris- 
 tianity, 33 n. 
 
 HAGIOGRAPHA, completed inagt 
 of Maccabees, 78. 
 
 Hal!, Robert, on the reward of vir- 
 tue, 330 n. 
 
 Hannah, her song of praise, 203. 
 
 Hanson, Sir R. D., nis "Jesus of 
 History," 10 ; on the resurrei tio 1 
 of Jesus, 24. 
 
 Hare, Archdeacon, on the second 
 coming, 257 n ; on miracles as evi- 
 dence of doctrine, 267, 268 n. 
 
 Hare, J. and A., on the Atonement, 
 .338. 
 
 Heaven, a reward of belief, 227-8 ; 
 selfishness of the ordinary view of, 
 347 n, 348, 354 ; and its tendency 
 to unfit men for this life, 351 ; 
 scriptural idea of, 35;J-4, ;i57-8 ; 
 its pleasures unchanging, 355 ; tbg 
 Th«i -t's idea of, 377. 
 
388 
 
 INDEX. 
 
 Hebrew language, ) 
 111 ; Biwken b: 
 
 hangeable, 
 
 ^les, 244 ; not 
 
 HO common as Greek even in Jeru- 
 salem, 244 n. 
 
 Hebrew poetry, Sohleiermaoher and 
 Strauss on, iiOl-4. 
 
 Hebrew polity, rested on temporal 
 rewards ana punishments, 128. 
 
 Hebrews. See Jews. 
 
 Hebrews, Epistle to the, its doubtful 
 character, 89, 236. 
 
 Hel^rews, Gospel of the, its canoni- 
 city, 89, 155 a ; its existence, 154, 
 165 n, 163 ; on miracles at cruci- 
 fixion and resurrection, 182 n ; on 
 Christ's appearance to James after 
 resurrection, 288. 
 
 Heeren, on Tyre, 129 n. 
 
 Hel], horrible nature of the doctrine, 
 61-2,856; as to threatening it for un- 
 belief, 225-8 ; scriptural foundation 
 for, 231-2 ; scriptural idea of, 365- 
 8 ; its pains unchanging, 355 ; and 
 physical, 357-8 ; F W. Newman 
 on the inefficacy of a belief m, 
 376 n ; its punishment, 377, 379. 
 
 Hennel, C. C., on the Urst Gospel, 
 154 n, 157 n ; on the death of Zach- 
 arias, 189-90 n; on Fourth Gospel, 
 210 n, 216 n ; on the miracle at 
 Cana, 222 n ; on Christ's appearance 
 to James after his resurrection, 
 288 n. 
 
 Herod, slaughter of innocents by, 
 mythical, 174-5 n ; his character, 
 174 n. 
 
 Herodotus, Greeks believed his le- 
 gends, 107. 
 
 Hezekiah, prophecies as to, 128. 
 
 High-Priest, as to his inspiration, 79 ; 
 to judge whether prophet true or 
 false, 130. 
 
 Hindoo myths, slaughter of innocents, 
 174 n. 
 
 Holy Spirit, descent of on Jesus, 206- 
 6 ; on household of Cornelius, 242 ; 
 on apostles, 243-6, 257 ; nature of 
 its manifestation, 242-50. 
 
 Hosea, non-fulfilment of prophecy 
 by, l^JO ; date of, 131 n ; his supposed 
 prophecy as to Jesus, 173-4. 
 
 Hougnton, Lord, quot«d, 69 n, 316 n, 
 334 n. 
 
 Hug, holds First Gospel not a trans- 
 lation, 154 n ; on the Hebrew Gos- 
 Sul, 166-6 n ; on authorship of 
 'ourth Gospel, 160 ; on composi- 
 tion of Synoptic Gospels, 163, 164 ; 
 on polemical character of First Gos- 
 
 r>l, 170 n ; as to the Zacharias o( 
 osephus, 190, 191 n ; on the po 
 lemical character of the Fourth 
 Gospel, 210 n ; on Gnosticism, 210- 
 1 ; on the Epistles, 237 n ; on the 
 use of the Grei?k language, 244; 
 on the discrepant teachings of I'aul 
 and JamcH as to justification by 
 faith, 253 n ; on the last chapter of 
 the Fourth Gospel, 285 n. 
 
 Human Race, the solidarity of , Tay- 
 lor on, 323 n. 
 
 Humility, enjoined by Christianity, 
 57, 319. 
 
 Hysteria, in religion, 127-8, 247 50, 
 261-2. 
 
 IDOLATRY, of Jews, 147-8 ; was 
 infidelity, not atheism, 149, 
 
 Ignatius, luotep apocryphal scrip- 
 tures as canonical, 89. 
 
 Inunortal bone, Jewish belief in,362n. 
 
 Immortality See Future liife. 
 
 Improvidence, christian doctrine as 
 to, 46-50 ; noxiout, 55. 
 
 Incarnation, the story of, examined, 
 171-3, 201-4; no mention of, in 
 Mark, 199 ; if true, Jeflus was not 
 of the seed of David, 171, 22!> n , 
 discredited, 206 n, 229 , the latent 
 truth in the doctrine, 356. 
 
 Infallibility, Coleridge on, 80, 101-2 ; 
 cannot be self -contradictory, 2'M ; 
 not attainable on religious subjects, 
 86-7, 312. 
 
 Innocents, slaughter of. by Herod, a 
 mj^h, 174. 
 
 Inspiration, plenary, 75; essential, 
 75; views of Jews on, 77-80, 96; 
 of Scriptures, 75-95 ; of Old Testa- 
 ment, 77-88; of New, 88-95; de- 
 grees of, 79-80. 91-2, 99-100 ; sup- 
 posed proof of, from miracles and 
 prophecies, H3-4, 94 ; testimony of 
 Christ and his apostles as to, 84- 
 7 ; of Paul, 86 ; internal evidence 
 of, 77, 82-3, 88 93-4 ; modem modi- 
 fications of the doctrine, %-105, 29'J; 
 Pagan views of, 96 ; Dr. Arnold on, 
 97-101 , Coleridge on, 101-4 ; popu- 
 lar doctrine rests on no foundation, 
 297 ; Parker on the universality of, 
 308-9. 
 
 Instinct, belief by, 373-5 
 
 Interpretation, biblical, allegorical, 
 80-1 n ; methods of, 119-25 ; Mat- 
 thew Arnold on disingenuour: me- 
 thods of, 136-7 n ; erroneous views 
 of Jesus on, 302-8 n. 
 
 i"! 
 
INDEX. 
 
 389 
 
 to the Zachariasof 
 
 l-'l n ; on the po 
 
 «r of the Fourth 
 
 on Gnosticism, 210- 
 
 itles, 237 n ; on the 
 
 eek language, 244; 
 
 Int teachings of I'au] 
 
 to justification bv 
 
 1 the last chapter of 
 
 ■pel, 285 n. ^ 
 
 e solidarity of, Tay. 
 
 ed by Christianity, 
 
 ?ion, 127-8, 247-.50, 
 
 Jews, 147-8 ; was 
 theism, 149. 
 apocryphal scrip- 
 
 swish belief in,;i62n. 
 e Future liife. 
 iristian doctrine as 
 )ut, 53. 
 
 story of, examined, 
 no mention of, in 
 brue, Jems was not 
 David, 171,22!) n, 
 » n, 229 , the latent 
 ;trine, 356. 
 ridge on, 80, 101-2 ; 
 ■contradictory, 2;i7 ; 
 n religious subjects, 
 
 ter of. by Herod, a 
 
 *ry. 75; essential, 
 ews on, 77-80, %■ 
 i-95 ; of Old Testa- 
 f New, 88-95 ; de- 
 91-2, 99-100' aup- 
 from miracles and 
 , 94 ; testimony of 
 a^wstles as to, 84- 
 mternal evidence 
 J-4 ; modem modi- 
 ictrine, %-106, 299; 
 >6 ; Dr. Arnold on, 
 B on, 101-4 ; popu- 
 on no foundation, 
 le universality of, 
 
 373-6 
 
 alical, allegorical, 
 of,_ 119-26 ; Mat- 
 disingenuou:: me- 
 ; erroneous viewa 
 Iq. 
 
 Intolerance, ia irrational, 67 ; exem- 
 plified in Fourth Gospel, 217 n. 
 
 intuition, belief by, 373-5. 
 
 Ireiiseus, on inspiration of New Tes- 
 tament, 89 ; on authorship of First 
 Gospel, 154 n, 155 n ; of Second, 
 157-8; of Third, 1-59; of Fourth, 
 210 n ; on relation of Mark to 
 Peter, 244 n. 
 
 Irvingites, their morbid religious en- 
 thusiasm, 248 and note. 
 
 Isaac, Strauss as to his being a late- 
 bon- child, 202, 203. 
 
 Isaiah, referred to in Chronicles as 
 an historian, 132. 
 
 Isaiah, Book of, date and authorship, 
 132 ; by two writers, 132 ; prophecy 
 against Damascus not fulfilled, 130 ; 
 Matthew Arnold on prophecies of, 
 135 n; its comparatively low con- 
 ceptions of God, 149-50 ; as to its 
 supposed prediction of the miracu- 
 lous conception, 172-3 ; how far in- 
 spired, 299 ; its Christian tone, 301. 
 
 Iscariot. See Judas. 
 
 Ishmael, Strauss on his birth, 202. 
 
 Islamism, spread of, 30. 
 
 Israel, Chnst aent to the lost sheep 
 of, 200 ; apostles to judge the twelve 
 tribes of, 200. 
 
 Italy, alms-giving in, 44. 
 
 JACOB, stole Laban's gods, 147-8; 
 his low ideas of God, 148. 
 
 Jairus, daughter of, her raising, 277 
 
 James, Epistle of, in error as to second 
 coming 93 d. 254 ; of doubtful ohar 
 acter, 236-7 ^ though probably genu 
 ine, 237 n ; its Christlike tone. 258. 
 
 James, the Apostle, on Judaic ob 
 servances by Gentiles, 251 -, appear- 
 ance of Jesus to, after resurrection. 
 288. 
 
 Jasher, Book of, its date, 112 n. 
 
 Jehoiada, 131. 
 
 Jehoiakim, non-fulfilment of Jere- 
 miah's prophecy against, 129. 
 
 Jehovah, translated "the Eternal" 
 by Matthew Arnold, 19, 136-7 n, 
 176 ; meaning of word, 113, 147. 
 
 Jehovah Elohuu, meaning of, 113; 
 indicates polytheism, 147. 
 
 Jehovistic portions of Pentateuch, 
 112-6, 117 n. 
 
 Jeremiah, his date, 131 n; put in 
 stocks for false prophecies, 131. 
 
 Jeremiah, Book of, elate and author- 
 ship, 132-3 ; non-fulfilment of his pro- 
 phed«8 against Jehoiakim, Egypt, 
 
 and Babylon, 129-30 ; on true and 
 false prophets, KW; Matthew Ar- 
 nold on prophecies in, i;^ n; it; 
 supiMJsed prophecy as to slaughter 
 of the innocents, 174-5 n 
 
 Jeroboam II., Amos's projihecy 
 against, not fulfilled, 129. 
 
 Jerome, on the authorship of the First 
 Gospel, 154 u, 155-6 n ; on Fourth 
 Gospel, 210 n ; on relation of Mark 
 to Peter, 244 n; on appeal ance of 
 Jesus to James after nis resuiTsc- 
 tion, 288 n. 
 
 Jerusalem, Daniel's oupposed pro- 
 phecy of its destruction by Titus, 
 127 n ; destroyed by Chaldteans, 
 133; Christ's prophecies of its de- 
 struction, 186, 197-8; date of its 
 destruction by Titus, 198 n; lan- 
 guage spoken m, 244 n. 
 
 Jerusalem, Church of, practised com- 
 munism, 53. 
 
 Jesus Christ, his resurrection, 22-9, 
 281-96 ; theories as to it, 25-6, 290 ; 
 his life and character, 34, 60; his 
 teachings as to non-resistance to 
 violence, 3^43; as to alms-giving, 
 43-6 ; improvidence, 46-50 ; riches, 
 50-3 ; communism, 53-8 ; spoke in 
 Aramaic, 56 ; sayings often misun- 
 stood by disciples, 36, 56, 256-7, 
 298, 307-8 n ; spiritual nature of his 
 teaching, 61, 318-9; on inspiration 
 of Old Testament, 84-7 ; abrogates 
 Mosaic law as to adultery, unclean 
 meats, and the Sabbath, 85-6 ; in- 
 spires the apostles, 92; as to pro- 
 phecies of him, 126 n, 136-8, 140-1, 
 172-7, 195-6, 297; not the ex- 
 pected Messiah, 135-8, 175-6, 192, 
 293-4 ; birthplace doubtful, 175-6 ; 
 flight into Egjrpt mythical, 173-4, 
 174 n ; lineage doubtful, 175, 229 n ; 
 discrepancies in genealogies of, 
 170-2 ; Matthew's account of cru- 
 cifixion and resurrection doubtful, 
 181-4 ; his acknowledgment of 
 Peter, and power of keys, 187-9 ; 
 baptismal formula, 191 ; his pro- 
 phecies of his death, 192-6; and 
 second coming, 196-8; his arrest 
 and burial, 194 ; length of time in 
 grave or " hell," 25, 196 n ; mirac- 
 ulous conception of, 171-2, 201-4, 
 229 ; relation to Baptist as to age, 
 202; his birth, 204; Luke's gen- 
 ealo^, 205 ; Luke on baptism of, 
 205-7 ; Gnostic views of his na- 
 ture, 211, 230-1 ; tone of bid dia^ 
 
390 
 
 INDEX. 
 
 13,;^ 
 
 Ilii 
 
 courses in Fuurth Gospel, 213-6; 
 view of his nature therein, 216 ; his 
 harsh speech to his mother at Cana^ 
 222 ; the dogma of hin divinity not of 
 scriptural origin, 228-31; identifica- 
 tion of, ^vith Logos, 230-1 ; did not 
 believe himself to be God, 229, 231 : 
 his mission to Jaws only, not Gen- 
 tiles, 238-42 ; his prophecy as to the 
 end of the world, 255 ; effect of his 
 reauiTection on views of apostles, 23, 
 249-50, 257 n ; his appearance to 
 Paul, 25,259-02; refuses to authenti- 
 cate his mission by miracles, 270, 275 ; 
 his character, 234 n, 300-1 ; his ideas 
 the natural product of his educa- 
 tion and surroundings, 301-2 ; his 
 erroneous views, 302-3 ; his char- 
 acter sublime but not necessarily 
 divine, 306-7 and note ; his mission, 
 308 ; if Son of God, not a human 
 exemplar, 813-4 ; his sublime moral 
 code, 318-9 ; his views as to prayer, 
 324-5; as to resi^ation, 330 n; 
 duty, 333 n; forgiveness of sins, 
 339 n ; bis aaoeticism of a mild type, 
 343 ; his views of a future life, 
 352- -3 ; weakness of his argument 
 as to, 359 u. 
 
 .Tethro, his monotheism doubtful, 
 148 n. 
 
 Jewish Scriptures, See Canon, Old 
 Testament, Bible. 
 
 Jews, their ideas on inspiration, 77, 
 79, 80, 96, 101, 107 ; their creduUty, 
 107 ; their ideas of the structure of 
 the universe, 122-3, 124 ; their views 
 of prophecy, 127-8 ; their polity 
 resty on temporal rewards and pun- 
 ishm'bnta, 128; false prophets 
 among them, 130-1 ; destruction of 
 by ChaLdaeans, 133 ; their notions of 
 the expected Messiah, 135-8, 192, 
 239, 289 n, 293^; their theism 
 impure and progressive, 145-52, 297, 
 336, mi'i their polytheism, 146, 
 147-9; signs from Qod common 
 among, 204, 270; accustomed to 
 figurative language, 214; expres- 
 sion " the Jews " in the Fourth 
 Gospel, 220 ; their ideas of a future 
 life, 291 n, 301, 359 n, 362 n ; on 
 nucleus of the soul, or immortal 
 bone, 362 n. 
 
 Job, his theism, 148, 149-50. 353; 
 his Christianity, 301 ; his sublime 
 piety, 316 ; and resignation, .^31. 
 
 Joel, hu prophecy as to Holy Spirit, 
 246. 
 
 John, Episties of, written after the 
 Gospels, 91 ; their claim to inspira- 
 tion, 91 ; in enor as to second com- 
 ing, 93 u, 254 ; First Epistle prob- 
 ably by author of Gospel, 159 ; 
 Second and Third of doubtful m- 
 thorship, 159-60, 236-7 ; Thiid al- 
 most certainlj' spurious, 237 n ; their 
 denunciations tor unbelief, 225 n ; 
 their intolerant tone, 2.58. 
 
 John, Gospel according to. See Gog- 
 pel Fourth. 
 
 John, the Apostle, his intolerant 
 temper, 225--6, 307 ; as exemplifitd 
 in Epistles, 258. 
 
 John, the Baptist, Luke on his an- 
 nunciation and birth, 201 ; a late- 
 born child, 202 ; his relation tu 
 Christ as to age, 202 ; commanded 
 to be a Nazarite, 203 ; his testi- 
 mony to the Messiahship of Jesus, 
 and his subsequent enquiry of him 
 as to, 205-7, 221, 232 ; tone of his 
 discourses in the Fourth Gospel, 
 213-4 ; Holy Spirit conferred on 
 his disciples, 243. 
 
 John, the Presbyter, on Matthew's 
 " oracles," 154 n, 155 n ; on the 
 Second Gospel, 158 ; as to his 
 being the autnor of the Second and 
 Third Epistles of John, 160 ; dis- 
 tinguished from the apostle, 160. 
 
 Jonah, rescinding propnecy by, 128, 
 129; as to his being a prefigure- 
 ment of Christ, 196. 
 
 Jones, Sir W., on the slaughter of 
 the innocents, 174 n. 
 
 Joseph, his conduct at miraculous 
 conception, 172 ; his Supposed flight 
 into Egypt mythical, 173-4, 174 n ; 
 his removal to Nazareth, 175. 
 
 Joseph of Arimathea, buries Jesus, 
 194. 
 
 JosephuB, on degrees of inspiration, 
 79; takes liberties with Mosaic 
 writings, 107 n ; on the passage of 
 the Ked Sea, 107 n ; makes no al- 
 lusion to slaughter of the innocents, 
 174 ; his reference to Zacharias, 
 189, 190, 191. 
 
 Joshua, Book of, its dat^ 112 n. 
 
 Josiah, discovery of the Book of the 
 Law in reign of, 109-11. 
 
 Judah, prophecies regarding, 128, 
 136-7 n. 
 
 Judaic observances, as to enforcement 
 on Gentiles, 251-2. 
 
 Judaism, how distinguished from 
 Chriatiaaity, 301-2, 
 
INDBX. 
 
 391 
 
 ', written after the 
 !ir claim to iuspira. 
 r as to secoinl corn- 
 First Epistle pro),. 
 of Gospd, 159; 
 rd of doubtful au- 
 >, 23«-7; Third al- 
 
 •urious, 237 n; their 
 >r unbelief, 22b tx ■ 
 tone, 258. ' 
 
 rdiugto. Seedoa. 
 
 Je, his intolerant 
 07 ; as exemplihed 
 
 Luke on his an- 
 
 birth, 201 ; a late- 
 
 ; his relation tu 
 
 202 ; commanded 
 
 ;e, 203; his testi- 
 
 isiahship of Jesus, 
 
 snt enquiry of him 
 
 , 232 ; tone of his 
 
 e Fourth Grospel, 
 
 jirit conferred on 
 
 ter, on Matthew's 
 a, 155 n; on the 
 158 ; as to his 
 of the Second and 
 Jf John, 160 ; dis- 
 the apostle, 160. 
 
 grophecy by, 128, 
 sing a prefigure- 
 
 the slaughter of 
 4 n. 
 
 ct at miraculous 
 his Supposed flight 
 ical, 17»-4, 174 n ; 
 uareth, 175. 
 lea, buries Jesus, 
 
 es of inspiration, 
 les with Mosaic 
 m the passage of 
 n ; maJces no al- 
 ■ cf the innocents, 
 je to Zacharias, 
 
 date, 112 n. 
 the Book of the 
 09-11. 
 r^arding, 128, 
 
 IS to enforcement 
 
 wguished from 
 
 Judaisers, 232 n. 
 
 Judas Iscariot, gifted with miracu- 
 lous powers, 94, 270 ; supposed pro- 
 Ehecy as to him and the price of 
 lood,177, 178n. 
 
 Jude, Epistle of, its doubtful char- 
 acter, 89, 236-7 ; does not claim 
 inspiration, 91 ; in error regarding 
 the second coming, 93 n. 
 
 Judea, materials for Fourth Gospel 
 came from, 165 n. 
 
 Jupiter Tonans, as a miracle worker, 
 279 n. 
 
 Justification. See Faith. 
 
 Justin, baptismal formula in, 191. 
 
 KEBLE, Christian year, quoted, 
 368 n. 
 
 Kenrick, Mr. , on genealogies of Adam 
 and Enos, 114 n; on Genesis, 117-8 ; 
 and its cleameHS of language, 120 n; 
 on Biblical chronology, 118-9 n; on 
 Biblical interpretation, 121 ; on 
 priority of Mark's Gospel, 164. 
 
 Keys, Power of, 188-9, 199. 
 
 King, Lord, his "Life of Locke" 
 (quoted, 268 n. 
 
 Kingdom of Grod, ideas of, 158 n, 
 245, 257 n. 
 
 Kings, Book of, its chronology disa- 
 grees with Chronicles, 129 n ; date 
 of, 13L 
 
 Kingsley, Bev. Charles, on miracles, 
 in " Alton Locke," 264 ; on selfish- 
 ness for eternity, in " Saint's 
 Tragedy," 332 n. 
 
 Koran, as to inspiration of, 87, 95. 
 
 LABAN, worshipped fetiches, 147-8. 
 
 Lardner, Dr>, on the credibility of 
 the Gospela, 153 n. 
 
 Last Supper, 192 n, discrepant dates 
 of in Gospels, 219-20 n ; institution 
 of ignored in Fourth Gospel, 219- 
 220 n, 232. 
 
 Late-born children, Jewish legends 
 as to, 202, 203. 
 
 Law, Mosaic^ public reading of, 111 
 n ; its divine origin assumed by 
 Jesus. 85, 145; but abrogated by 
 him, 85-6 ; aa to observance of by 
 Gentile converts, 251-2. 
 
 Law, (Natural, grayer and, 322-5, 
 328-9 ; resignation and, 331-2 ; sin 
 and its consequences, 335-43 ; Fox 
 on our belief in its permanency, 
 374-5 n. 
 
 Lazarus, Christ's discourse as to 
 sleep of, 215 ; nosing of, 264-5 ; did 
 
 not produce universal conviction, 
 276 ; parable of Dives and, 50, 354. 
 
 Leroux, Pierre, on selfishness of ordi- 
 nary idea of heavun, 349 n. 
 
 Lessing, on composition of Gospels, 
 164. 
 
 Life, This, its claims, 345-51 ; in- 
 equalities of, as an argument for a 
 future life, 364-71; whetlier adequate 
 to employ man's faculties, 371-2. 
 
 Livy, Niebuhr on, 95 ; the Bomans 
 believed his figments, 107; ora- 
 tions in manufactured, 186 n. 
 
 Locke, on miracles as evidence of doc- 
 trine, 267, 268, ■ 
 
 Logos, Gnostic views of, 211 ; teach- 
 ing of the Fourth Gospel as to, 
 216, 230-1. 
 
 Lord's Prayer, contained in the Tal- 
 mud, 321 n. 
 
 Loyola, 226. 
 
 Luke, Gospel according to, on the 
 resurrection of Jesus, 26-8 ; does 
 not claim to be inspired, 91 ; au- 
 thorship of, 159; proem to, 159,163, 
 165: composition of, 163-5, 167 ; 
 doubtful portions, 169, 171 n, 201- 
 9 ; genealogy of Chrbt differs from 
 Matthew's, 170, 171-2 ; its tone 
 non- Judaic, 170 n : on the Incarna- 
 tion, 171-2 ; precludes flight into 
 Egypt, 174 ; its account of Judas's 
 death, 177 n ; accounts of cure of 
 demoniacs and blind, and of the 
 miraculous feeding, 178-80; no 
 mention of power of keys, 189; 
 Christ's premctions of his death, 
 192-6 ; its fidelity examined, 200-9 ; 
 firnt chapter legendary, 201-4 ; also 
 second, 204-5 ; genealogy of Jesus, 
 205 ; his baptism, 205-7 ; confession 
 of his Messiahship by demoniacs, 
 207-8 ; interpolations in, 207, 209 ; 
 not altogether trustworthy, 243-4. 
 
 Luke, the Evangelist, acquainted 
 with Matthew's Gospel, 157; not 
 an eye-witness, 159 ; supposed to 
 be Silas, 159, 235 n ; autho-- of Third 
 Gospel and Acts, 159 ; on gift of 
 Holy Spirit, 245-6. 
 
 Luther, pronounced the Apocalypse 
 spurious, 93 ; his numbering of 
 verses in Genesis i. , 112 n ; Chris- 
 tianity as taught by him, 226 ; how 
 far inspired, 299. 
 
 Lutheranism, not Christianity, 33. 
 
 Luz, ossiculum, 362 n. 
 
 Lytton, Lord, ideas of heaven in 
 " Eugene Aram," 854 n. 
 
392 
 
 INDEX. 
 
 M ACRAY, R W. , M to Philo on pro- 
 phecy, 127 n ; on Chriatianity before 
 Christ, 301 n, 321 n. 
 
 Mackintouh, 8ir James, on selfishness 
 of ordinary view of heaven, 348 n ; 
 on a future life, 360, 361. 
 
 Magi, story of, doubtful, 156, 173-4, 
 178. 
 
 Magicians, Egyptian, 269 ; Hebrew, 
 274, 277. 
 
 Mainnonides, distinguished eleven 
 degrees of iiisph-ation, 79 u. 
 
 Mark, Grospel according to, on resur- 
 rection of Jesus, 26-8 ; authorship 
 of, 157-9, 199; composition and 
 date, 162-7, 283 n ; last twelve 
 verses spurious, 26, 169, 199 n, 225, 
 243 n, 283 n ; its tone non-Judaic, 
 170 n, 200 ; accounts of cures of 
 demoniac and blind, and miraculous 
 feeding, 178-80; inaccuracy in, as 
 to the feeding, 187 ; on acknow- 
 ledgment of Christ by Peter, 188 ; 
 no mention of power of kejrs, 189, 
 199 ; Christ's predictions of his 
 death, 192-6; its fidelity examined, 
 199-200; tradition of authorship 
 doubtful, 199 j probably the earliest 
 of the Gospels, 28, 164, 199, 283 n ; 
 its si^ificant omissions, 199 ; pecu- 
 liarities in Christ's discourses, 199- 
 200 j its account of the resur- 
 rection the most trustworthy, 20, 
 283. 
 
 Markj the Evangelist, possibly ac- 
 quainted with Matthew's Gospel, 
 157 ; a fellow-traveller of Peter, 
 Barnabas, and Paul, 158 ; not an 
 eye-witness, 158; "interpreter" of 
 Peter, 168, 244 ; his identity doubt- 
 ful, 158-9. 
 
 Marriage, discrepant scriptural views 
 as to, 253, 256. 
 
 Marsh, Dr., on the Synoptic Gospels, 
 163. 
 
 Martineau, Rev. James, on miracles 
 as proofs of inspiration, 94. 
 
 Mary Magdalene, at resurrection, 27, 
 194, 287, 289. 
 
 Mary, mother of Jesus, supposed 
 genealogy of, 172 ; annunciation to, 
 201 ; her song in Luke, 202 ; con- 
 sanguineous with Elizabeth, 202 ; 
 her wonder at song of Simeon, 
 204-5 : prayers to, 327 n. 
 
 Materialism, 360-1. 
 
 Matter, Berkeley's doctrine as to 
 reality of, 373, 375 n: Fox on our 
 l)«U«i: in. 376 n. 
 
 Matthew, Groipel aecorcling to, on 
 resurrection of Jesus, 26-8 ; date of, 
 153, autho;'ship, 153-7 ; not a tram- 
 lation from Hebrew, 154, Id-W? n; 
 materials collected in Galilee, 157, 
 165 n ; doubtful portions, 156-7, 
 169-98 ; its fidelity examined, 169- 
 98 ; character of Jesus clearly de- 
 picted, 169 ; its tone Judaic, 170-7 ; 
 genealogy of Jesus wrons/, 17()-1; 
 its account of the Incarnation, 
 171-3 ; flight into Egypt myth^ *1, 
 ' ~3-4; slaughter of innoc 'nts myth- 
 ical, 174-5 n; as to bir hplaoe of 
 Jesus, 175 ; as to his riding on two 
 asses, 176-7 ; its account of Judas's 
 death differs from Luke's, 177 n; 
 attributes to Jeremiah a prophecy 
 of Zechariah, 177-8 n ; story of sta.' 
 in the East mythical, 178 ; account 
 of cure of two demoniacs and blind 
 men, and two miraculous feediiigB, 
 incorrect, 178-80 ; story of Peter 
 and tribute money niytnical, 180 ; 
 washing of hands by Pilate myth- 
 ical 180^ account of crucifixion, 
 resurrection, and attendant mira- 
 cles doubtful, 181-2; private con- 
 versations reported in, 182-3 ; re- 
 portsChiist's discourses incorrectly, 
 185-98 ; indifference to chronology, 
 186. 
 
 Matthew, the Apostle, wrote memnra^ 
 bilia in Hebrew, lo4-6 ; which were 
 not our First Gospel, 154-7 & notes. 
 
 Meats, Mosaic law regarding, set aside 
 by Jesus, 85-6. 
 
 Mraard, St., convultionnaires of, 
 248 n. 
 
 Media, many Greek cities in, 244 n. 
 
 Mediterranean sea, tideless, 280. 
 
 Mesopotamia, many Greek cities iu, 
 244 n. 
 
 Messiah, the doctrine of, the cause of 
 the spread of Christianity among 
 the Jews, 31, 71 ; character of, as 
 prophecied, 135, 138, 192, 239, 289 
 n, 293-4 ; prophecy of Plato, 137 n; 
 references to, in Gospels, 170 n, 
 195-6 ; of the seed of Abranam and 
 David, 170, 229 n ; character of, 
 not fulfilled in Jesus, 31, 71, 135-7, 
 175-6, 291^4 : annunciation of, by 
 angel Gabriel, 201 ; and at baptism 
 of Jesus, 205-7 ; claim of Jesus, 
 first acknowledged by demoniacs, 
 207-? ; the Fourth Gospel on Mes- 
 siahsiiip of Jesus, 216; apostolic 
 viewa of, 267 n. 
 
 Mes.-*ianick 
 
 Metretes, a 
 
 Miilillet«in. 
 
 tradition 
 
 Mill, J. «- 
 Mill, Mr., 
 
 1(14. 
 Millenium _ 
 
 expectati 
 
 25;i-6, '^[ 
 ants of, 2 
 
 Milinan, D 
 the Jews 
 Milnes, R. 
 Milton, ho 
 Mind, infli 
 Minton, K 
 uient, 23 
 Miracles, 
 13 ; as p 
 discrepa 
 178-80, 
 senses c 
 seven bd 
 Gospel, 
 on, 246-: 
 the quef 
 definitifl 
 ticate dJ 
 bolicmi 
 of, putt 
 fuses t 
 275; p< 
 ties, ir 
 94, 270 
 270-1 ; 
 271-80, 
 the as 
 271-2 ; 
 272-3, 
 mon ii 
 condit 
 Jesus 
 275-8; 
 jectioi 
 ami" 
 infere 
 nold 
 attest 
 Miracu 
 3,201 
 199; 
 seed 
 storj 
 the 
 C6«. 
 Mt'hai 
 Mohai 
 spiv 
 
accordfngr to, on 
 
 fe'l^° ?»"lee, 157 
 W portions, 156-7 
 Jity examined, 169^ 
 It Jesus clearly de- 
 itone Judaic, 170-7 • 
 '8U8 wron/, 17()-i.' 
 the Incarnation' 
 'O i-gypt mytlr- hI 
 
 ofinnoc-ntsnivth' 
 " to bir hplac^ of 
 bia nding on two 
 .account of Judas's 
 to Luke's, 177 n; 
 remiah a prophecy 
 -8 n ; story of stai' 
 "cal, 178,. accounJ 
 smomacs and blind 
 iraculous feedii.jTH 
 >; Btorvof Pete; 
 ®y njythical, 180; 
 «by PlJateinyti: 
 mt of crucifixion, 
 fJ attendant mira- 
 >i--i; private con- 
 •ed in, 182-3 ; re- 
 tourses incorrectly 
 'nee to chronology,' 
 
 tie, wrote memora- 
 ^of-6; which were 
 'el, 164-7 & notes, 
 egarding, set aside 
 
 ^'ulaionnaires of, 
 
 : cities in, 244 n. 
 iideless, 280. 
 Greek cities in, 
 
 3 of, the cause of 
 
 istiamty among 
 
 character of. as 
 
 58. 192, 239, '28^ 
 
 of Plato, 137 n; 
 
 'ospelsj 170 n, 
 
 I Abraham and 
 
 ; character of, 
 
 9. 31, 71, 135-7 
 
 nciation of, by 
 
 •nd at baptism 
 *»m of jggyg^ 
 
 by demoniacs, 
 rospel on Mes- 
 ^16; apostolic 
 
 INDEX. 
 
 393 
 
 Me.ssinnic kingdom, 193, 2i;7-8. 
 
 Metretes, a Greek measure, 222 n. 
 
 Miililleton, Dr., on uncertainty of 
 tradition, 158 n. 
 
 Mill, J. S., on communism, 54. 
 
 Slill, >Ir., on composition of Tiuke, 
 ](;4. 
 
 Millenium, traditions as to, 158 u ; 
 e.\pectations of, 93 n, 98, 193, 249, 
 25',i-6, 257-8; spiritual concomit- 
 ants of, 245. 
 
 Milman, Dean, on the monotheism of 
 the Jews, 145-43. 
 
 Milnes, R. M. See Houghton. 
 
 Milton, how far inspired, 103. 
 
 Mind, influence of CKidyon, 360-1. 
 
 Minton, Rev. S., on future punish- 
 ment, 231 n. 
 
 Miracles, Renan on the growth of, 
 13 ; as proofs of inspiration, 83, 94 ; 
 discrepant accounts of, in Gospels, 
 178-80, 277 i miraculovs loss of 
 senses common among Jews, 204 ; 
 seven miracles reported in Fouith 
 Gospel, 221 ; at Cana, 221-2 ; Paul 
 on, 246-7 ; his low estimate of, 270 ; 
 the question of, examined, 263-80 ; 
 definition of, 264-5 ; cannot authen- 
 ticate doctrine, 266-71, 294-5 ; dia- 
 bolic miracles, 266, 269-70 ; worker 
 of, put to death, 94 n, 269 ; Jesus re- 
 fuses to perform, as signs, 270, 
 275 ; power to work given to apos- 
 tles, including Judas and Peter, 
 94, 270; worthless as credentials. 
 270-1 ; cannot be a basis of religion^ 
 271-80, 294-5^ are evidence omy to 
 the age which witnesses them. 
 271-2 ; quantity of proof requisite, 
 272-3, 284, 291 n ; extremely com- 
 mon in early ages, 273-5 ; laith a 
 condition precedent, 275 ; those of 
 Jesus did not produce conviction, 
 275-8 ; or even fear, 277 ; minor ob- 
 jections to gospel miracles, 277-8 ; 
 a miracle involves ono fact and two 
 inferences, 278-9 ; Matthew Ar- 
 nold on, 279-80; unnecessary to 
 attest moral precepts, 268, 294,319, 
 Miraculous Conception, of Jesus, 171- 
 3, 201-4 ; no mention of in Mark, 
 199 ; if true, Jesus was not of the 
 seed of David, 171, 229 n; the 
 story of, discredited, 205 n, 229; 
 the latent truth in the doctrine, 
 C56. 
 Mohammedanism, spread of. 30. 
 Mohammedans, their belief in the in- 
 spiration of the Koran, 87, 94. 
 
 Monev-getting. See Improvidence 
 Riches. 
 
 Monotheism. See Theism. 
 
 Morality, Christian, 31-68, 318-9; 
 needs no miraculous support, 268, 
 294, 319, 320. 
 
 Morbid religious enthusiasm, among 
 Hebrew prophets, 127-8; among 
 early Christians, 245-50 ; of St. 
 Paul, 36, 261-2 ; among modern 
 sects, 248 n. 
 
 Mortification, of the flesh. See As- 
 ceticism. 
 
 Mosaic books. See Pentateuch. 
 
 Mosaic cosmogony, its relation to 
 science, 118-24. 
 
 Mosaic Law See Law of Moses. 
 
 Moses, his authority affirmed by Je- 
 sus, 84-5, 145; and set aside naver- 
 theless, 85-6 ; the organiser of the 
 Hfibrew polity, 117; his monothe- 
 ism doubtful, 148-9 ; nature of his 
 mission, 2;^ ; not the author of the 
 Pentateuch, 106-18, 297. 
 
 Mygdone, 279. 
 
 Myths, growth of, in early Church,208. 
 
 NANTES, Edict of, effect of its re- 
 vocation on ecstatics of Cf ennes, 
 248 n. 
 
 Napoleon, supposed to be referred to 
 by Daniel, 127 n. 
 
 Natural Law, prayer and, 322-5, .328- 
 9; resignaticm and, 331-2; sin and 
 its con8er|uences, 335-43 ; Fox on 
 our belief in its permanency, 374-5il 
 
 Natural Theology, contrasted with 
 supernaturalism, 309- 16. 
 
 Nature, external, Berkeley on our 
 belief in, 373, 375 n ; Fox on our 
 belief in, 376 n. 
 
 Nazarenes. possessed a Hebrew gos- 
 pel, 154 ; as to its being the same 
 as Matthew's, 156 n ; prophecy as 
 to Jesus being called a Nazarene, 
 176. 
 
 Nazareth, Jesus returns to, after pre- 
 sentation in Temple, 174 n ; as to 
 its being the residence of Christ's 
 parents, 176. 
 
 Nazarite, what constituted a, 176; 
 command of the Baptist to be one, 
 203. 
 
 Neander, on authorship of the Fourth 
 
 mquiryi 
 
 of Jesus, 206 n ; on speaking with 
 longues, 246 n. 
 
il 
 
 394 
 
 INDEX. 
 
 i 
 
 Nebuchadnezzar, propheoieB an to, 
 129-30; date of hia reign, 129 n, 134. 
 
 Nehemiah, legend as to formation of 
 Hebrew canon liv , 78. 
 
 Newcome, Archbishop, on a prophecy 
 of Zechariah, 126 n. 
 
 Newman, F. W. , on the gospel nar- 
 ratives and Christ's character, 16 ; 
 his " Phases of Faith," 64 i on the 
 composition of the Pentateuch, 
 117 n ; on meaning .of the word 
 "prophecy," 127 n; on prophecy 
 against Egypt, 129 n ; and Babylon, 
 
 130 ; as to when prophecies written, 
 
 131 n ; on prophecy of miraculous 
 conception, 173 n ; his Hebrew 
 Monarchy" on Messianic prophecy, 
 303 n ; on Paul's argument for a fu- 
 ture life, 359 n, 373 n j on the in- 
 fluence of the belief m hell or a 
 future life, 376 n 
 
 New Testament, formation of canon, 
 88-9 ; inspii'ation of, 88-95 : inter- 
 nal evidence of, 93-4 
 
 Newton, Su- Isaac, how far inspired, 
 299. 
 
 Nicene Creed, Matthew Arnold on, 
 21 ; not a faithful embodiment of 
 Christianity, 33, 
 
 Nicodemus, Christ's discourse with. 
 214, 215 n, 220 
 
 Nicoaemus, Gospel of, on miracles at 
 crucifixion ana resurrection, 182 n. 
 
 Nicolaitans, their views of God antx 
 Jesus, 210-1. 
 
 Niebuhr, on Livy, 95. 
 
 Non-resistance to violence, 3&~43 ; 
 noxious, 55. 
 
 Norton, on the abrogation of the Mosa- 
 ic law by Jesus, 86 n , on the com- 
 position of the First Gospel, 154-5 n, 
 156 n ; on the Ebionites and their 
 
 fospel, 155 n, 156 n; on oral tradition; 
 65 n : on the composition of the 
 Gospels. 167 ; on doubtful portions 
 of Matthew^ Mark, and Luke, 169 
 n ; on the miracles at the crucifixion 
 and resurrection, 181 n; on the 
 Gnostics, 210 n. 
 
 OBERLIN, 226. 
 
 Old Testament, formation of canon, 
 77-80 ; inspiration of, 77-88, 106-25 ; 
 internal evidence as to, 81-4 ; tes- 
 timony of Christ, the apostles, and 
 the evanp^elists as to, 84-7, 145 , 
 authorship of, 106-25 ; popular views 
 as to its authority, 106-7 ; its gen- 
 eral character, 107. 
 
 Oracles, psjgan, their ambiguity, Ift 
 
 Oral traoitiou, influence of, on gonpd 
 history, 56, 163, 164-7, 168 ; MM 
 dleton on, 158 n ; Thirwall and 
 Norton on, 165 n ; Schleienuacher 
 on, 166 ; Trench on, 185-6 u. 
 
 Origen, on the authorship of the First 
 Gospel, 154 n, 155 n ; on the Second 
 and Third Epistles of John, 159 n. 
 
 Orthodoxy, its narrowness, 309-17 
 
 Ossiculum Luz, 362 n. 
 
 PAGAN ORACLES, their amWi!. 
 uity, 142. 
 
 Pagans, their views of inspiration, 
 96 ; of a future life, .352, 353, 359 n. 
 
 Palaeontology, and Scriptire, Whe- 
 well on, 120-1. 
 
 Palaetiology, Wh^^f ell on, 120. 
 
 Palestinian Christians, Schleiermach. 
 er on traditions cf Jesus kept by. 
 166. 
 
 Paley, on the inspiration of the New 
 Testament, 90 ; on the theism of the 
 Jews, 145 ; on testimony, 153 n ; on 
 miracles as evidence of doctrine 
 263. 
 
 Pamphylian seR, passage of, by Alex- 
 ander, 280. 
 
 Papias, on the authorship of the First 
 Gospel, 154 n, 155 n; his sources 
 of information, 157-8 n ; bis creduli- 
 ty. 158 n, 199 ; on the Second Gos- 
 pel, 157-8 ; on the relation of Mark 
 to Peter, 158 244 n. 
 
 Parker; Theodore, on date of Old 
 Testament writings, 78 n , on gene- 
 alogies of Adam and Enos, 114 n , 
 as to faithfulness of gospel record, 
 234 n . on miracles, 279 n ; on the 
 character of Jesus, 234 n, 307-8 n ; 
 on the universality of inspiration, 
 308-9 
 
 Pascal, 226 , how far inspired, 290. 
 
 Paschal Controvc^y, 219-20 n 
 
 Pashur, puts Jeremiah in stocks for 
 false prophecies, 131. 
 
 Patriarchs, antedilu^irm, their great 
 age, 119 n. 
 
 Paul, the Apostle, date of his writings. 
 22 n, 288 , on the res\;rrection or 
 Jesus 22-4, 25, 28, 29, 288 ; respon- 
 sible for the dogmatic character of 
 Christianity, 34-5 ; on inspiration 
 of the Hebrew canon, 86 ; on de- 
 grees of inspiration, 91-2 ; claims 
 inspiration, 91 , of a special nature, 
 260-2 ; in error as to second coming, 
 93 n, 98, 254 ; anathematises false 
 
 teiwhers, 
 iiispiriition 
 gospel to 
 iniiaculou* 
 unknown 
 Judaic o\ 
 '2">l-'-i; bis 
 of the otl 
 views on 
 conversion 
 Aru( Id on 
 23, 25, 261 
 of passafe* 
 his low ei 
 274 ; his 
 life, 'm n 
 physical 
 of resigna 
 raulus, on ] 
 (iospel. It 
 ing, 257 I 
 surrectioB 
 I'earson, or 
 body, 2% 
 Pentateuch 
 time of J 
 85 n, 106.- 
 Bpiration 
 111-2, li 
 Joaiah, 1 
 or more 
 chronism 
 ancies in, 
 Pentecost, 
 Peter, Firs 
 ifction < 
 not clain 
 as to the 
 Peter, Seci 
 ful ohari 
 tainly si 
 Peter, tb< 
 raculoue 
 the fish i 
 180 ; bii 
 187-8; 
 Jesus, 1 
 tary of 
 he disbi 
 his resu 
 thronef 
 tiles, 5 
 his iTi 
 vision, 
 tongue 
 preter, 
 convei 
 2 ; his 
 narrow 
 
INDEX. 
 
 305 
 
 ..their ambifruity. li, 
 
 65 n; SchleiennacS 
 'nch on, 185-6 n 
 
 authorahipofthePiBt 
 
 '..15on; on the Second 
 .iistles of John, 159 « 
 
 narrowneiB, 309-17 
 'w2 n. 
 
 ■CLES, their amWg. 
 Sv^ .?! inspiration, 
 and Scnptire, Whe- 
 
 ^"'well on, 120. 
 
 istians Schleiennach. 
 >ns <.f Jesus kejjt by, 
 
 aspiration of the New 
 
 P; on the theism of the 
 testimony, 153 n ; on 
 vidence of doctrine 
 
 , passage of, by Alex. 
 
 "thorshipoftheFint 
 
 'iKT o"' ^i" sources 
 , 107-8 a ; bis creduli- 
 i on the Second Gog- 
 the relation of Mark 
 244 n. 
 re, on date of Old 
 
 tmgs 78n,ongene- 
 B and Enos, 114 n 
 !ss of gospel record' 
 wles, 279 n ; on the 
 »U8, 234 n, 307-8 n; 
 >uty of ;n8piration, 
 
 far inspired, 290, 
 ny, 219-20 n 
 jmiuh in stocks for 
 
 [, xol, 
 
 ilu\ifm, their great 
 date of his writings. 
 
 matic character of 
 -5; on inspiration 
 canon, 86 ; on da- 
 'ion, 91-2; claims 
 )t a special nature, 
 ' to second coming, 
 lathematisM false 
 
 teiu hers, 94 n ; Dr. Arnold on his 
 inspinition, 98-9 ; on preaching th^ 
 goHpel to the Gentiles, 240 ; his 
 miraculous powers, 243, 274 ; on 
 unknown tongues, 246-7, 249 , as to 
 .Tudaic obHervances by Gentiles, 
 2'il-"J ; his teaching differs from that 
 of the other apostles, 251-3 ; his 
 views on mai-riage, 253, 25(i , his 
 conversion, 2ri8-G2, 2SG ; Miitthew 
 Arndd on, 280 ; his vision of Jesus, 
 23, '2'), 2til »<, 2oiJ ; unchristian tone 
 of passatjCS in his writings, 262 ; 
 his low estimate of miraolea. 270, 
 274 ; his argunient as to a future 
 life, 202 n, 351) n, 373 n ; his meta- 
 physical subtleties, .'}07 ; his view 
 of resignation, 331. 
 
 r.nilus, on the language of the First 
 (iospel, 154 n ; on the second com- 
 ing, 257 n ; his theory of the re- 
 surrection of JtiBUs, 290. 
 
 Pearson, on the resurrection of the 
 body, 296 n. 
 
 Pentateuch, completed about the 
 time of Josiah, 7iS ; auihorship of, 
 85 n, 106,-18 ; Cabbalists on the in- 
 spiration of, 101 ; date of, 106, 109, 
 111-2, 114-45 ; discovery of, by 
 Josiah, 109-10 ; made up of two 
 or more documents, 112-16 ; ana- 
 chronisms in, 112, 115-6 ; discrep- 
 ancies in, 113-4. 
 
 Pentecost, 243, 244, 245, 2'16. 
 
 Peter, First Epistle of, on the resur- 
 rection of Jesus, 22, 285 ; does 
 not claim inspiratii :i, 91 ; in error 
 as to the end of the world, 93 n, 254. 
 
 Peter, Second Epistle of, its doubt- 
 ful character, 89, 236 ; almost cer- 
 tainly spurious, 237 n. 
 
 Peter, the Apostle, gifted with mi- 
 raculous powers, 94, 270 ; story of 
 the fish and tribute money mytliical, 
 180 ; bis acknowledgment of Jesus, 
 187-8; bestowal of his name by 
 Jesus, 188 ; his unfitness as deposi- 
 tary of the power of the keys, 189 ; 
 he disbelieves Christ's prophecy of 
 his resurrection, 194-5 ; promise of 
 thrones to, 2C0 ; his baptizing (Jen- 
 tiles, 238, 239, 241-2, 246 n, 250 ; 
 his interpretion of Cornelius's 
 vision, 239 ; as to his speaking with 
 tongues, 244; Mark his "inter- 
 preter," 158, 244 ; as to Gentile 
 converts obeying Mosaic law, 251- 
 2; his character, 258; his Judaic 
 narrowness, 307. 
 
 Pharisees, their conceptions of God„ 
 108; Christ's discourse with, in the 
 Fourth Gospel, 214 ; and in the 
 First, 274 ; on the circumcision of 
 Gentiles, 251 ; their exorcists work 
 miracles, 274, 277 ; as to the for- 
 giveness of sins, 335 ; their views of 
 a future life, 353 
 
 Philanthropy, as a duty, 347-51. 
 
 Philo, on deg'-ees of inspiration, 79 ; 
 on prophecy, 127. 
 
 Physiology, and religious enthusiasm, 
 247-50, 2C2. 
 
 Pilate, story of washing hands by, 
 mythical, 180. 
 
 Plato, how fai- in8i>ired, 103, 299 , on 
 the meaning of the word " pro- 
 phecy," 127; his Messianic pro- 
 phecy, 137 n , his view of Socrates, 
 212-3 • influence of his philosophy 
 on the Fourth Gospel, 230: hw 
 Trinity, 230-1. 
 
 Plenary injBpiration, 75. 
 
 Polycarp, Papias a companion of, 
 158 n. 
 
 Polytheism, of the Jews, 146, 147-9. 
 
 Poor rates, levied on savings of prov- 
 ident, 47. 
 
 Pone, his " Essay on Man," 371 ; on 
 the reward of virtue, 371 n. 
 
 Pottex-, the word a mistranslation in 
 Zechariah, 178 n. 
 
 Potter's field, purchase of, with price 
 of blood, 177. 
 
 Prayer, enjoined by Scripture, 320-2 ; 
 but see 322 n ; the Lord's Prayer 
 may be reconstructed from the 
 Tal nud, 321 n ; the question of 
 the tfficacy of prayer examined, 
 320-30 ; difficulty of believing in 
 its efficacy, 322-4, 325, 328-;30, 376 ; 
 is not merely commimioii, 324-5 ; 
 Christ's views as to, 324-5 ; prayers • 
 to Jesus, the saints, and the Virgin, 
 327 n ; it may operate as a natural 
 cause, 328-9. 
 
 Pre-ordination, and prayer, 322-3, 
 .328. 
 
 Probation, this world not merely a 
 scene of, .345. 
 
 Prodigy, not a miracle, 264-5. 
 
 Progress, of humanity, 41, ;J4S ; none 
 in the future state, according to 
 Scripture, 35.5. 
 
 Prophecies, as evidence of inspiration, 
 83-4 ; examination of the, 126-144 ; 
 • ^arks of a genuine, 126 ; Philo on, 
 .27 ; meaning of the word, 127 ; 
 often not intended as predictions. 
 
39C 
 
 INDEX 
 
 128, 135 n; non-fulfilnent of, 129- 
 30, 172-7 ; false, l.W-l ; when ut- 
 tered or written down, 131-4 ; after 
 the event, 134-6 ; reference of, to 
 Jeaus, 126 n, 135-8. 140-1, 172-7, 
 195, 2i97, 302-3 n : disingenuous in- 
 terpretations of, 130-7 n, 137-8 ; Dr. 
 Arnold on the interpretation of, 
 138-44 ; Christ's propnecies of his 
 death and resurrection, 192-6 , and 
 second cominur, 19G-8 ; in the Old 
 Testament do not allude to Christ's 
 sufferings, 190 ; Toel's as to the 
 Holy Spririt, 245. 
 
 Prophetical Books, completed soon 
 after Nehemiah, 78 ; their ohacuri- 
 ties, 126. 
 
 Prophets, their absurd and disgusting 
 practices, 127-8; the Hebrew na- 
 tion inundated with false, 130-1 ; 
 who were put to death under the 
 Mosaic Law, 94 n, 269 
 
 Protestants, their notion of miracles, 
 279-80. 
 
 Psalms, their conceptions of God, 
 149-52 ; theii- Christianity, 301. 
 
 Punishment, is by natural conse- 
 quence, 336, 338, 339-42, 369-70 n ; 
 eternal, 355-8, 377. 379 ; ignorance 
 of its nature and amount in this 
 Ufe, 369. /See Hell. 
 
 Purity, inward, enjoined by Chris- 
 tianity, 319. 
 
 QUAKERS, 39, 40 ; pursuitof wealth 
 
 by, 51. 
 Quarto-deciman Controversy. 219- 
 
 20n 
 
 RABBINS, regard much of the Old 
 
 Testament as allegorical, 80-1 n. 
 Rationalism, Dr. Arnold on, 267 
 Reason, the foundation of relirion, 
 
 311-12. 
 Red Sea, the passage of, by the Is:'ael- 
 
 ites, 280; Josephus explains m a 
 
 natural event, 107 n. 
 Regeneration, Christ's discourse on, 
 
 214, 215 n, 220. 
 Religion, necessarily imperfect, 65- 
 
 71 ; cannot be authenticated by 
 
 miracles, 271-80, 294-5; founded 
 
 on reason, 311-2. 
 Religious ecstasy or enthusiasm, 245- 
 
 50, 261-2; of Hebrew prophets 
 
 127-8. 
 Renan, his "Vie de Jdsus," 10, 12- 
 
 14 ; on the growth of miracle, 13 ; 
 
 on the authorship of the Fourth 
 
 Gospel, 13-14, 160, 161-2; oiitki 
 resurrection of Jesus, 24, 25 ; n ' 
 the character of Jetus, 12-14, Ij^ 
 160 ; on life of a Galilean fiMhermai, 
 48n ; on Christianity before ChrijJi 
 301 n ; on imperfect understandiiij 
 of Jesus by the ajMistles, 162, ^.''^n. 
 
 Repentance, 335, 340-2. 
 
 Resignation, the Christian view of, 
 330-2 ; Paul's idea of, 330-1 ; Job'i, 
 331 ; the philosophic view superior 
 to the Christian, 331-2. 
 
 Resurrection from the dead, recordsof, 
 in the Gosnela, 181-2 n, 264-5, 277, 
 293 ; Jewisli ideas as to, 291 n, m, 
 359 n, 362 n ; evidence required to 
 prove, 272, 284, 291 n ; not proved 
 by Christ's resurrection, 295-6 ; no 
 proof of peculiar favour, 293. Sa 
 Future Life. 
 
 Resurrection of JesHS, 22-9, 281-96 ; 
 how long Jesus was in the grave or 
 "hell," 25, 196 n ; miracles at, 181- 
 2 ; not expected by the disciples, 
 183 n, 193-5 ; prophecies of Jesus as 
 to, 102-6 ; not believed at first, 1 94 ; 
 effect of belief in, on early Chris- 
 tians, 249-50 ; and on the teachine 
 of the apostles, 257 n ; the centra 
 fact of orthodoxy, 281 ; grounds of 
 belief in, 282 ; discrepancies in ac- 
 counts of, 24-8, 282-4, 286-90; 
 founded on a nucleus of fact, 283; 
 Ao testimony of eye-witnesses, 284- 
 6 ; belief iv general, 23, 284 n, 291- 
 2 ; non-recognition of Jesus after, 
 26-7, 288-90 ; theories as to, 25-6, 
 290; subsequent conduct of apos- 
 tles, 291-2 , of no doctrinal value, 
 292-5 ; and no pledge of our resur- 
 rection, 295-6 ; unless spiritual, 
 295 : it was bodUy, 25, 27, 295-6. 
 
 Resui-rection of the body. Prof. Bush 
 on, 182 n ; Pearson on, 296 n ; 
 Mackintosh on, 360. 
 
 Revelation, how far possible, 66 ; d 
 priori probability of, 88, 89-90 ; of 
 unreasonable or immoral doctrines, 
 233, 267-8; to the soul not the 
 senses, 268-9; cannot be proved by 
 miracles, 271-80, 294-5 ; if based on, 
 always at memy of science, 279; 
 examination of claims of Christi- 
 anity to be a, 29-31, 297-317 ; is it 
 Sossible of ' nundiscoverable truth? 
 XiS ; merely temporary and pro- 
 visional 304: how known to be 
 real, 305-6; of moral truths, not ne 
 cessary, 268 n, 294, 319, 320 
 
 Revelatioi 
 
 bT8«- „ 
 Riches, C 
 
 Mrs. B 
 
 371 n. 
 Jiitualism 
 
 61 ; woi 
 Komans, 
 lloman st 
 llome, 
 
 wards 
 
 nold on 
 Rousseau 
 
INDEX. 
 
 3U7 
 
 14, 100, 161-2; oiitk 
 of Jesus, 24, 2.5;, 
 er of Je«u8, 12-14 w 
 of a Galilean fisheiW 
 nstianitybefoieChriJ 
 nperfect understandiM 
 the apostles, 162, V'^» 
 35,340-2. ^ 
 
 ;he Christian view of 
 8 idea of, 330-1 ; Job',' 
 uosophic view sunerior 
 iian, 331-2. 
 •om thedead, recordsof 
 3Kl81-2n, 264-5, 277' 
 ideas as to, 291 n, m' 
 
 '»*, ^yin; not proved 
 •esurrection, 295-6 ; no 
 iiliar favour, 293. Sa 
 
 f JesHs, 22-9, 281-96- 
 ns was in the giave or 
 96 n; miracles at, 181- 
 Bted by the disciples, 
 prophecies of Jesnsas 
 •t believed at first, 1 94 ; 
 lef in, on early Chris- 
 ; and on the teaching 
 », 257 n ; the cei.trd 
 doxy, 281 ; grounds of 
 ; discrepancies in ac- 
 24-8, 282-4, 286-90; 
 nucleus of fact, 283; 
 of eye-witnesses, 284- 
 eneral, 23, 284 n, 291- 
 tution of Jesus after, 
 ; theories as to, 25-6, 
 lent conduct of apes- 
 if no doctrinal value, 
 J pledge of our resur- 
 6 ; unless spiritual, 
 JdUy, 25, 27, 295-6. 
 the body. Prof. Bush 
 rearson on, 296 n: 
 n, 360. ' 
 
 ^ far possible, 66 ; d 
 lityof, 88, 89-90; of 
 ar immoral doctrines, 
 to the soul not the 
 cannot be proved bv 
 W, 294-5; if based on, 
 n^y of science, 279; 
 'f claims of Christi- 
 29-31, ?97-317; is it 
 indisco verable truth ? 
 temporary and pro- 
 how known to be 
 moral truths, not ne 
 294,319,320 
 
 Re\ elation of St. John. See Apoca- 
 Ij-pse. 
 
 Riches, Christ's teachings as to, 50-3 ; 
 ^Irs. Barbauld on the pursuit of, 
 371 n. 
 
 Jvituaiism, discountenanced by Christ, 
 bl ; worthlessness of, 318-9. 
 
 IJomans, credulity of,, 107. 
 
 lluman soldiers, their discipline, 18H, 
 
 llome. Church of, its attitude tf)- 
 wards science, 119; Matthew Ar- 
 nold on the miracles of, 279-80. 
 
 llousseau, how far, inspired, 103. 
 
 SABBATH, Mosaic law of, super- 
 Reded by Jesus, 86 ; its bearing on 
 the meaning of the word "day," 
 ] 22 ; a day's journey on, 200. 
 
 Sacrifices, discrepant views in the Bi- 
 ble regarding, 152. 
 
 Saint Fructuosus, Matthew Arnold on 
 miracles at martyrdom of, 279-80. 
 
 Saint M<kiard, convultionnairea of, 
 248 n. 
 
 Saints, rising of, at Christ's resur- 
 rection mjrthical, 181-2; prayers 
 to, 327 n. 
 
 Sallust, orations in, manufactured, 
 186 n. 
 
 Salvation, scheme of, 33-4 n; by 
 faivh, its slight scriptural founda- 
 tion, 225-6; an immoral doctrine, 
 3:^-1, 227-8. 
 
 Samaritan leper, healing of, by Jesus, 
 240 n. 
 
 Samaritan Version, of the Pentateuch 
 more spiritual than the Hebrew, 
 147 n. ! 
 
 Samaritan woman. Christ's discourse \ 
 with, 214, 240 n. | 
 
 Samaritans, as to preaching the gos- 
 
 Eel to, 200, 240 n, 241 • not Gentiles, 
 ut heretical Jews, 240 n. 
 
 Samothracia, 235 n. 
 
 Samson, a Nazarite, 175 j Strauss on 
 his being a late-born child, 202, 203. 
 
 Samuel, Strauss as to his being a late- 
 bom child, 202, 203. 
 
 Sapphira, story of, 53. 
 
 Sarah, late-bom child of, 203. 
 
 Satan, said to havj been the source of 
 the Irvingiie delusion, 248 n , his 
 power to work miracles, 266, 269- 
 70. 
 
 Saul. See Paul. 
 
 Schleiermacher, on the Gospels, 
 156 n ; on the composition of the 
 Synoptic Gospels, 1(53, 164, 165-7 ; 
 on the comirosition of Luke's 
 
 Gospel, 167 ; on the miraculous 
 feeding, 179 n ; on th( h-st chajjter 
 of Luke, 201-2 ; on the second, 204- 
 5 ; on Luke's account of Christ's 
 baptism, 207 ; on inleii)olations in 
 Luke, 207, 209 n. 
 Scholten, on the A|)ostlus Creed, 
 34 n ; on dogmatic Christianity, 
 34-5 n. 
 Science, its conflict or harmony wii.h 
 
 Scripture, 118-24. 
 Scotch, pursuit of n'ealth by, 51 ; 
 
 former frugality of peasantry, 47. 
 Scribes, their conceptions of God, 108. 
 Scrijitures. See Bibb, Canon, New 
 
 Testament, Old Testament. 
 Second coming, Christ's prophecies 
 of his, 196-8 : expectation of, by 
 apostles, 93 n, 98, 249-50, 253-ti, 
 257 n. 
 Self-sacrifice, enjoined by Christian- 
 ity, 319. 
 Septuagint, translation of word ' ' let- 
 ter" in, 178 n. 
 Shakespeare, how far inspire^ 103, 
 299 ; as to prodigies on Caesar's 
 death, 182 n ; as to growth of mira- 
 cles, 280. 
 Shemaiah, reproves Jehoiada for not 
 
 punishing .Jeremiah, 131, 
 Shiloh, meaning of word, 136 n. 
 Sichem, 219 n. 
 Sidney, Algernon, on consequences, 
 
 153 n, 233. 
 Signs, common among the Jews, 204, 
 
 270; of belief, 243 n, 250. 
 Silas, supposed to be Luke, 159, 2:J5n. 
 Siloam, its erroneous interpretation 
 
 in the Fourth Gospel, 219 n. 
 Simeon, his song, 204. 
 Simon Bar-jona. See Peter. 
 Sin, forgiveness of, the Christian doc- 
 trine of, irrational and immoral, 
 3:^^r43 ; is punished by its natural 
 consequences, 336, 338, 339-42, 
 369-70 n : cannot be forgiven, 335, 
 339-43, 356-7; Christ's view of, 
 339 n ; belief in forgiveness a 
 cause of sin, 340-1 ; consequences 
 of sin eternal, 356-7 n ; propaga- 
 tion c;f, 366 n ; future punishment 
 of, 355-8,377,379. 
 Sincerity, enjoined by Christianity, 
 
 319. 
 Socrates, Xenophon and Plato's di- 
 verse views 01 his discourses, 212 3. 
 Solidarity of mankind, 17-8, 320, 
 
 323 n. 
 Solomon's St)ng, when written, 79. 
 
398 
 
 IND£X. 
 
 Son of God, meaning of phrase, 230 
 and noteR. 
 
 So\il, influence of body on, 860-1 ; 
 doctrine of a germ or nucleus of, 
 361-2 n ; immateriality of, 'M\2 ; as 
 to its change un death, 378. See 
 Future Life. 
 
 Spain, alms<j;iving in, 44. 
 
 Speaker's Commentary, 11, 21, 32. 
 
 Spirituality, striving after, a mistake, 
 347-8. 
 
 Stael, De, how far inspired, 103. 
 
 Star of the East, story of, mythical, 
 156, 178. 
 
 Stephen, Matthew Arnold on the 
 martyrdom of, 279. 
 
 Strauss, his " Leben Jesu," 10 ; on 
 the resurrection of Jesus, 24, 25 ; bis 
 "Old Faith and the New," 32; 
 "Are we yet Christians ? " 31-2 : his 
 • * Universum/' 60 ; on the author- 
 ship of the Fourth Gospel, 160; 
 on Matthew's genealogy of Jesus, 
 170 ; on Christ's prophecies of his 
 death and resurrection, 195-6 n ; 
 on the first chapter of Luke's Gos- 
 pel, 201-4 ; on the second, 204 ; 
 on the Fourth Gospel, 210 n ; on 
 the discourses of Jesus therein, 215- 
 6; on the miracle at Cana, 222 ; his 
 tlieory as to the resurrection of 
 Jesus, 24, 25, 290 ; on the gain to 
 religion by eliminating dogma, 313 
 n, 314-5. 
 
 Supematuralism, contrasted with 
 naturalism, 309-16. 
 
 Swiss peasantry, their former frugal- 
 ity, 47. 
 
 Sychar, 219 n. 
 
 Sydney, Algernon, on consequenoeB, 
 153 n, 233. 
 
 Synagogue, the Great, legend as to 
 the formation of the Hebrew canon 
 by, 78. 
 
 Synoptic Gospels, composition of, 
 162-7 ; muterials collected in Galilee, 
 165 n, doubtful portions of, 169 ; 
 date of, 22 n, 56, 153, 164, 198, 288 ; 
 their accounts of the demoniac's 
 testimony to the Messiah, 207-8 ; 
 their errors, 209 ; contrasted with 
 the Fouirth Gospel, 208 n, 212, 214, 
 216-20 n, 277 ; faithful in the main, 
 but containing much not authentic, 
 223 ; negative the dogma of Christ's 
 divinity, 228; their difference of 
 tone from the Epistles, 256-62. 
 
 Syiu-Chaldaic Gobpel, supposed, 163. 
 
 TACITUS, on • future life, 359 n. 
 
 Tait, Dr., on the Fourth Gospel, 
 210 n. 
 
 Talmud, theEdinhutyh Reviewon, SO n; 
 Deutach on, 301 n ; the Iii>rd'! 
 Prayer contained in, 321 n. 
 
 Talmudists, The, on degrees of in^<l)i^ 
 atiou, 79. 
 
 Tayler, Rev. J. J. , on the authorHhip 
 of the Fourth Gospel, 160, 162 ; on 
 the Paschal Controversy, 219 n. 
 
 Taylor, Isaac, on the crenulity of the 
 Fathera, 89 n ; as to the end of the 
 world, 255 n; on the duty and 
 efficacy of prayer, 323 n, 325-7 ; ou 
 the Bolidarity of mankind, 323 n ; 
 nucleus or germ of the soul, 3()2 !i. 
 
 Temple of Jerusalem, 116 ; Christ's 
 prophecy as to, 183 n. 
 
 Tennyson, quoted, 67 n. 
 
 TertuUian, on the inspiration of the 
 New Testament, 89 ; on the joys of 
 heaven, 354-5 n. 
 
 Testament. See Bible, New Testa- 
 ment, Old Testament. 
 
 Testimony. "See Evidence. 
 
 Tetzel, Christianity as taught by, 
 226 
 
 Theism of the Jews, 145-52 ; Paley 
 on, 145 ; Milman on, 145-6 ; Bauer 
 on, 146, 147 ; three stages of, 14(1, 
 148; not pure till after Captivity, 
 146. 149, 297. 
 
 Theology, Natural, contrasted with 
 supernaturalism, 309-16. 
 
 Theudas, the reference to, in Acts, an 
 anachronism, 186 n. 
 
 ThirlwalL Bishop, on the authorship 
 of the First Gospel, 154 n ; on the 
 peculiar similarities in the Gospels, 
 162-3 n, 165 n ; on the composition 
 of the Synoptic Gospels, 163, 164, 
 165 n ; on oral tradition, 165 n ; 
 on the omission b* Mark of the 
 power of the keys, 189 n ; as to the 
 Zacharias of Josephus, 190 n, 191 n. 
 
 Thom, Rev. J. H., on the Trinity, 
 228 n ; on the effect of the death, 
 resurrection, and ascension of Jesus 
 on the teaching of the apostles, 
 237 n. 
 
 Thucydides, Dr. Arnold on, 95 ; ora- 
 tions in, manufactured, 186 n. 
 
 Titus, prophecies as to the destruc- 
 tion of Jerusalem by, 127 n, 197. 
 
 Tongues, confusion of, Kenriuk on, 
 118. 
 
 Tongues, speaking with, 243-50. 
 
future life, 350 n. 
 10 Fourth Goapel, 
 
 urtjh Reviewon, SO n; 
 Wl n; the Lord's 
 
 il in, 321 11. 
 Jii deffrees of in.spir 
 
 on the authorship 
 ospel, 160, 162 ; on 
 
 itnjversy, 219 n. 
 
 the credulity of the 
 
 Eis to the end of the 
 on the duty and 
 
 »r, 323 n, 325-7 ; ou 
 
 >f mankind, 32;i n ; 
 
 of thesoul, 3()2ti. 
 
 dera, 116; Christ's 
 
 183 n. 
 
 ,67n. 
 
 B inspiration nf the 
 
 , 89 ; on the joys of 
 
 Hble, New Testa- 
 
 iment. 
 
 vidence. 
 
 [ty as taught by, 
 
 ws, 145-52; Paley 
 1 on, 145-6 ; Bauer 
 ree stages of, 140, 
 ill after Captivity, 
 
 1, contrasted with 
 
 , 309-16. 
 
 ence to, in Acts, an 
 
 6n. 
 
 on the authorshi]) 
 
 3el, 154 n; on the 
 
 iies in the Gospels, 
 
 n the composition 
 
 Gospels, 163, 164, 
 
 tradition, 165 n ; 
 
 hi Mark of the 
 ■s, 189 n ; as to the 
 phus, 190 n, 191 n. 
 , on the Trinity, 
 feet of the death, 
 ascension of Jesus 
 
 of the apostles, 
 
 :noId on, 95 ; ora- 
 
 tured, 180 n. 
 
 IS to the destruc- 
 
 by, 127 n, 197. 
 
 of, Kenrick on, 
 
 with, 243-50. 
 
 INDEX. 
 
 399 
 
 Tradition, oral, influence of, on gospel 
 history, 66, 163, 164-7, 168; Mid- 
 (Ucton on, 158 n ; Norton on, 165 n ; 
 Thirlwall on, 165 n ; Schleiermacher 
 on, 166 ; Trench on, 185-6 n. 
 
 Trench, Archbishop, on tho weakness 
 of oral tradition, 186-6 n ; on mira- 
 cles as evidence of doctrine, 267, 
 2r)8 n. 
 
 Trinity, as to baptism in the name of, 
 191 ; an ecclesiastical not an evan- 
 gelical doctrine, 228-31; Plato's, 
 2:51. 
 
 Truth, difficulty and pain of the search 
 after, 71-3, 316-7 ; latent in false- 
 hood, 355-6, 
 
 Tyre, prophecies against, not fulfilled, 
 129. 
 
 UNITY of the human race, 17-8, I 
 320, 323 n. ' 
 
 Unknown tongues, 243-50 
 
 VESPASIAN, 198 n. 
 
 Virgil, as to prodigies on Caesar's 
 death, 182 n. 
 
 Virgin Mary. See Mary 
 
 Virtue, the Christian idea of, some- 
 times mercenary, 330 n, 333-5 ; 
 Pope on the reward of, 371 n. 
 
 WASHING HANDS, a Jewish 
 
 ceremony, 180 ; a Mosaic rite, 180 n. 
 Wealth, Christ's teachings as toj 50- 
 
 3 ; Mrs. Barbauld on the pursuit of, 
 
 371 n. 
 Webster, on the language of the First 
 
 Gospel, 154 n. 
 Westminster Confession, not a faith- 
 
 ful emboliment of Christianity, 
 
 3;i. 
 Wetstein, on the composition of 
 
 Luke, 164 ; on the Lord's Prayer 
 
 and the Talmud, 321 n. 
 Wette. See De Wette. 
 Whateley, Archbishop, on miracles, 
 
 279. 
 Whewell, on the relations of Scrip- 
 ture and Geology, 120-1, 124. 
 Wisdom, Book of, quoted, 103. 
 Word, the. See Logos. 
 Wordsworth, his ode on Immortality 
 
 quoted, 375-6 n. 
 World, This, its true value, 345-51. 
 
 See Second Coming. 
 
 XENOPHON, his view of Socrates 
 contrasted with Plato's, 212-3. 
 
 ZACH ARIAS, father of the Baptist, 
 his hymn in Luke, 202, 203 ; ad- 
 vanced in years, 203. 
 
 Zacharias. son of Barachias, Mat- 
 thew's account of his murder apoc- 
 ryphal, 189-91. 
 
 Zacharias, son of Baruch, 189. 
 
 Zacharias, son of Jehoiada, 189. 
 
 Zecliariah, Book of, Newcome and 
 Davidson on it prophecy in, 126 n ; 
 date of, 131 n; its supposed prophecy 
 as to Jesus, 177 n ; as to the paj- 
 sage in, which Matthew attributes 
 to Jeremiah, 177-8 n ; manner of 
 the prophet's death unknown, 189- 
 90 n. 
 
 Zerubbabel, Zechariah's prophecy as 
 to, 126 n. 
 
 Zsohokke, quoted, 317.