LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, Chap. Copyriglit No. Slielf_._^W_.3 j UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. I THE GREAT MEANING OF METANOIA AN UNDEVELOPED CHAPTER IN THE LIFE AND TEACHING OF CHRIST A NEW EDITION WITH A SUPPLEMENTARY ESSAY TREADWELL WALDEN NEW-YORK THOMAS WHITTAKER 1896 3^ dj-' .vi^ -->&^ Copyright, 1896, By Treadwell Walden. INSCRIBED WITH DEVOTED LOVE TO MY WIFE, GRACE GORDON WALDEN. "233 Clarendon Street, "Boston, October 15, 1881. " Dear Walden : I have just read your * Meta- noia' through from beginning to end, and I want to tell you how much I enjoyed it, and how much I thank you for sending it to me. " It is full of inspiration. " It makes one think of Christian faith as positive and constructive, and not merely destructive and remedial. " It makes the work of Christ seem worthy of Christ. " I thank you truly, both for writing it and for giving it to me. ' ' Your sincere friend, " Phillips Brooks." PEEFAOE. The first of these Essays appeared in the " American Church Review " for July, 1 88 1 — following the memorable day in May when the Revised Version of the New Testament was issued. The paper was soon afterwards reprinted separately, and in 1882 was put into book form by the present publisher. Although its point was made timely by the revision, and by the astonishing fact that, in a work expressly undertaken in this age to correct the misapprehensions of a former age, a mistranslation involving such conse- quences had been overpassed and perpetu- ated, yet the Essay did not set out to be a criticism of the New Version in this particu- lar. It could not help falling into something like it, but its main purpose was to draw attention to, and to be a popular exposition of, a word in whose enormous potentiality of meaning lay, as I beheved, a more true and more catholic, a more spiritual and more philo- Preface. sophical, interpretation of Christianity. The Essay could have done as well for this — with a httle modification — if the revisers had adopted a new rendering which was, in any degree, sympathetic with the real import of the original. As such, I am glad to say — after the nov- elty of the New Version had passed — the Essay seems to have been accepted : simply as an exposition in itself, that might at any time be in order; and as a contribution, called for under the circumstances, to the knowledge and the spirit which ought to in- spire that comprehensive English expression or that happy combination of words — vary- ing according to their connection in the text — which may venture sometime hence to represent the idea of Merai^om ; a word of whose fullness, in its initial position, the New Testament itself can be the only adequate translation, for, in that initial position, it is the key-note of its whole strain. There was nothing new in the view itself. If there had been, it could not have been true. It was as old as the apostolic age. And the revival of it was only an attempt to uncover and clear out a partially choked well. Preface. The Greek expression lay directly under the eye of any reader of the original, manifestly opening down to a great depth, provided his eye was disengaged enough from preposses- sions to be alive to the fact. The word bore the hint of what it was on its very face : an intimation that the whole inward nature of man was appealed to, all its springs of action, all its possibihties of affection. Every scholar was aware of its literal meaning — and that meaning alone was in itself enough to suggest the dropping of an exploring plummet. Why this was not done, why what was so obvious was overlooked, per- haps the second Essay may explain. Neither was there anything new in the endeavor to recover the lost meaning of the word. There had been, even so far back as the remote age in which its present custom- ary curb and covering had first been imposed upon it, an instinctive misgiving that its full depth had not been sounded. But the mis- giving had been overborne because it was not pronounced enough. The Reformation, also, developed a restiveness under the same ancient limitation — for mud, as well as water, was being drawn up now — but the restiveness Preface, wrought no real purification, because it was not articulate enough. At a later day — that is, a hundred years ago — an orthodox but independent Scotchman, Dr. George Camp- bell, exposed the whole imposition with startling distinctness, and succeeded so well in sweeping the fabric away that many since his day — several recent translators among them — owe all their new conception of the truth to him. But in both his and their contentment with the substitute "reforma- tion" for "repentance " there lay an implica- tion of externaHsm, which betrayed, appa- rently, a lack of insight into the spiritual pro- fundity of the original expression. The new rendering did not, also, popularly prevail, though pointing to the practical result in the life, because the old one, though falling short of the whole truth ("regeneration"), did at last reach down far enough to stir the oft- stagnant pool of the conscience and the heart. It has turned out that the absolute insight into the meaning of the word has in our own day been given to two scholars hke De Quincey and Matthew Arnold, and has found its first distinct expression through them, be- cause, unlike all that have gone before them, Preface, their vision was unhampered by any theo- logical preconception, and by the necessity of looking for an available form of English translation. It was simply this which left their powers of perception clear ; both open- eyed to a palpable meaning, and free-handed in their statement of it. But they did not raise a signal-flag over the fact when they found it, as if it were a discovery, nor con- cern themselves especially in identifying the word with its issues. They took its evident idea as a matter of course, recognized it as the original spring-head of the Gospel, re- stored it to its natural condition, andpassedon. Hence their brief and casual allusions to it have escaped the attention that was their due. I was far on in the preparation of the first Essay before I ran accidentally upon the passage in De Quincey, and well on in the second before I came as accidentally upon the coincidence with it and yet variation from it of Matthew Arnold — the one indicat- ing the intellectual sweep, the other the ethical depth of the word ; but I have been glad indeed to owe to them both an encour- aging and illumining inspiration in the en- Preface. deavor to show that the principle enunciated by " Metanoia " in the outset of the Gospel was profound enough to be the underlying and prevailing idea of the New Testament from beginning to end, and to suggest the apphcation of its interpretative potency to the teaching of Christ and His apostles. And this — the most obvious thing in the world to do when once on the track of it — is all that appears to be new. But even this could be only generally and superficially intimated in a review article. Still, such as it was, the idea was a siuprise and even a revelation to many people. And there have been indications enough that it has since taken a wide hold. I do not re- ceive this impression only from the many earnest letters and other like evidences which have come to me,. or from an occasional ref- erence in a recent commentary or expository paper, but from the fact that the view seems to have entered largely into pulpit teaching and cun-ent thought. It has been made the theme of many sermons, and it has given occasion to a number of printed essays and magazine articles, several even of a philo- sophical character. The word " Metanoia " Preface. itself has also become quite a familiar Eng- lish expression, not only for what it really means, but, I fear, in some cases where an ignorant enthusiasm has laid hold of it, for what it cannot be understood to mean. It has been made the ground, however, of one interesting suggestion, by a writer in the " Popular Science Monthly," who has copi- ously quoted the Essay, that the term " Met- agnostic " — or, better, the words ** Metanos- tic " and " Metanoetic " — should displace the idea conveyed by '' Agnostic," as expressing positively, affirmatively, and hopefully, in stead of negatively and despairingly, the at- titude even of the purely scientific mind in the presence of the Unknown. The sugges- tion, it seems, failed with Mr. Huxley, when presented to him, because a slight inaccuracy in the statement of the primary force of the proposed words gave him an opportunity to evade it ; but the idea has, however, gone far enough into usage to bring about the in- troduction of " Metagnostic," with this sig- nification, in the " Century Dictionary." It is all this and the like of it that has kept the memory of the Essay afloat these Preface. fourteen years and more, that has caused a continual inquiry for it, and that has now led to its reissue, after being long out of print. In publishing it again I ought to say that I have gone over the whole ground with much thorough and painstaking study, and have verified all its positions so satisfactorily that I have seen no reason to change any of them. Indeed, so largely and variously has the subject opened and enriched itself, both in its Scriptural illustration and its practical application, that the present little volume seems to stand yet only on the threshold of the whole contemplation. But I have been under an exigency of brevity in bringing it out, and can only hope that it may serve its purpose as an introduction, if no more. The book has fallen into a threefold form : first, the original Essay, slightly retouched and with a few notes added ; second, a Sup- plementary' Essay, mainly to supply a strong point of view in which the other was neces- sarily lacking, but incidentally including such further intimations of the bearing of " Meta- noia" as could be tlirown out by the way ; and third, a group of selected comments upon Preface. the subject by different distinguished hands — five of them revisers — to show that I do not stand alone in my estimate of its neces- sity and importance. The last in the list of these — by no means the least — is Phillips Brooks. I have also set the whole of the opening part of his note to me in the forefront of this new edition, partly under an impulse of personal affection, partly because of the comprehensiveness and force of what he wrote. He was my cher- ished friend for thirty years, a pride and de- Hght to me as I saw him advancing in the strength of the breadth and depth of the truth he proclaimed, and under the blessing which attended a pure, a noble, and a de- voted life. In these few words, out of his very heart, he seized with characteristic in- sight the vital point of the whole considera- tion, and they are of that very quaHty in thought, conviction, and expression which was the secret of his power both as a preacher and as a man. In the midst of the concen- tric circles drawn round the mark, as it was also recognized by the others that I have quoted, he thus laid his finger upon the cen- tral white; — Preface. "It makes one think of Christian faith as positive and constructive, and not merely destructive and remedial. " It makes the work of Christ seem worthy of Christ." In that he said all. T. W. Cambridge, Mass., December, 1895. CONTENTS. ESSAY I. THE GREAT MEANING OF THE WORD METANOIA : LOST IN THE OLD VERSION, UNRECOVERED IN THE NEW. CHAPTER PAGE I. The New Testament Idea of Metanoia. . . i II. "Metdnoia" Mistranslated ^'Repentance'''' 13 III. The Intellectual as well as Moral Compass of Metanoia 31 IV. The Inaugural Action of Metanoia in the First Age 45 V. Metanoia the Method of Christ's Teach- ing 60 VI. The Metanoia of St. Paul— Faith and Re- newal 71 VII. Metanoia the Word of Christ to the Pres- ent Age 83 Note. — The View of Matthew Arnold . . 91 xvii Contents. ESSAY II. THE ECLIPSE OF METANOIA BY PCENITENTIA. CHAPTER PAGE I. An Impossible Expedient to End it : ^'Re- pentance " to be Made to Mean Meta- noia 95 II. Meraw^a Transfigured Greek lOO III. "it'^/^«/d!«