LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. BV fc o %qt, ., ®opi|rig|t If tu UNITED STATES OF AMEKICA. CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD; OR, THE RELATION OF CHILDREN TO THE CHURCH. R. J. COOKE, A. M., D. D., PROFESSOR OF THEOLOGY IN THE U. S. GRANT UNIVERSITY. author of "Outlines of Doctrine of the Resurrection," "Reasons for Church Creed," Etc. 3oiifu. CINCINNATI ; CRANSTON AND STOWE. NEW YORK: HUNT AND EATON. 1891. .ok*" Copyright BY CRANSTON & STOWE, 1891. PREFACE. 9 r I ^HE present work is designed to establish, on •*- Biblical and Historical grounds, the reasons for Child-membership in the Christian Church. Every institution of the Church must have some funda- mental reasons for its existence, otherwise it is en- titled to oblivion. While the literature on the corre- lated doctrine is exceeding voluminous, there is no serious attempt, with, perhaps, one or two exceptions, to reduce to a system the various facts which consti- tute the doctrine underlying the practice of those Churches who include children within their folds. There is, therefore, a real demand for a work of this nature. That this work now presented to the Church will answer the requirement, is not the province of the writer to decide. It has been prompted solely by the desire to advance within, the interests of the Re- deemer's kingdom. That it will be acceptable to all, is not expected. It certainly will not be to those who maintain an unreasonable adherence to the fabricated technicalities of theological terminology, nor to those who antagonize the conservative-progressive method of the best thought of the present. In my ideal of it, I have but skirted the rim of this great argument, yet no important fact has been 2 PREFACE. ignored or indifferently treated, while the many di- visions have been joined in an articulate, systematic whole. The subject is immense, is of such supreme importance in its results, and so varied in its relations to the cardinal doctrines of Christianity, that it would be a miracle (not to be looked for) if any book pro- ducible could satisfy the critical judgment of even all those who may agree on the general principles. I have followed the truths of Scripture and the facts of history ; and the critic who imagines I have misin- terpreted both, will find it easier to utter his opinion than to furnish the proof. It will be readily perceived that not all is said that might be said under each theme; and that one or two subjects, important in themselves, have been wholly omitted, such as the " Post-mortem Pro- bation of Children," and the " Origin and Scope of the Catechumenate in the Primitive Church." Should this work receive the approbation of those interested in the position of children in the Christian scheme of redemption, these subjects and others will be added. In the meantime the English reader will find full information concerning catechumens in Bingham's "Antiquities of the Christian Church," Vol. I, and Neander's " History of the Christian Church," trans- lated by Torrey, Vol. I. One thing the author de- sires to emphasize, and that is, that these pages are not designed to be polemic in character or tone. They were not written in that spirit. It is devoutly PREFACE. 3 hoped that no written word of mine will ever wound the denominational feeling of any child of God. I have been loyal to the Truth, as prolonged investiga- tion has made it clear. Alas! the history of the Church only too clearly shows that that very loyalty is ofttimes the severest accusation of error. My sole aim has been to set forth, in sun-clear manner, the true grounds for the practice of the Church, and to awaken zeal in the Divinely appointed shepherds for the lambs of the Flock. Were I certain that no discordant sound would arise from this work, written in behalf of children, I would, as a testimony to much that is contained in these pages, inscribe it to the memory of a bright, sweet boy, who, after five years of blissful life, full of Christian joy, song, and prayer, w r ent out one even- ing, in the October sunset, while the first pages of this book were being written, to the Church of the first- born, which is without fault before the throne of God. R. J. C. August, 1891. TABLE OF CONTENTS. PAGE. Preface, 1 CHAPTEE I. Heathenism and Childhood, 7 CHAPTER II. Christianity and Childhood, 34 CHAPTER III. Children under Adam, 51 CHAPTER IV. Children under Christ, 97 CHAPTER V. The Core of the Problem, 114 CHAPTER VI. Christ's Recognition of Child-membership, 125 CHAPTER VII. The Unity of the Church in the Old and New Testa- ments, 140 CHAPTER VIII. The Position of Children in the Old Testament Church, . 161 5 6 TABLE OF CONTENTS. CHAPTEK IX. PAGE. Children in the Church of the New Testament (The Mother Church at Jerusalem), .171 CHAPTER X. Children in the Church op the New Testament (Among the Gentiles and the Dispersion), 191 CHAPTER XI. The Relation of Children to the Sacraments, 215 Index, 227 Christianity and Childhood. CHAPTER L HEATHENISM AND CHILDHOOD. WHEN the religion of Jesus advanced beyond the walls of Jerusalem, and began its mission to the Gentiles, it came into immediate conflict with world-powers — social, political, and religious — such as mankind had never witnessed before, and the like of which will never be seen again. By the force of her arms, the wisdom of her states- men, the vigor of her laws, and the majesty of her name, Rome had expanded the limits of her domain till the boundaries of the empire, under Augustus, stretched from the Rhine and the Danube on the north, to the African and Arabian deserts on the south ; and from the Atlantic Ocean on the west, to the Euphrates on the east. Within this territory, which embraced those fair countries where civiliza- tion, letters, the arts, and the sciences had their birth, and had attained their highest development, all phi- losophies were taught, all religions tolerated,* and, *"The various modes of worship which prevailed in the Roman world were all considered by the people as equally true, by the philosopher as equally false, and by the magistrate as equally useful." (Gibbon, Decline and Fall, chap, ii, where see notes; and also Dean Milman's note to a similar passage in chap, xv, I, where, on the other hand, the intolerant spirit of 7 8 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. through the universal decay of morals, all wickedness was practiced. Ancient traditions and beliefs had lost their power. The Egyptian still worshiped Isis and Serapis, and the many monster-headed representations of his di- vinities; the Phoenician and the Chaldean still had recourse to Bel, and indulged in the impure rites of Astarte; the gods of Greece and of Rome were still invoked by the priests, and their temples, often the centers of pollution,* were still thronged by the mul- titudes; but the old faiths in Providence, in the real existence of the very gods whose altars were fragrant with incense, in the rewards of virtue and the punish- ment of vice, — these had departed. The Elder Pliny considered it degrading to the idea of a supreme God when men imagined that he could or would take in- terest in human affairs, and finally concluded, from the practices of men throughout the world, who at all hours and in all places invoked fortune, that God was uncertain.f paganism is fully set forth.) Nevertheless, it can not be doubted that the policy of Augustus was in favor of universal religious toleration. "Le favori intelligent d'Auguste eleve le Pantheon, et invite les dieux de toutes les nations a se reunir pour vivre en paix sous un meme toit." (De Broglie, L'Eglise et L'Ernpire Eomain, Sixieme Edition, p. 5.) * " But if I add what all know and will readily admit to be the fact — that in the temples adulteries are arranged ; ... that often in the houses of the temple-keepers and priests, under the sacrificial fillets, and the sacred hats and the purple robes, amid the fumes of incense, deeds of licentiousness are done." (Tertul., Apology, chap, xv.) tNat. Hist., Book II, chap, vii: "Mittendum vero agere curaru illud, quidquid est summum." HEATHENISM AND CHILDHOOD. 9 Seneca* testifies to the general contempt for the gods which had gradually permeated the minds of all, and Juvenal f utters the same complaint when he says that, owing to the corruptions of the time, one may be believed to have perjured himself with impunity at the altars of all the gods that were dear to Rome. Lucian J introduces one of the deities, Momus, as saying to Apollo, that since the number of divinities has increased, perjury and sacrilege are so much the more prevalent, while the old gods are being totally despised. Paradoxical as it may seem to one who has never seriously studied the human heart, with this general skepticism and contempt for the ancient deities, there arose in Rome, which in itself was an epitome of' the empire, a passion for foreign superstitions. Tacitus, the historian of that age, narrates the interest of Ger- manicus in the Egyptian gods; Vespasian consulted the gods of Memphis, and, being desirous of the im- perial purple, offered sacrifice to a local deity on Mount Carmel. Nero worshiped the licentious Dea Syra; Marcus Aurelius, Severus, Commodus, Cara- calla, and Heliogabalus adored Isis and Serapis, the Persian Mithras and the Syrian deities. During the last days of the Republic the number of gods and sacred ceremonies constantly increased until at the *" How great in our time is the madness of men! They whisper to the gods most abominable prayers. . . . What they would not have men know, they tell to God — quod scire hominum nolunt, Deo narrant." (Ep. x.) tSat. Ill, 145; XIII, 75; VI, 344. iDeorum Concilio. 10 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. time of Christ the Imperial City, which, according to Tacitus, " was the common sink into which every- thing infamous and abominable flowed like a torrent from all quarters of the world " (Annals, Bk. XV, 44), had become glutted with divinities and embarrassed with religious rites, the very names of which were un- known to earlier days. The Christian apologist, Ter- tullian, charges this multiplying of the gods on the heathen with his usual vehemence, and declares that those deities who had formerly been denied admission to Rome were now worshiped with honor.* Disbelief in the immortality of the soul had be- come almost universal. The reasonings of the philos- ophers usually ended with a denial or an uncertain opinion, and as theoretical doubts with the few become practical unbelief with the many, these negations having filtered down through society, were not long in producing positive effects upon the beliefs of the people. Among the Athenians, long prior to the advent of the gospel, the doctrine of a future state had become a matter of speculation. The poets had sung the early faith of mankind, but many philosophers either ridiculed the form or denied the truths which the poets had immortalized in verse, and the multitude soon learned to treat them as unconsoling and baseless fables. Plato could give no sure word. Aristotle * The Consuls Piso and Gabinus had forbidden the worship of Serapis and Isis and Arpocrates, with their dog-headed friend, Anubis, and had overthrown their altars and expelled them from the country. See the spirited passage in the sixth chapter of the " Apology for the Christians." HEATHENISM AND CHILDHOOD. 11 wavered in his opinions. In several instances he seems to have retained the ancient belief; but in the Nicornachean Ethics he plainly teaches that death is the most dreadful of all things, the end of all things; aud that for him who is dead there remains nothing more, whether of good or of evil. What the doctrine of the Cyreniacs, the Skeptics, and the Epicurean herd was, is well known. Polybius, who died about one hundred and twenty-five years before the birth of Christ, shows that this unbelief in a future state had become in his time a fashion among all classes — a fact not without parallel in modern history. The influence of Greece upon Roman manners and beliefs was of a most corrupting character, and, as a result, the Romans, no less than the Greeks, had gradually surrendered to the same infidelity. Sixty- three years before Christ, Caius Caesar solemnly de- clared in the Senate, on the occasion of the trial of the Catiline conspirators, that death is a repose from ca- lamity, not a torment; and that it puts an end to all the evils to which mortals are subject. Both Cato and Cicero spoke in reply, but neither expressed any disapprobation of Caesar's bold denial of the soul's immortality,* which, had it not been the senti- *De Broglie, in his great work, "L'Eglise et L'Emp. Rom.," speaks of the indignation which Caesar aroused in the soul of Cato, " en professant des ruaxirnes d'irreligion triviale," but it was certainly not on this occasion. Cato barely mentions the denial of Caesar, and what he did say gave no indication of wrath. The truth is that the intelligent classes of that period had lost faith in everything but the grandeur and destiny of Rome. Compare Sallust, Bell. Catil., c. 51, 52 ; Cicero in Catil., iv, 4, 5, 12 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. merit of the Assembly, be would bave been too politic to make, since be was at that time, by virtue of his office, chief pontiff of the State religion, the high- priest of Rome, the interpreter of the wills of the gods. In the First Book of the Tusculan Disputa- tions, Cicero testifies to the universal unbelief. He affirms that there were crowds of augurs who denied the immortality of the soul, " and that not only Epi- cureans, whom I regard very little, but, somehow or other, almost every man of letters." Seneca con- fessed : " I once flattered myself with the expectation of a future state, because I believed others " (Ep. 102) ; and in Epistle 55 it will be seen that his hope lay in a return to non-existence. Horace, in the splendid days of Augustus, wrote to his friend Sextius : " Pres- ently shall night oppress thee, and the ghosts of fable and the gloomy mansion of Pluto." (Odes, Bk. I, 4. See also Virgil, Geog. II, 490-492.) The well-known lines of Juvenal show that the old faith was dead in the hearts of the men of that age, who were without God or hope in the world. " That there are many ghosts and subterranean realms, And a boat-pole, and black frogs in the Stygian Gulf, And that so many thousands press over in one boat, Not even boys believe." With this loss of faith in a superintending Prov- idence, in a life after death, and the consequent dis- belief in the punishment of vice and the reward of virtue, heathenism sunk into the lowest depths of sensuality, deeper than which it was not possible for man to go. " There will be nothing," says Juve- nal, " which posterity can add to our morals. Those HEATHENISM AND CHILDHOOD. 13 born after us will desire and do the same things. Every vice stands on the summit." The voluptuous- ness, the sensual vices, and the profound infidelity of Greece had destroyed the hardy virtues of an earlier age, and what the corrupt influences of Greece might have failed to produce, the enervating manners of the East brought to the blossom. The Orontes flowed into the Tiber, as the stern satirist of the time wrote, aud no lasciviousness, no vice, no impure rite or ceremony of Eastern nations was unknown to the citizens of Rome.* The Orient, with its mysteries, its magic, its talismans, its astrologies, its bizarre gods, its bloody practices, its veiled women, had produced such a state of immorality as no historian has yet ventured or should attempt to describe. It is not my purpose to write a history of the morals of that age, but to show what were the pro- ducing causes of the frightful condition of childhood in heathenism when Christianity began its mission of mercy and beneficence ; how that the decay of family life, through the frequency of divorce and the increase of licentiousness, and the consequent neglect of chil- dren, the cruelty practiced upon them, the contempt in which they were held, in utter disregard of the natural feelings of the heart, were all owing to a dis- * R&nan's description of the morals of Antioch would apply, with little change, to the Eome of that period. " La legerete syrienne, le charlatanisme babylonien, toutes les impostures de l'Asia, se confondant a cette limite des deux mondes avaient fait d'Antioche la capitale du mesonge, la sentine de toutes les infamies ce thieve de boue qui, sortant par l'ern- bouchure de l'Oronte, venait inonder Rome, avait la sa source principale." (Les Apotres, p. 218, it.) 14 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. belief in God, to a complete surrender of the spirit to the deified lusts of the heart, and to an abandonment of hope in a future life. In the history of modern Europe we have seen the consequence of unbelief upon the morals of the people, upon the family, and so upon the religious care and education of childhood. Jean Jacques Rousseau* had critically estimated the effect of skepticism upon society when he wrote concerning atheism the terrible sentence: " Its principles do not kill men, they hinder them from being born, in destroying the manners which multiply them, in detaching them from their species, in reducing all their affections to a secret egoism as fatal to population as to virtue." As in France, during the Revolution, when the teachings of the Encyclopedists bore their fruit; as in England, when deism was fashionable among all classes ; and as in Germany, during the Rationalistic period — so was it in the Roman society of the age now under consid- eration. The effect of philosophical skepticism, the development of an intense eagerness for things of the *Emile, Bk. IV, CEuvres de Rousseau, Vol. IX. The condi- tion of France at the present time may be in some measure understood from the following ; no other commentary on Rous- seau's words need be written : " In 1886 there were over six thousand less marriages in France than in 1887, while there were nearly two thousand more divorces. In the Department of the Seine there was one divorce for each four hundred fam- ilies. The birth-rate has gone back well-nigh twenty thousand, and since 1884 the receding current has been on the increase. There are nearly one hundred and fifty thousand less children now than four years ago. But illegitimate births are on the in- crease. In the same Department the ratio was twenty-five per cent." (Methodist Review, Jan., 1890, p. 132.) HEATHENISM AND CHILDHOOD. 15 flesh, the consequent multiplicity of divinities and the concomitant increase of superstition and despair, — all tended, by the working of inevitable law, to de- stroy the early feelings of respect for marriage and the ideas of sanctity with which the family was once invested; to minimize its value, and so to bring about a shameful looseness of the marriage bond; a con- tempt for children, as a misfortune to be avoided ; an intensification of " secret egoism," and its fruit — re- lentless cruelty. The family was once sacred among the Romans. For five hundred and twenty years from the founding of the city, divorce was unknown. But in the time of Augustus celibacy became the fashion; marriage was lightly esteemed, and to such an alarming extent had licentiousness undermined this foundation of the State, that laws were enacted by which rewards were conferred upon those who were married and had become parents, and punishments by fines and dis- abilities inflicted upon all who obstinately remained single.* Horace, the poet, next to Virgil, of that age wrote : " The times, fertile in wickedness, have in the first place polluted the marriage state and [thence] the issue and the families. From this fountain per- dition has overwhelmed the nation and the people."f Seneca writes that the women indulged in divorce * Tacitus, Annals, Bk. Ill, xxv. The historian goes on to state that the Julian Laws were ineffectual ; to be without heirs was still considered as a condition that gave great advantages. Compare his Manners of the Germans, xviii. The usual works on Roman history will furnish much literature. See also Lecky's History of European Morals. tOdes, Bk. Ill, 6. 16 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. through mere wantonness, and that they counted the years, not by the number of the consuls, but by the number of their rejected husbands — non consilium numero sed maritorum annos suos computant.* Ju- venal satirizes the women who divorced themselves so often that they wore out their bridal veils; and another poet hurls his shaft at the iniquity of the time and the facility for divorce when he says that thirteen days after the revival of the Julian Law for the restraint of immorality, Thalisina had already married her tenth husband.f Well might Tertullian say concerning the women of that age: "As for divorce, they long for it; they long for it as though it were the natural consequence of marriage."! Virtue had not fled, however, from womankind. The domestic life of France in the times of Louis XIV and his successor would never be judged by the brill- iant but immoral coterie dames du palace which dis- graced their courts and made possible the Revolution. Among the higher classes of Eome, as also in the middle and lower walks of life, there were many who still cherished those virtues which are of more value to the world than its philosophy and its acquisi- tions of science and increase of wealth — virtues which underlie all civilization, and without which national life is impossible. But it can not be ignored that at this period family life was despised by the majority, and a life of gayety and profligacy substituted for it by women of the first rank in Roman society. It is * De Benef ., Ill, 6. t Martial, Epigram 7, Bk. VI. % Apolog., 6. HEATHENISM AND CHILDHOOD. 17 a remarkable fact in the history of morals that to such a degree had the licentiousness of the times in- creased, that the Senate was compelled to pass severe laws, in forlorn hope that the frightful torrent of iniquity among women might be stayed.* In such a condition of society f it is difficult to suppose that there would be such a thing as a pro- found recognition of the natural rights of childhood ; or that the nurture of children in the principles of morality and religion would be considered an im- perative duty. Not that there was a universal and absolute neglect of children. Not that mankind had entered into a conspiracy of hate against them, for there were fathers and mothers everywhere who cherished with beautiful affection the love of their children, and, superior to their religion and the cor- rupting influences about them, threw around the feebleness of childhood that instinctive love which Providence has imbedded in human nature for helpless infancy. But while this was so, society was organized on such principles that, outside the natural sentiment which might rule in the heart of the parent, there could be no recognition of the priceless value of the child as an immortal being. "The customs, legisla- tions, and spirit of society were not even a defense for life itself in its earlier years; and the character- * Tacitus, Annals, II, 85. See also Uhlhorn, Conflict of Christianity with Heathenism ; and compare Gibbon's Decline and Fall, chapter xxiii, for a view of morals prevalent in this age. t See Geikie, Life of Christ, chapter xxxvii ; Farrar's Early Days of Christianity, chapter i. 2 18 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. istic tone of literature, as it was carried at that very time toward almost its highest historical development, shows how haughtily careless society was, in what we call the classic ages, of what to us appear its im- perative and primary duty. Care for the child, when required at all, was so only because of the citizenship which was about to be his." * Lust and Hate go hand in hand, and the world's history only too clearly demonstrates that an age in which unbelief and profligacy of manners usurp the heroic virtues of chaste living and sober thinking, is also an age of bestiality and cruelty. The "secret egoism" of Rousseau is intense selfishness, which in its last analysis is the essence of all evil, as love is the fount- ain of all good. It was not in Rome only that indifference towards childhood was prevalent, nor was such inhumanity wholly owing to the universal corruption of the age or the extreme poverty of the lower classes. Heathen- ism could produce nothing better. Whenever and wherever heathenism came to the flower, it tended to repress the better instincts of humanity; for, by developing the passions of men through the reflex in- fluence of the worship they offered to the gods, it could not do other than produce an insensibility to human suffering, as the butcheries of the amphitheaters testify to the callousness of the age, and a terrible cruelty, or at least indifference, toward helpless child- hood. " The exposition of children," says Gibbon, " was the prevailing and stubborn vice of antiquity. * The Divine Origin of Christianity, p. 141 ; R. S. Storrs, D. D., LL. D., New York. HEATHENISM AND CHILDHOOD. 19 It was sometimes prescribed, often permitted, almost always practiced with impunity, by the nations which never entertained the Roman ideas of paternal power; and the dramatic poets who appeal to the human heart, represent with indifference a popular custom, which was palliated by the motive of economy and compassion. If the father could subdue his own feelings, he might escape, though not the censure, at least the chastisement of the laws; and the Roman Empire was stained with the blood of infants, till such murders were included by Valentinian and his col- leagues, in the letter and spirit of the Cornelian law." * But the exposure of children was not the only * It will be remembered, however, that at this time the humanizing influence of Christianity had, to some extent, per- meated the empire. One would think that either Guizot or Milman would have annotated the sentence following the third note in chapter xliv, where Gibbon refers to the humanity of Paulus. If I remember correctly, this occurred under Severus, when Christianity had already been in the world for two hun- dred and twenty-five years. '"Now, it was one of the most im- portant services of Christianity, that, besides quickening greatly our benevolent affections, it definitely and dogmatically asserted the sinfulness of all destruction of human life as a matter of amusement, or of simple convenience, and thereby formed a new standard higher than any which then existed in the world. The influence of Christianity in this respect began with the very earliest stage of human life. The practice of abortion was one to which few persons in antiquity attached any deep feel- ing of condemnation. . . . No law in Greece, or in the Roman Republic, or during the greater part of the Empire, condemned it (see on the views of Aristotle, Latourt, Recher- che? liisioriques sur les Enfant s trouves, Paris, 1848, p. 9) ; and if, as has been thought, some measure was adopted condemnatory of it before the close of the Pagan Empire, that measure was altogether inoperative." (History of European Morals, W. E. H. Lecky, M. A., p. 20.) 20 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. form in which the dehumanizing influence of heathen- ism manifested itself. The sacrificing of children was common to nearly all the nations of antiquity. And what is still worse, not only were they offered as were other human sacrifices on the altars of the Dii Majores, the greater gods of the national Pantheons, but in the East, in process of time, it was not uncom- mon for them to be brought up to the vilest uses in the rites of sensual worship. Of all the ancient forms of idolatry that of Moloch, the Phoenician god of the destructive principle in nature, was the most revolting. To him children were publicly sacrificed. At Carthage he was wor- shiped as Saturn, the same who in Roman mythology was portrayed as devouring his own children. This worship, with the obscene rites of his divine paramour, became familiar at an early date to all the nations of the East. Moloch was represented by a colossal brazen image of a seated human figure, with a bull's head and outstretched arms ever ready to receive the offerings. Into these open arms, the bodies of little children and infants were thrown, whence they rolled off into a glowing furnace beneath. On the day ap- pointed, mothers brought their little ones, and, lest the frantic cries of these should detract from their value as sacrifices, kissed and caressed them until their turn came, when they were taken by the priest and flung into the furnace; the drums and trumpets meanwhile beating and shrieking to drown the pitiful cries of the helpless victims.* The Christian writers * Among the Romans the fable was that Ops (works), the wife of Saturn (time), hid Jupiter among the Corybantes on HEATHENISM AND CHILDHOOD. 21 of the first centuries exhausted the possibilities of language in giving vent to their horror at such bar- barities. " I can not find language," says Lactantius, "to speak of the infants who were immolated to the same Saturn, on account of his hatred of Jupiter. To think that men were so barbarous, so savage that they gave the name of sacrifice to the slaughter of their own children ; that is, to a deed foul, and to be held in detestation by the human race; since without any re- gard to parental affection, they destroyed tender and innocent lives at an age which is especially pleasing to parents, and surpassed in brutality the savageness of all beasts, which (savage as they are) still love their offspring." f The worship of Moloch prevailed among all the tribes of Canaan and of Syria, and among the Carthaginians, who brought it from Phoenicia, their mother country. It was the custom in ancient Carthage and else- where, in times of sore distress or public calamity of any kind, for the rulers of the city to sacrifice the best beloved of their children as a propitiatory offering to the avenging cities. El, the highest god in the Car- thaginian calendar, once placed his own son on the altar, and slew him with his own hand. Having such an example constantly before them, the people would not be slow to imitate it, for pious or political rea- Mount Ida, lest Saturn should devour him, as he had her other children. It was the custom of the Corybantes to heat drums and cymbals while the sacrifices were offered, and the noise of the instruments prevented Saturn from hearing the cries of the infant Jupiter. tTbe Divine Institutes, chapter xxi, Clark's Ed. 22 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD, sons, when the wrath of the gods rested on their de- voted city. Lactantius* narrates that the Carthagin- ians offered human sacrifices to Saturn, and that, when they were conquered by Agathocles, the king of the Sicilians, believing that god to be angry with them, they immolated on his altars as an expiation two hundred sons of the nobles. These boys were taken instead of those youths who were brought up for this purpose of sacrifice, because it was discovered that many families, influenced more by natural affection than religious fear, had secreted their offspring. But such was the terrible effect of this great sacrifice upon the minds of the people that, instead of producing a reaction against such a cruel divinity, an uncontrolla- ble frenzy, easily explainable, took possession of them, and three hundred boys were brought forth and offered up as free-will offerings to the implacable deity. This mode of worship continued there until it was abolished by the Eoman arms under the proconsul Tiberius. He made several attempts to suppress it without success, until finally, making a dread example in true Roman fashion, he hung the priests of these bloody rites on the trees of their sacred grove. To this same worship, which, as stated, the Car- thaginians derived from the Phoenicians, the Hebrew people were constantly exposed from their first settle- ment in Canaan. In Leviticus xviii, 21, is the statute : " Thou shalt not let any of thy seed pass through the fire to Moloch." Also in chapter xx: "And the Lord spake unto Moses saying, Again thou shalt say * Instit. I, xxi ; Rawlinson, The Religions of the Ancient World, p. 156 ; Tertull., Apolog., ix. HEATHENISM AND CHILDHOOD. 23 to the children of Israel, Whosoever he be of the children of Israel, or of the strangers that sojourn in in Israel, that giveth any of his seed unto Moloch, he shall surely be put to death ; the people of the land shall stone him with stones." But this command- ment, like many others, was violated when the nation fell into idolatry. Among the many iniquities listed in Psalm cvi against the early Israelites is this very crime of offering their children to Moloch : " But they were mingled among the heathen, and learned their works. And they served their idols, which were a snare unto them. Yea, they sacrificed their sons and their daughters unto devils, and they shed innocent blood, even the blood of their sons and their daughters, whom they sacrificed unto the idols of Canaan, and the land was polluted with blood." That these idols of Canaan were fire-gods, and so were worshiped by purifications through fire, hu- man sacrifices, offering of the first-born, and other inhuman rites, is beyond question. In 1 Kings xi, 7, we read that Solomon, having his heart turned by his Ammonite wives, set up, no doubt from political reasons, the "abomination of the children of Amnion" on the Mount of Olives. In Jeremiah vii, 31, ref- erence is made to the Hebrew worship of Moloch, and in chapter xix, 5, it is written : " They have built also the high places of Baal, to burn their sons with fire for burnt-offerings unto Baal, which I com- manded not, nor spake it, neither came it into my mind." Similar allusions will be found in Ezekiel xvi, 20, 21, 26 ; xxxiii, 37. These passages prove those critics to be in error 24 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. who, following the lead of E. Kimchi and Mainion- ides,* supposed that the children were not consumed, but " passed through " and returned to the parents. For as Hengstenberg observes on Ezekiel xvi, 24 : " That the consequence of this passing through was death, appears from the foregoing words, ' Thou didst slay them/ and also from the phrase ' to devour ? in verse 20. The passing through was the mode of slaying." This is evident from 2 Kings xvii, 17 : "And they caused their sons and their daughters to pass through the fire." (R. V.) But the most re- markable passage is 2 Chronicles xxviii, 3, where the iniquity of Ahaz is described : " Moreover he burnt incense in the valley of Hinnom, and burnt his chil- dren in the fire, after the abominations of the nations whom Jehovah had driven out before the children of Israel." (See the parallel passage, 2 Kings xvi, 3.) Dur- ing the revival under Josiah the self-mutilated priests of the obscene rifces, who had found lodgment near the temple of Jehovah, were " put down ;" the houses of the Kedoshim, where the women wove curtains for the Asherah, were broken in pieces ; the worship of Ashtoreth, during which mothers flung their children from the walls of the temple, and were afterwards gathered up and placed upon the sacrificial altar,f was abolished. "And he defiled Tophet, which is in the valley of Hinnom, that no man might make his son or his daughter to pass through the fire to Moloch." (2 Kings xxiii, 10.) * More Nevochiin, Eng. Trans, under title "Guide of the Perplexed," Vol. II, Heb. Lit. Soc. t Geikie. Hours with the Bible. HEATHENISM AND CHILDHOOD. 25 It is evident from these passages that the practice of sacrificing children to Moloch, or Milcom, or Me- lech, as this god is variously called, was wide-spread among all the nations of the East. In 2 Kings xviii, 31, we find that the Sepharvites, a nation who were settled in Samaria by the king of Assyria on the re- moval of the Israelites to that country, were addicted to this worship. Dr. Adam Clarke thinks that these Sepharvites probably came from the cities of the Medes. Rawlinson says :* " The chief seats of the sun-god's worship in Chaldea appear to have been the two famous cities of Larsa (Ellasar ?) and Sippara. . . . At Sippara the worship of the sun-god was so pre- dominant that Abydenus, probably following Berosus, Ecclesia (Church). It is evident, then, that the Greek term Ecclesia correctly and fully expressed the Hebrew idea in the word Kahal.* Every convocation or as- *"Satius tauien fuisset, ut opinor, si to ^j-jp semper reddi- dissent per kniikrjoia, quid haec notio formata videtur in Lingua Grseca ad clare exprimendum Hebraeum ^np-" (De Synag., p. 84.) UNITY OF THE CHURCH. 145 sembly is an Edah, and may be so spoken of, the true import of the term being understood, but it can not by itself indicate the whole people. But, as Vitringa observes, this is just what Kahal always and every- where signifies.* It was to the Kahal of Israel, " all the congregation of Israel," that the command came to inaugurate the Passover. (Ex. xii, 3-6.) In Leviticus iv, 13, it is the whole congregation, the Kahal, which if it shall err, that shall offer a young bullock for a sin-offering; for a glance will show that the phrase ^yp" rnj£ hi, the whole Edah of Israel, is equivalent to ^npn, the Kahal, which occurs in the same verse, and in verse 14, and also in verse 21, where it is said that the bullock is the sin-offering for the assembly (^nj^n,). In chapter xvi, 17, it is for the whole Assembly (^np- 1 ?^) of Israel, the Kahal, the Church, that Aaron shall make atonement. See also Num. x, 7; xiv, 5; xv, 15; xvi, 3. We have seen that the LXX have translated this word Kahal by 'ExxAyata, Ecclesia, a word derived from ixxaAefo, to call out, to summon an assembly. Now this same word Christ and his apostles employed to designate the idea of the Christian Church. It is found one hundred and fourteen times in the New Testament, and in every case, except one or two, it denotes the whole of the Christians in one place (a part of which may be an Edah or synagogue) or, as in numerous instances, the universal Church of Christ. Acts v, 11 : " And great fear came upon the whole Church [ixxfyai(i] ;" Acts viii, 3 : " Saul laid waste *Sed vocabulum /Pip semper et ubicurnque, nisi fallor, designat universum populi civitatern. P. 83. 146 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. the Church [ixxfyacoi] ;" " Unto the Church [kxxtyoloi] of God which is at Corinth " (1 Cor. i, 2) ; on which Meyer remarks : " Compare rnrr Snp (Num. xvi, 3 ; xx ; 4.) The expression is with Paul the standing theocratic designation of the Christian community in which the theocratic idea of the Old Testament ^np^ Kahal, presents itself as realized ; it is the nkjpcoa^ y fullness, of this Snp, Kahal." As far, then, as the name is concerned, the Churches of the Old Testament and of the New are identical. Both are called by the same terms of endearment in addition to their technical designations. In Isaiah lx, 5 ; Jeremiah xxxii, 2, the Church of the Old Testament is called " his bride." In Eevelation xix, 7, this is declared of the Church of the New Testa- ment. The Lord is wedded to both, they both are the one " bride." The Church of the Old Testament is called in the New, Christ's " own house." (Heb. iii, 1-6.) It was the " Church in the wilderness," and in both Testaments the Lord calls the members of his Church " his people," " his chosen people." But to found the unity of both Churches on the signification of mere words would be to trifle with so grave a theme. Our purpose is far otherwise. It is the identity of thought underlying both terms, and not their etymology upon which emphasis is laid. This has been shown above in the tender language of God concerning both Churches. To the pious Israelite the Hebrew terms Kahal and Edah {synagogue) signified something more than a collective unity of the children of Israel. They meant to him that the Israelitish community as a chosen people had its existence apart UNITY OF THE CHURCH. 147 from other nations for a holy purpose, and that it was originally designed for a special end in the economy of redemption. Thus Cremer notes (Biblico- Theolog. Lex., second German Ed.) : " The use of these words, therefore, was determined by something else than the mere thought of national unity, and it is self-evident that the underlying thought is the function of the people in the plan of salvation. . . . The same thought lies at the root of the word as used by Christ, so far as it was suggested by the Old Testament. . . . When Christ says, ' I will build my Church/ we are scarcely reminded that ixxfyaca denoted in profane Greek the place of assembly as well as the Assembly, but rather that the Old Testament community was the house of Israel. Accordingly Ixxlrjoia, ecclesia, denotes the New Testament com- munity of the redeemed in its twofold aspect. (1) The entire congregation of all who are called by and to Christ, who are in the fellowship of his salvation — in the Church. (2) The New Testament Churches as confined to particular places." II. The nature of the Abrahamic Covenant. The first formal organization of a kingdom of God on earth is revealed to us in the family of Abraham. We see that family chosen out of the world, separated to the worship of the true God, and related to him by bonds of faith and gracious promises made by him to them. God revealed himself to Abraham, not merely by the inner voice, as when the command came to leave Chaldea and begin the nomadic life in Pales- tine, but in a personal manifestation, a theophany, the first since Jehovah revealed himself to Adam in Par- 148 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. adise. In this revelation to Abraham was contained, as the Apostle Paul teaches, the principles of the gos- pel; and our Lord himself said: " Abraham saw his day, and was glad." The whole tenor of the Divine address to this remarkable man shows that his family was to be a repository and witness and teacher of the revelation given. We further see that the truths made known were accepted by faith, and all subse- quent history of Abraham's posterity proves that faith in the promises was a distinguishing element in the religion of Israel. Further, Abraham stands be- fore Jehovah, and receives these promises, and enters into covenant relation with him, not as an individual only, but as the representative of a class who shall be as the sand by the sea-shore or the stars of heaven for multitude. He is Abraham, the father of many na- tions. " In thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed, because thou hast obeyed my voice." (Gen. xxii.) The covenant which God made with Abra- ham is recorded in Genesis xvii, 1-14. This covenant, like, in general, all the promises of God, has a two- fold aspect — one relating to his providential care over those obeying his precepts, and the other bearing di- rectly upon the spiritual blessing, of which the lower aspect is but the type. In the change of Abraham's name he is consti- tuted the Father of Multitudes. History has demon- strated that these can not be world-kingdoms ; and Scripture teaches that they are all those of all nations who, through faith in the world's Redeemer, become the spiritual seed or children of the Patriarch. " For the Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the UNITY OF THE CHURCH. 149 heathen by faith, preached the gospel beforehand unto Abraham, saying, In thee shall all the nations [rd. iOwj] be blessed." (Gal. iii, 8.) The family of Abra- ham thus became the Church, having a definite be- lief, a definite object of worship, a definite ordinance, obligatory on all becoming members, and a distinct purpose in its mission in the world. But this covenant of grace is the same by which all believers in Christ become heirs of the promise; for, as the Apostle in the Epistle to the Galatians teaches, " the blessing of Abraham has come upon the Gentiles in Christ Jesus" (chap, iii, 14). Now this could not be if the covenant was different from the gospel announced by Christ and the Apostles. Paul distinctly declares that God preached the gospel to Abraham ; and this being true, there can be no differ- ence in fact between the New Testament Church and the Church founded by Jehovah in the family of Abra- ham. Just what the precise, exact thought of the Apostle was, one may not be able to express otherwise than in general terms. But this we do know, that God revealed himself to Abraham as El Shaddai, the All-sufficient, Powerful God; that immediately after revealing his character and his attitude towards Abra- ham, and in him toward the world, showing a desire to enter into fellowship with man, he commands the Patriarch to be " perfect ," and then follows the promise of an everlasting and universal blessing. So that in this record there is wrapped up the germ of the wonderful truths brought to completion in the appearance and work of Christ, the Promised Seed. If there is an essential difference between the Abra- 150 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. hamic Church and the Church of the New Testament, it is extremely difficult to understand the Apostle's reasoning when he says, " They which are of faith, the same are the children of Abraham " (Gal. iii, 7), and "by faith Abraham became the father of all them that believe" (Rom. iv, 11); since between the two — the Church of Abraham and the Church of Christ — there is a wide gulf. Nor can we see anything in the strong and luminous proposition, "If ye be Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to promise." (Gal. iii, 29.) The fact is, if the two Churches are different it must be admitted, with rev- erence, that the Apostle's reasoning is wholly incon- sequential. There is no way by which we can see the logical connection between the two ideas. But on the ground of unity of the Churches the argument of the Apostle is grand and self-evident. Abraham entered into this covenant with God through faith. "Abraham believed God, and it was reckoned unto him for righteousness." (Gal. iii, 6.) But faith is the essential element in the Christian Church. Without it, there is no Christianity. It in- volves the idea of grace as opposed to the idea of law and works. Its object is Christ, through whom, by virtue of the atonement, the grace comes. Then, again, the object of Abraham's faith was Christ, for Christ himself says, "Abraham saw my day, and was glad." No one can enter the Church of Christ with- out faith, and therefore can not be counted as the seed of Abraham. But why not, if the Church of the Patriarch and the Church in New Testament dispen- sation are different? And on the contrary, how is it UNITY OF THE CHURCH. 151 that "they which are of faith, the same are the chil- dren of Abraham," and " they which be of faith are blessed with faithful Abraham?" Tins covenant was an everlasting covenant. It was not made to be broken. The gifts of God are with- out repentance. The nature of the promise contained in the covenant demonstrates its perpetuity. The words of the Lord in the record are sufficient proof; but since much discussion has arisen concerning the meaning of the term " everlasting," the question may be otherwise laid to rest by recalling the apostolic argument in Galatians iii. An examination of that argument will show that it rests, for its validity, upon the perpetuity of the covenant. If this is not what the Apostle is asserting, we shall look in vain for the reason why the Apostle affirms the inability of the Sinaitic law to abrogate that covenant, or why he should refer to the annulling of the covenant at all. He says : " Brethren, I speak after the manner of men. Though it be but a man's covenant, yet, if it be confirmed, no man disannulleth or addeth thereto. Now to Abraham and his seed were the promises made. He saith not, And to seeds, as of many; but as of one, And to thy seed, which is Christ. And this I say, That the covenant that was confirmed be- fore of God in Christ, the law which was four hun- dred and thirty years after can not disannul, that it should make the promise of none effect." Our God never violated a pledge. He confirmed the covenant with an oath, and it remains to this day. The first promise was made in Eden; the promise to Abra- ham was a reaffirmation of that, and the beginning 152 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. of the historical process for its fulfillment. It was the first stage in the unfolding of the Divine plan, the first day in the genesis of the new creation. The law was " added because of transgression till the seed should come to whom the promise was made." (Gal. iii, 19.) From the giving of this law on Sinai, going backward to the covenant with Abraham (Gen. xii), is exactly four hundred and thirty years, and there- fore it is the Abrahamic Covenant, which could not be annulled by the law. The Church of God, founded in the family of Abra- ham, was never destroyed. Through all the checkered ages of Israel's history it persisted until, surviving all changes, social, political, and religious, it finally shone out in the Messianic glory of the New Testa- ment period. After the death of Abraham, the prom- ise is conserved in Isaac and Jacob, who walked in the steps of their fathers. (Rom. iv, 12.) In the furnace of Egypt, the chosen is watched over till the hour of deliverance. " When Israel was a child, then I loved him, and called my son out of Egypt." (Hosea xi, 1.) At the giving of the law, the idea of Divine selection is emphasized, and the spiritual purpose of that selection : " Ye shall be a peculiar treasure unto me above all people, for all the earth is mine, and ye shall be unto me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation." From the giving of the law the national consciousness is, that it is called to political existence for a religious purpose, and so strongly was this idea developed in Israel, that it seems as if the whole na- tion constituted the Church of God. But "all are not Israel which are of Israel, neither because they UNITY OF THE CHURCH. 153 are Abraham's seed are they all children." Neverthe- less, within the political nation was the spiritual Israel. In the wilderness, while obeying Jehovah, they were the " Church " (Acts vii, 38), and they all drank of the spiritual Rock, which was Christ. (1 Cor. x, 4.) In these affirmations of Stephen and Paul is involved the fact that they exercised faith, the religious char- acteristics of their father Abraham, and the distin- guishing trait of every true child of Abraham. Faith is found everywhere in the Old Testament. The author of the Epistle to the Hebrews, after defining faith, says that " by faith the elders obtained a good report ;" that the men of God " all died in faith, not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off, and were persuaded of them, and embraced them, and confessed that they were strangers and pil- grims on the earth." The list is carried up through all the stages of Israel's history, and not only are the rulers and heroes of Israel mentioned as being men of faith, whereby the Church might seem to be limited to a few individuals scattered through long periods, and therefore destroying the idea of the perpetuity of the Church established in Abraham's family, but faith is affirmed of the common people (vs. 35-38) who were loyal to God. "And these all having ob- tained a good report through faith, received not the promise, God having provided some better thing for us, that they, without us, should not be made perfect " The eleventh chapter of Hebrews is a complete demon- stration of the perpetuity of the Church. When national apostasy manifests itself, God raises up the prophets, who appeal to the true Israel and 154 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. keep alive the flickering flame of personal righteous- ness by faith. (Isa. vii, 9 ; xxx, 15 ; comp. viii, 17 ; Jer. xviii, 5; Hab. ii, 4.) "The just shall live by his faith. " The Psalms are not simply the outbursts of individual piety ; they are the reflection of the ex- perience of God's people, the concentrated voice of the spiritual Israel. At times this true Israel is in a hopeless minority, as in the days of Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Elijah, when it was reduced to a mere " remnant ;" but in the darkest periods there were those who had not bowed the knee to Baal. To human eye the Church of God is extinct, but to the eye of Jehovah it is a seed in the winter field, waiting the coming of spring. The perpetuity of this Church may also be shown from prophecy. The prophets were all members of the household of faith. Instead of prophesy ing the overthrow of that Church, they all affirm its spiritual nature and its everlasting continuance, em- phasizing the inner life more than the external, the spiritual rather than the ritual. The Church of the future is always depicted as a continuation of the Church then existing. Zion is to be enlarged; she will embrace all nations ; but it is the Zion then exist- ing. The sublime prophecies of Isaiah xliii, 1-7 ; xiv, 1-5; xlix, 18-23; li, 2-6; lii, 9, 10, and the va- rious prophecies in Jeremiah and the minor prophets, might be quoted in proof, but a full exposition of them would require a volume. The latter portion of Isaiah's prophecies, however, should be constantly borne in mind, since it bears so directly upon this particular thought. "Zion said, The Lord hath for- saken me, and my Lord hath forgotten me. Can a UNITY OF THE CHURCH. 155 woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? yea, they may forget, yet will I not forget thee. Behold, I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands; thy walls are continually before me. . . . Lift up thine eyes round about, and behold : all these gather themselves together, and come to thee. As I live, saith the Lord, thou shalt surely clothe thee with them all, as with an ornament, and bind them on thee, as a bride doeth. For thy waste and thy desolate places, and the land of thy destruction, shall even now be too narrow by reason of the inhabitants, and they that swallowed thee up shall be far away. The children which thou shalt have, after thou hast lost the other, shall say again in thine ears, The place is too strait for me : give place to me that I may dwell. Then shalt thou say in thine heart, Who hath begotten me these, see- ing I have lost my children, and am desolate, a cap- tive, and removing to and fro? and who hath brought up these? Behold, I was left alone; these, where had they been ? Thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I will lift up my hand to the Gentiles, and set up my standard to the people : and they shall bring thy sons in their arms, and thy daughters shall be carried upon their shoulders." (Isaiah xlix, 14-22.) In chapter liv he again prophesies of the then existing Zion : " En- large the place of thy tent, and let them stretch forth the curtains of thine habitations : spare not, lengthen thy cords, and strengthen thy stakes ; for thou shalt break forth on the right hand and on the left; and thy seed shall inherit the Gentiles." Some few pas- sages in the prophecies have been interpreted in op- 156 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. position to our position; such as Daniel ii, 44, and Amos ix, 11. But those who employ these Scriptures in the manner indicated, read into them what they force out of them. When the prophet says that "in the days of these kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom," it is purely arbitrary to suppose that that kingdom will have laws different, and subjects different, from the real kingdom which was never to be destroyed. The kingdom to be set up is put in contrast to the world kingdoms, and not to the spiritual kingdom of God already existing ; and, though destined to eclipse, yet also destined to universal sway. In Amos ix, 11, it is said: "In that day will I raise up the tabernacle of David that is fallen, and close up the breaches thereof; and I will raise up his ruins, and I will build it as in days of old." This proph- ecy, and that above quoted from Daniel, doubtless refer to the same event. In Acts xv, 14-16, James applies this prophecy of Amos to the upbuilding of the New Testament Charch: "Simeon had declared how God at the first did visit the Gentiles, to take out of them a people for his name. And to this agree the words of the prophets ; as it is written, After this I will return, and will build again the tabernacle of David which is fallen down; and I will build the ruins thereof, and I will set it up." It is evident, then, that the apostles did not consider these Scriptures as declaring a totally different Church, tabernacle, or kingdom, from that which had fallen, for that which had fallen is that which is again set up. When we enter the New Testament, Judaism is presented to us as we have often seen it in the Old UNITY OF THE CHURCH. 157 Testament. While outwardly the chosen of God, it has in reality lost the element of spirituality characteristic of the house of Jacob. It is no longer the bride of the Lord, but a secular power striving intensely for political existence by unrighteous methods, and there- fore on the low level of other world powers. It has the law, but that has become a mere mechanical sys- tem, a battle-ground for contending schools lacking the principle of spiritual life. It has a temple, but no shekinah ; sacrifices, but no repentance. The whole nation seems forsaken of God, sunk in national apostasy, reviving now and then in some short-lived paroxysm of conscience. But as in other days of Israel's degeneracy, there is within this outward politico-ecclesiasticism a true spiritual Israel which looked for the fulfillment of ancient promises. The Magnificat of Mary, as re- corded by Luke, gives utterance to this faith : " He hath holpen his servant Israel in remembrance of his mercy, as he spoke to our fathers, to Abraham and his seed for ever." In the song of Zacharias the same belief asserts itself and particularly the important fact that God still had a people who were called his own, and therefore constituted his Church. " Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, for he hath visited and re- deemed his people, and hath raised up an horn of sal- vation for us in the house of his servant David, as he spake by the mouth of his holy prophets which have been since the world began, that we should be saved from our enemies, and from the hand of all that hate us; to perform the mercy promised to our fathers, and to remember his holy covenant ; the oath which 158 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. he sware to our father Abraham." Afterwards at the presentation in the temple, Simeon bears unconscious testimony to the same fact. "And behold, there was a man in Jerusalem, whose name was Simeon; and the same man was just and devout, waiting for the consolation of Israel." There were many others in Jerusalem looking for the same hope from the same spiritual stand-point: "And there was one Anna, a prophetess, . . . which departed not from the temple, but served God with fastings and prayers night and day. And she coming in that instant, gave thanks likewise unto the Lord, and spake of him to all them that looked for redemption in Jerusalevn." Omitting the proof from the events of Pentecost, as recorded in the Acts, and the testimony of Stephen, the Pauline Epistles may be cited as containing in fullest measure the teaching of inspiration. In Rom. ix, Paul says: "I say then, hath God cast away his people ? God forbid. For I am an Israelite of the seed of Abraham, of the tribe of Benjamin. God hath not cast away his people whom he foreknew. Note ye not what the Scripture saith of Elias ? how that he maketh intercession to God against Israel, saying, Lord, they have killed thy prophets, and digged down thy altars, and I am left alone and they seek my life. But what saith the answer of God unto him ? I have reserved to myself seven thousand men, who have not bowed the knee to Baal; even so, then, at this present time, also there is a remnant according to the elec- tion of grace." But what is this " remnant " other than the true Israel, which is itself a continuation of the Israel of God running back to Abraham? UNITY OF THE CHURCH. 159 If more argument were needed, the Apostle fur- nishes abundant proof in the succeeding verses of the same chapter. Having doubtless in mind the words of Jeremiah concerning Israel, "The Lord called thy name a green olive-tree" (chapter xi, 16); and of Hosea (chapter xiv, 6), "His branches shall spread, and his beauty shall be as the olive-tree;" the Apostle sets forth the Church of the Israelites as an olive-tree, the "natural branches" of which are the unbelieving Jews. These branches are " broken off," and the believing Gentiles are "grafted" into it, into which God is also able, he says, to graft the un- believing Jews who are broken off. The Church of Christ, then, must be one with the Church of the Old Testament, which is the " good olive-tree," the Jew's "own olive-tree " in the apostle's argument. In the Epistle to the Ephesians the same doctrine is taught : " Wherefore remember, that ye being in time past Gentiles in the flesh who are called uncir- cumcision by that which is called the circumcision in the flesh made by hands; that at that time ye were aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world. But now, in Christ Jesus, ye, who sometime were far off, are made nigh by the blood of Christ. For he is our peace, who hath made both one, and hath broken down the middle wall of partition between us ; having abolished in his flesh the enmity, even the law of commandments con- tained in ordinances; for to make in himself of twain one new man, so making peace; and that he migbt rec- oncile both unto God in one body by the cross, 14 160 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. having slain the enmity thereby; and came and preached peace to yon which were afar off, and to them that were nigh. For through him we both have access by one Spirit unto the Father. Now, therefore, ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellow- citizens with the saints and of the household of God, and are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner- stone." Such, in briefest outline, are the various proofs for the unity of the Church of God under the two dispen- sations. To deny this unity is to affirm that the patriarchs, the prophets, the priests, holy kings, and servants of God in all centuries of Jewish history were aliens to the true Israel, the Church of God aud of his Anointed, and knew nothing of saving faith in the coming Kedeemer. This, however, is contradicted by the Apostle, who founds the Church of Christ upon the Apostles and prophets, both united or held together in unity by Jesus Christ, the chief corner-stone. THE OLD TESTAMENT CHURCH, 161 CHAPTER VIII. THE POSITION OF CHILDREN IN THE OLD TESTA- MENT CHURCH. IN no other sacred books of the world's religions, and therefore in no other religion than that of the Bible, is there such prominence given to childhood as is given in the Holy Scriptures. In the earliest of these Books, as if laying the foundation of the secular and spiritual prosperity of the Hebrew race, special regard is had for children, and precepts are laid down which govern their whole period from the day of birth till they become the " sons of the covenant.' 7 In Genesis i, 28, and thence onward to the closing verses of Malachi, the possession of children is con- sidered a blessing from Jehovah. The first mother uttered that belief (Gen. iv, 1) : "I have gotten a man from the Lord." It is God who appointed her in Seth "another seed instead of Abel" (iv, 25). He who will bless Sara is God. (Gen. xvii, 16.) It is- God who makes a mother fruitful or barren (xxix, 31 ; xxx, 2) ; for the reason that childlessness is re- garded as the worst calamity to a A ouse; unfruitf ill- ness is dishonorable to a woman (Gen. xxx, 23), and is looked upon as a token, in some measure, of the Divine anger (xvi, 2). Hence the practices of hea- thenism toward children are condemned by the letter and spirit of all Hebraic laws concerning children. 162 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. The first tiling of religious importance to the child was his reception of the rite of circumcision. Circumcision was the divinely established sign or token of the Abrahamic Covenant. While this rite may have been practiced by other peoples prior to, or contemporaneously with, its use among the Israelites, its first appearance in the Old Testament is in con- nection with the revelation of God to Abraham in all the majesty of power and holiness. " The Lord appeared to Abraham, and said unto him, I am God Almighty [El-Shaddai] ; walk before me and be thou perfect, and I will make my covenant between me and thee." (Gen. xvii, 1, 2.) In the succeeding verses the promises follow, and then is established, or instituted, the token of the covenant made. " This is my covenant which ye shall keep, between me and thee, and thy seed after thee. Every man-child among you shall be circumcised. ... It shall be a token of the covenant betwixt me and you. . . . My covenant shall be in your flesh for an everlasting covenant. And the uncircumcised man-child, whose flesh of his foreskin is not circumcised, that soul shall be cut off from his people; he hath broken my cove- nant." (Gen. xvii, 10-14.) It is sometimes affirmed that this rite was the seal of a national, a temporal covenant, and not of a cove- nant of grace. If that were true the grace covenant made with Abraham would have no outward sign. But again, the objection is nullified by the facts of sacred history. Ishmael and his sons were circum- cised, but neither he nor they obtained an inheritance in the Promised Land. Esau and his children re- THE OLD TESTAMENT CHURCH. 163 ceived the seal also, but they inherited no portion of Canaan. If, now, these descendants of Abraham re- ceived the sign of the covenant, which was wholly temporal in its nature, and therefore guaranteed to those entering it temporal possessions, how shall their exclusion from its blessings and the failure of the guarantee in this case be explained? By such in- quiries as these, which may be multiplied, the fact is made very clear that, while the covenant secured national blessings, it was primarily and essentially spiritual in its design. The author of the Epistle to the Hebrews teaches this (xi, 13-16), and especially in the statement (vs. 9, 10) that the land of Canaan was not the sole hope of the patriarchs, since they "looked for a city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God." The religious import of circumcision is seen in that it was the ordinance of admission to the household of faith .* It was "the covenant in the flesh for an everlasting covenant" (Gen. xvii, 12), and must be performed on every male child born in the house or bought with money. (Vs. 13.) If it was neglected in the case of any child, he could not be numbered with the people of God, since he formed no part of the family with whom the covenant was made; "that soul shall be cut off from his people ; he hath broken * "Die Beschneidung ist in Israel die Weihe des Menschen zam Eintritt in das heilige Volk Jehove's. An dem Gliede, wo- rauf die Lebensfortpflanzung ruht und welchem heilige Ehr- furcht gezollt ward, wird diese blutige Eeinigung vollzogen, zuin Zeichen, dass die Fortpflanzung des ganzen Volks Gott geweiht werde." (Alttestament. Theol., 177; Dr. Herman Schultz, fourth Ed.) 164 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. my covenant." (Vs. 14.) To be cut off from his people signified absolute exclusion from the congrega- tion, or Church of Israel, and all the blessings and privileges, spiritual and temporal, attached to or im- plied therein. (Ex. xii, 15 ; xxx, 33, 38 ; Lev. vii, 20. 21, 25, 27 ; xvii, 4, 9 ; xix, 8 ; Num. xv, 30 ; xix, 13.) In all probability this modified view of excision is wholly wrong, and there are not a few, of the highest scholarship, who regard this excision as penal in the extreme. Thus Oehler : " The punishment of death is attached, apparently, to a large number of crimes. It is prescribed, not only for the crime of murder, mal- treatment of parents, man-stealing (Ex. xxi, 12), adultery, incest, and other unnatural crimes, . . . but for overstepping certain fundamental ordinances of the theocracy — the law of circumcision (Gen. xvii, 14), the law of the passover (Ex. xii, 15, 19.) " (Old Test. Theol., p. 223.) The supposition, then, that one was born into the Israelitish Church is without valid grounds. The child was born into the nation, but since, in idea, the Church and State were one, he could not remain a citizen of the nation without becoming, at least outwardly in the flesh, a member of the Church. Nor, to carry out the thought, could he be- come a member of the invisible, spiritual Israel, with- out being circumcised in heart, of which the fleshly circumcision was the sign. Hence, circumcision was the symbol of the renewal and purification of the heart. This is seen in the phrase uncircumcision of heart frequently met with, and in the reiterated exhortations : " Circumcise there- fore the foreskin of your heart" (Deut. x, 16), " and THE OLD TESTAMENT CHURCH. 165 the Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart, and the heart of thy seed, to love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul, that thou may est live." (Deut. x, 16.) Circumcision being an outward sign of inward holiness, it was at the same time the seal of the right- eousness of faith. (Rom. iv, 11-25.) The object of that faith was the gospel, which had been preached to Abraham. That gospel spoke of a Redeemer to come, of the spiritual blessings coming upon the infant seed thereby, and of the child's personal active interest in those blessings. Every male child carried in his flesh the sign of God's promises, and of the obedience which he owed to his God as a condition of receiving the blessings. It also reminded him that nature was im- pure, and could not beget its own redeemer, nor purify itself. True this rite was imposed upon an uncon- scious babe, who knew nothing of the obligations placed upon him. This same objection is made against infant baptism. But to such crudities no answer need be given. Besides the fact that they are a criticism upon the commandment and wisdom of the All-wise God, they are the immediate product of a state of mind, which, because of its essentially anarchic quality, is a menace to the well-being of society. It should be understood, once for all, that no one has the right to do wrong. And while the parent has no right to obligate his child to do a wrong thing, it is both his right and his duty to obligate him to do what is right, because it is right that the child should do what is right. This holy rite of circumcision the child received on the eighth day after birth. During the perform- 166 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. ance he formally received his name (Luke i, 59 ; comp. Gen. xvii, 5 ff., with xxi, 3 f.), so that the first utter- ance of his name was mingled with the accents of prayer in a solemn rite ordained of God. Then the God of Israel was pledged to be a God to the child forever, and the child was pledged to obedience and a holy life. (Gen. xvii, 1.) When he was one month old he was brought, if a first-born, to the sanctuary and there redeemed — since all the first-born belonged to God in a particular sense — by the payment of five shekels of the sanctuary. His presentation and redemption were vicarious for all the other children born in the family, as the Levite tribe was a perpetual vicarious offering for all the first-born of Israel. In this act of presen- tation the child was offered as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable unto God. In that act it was also set forth that he was indebted to God for his life and all its blessings ; and, finally, that he was God's property. As soon as the Hebrew boy was able to speak, he was taught verses of Holy Scripture and short prayers.* But it was not until the fifth or sixth year that formal instruction began. In the statutes for the government of the Hebrew people, Moses commands, "Only take heed to thyself, and keep thy soul diligently, lest thou forget the things which thine eyes have seen, and lest they depart from thy heart all the days of thy life : * Paul the Apostle reminds Timothy " that from a child [brephos, infant] thou hast known the Holy Scriptures." (2 Tim. iii, 5.) Josephus says that " their [the Jews'] children learn their laws from, the first dawnings of sense a»d reason in them." THE OLD TESTAMENT CHURCH. 167 but thou shalt teach them thy sons, and thy sons' sons." In the succeeding verse he calls to mind why God gathered the people at Horeb — " That they may learn to fear me all the days that they shall live upon the earth, and that they may teach their children." (Deut. iv, 9, 10.) So important was the position of childhood in the Old Testament Church that this commandment concerning religious instruction is again emphasized with particular additions, in Deut. vi, 6-9: "And these words which I command thee this day, shall be in thine heart. And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up. And thou shalt bind them for a sign upon thine hand, and they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes. And thou shalt write them upon the posts of thy house, and on thy gates." The Divine solicitude for the religious culture of the Hebrew child can only be faintly apprehended in any Version. The original of " diligently " signifies to repeat a thing again and again continuously until one has permanently learned it and understood its purport. But this was not enough. Religion must be in the home, where the children grow, absorb, and receive their earliest and most lasting impressions. Hence the statutes of the Lord were to be topics of conversation, so that their spiritual and temporal meanings might be simplified, brought down to the comprehension of the child's understanding, and thereby enter into the fiber of his soul at the earliest dawning of reason : " Thou shalt talk of them when 15 168 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. thou sittest in thine house." Morning and evening the child would hear the Word of God and its explana- tions in the prayers and religious rites of the house- hold. On the hand and forehead of his father he would see the holy words. When he went out or came in he would see the statutes of Jehovah written on the door-posts of his house ; and all this that he might know and ever remember the words of the Lord, consider himself holy unto God, and transmit to his children what he had received from his father. At five years of age the Hebrew child began the study of the Bible, commencing with Leviticus, which contained the ordinances concerning sacrifices. From this, advance was made to the prophets, and finally to the Hagiographa. Every seven years the Law was publicly read at the Feast of Tabernacles (Deut. xxxi), at which the little children were to be present. Whether this statute became a dead-letter or not, and was only once observed in a space of five hundred years, as some think, matters little. Whatever may have been the facts in the case, we see clearly the command of God, and that little children were to be present at the ceremony. The Book of Proverbs is replete with precepts concerning the religious instruc- tion of children. Warnings are given to parents to lay the foundation of a religious life at the beginning of the child's days: "Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it." The instinctive outgoings of his nature are to be watched, " whether his nature be pure and whether it be right" (xx, 1), and to all instruction in the Divine wisdom he must give an attentive ear, for THE OLD TESTAMENT CHURCH. 169 a knowledge of that is an experience of the fear of the Lord. At twelve or thirteen years of age the boy became " a son of the commandment," or of " the Law." He was now for the first time subject to the whole Law, must observe all its ordinances, and therefore took part in all the solemn services of the sanctuary or temple. It was an eventful day to him and to the family when he entered the courts of the God of Jacob. As one of the people of God, he took part in all the sacred festivals, in the holy convocations, and pilgrimage feasts. For the first time he now assisted at the Passover, and partook of the paschal lamb, the meaning of which he had been taught years previously. (Ex. xii, 26, 27.) Dr. Gill, a Baptist and eminent Rabbinic scholar, observes in his notes on Luke ii, 42 : " According to the maxims of the Jews, persons were not obliged to the duties of the law, or subject to the penalties of it in case of non-performance, until they were: A female, at the age of twelve years and one day ; and a male, at the age of thirteen years and one day. They were not reckoned adult Church members till then ; nor then, either, unless worthy persons ; for so it is said : ' He that is worthy is called, at thirteen years of age, a son of the congregation of Israel ; ? that is, a member of the Church." Bloomfield (Critical Digest, Luke ii, 42) says: "The custom was not to take them [children] to the Passover, until they should have attained the years of puberty, a period which the Rabbins tell us was fixed at the twelfth year, when they were held amenable to the law, and were called Sons of Precept. Then were they also introduced 170 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. into the Church, initiated into its doctrines and cere- monies, and consequently were taken by their relations to Jerusalem at the festivals." In Poole's Synop. Crit. (Ex. xii, 26) : " Children, at the age of twelve years, were brought by their parents to the temple ; and from that time they began to eat of the Passover and other sacrifices." Rosen muller and Kuinoel and other critics, English and foreign, have similar notes. Joseph us, in the " Antiquities," says : " The law for- bids the son to eat of the sacrifice before he has come to the temple." (Book IV, chap, xvi, sec. 30.) Thus we see the care for childhood in the Old Tes- tament, and the relation which children sustained to the Church. From the beginning they were conse- crated to God, nurtured in his holy law, regarded as members of the household of faith, and prepared for public and personal acceptance of the obligations laid upon them in circumcision. Having arrived at the proper age when they could discern, in some degree, the profound symbolisms of religion, they became re- sponsible, full members of the Church of God. Their probation was over; they could now enter the courts of the Lord with gladness, offer sacrifice, eat the Passover, chant with their parents and friends gath- ered at the feasts the glorious Hallel Psalms, and re- joice in the Coming One, the Messiah of Israel. THE NEW TESTAMENT CHURCH. 171 CHAPTER IX. CHILDREN IN THE CHURCH OF THE NEW TES- TAMENT. THE MOTHER CHURCH AT JERUSALEM. IN previous chapters we have shown the condition of childhood in the Roman Empire when Chris- tianity began its beneficent career. The careful student will recall the faithful picture there given, in order to pursue an intelligent study of the same subject in the writings of the New Testament. It is a prime canon in historical criticism applied, that he only who is imbued with the literary, social, philosophical, and religious spirit of an age, can understand that age. He only, therefore, who can project himself into the life of the New Testament period, and can live, think, and act in turn in Jerusalem, in Ephesus, in Antioch, and in the Imperial Capital, can hope to understand sympathetically the full significance of much that is historical in the Acts of the Apostles and the Pauline Epistles, concerning the early struggles of the Church with Paganism, Judaism, and the pervasive spirit of Orientalism. Brought by the historic spirit into rapport with New Testament times, we may ask, without servility to preconceived judgments, what was the effect of the degraded ideas relative to childhood in heathenism upon Apostolic teaching and Church practice concern- 172 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. ing children? Knowing the character of Chris- tianity from the teachings of Christ Jesus, have we not a presumptive right to investigate the New Testa- ment records with the expectancy of there finding statements indicating something more than heathen interest in the ethical and religious welfare of chil- dren? Heathenism, it will be remembered, valued the child for what he might become; Christianity considered him for what he was. Further, it has been shown that the Church in the age immediately after the Apostles manifested especial interest in children, and that finally Christian teaching modified the Imperial laws concerning them. The greatest teachers and writers of the Church vigorously attacked the inhumanity of heathenism toward the little ones and pleaded for their religious care as the purchase of Christ. On what grounds, we may ask, did the Church do this? Was this interest a mere develop- ment or corollary of Christian sentiment? This was the age of Justin Martyr, who testifies that there were those then in the Church sixty and seventy years old who were made disciples to Christ in their childhood. Justin wrote about the year 142 A. D. ; sixty or seventy years from that date carries us into the middle of the Apostolic days, midway between the death of John (102 A. D.) and the extraordinary manifesta- tions of Pentecost when the Church was formally opened. It was the age of Clemens Romanus, of Ignatius, of Polycarp, the disciple and friend of the holy John. The idea, therefore, that the Churches of that early day, scattered throughout the vast distances of *he Roman Empire, simultaneously introduced THE NEW TESTAMENT CHURCH. 173 child-membership, can not be seriously considered. Wherever Origen traveled in this same period, he found the same Church relation of children, and has left it on record that it was received from the Apostles, the only source indeed from which it could have come. Again, to apprehend this matter clearly, we may approach the subject from another stand-point, and one entirely new. Let us suppose, for instance, that the Acts of the Apostles, which contains much concerning the founding of the Church, was lost — what conclusion relative to the position of children in the New Testa- ment Church would be reached from a study of the Pauline theology ? The Epistles to the Romans and to the Galatians teach plainly the salvation of the human race in infancy through the atonement; that the gospel was preached to Abraham ; that the bless- ings of the covenant made with him have come upon the Gentiles; that the Church of Christ is one with the Church of the Old Testament, and that all who are justified in Christ (and certainly children are) are of the seed of Abraham as truly as were Isaac and Jacob. Calling these facts into view, and remember- ing at the same moment that Paul was fully acquainted with the teachings of our Lord, touching the moral character of little children and the relation which they sustained to the kingdom of God, by what ten- able hypothesis could the exclusion of believers' children from the Church of Christ be maintained? No one in the exercise of a sound critical judgment would be bold enough to conclude that the teachings of the Apostles were at variance with the practice of 174 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. the Churches they had founded. Certainly no one ever did so conclude for a thousand years, until the rise of the semi-Manichean sects of the twelfth cen- tury and the furious Anabaptists of the Reformation period. The history of the planting of the Church, and of the conversion of families as given in the Acts, can be understood only by reference to the teachings of the Apostles as set forth in their Epistles. It must be insisted upon, therefore, that history and doctrine be studied together; and, as a preliminary fact, that the practices of the early Churches in relation to the chil- dren of believers were not antagonistic to the doc- trinal teachings of the Apostles. We may now study the teachings of the days of Pentecost. Acts ii, 38, 39 : " For the promise is to you, and to your children. " This is that part of Peter's discourse which bears directly on the membership of children. The audience were Jews and proselytes, " devout men out of every nation under heaven," and therefore understood the import of the remarkable announcement of Peter con- cerning Christ as the long-expected Messiah and his glorious kingdom. It is necessary to study this au- dience closely from the religious stand-point, for three thousand of them that day accepted the proffered Christ, and were added to the Christian Church. I. The Jews. The Jewish element fully appre- hended the Apostolic teaching ; for the Messiah had been, from the beginning, the hope of Israel. They were also acquainted with the various views held in Judaism concerning the Messiah's kingdom ; its scope THE NEW TESTAMENT CHURCH. 175 and relation to the ancient theocracy of their fathers. They could not have dreamed, and it was certainly antagonistic to all of their teachings, Scriptural and Rabbinic, that with the coming of their own Messiah, their religious blessings and privileges would be abol- ished, or even abridged. Every Jew in that assembly, and among the three thousand that day converted, knew that his children were included with him in the covenant made with Abraham; that they were circumcised under the solemn pledge, " I will be a God to. thee and thy seed," and that that pledge had not yet been revoked; that he himself had been by this God-ordained rite numbered with the people of God in his infancy, and when of age had been form- ally received into full membership in the Kahal of Israel. In a previous chapter the position of chil- dren in the Old Testament Church has been fully treated. The facts there adduced were not to him a mere theory, but a joyful and blessed experience, for which he was 'ever piously thankful and nationally proud. It never could have presented itself to those Jews then listening to Peter, that his teaching that day was the death-knell of their children's relation to the Church of the living God, their God. That would have been to them far other than good tidings, and, in the nature of things, must have provoked antago- nistic views based on Old Testament grounds. Be- sides the express commands of God, delivered under the most awful circumstances, and enforced by fear- ful threatenings, the laws and ordinances of their religion had declared the sacred relation of the He- brew child to the people of Jehovah. The prophet, 176 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. who was ever before them when they read of the fall of Jerusalem, had promised that, in the brighter day of the future, " their children also should be as afore- time." (Jer. xxx, 20.) Moreover — and this should be specially noted — 'they heard nothing in the sermon to the effect that the Church was for adults only. The declaration of the Apostle leads directly to the opposite conclusion. Peter was a Jew, addressing Jews. He had not, nor had any of the disciples, yet abandoned the services of the temple, or the pure teachings of Judaism. To read, then, into this nar- rative or to inject into the religious feelings, aspira- tions, and traditions of the Hebrews of that day the Anabaptist notions of modern times, is utterly at variance with the historic spirit. II. The second element of that audience were the proselytes. A proselyte was one who had forsaken the worship of heathenism, and had turned to the true and living God, as revealed in the teachings of Judaism. In the religious economy of the Hebrews provision was made, from the beginning, for the " stranger" (G fervent piety, of exten- sive erudition, Avhose " name will be transmitted with honor through the annals of time as long as learning and genius shall be esteemed among men." Eusebius tells us that he lived for some time in Greece and in Rome ; that he spent some time in Arabia and Cappadocia ; that at Csesarea he was requested by the bishops to expound the Sacred Scriptures publicly in the Church ; that he wrote his commentary on Isaiah in Palestine, in which country and in Syria he passed the most of his life. In these regions the first Churches were founded by the Apostles, and this eminent man of God, scholar, traveler, and commentator, having fall knowledge of all the Churches, their manners and customs, and being in constant intercourse with their GENTILES AND THE DISPERSION. 199 chief pastors, especially with Alexander, bishop of Jerusalem, and Theotiaeus, bishop of Ca?sarea, — this man says: "The Church had from the Apostles the tradition, or instruction, to give baptism to young children, according to the saying of our Lord con- cerning infants," etc. In his " Homilv on Leviticus " he again says: "Why, according to the usage, or cus- tom, of the Church, it [baptism] is likewise given to little children." In his " Homily on Luke" he fur- ther says : " Little children are baptized for the for- giveness of sins. Of what sins'?" etc. He then continues his remarks on the cleansing from original sin. Here, then, is a man "of great and uncommon abilities," who had lived in the Eastern countries — in Syria, in Palestine, and adjoining countries — where the Peshito version was made, and among the Churches and people by whom it was used as our version is among us to-day, and he testifies that children were embraced by the Church in every country he visited. Everywhere he finds the same belief on that subject, and the same practice. This, then, without the pos- sibility of a rational, candid doubt, proves in what sense the conversion of Lydia's family, and that of the jailer at Philippi, and that of Crispus, the ruler of the synagogue at Corinth, was understood by the Christians who formed the first Churches planted by the Apostles in Syria and Mesopotamia. In Acts xvi, 31, 34, we have another instance, similar to the above, of an entire household or family becoming Christian. The Syriac reads : "And they spake the word of the Lord 200 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. to him and to all the sons, or children, of his house." "And he was baptized immediately, he and all the sons of his house." It is a misfortune that two words in the Greek, both different, are translated in the English version by one word. Those words are olxia, oikia, a house, a building ; and dlxoz, oikos, a family, descendants. Peter, after his release from prison, came to the house, oikia, of Mary. , (Acts xii, 12, 14.) The dwelling of Simon, the tanner, is called oikia. (Acts iii, 6.) This term is wider in meaning than oikos, for it includes the slaves, the attendants, and various servants attached to a family. But the term oikos properly signifies a family in the narrower sense — Septuagint (2 Sam. vii, 11,27, 29). And since the terms " house of Jacob," " house of Israel," " house of David," etc., so often met with in the Scripture, must include children, the term must in- clude young children and infants. Now, it sometimes includes children as distinct from their parents. (Com- pare Gen. xlvi, 27, with vs. 5.) In verse five men- tion is made of the " little ones ;" in verse twenty- seven these are embraced without modification in the phrase " house of Jacob " [olxov 'Iaxcoff]. In Exodus i, 1, the same word is used that is employed in the chapter under consideration (Acts xvi, 34) : " Every man and his navotxl, whole family." In order to keep children out of the Church of the New Testament, we can not say that no children came up out of Egypt in the houses of their fathers. For other references, consult the original and Septuagint in Deut. xxv, 9 ; Num. xviii, 11 ; 2 Sam. xii, 11 ; 1 Sam. ii, 3; Job xx, 28; Euth iv, 11, 12; Ps. lxviii, 6 ; Isa. GENTILES AND THE DISPERSION. 201 xiii, 16. In some of these passages the word has reference to children only. Other texts may be cited in which the word embraces young children under the care of the parent ; e. g., 1 Timothy iii, 4, 5 : " One that ruleth well his own house [o?*oc], having his children in subjection with all gravity. For if a man know not how to rule his own house [oikos] how shall he take care of the Church of God ?" Again : "Let the deacons be the husband of one wife, ruliug their children, even their own house [o?£os] well." (Vs. 12.) Finally, in the whole of the New Testament there is not a single passage in which oikia is used in con- nection with the administration of baptism. The oikia is never baptized, but the oikos is. Hence, when the Apostle mentions the houses of Lydia, Crispus, Stephanas, Aristobulus, the Philippian jailer, One- siphorus, and Narcissus, we must understand him to mean the family in every instance ; and, then, if we would exclude children from the Church, take the astounding position, without the shadow of proof in support of it, that in these families, and in all the families who joined the Christian Church in Europe and Asia, from the day of Pentecost to the death ol St. John, A. D. 102 (or 100), a period of seventy years, there were no children ! In his Epistle to the Smyrneaus, Ignatius (died A. D. 107) says : " I salute the families [roue olxouz] of my brethren, with their wives and children." If, now, we turn to the Epistles of St. Paul, we shall find proof positive that there were children in the families composing the Churches he had founded, 202 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. and that they were included in the Christian commu- nity. From what has been already said on the Jewish and proselyte composition of those Churches, we know that they were so reckoned. That they were so regarded by the Apostles is evidenced in 1 Corinthians vii, 12, 14. " Else were your children unclean, but now are they holy." Every Bible-reader knows that to be "unclean" was the same as being uncircumcised, and therefore as being outside covenant relation with God. No un- clean person could be numbered with the holy people, the people of the covenant. He was a heathen. The term ayca, holy, is the New Testament word for the Old Testament term tsrrp, Jcodesh, "pure, clean." It is used by the Apostle as the common designation of the members of the Church. Romans xv, 25 : " I go to Jerusalem to minister to the saints [ro?c Stylois]" So also in the Salutations : " To the saints [to7z a-fioc<;\ which are at Ephesus ; to the saints and faithful at Colosse, at Philippi." This term " holy " is never given in the Scriptures to any but those who, in the Old Testament, are in covenant with God, or who, in the New Testament, are members of the Christian Church. It is never used by the New Testament writers as designating the Jewish people of the New Testament period. It be- longs, in their usus loquendi, to the members of Christ's body. The unbelieving husband, even, is declared by the Apostle to be in some sense under the holy influ- ence of the believing wife. It will not be understood that this designation " holy " affirms personal inward GENTILES AND THE DISPERSION. 203 holiness of any one thus styled, since that could be known to God alone, but that such ones are separated unto God and his service, as the Israelites, though not all holy, are called a " holy nation ;" and the mem- bers of the Church at Coriuth and elsewhere are called " saints." In this instance the word is used in its ecclesiastical, and not in its spiritual, sense. Now, Paul says that the children of one believing parent are clean, pure, thus designating them by the identical title the members of the Church bear. Knowing the teaching of the Apostle on infant sal- vation, and that at Jerusalem he refuted the charge that he taught the Jews not to circumcise their chil- dren, we can see no other conclusion than that he con- sidered believers' children as within the visible fold of Christ. Mr. Wesley paraphrases' the passage thus : " Else your children would have brought up heathens ; whereas, now they are Christians. As if he had said, Ye see the proof of it before your eyes." Meyer, in his Commentary, observes : " That Christians' children are not profane, outside of the theocratic community and the Divine covenant, and belonging to the unholy Jcosmos, but on the contrary holy, is the conceded point from which the Apostle proves that the non-believing husband is sanctified through his believing wife." Dr. A. Clarke has a lengthy note on the same pas- sage, the essence of which is : " If this kind of rela- tive sanctification were not allowed, the children of these persons could not be received into the Christian Church, nor enjoy any rights or privileges as Chris- tians ; but the Church of God never scrupled to admit such children as members, just as well as she did those 204 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. who had sprang from parents, both of whom were Christians." The fact is, this passage demonstrates the Church membership of children under the teaching of the Apostle. The difficulty which he had to settle grew out of the primal question, If the children of parents, both being believers, are holy, what is the status of children of parents one only of whom is a believer? Now, if the children of parents both Chris- tians were not holy, how could the children having only one Christian parent be holy ? The Apostle, as Meyer says, " concedes ;" he assumes, as a matter of fact then known and accepted, that believers' children are holy, and thus settles the important question, on that principle, concerning the conjugal relationship between an unbelieving husband and a Christian wife. The final proof in the New Testament for Church membership of children, as it has been defined in this work, is found in the Apostolic recognition of chil- dren as Church members. This is important. In the Epistle to the Ephesian Church the greeting of the Apostle is to the "holy ones" and to the faithful in Christ Jesus. In this Epistle, children, under the care of their parents, are mentioned in a manner which proves their membership just as clearly as the same manner, when employed with respect to adults, proves their membership. Ephesians vi, 1, 4. "Children, obey your parents in the Lord. . . . Fathers, bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord." It is sometimes said that this exhortation to the children does not imply their Church membership, since they could be exhorted without being members. GENTILES AND THE DISPERSION. 205 This is correct, but it proves too much. For the same argument would leave the Church at Ephesus without any members, since the fathers and mothers and serv- ants, exhorted in precisely similar terms, could all be exhorted without being members of the Church. To assume a possibility, and then make it a universal cer- tainty, is not reason, but unreason, and its irration- ality is its own refutation. Only on the ground that the children addressed belonged to the Church, and were so recognized by the Apostle, can the particular tone of the exhortation be accounted for — " Children, obey your parents in the Lord." The parallel pas- sage (Col. iii, 20) reads: " For this is well pleasing in the Lord." Again, fathers are exhorted fondly to cherish them in the nurture (instruction) and admoni- tion (discipline) of the Lord. The Syriac reads: " Train them up in the discipline and doctrine of our Lord." As might be expected, and in conformity with the fact of the unity of the Old Testament and New Testament Churches, as affirmed in his Epistles, Paul continues, in the economy of Christianity, the Old Testament idea of the religious nurture of children. In Colossians iii, 20, 21, we have similar instruc- tion. The salutation, like that to the Ephesians, is to the saints (holy ones) and faithful brethren. Children are included, for they are exhorted as are other mem- bers of the Church. From a study of these several passages it is conclusive that children were in the Church of the Apostolic Period. We do not suppose, and have not taught, that they were members in the fullest sense. Our position is, that the position of children in the New Testament Church was precisely 206 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. similar to the position of children in the Church of the Old Testament ; that the Church of the New Tes- tament being a continuation of the Church of the Old Testament, the Apostles and believing Jews continued to hold and practice the same belief that they did hold and practice before the Church of Christ was formally opened. Strong objections will be made to this state- ment, among many of which will be the one couched in the counter-statement that, without positive faith on the part of the applicant, there was no admission to the Christian Church. Such objections, and many others not here mentioned, have been carefully con- sidered. They have not been set aside as trivial and of little weight; rather have they been studied with the belief that in most of them lay a germ of truth. This has been recognized, and the chaff rejected. The objection stated is, perhaps, the most important. Meyer stumbles over it, and the truth in it is, that just as no proselyte, under the Old Testament, was ad- mitted, without faith in the God of Israel and the rev- elation he had given in the Sacred Book, into the Kahal of Jehovah, among the people of God, so no Jew or proselyte could enter the Christian Church without faith in Jesus Christ, the Messiah of God, as the Redeemer which was to come as a Savior from sin. But since the faith of an alien, under the Old Testament, was taken as the faith of the family, and the children were taken in with the proselyte parents under the wings of the majesty of God, so in the Church of the New Testament the faith of believing parents sanctified the children, "else were your children un- clean, but now they are holy." GENTILES AND THE DISPERSION. 207 But there is also historical proof of child-member- ship, based on these passages from the Epistles to Ephesians and Colossians. It will be noted that the members of these Churches are called "faithful." This significant word entered into the heart of the Church, and, because of its comprehensive meaning,* continued long as a beautiful and holy title of the Christian brethren. The iuscriptions from the Catacombs show that this word "faithful"' was given to the children of believers. Many instauces could be cited, but the following will suffice (Taylor's Facts and Ev.) : " A ' Faithful/ descended from ancestors who were Faith- fuls. Here lies Zosimus. He lived two years, one month, and twenty-five days."" This inscription bears the ichthus (fish) and anchor, symbols approved by Clement of Alexandria (Paxlag., Lib. Ill, c. 2) at the close of the second ceutury, A. D. 185. How, we may inquire, did the ancestors of this child Zosimus, who were themselves " Faithfuls,"" un- derstand the term and its implications? Even in this inquiry we may not investigate fruitlessly, hopeless as it may seem. Origen was born five years after the above date. His father, as already stated, was a Christian, and died a martyr; his grandfather and his great-grandfather also were Christians. If from this date, A. D. 185, we subtract twenty-five years — a mod- erate number — for Origen's father, forty for his grand- father, and forty for his great-grandfather, we are brought to the year A. D. 80. Some ten or twelve years previous, Mark the Evangelist died as a martyr, having founded the Church at Alexandria, where Origen was born. The Apostle John was yet alive, 208 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. as were many " faithful " men to whom had been committed the doctrines of the gospel. Here, then, are hundreds of Christian men, with their teachers, commissioned by the Apostles or the Evangelists, Timothy and Titus, according to the instructions of Paul, who were contemporary with the ancestors of Origen. Is it within the region of truth to suppose that these Christians did not know the Apostolic doc- trine, nor the common belief and practice of their own day? How, then, did they understand that doctrine and practice ? That is easily understood from the fact that Origen was baptized in his infancy. But whence did his father obtain this belief? His father, also, it is said, was baptized in infancy. Where, then, did the grandfather get it but from the great-grandfather? Origen was brought up in the Church as his father had been before him, and all his ancestors of several generations. A " Faithful," then, was one within the pale of the Church. Another instance : " To Nina Florentina, a most sweet and innocent infant, made a Faithful by her parent." The parent in seclusion bap- tizes the child ; but, not satisfied with the manner or the circumstances — for from the inscription it is evident persecution was devastating the Church — the child is again "made a Faithful at the eighth hour of the night, at the last extremity of life. She lived but four hours afterward, the rite having been performed ac- cording to custom. She died at Hybla. . . . On which decease her parents wept with each other every moment of the night, open lamentations for the Chris- tian dead being prohibited as treason. Her corpse, with its coffin, by the presbyters, was interred in the GENTILES AND THE DISPERSION. 209 burying-place of the Christian martyrs, the fourth of the Nones of October." (Taylor's Apostolic Bap., New York, 1844, 145.) This child was, the inscrip- tion tells us, a "daughter of Zoilus the Corrector." Correctors are mentioned as early as A. D. 117. " Cynacus, a Faithful, died eight days less than three years." "Eustafia, the mother, places this in com- memoration of her son Polichronis, a Faithful, who lived three years." "Urcia Florentina, a Faithful, rests here in peace. She lived five years, eight months, and eight days." It is evident, then, that from the days of the Apostles the Church gathered the children to her bosom. I am fully aware that Tertullian, the con- temporary of Origen, may be, and has been, quoted in opposition to this view. I am also just as certain that no Antipedobaptist has presented Tertullian with the historical background necessary to a correct under- standing of his position. He did not oppose the bap- tism of children, nor their admission to the Church, on Scriptural grounds, nor as being opposed to the practice of the Church, nor because it was a new thing intro- duced by heretical teachers. For none of these rea- sons did he antagonize what was then, as Origen (who had far better facilities for knowing than Tertullian) tells us, the practice of the Universal Church. His sole ground of opposition, besides the idea that it was more useful (utilior est) to wait, was theological, and that it should be deferred till they were confirmed in continence. The historical evidence for child membership from the Apostolic Period is complete and conclusive. A 210 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. final resume of it may appropriately close this chapter. Immediately connected with the Apostle John, by whom he was appointed bishop of Smyrna, is Polycarp. — This holy man was, as Irenaeus his disciple tells us, " instructed by the Apostles, and was brought into contact with many who had seen Christ." (Adv. Hser., Ill, 3 ; Euseb., Hist. Eccl., IV, 14.) In the year A. D. 167, about sixty-five years after the death of John the Apostle, he sealed his faith in martyrdom. When urged by his perse- cutors to reproach Christ, he declared : "Eighty and six years have I served him, and he never did me any injury; how, then, can I blaspheme my King and my Savior ?" (Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. I, p. 88, Clark's Ed.) Polycarp, then, was made a disciple of Christ in childhood. Ieenjeus. — Dodwell puts the date of his birth A. D. 97, but A. D. 120 is probably correct. He was the disciple of the venerable Polycarp, and in his Epistle to Florinus recounts how Polycarp used to relate the discourses of the Apostles, and what things he had heard from them concerning the Lord. In his great work "Against Heresies," Irenaeus says: " For he [Christ] came to save all persons by him- self; all, I mean, who are by him regenerated unto God \renascuntur in Deum\, infants [infantes'], and little ones [parvulos], and children [pueros], and youths and elder persons. Therefore he went through the dif- ferent ages, for infants being made an infant, sanctifying infants," etc. The word renascuntur, regenerated, is a term used in the second century, and afterwards to denote baptism. Although this is disputed, as every- GENTILES AND THE DISPERSION. 211 tiling must be that favors the Church relation of children, there is such undoubted proof of it that with those who understand the force of argument, it is no longer a debatable question. For instance, Justin Martyr, referring to the manner of admission into the Church, says : " Then we bring them to a place where there is water and we regenerate them by the same way of regeneration by which we were re- generated" (Apolog. Prima; see also Clem. Alex., Predegog., Bk. I, c. 6.) Justin Maetye. — He was born in Flavia Ne- apolis, a city of Samaria, about A. D. 114. He studied in the schools of the philosophers, became a Christian, and suffered martyrdom under Marcus Aurelius. His writings are among the most im- portant of that age, when Christianity w T as contend- ing with all the world-powers for an existence. He wrote a little before Irenaeus, and how harmoniously they both express the belief of the Church then just as the Apostles left it, will be seen in this extract, which we have quoted before (Apol. II) : " There are many persons among us, of both sexes, of sixty and seventy years of age, who were made dis- ciples to Christ from their childhood, that continue uncorrupted." Oeigen, A. D. 185. — This writer has been cited, and bore testimony, that the admission of children by baptism into the Church was derived from the Apos- tles, and that it was the usage of the Church, secun- dum ecclesioz observantiam. (Homilia 8, in Lev.) Teetullian. — The fact that this writer endeav- ored to oppose a practice which, to his thinking, 212 CHRISTIANITY AND CHILDHOOD. would be more useful if delayed until the innocent ones were grown up and had been confirmed in virtue or married, donee aut nubant aut continentia corrobor- antur, is proof sufficient of the statement of Origen that the practice was then the usage of the Church. Cyprian. — One hundred and fifty years from the close of the Apostolic days we find the whole Church at Carthage setting forth its belief. Cyprian was born about A. D. 200, converted under the presbyter Csecilius A. D. 246, and two years after, A. D. 248, accepted the office of bishop of Carthage, which he held until his martyrdom, A. D. 258. In the Epistle to Fidus is the faith of the Church : " Cyprian and others, his colleagues, who were present in council, in number sixty-six, to Fidus their brother, greeting: " We have read your letter, dearest brother, etc. " But in respect of the case of infants, which you say ought not to be baptized within the second or third day after their birth, and that the law of ancient circumcision should be regarded, so that you think that one who is just born should not be baptized and sanctified within the eight days, we all thought very differently in our council; for in this course, which you thought was to be taken, no one agreed; but we all rather judge that the mercy and grace of God is not to be refused to any one born of man." The whole epistle is very strong, and asserts the gift of the Holy Ghost to all alike : " For God, as he does not accept the person, so does not accept the age, since he shows himself a Father to all with well weighed quality for the attainment of heavenly grace." GENTILES AND THE DISPERSION. 213 It will be noted that of sixty-six Carthaginian pres- byters, not one opposed the ancient usage. Coming down a little later, the Council of Eliberis, held about 200 years from the Age of the Apostles, affirmed that if any one went over from the Church to any heresy, he must repent before he can be readmitted. " But if they were infants [infantes] when they were carried over, because as it was not by their own fault that they erred, they ought to be admitted with- out delay." Gregory Nazianzen, 370 A. D. — This eminent teacher continues the chain of evidence of the uni- versal practice of the Church. The previous testi- mony was from a Council in Sj:>ain • Gregory repre- sents the Greeks : " Have you an infant ? Let not wickedness have the advantage of time from his infancy; let him be sanctified, \jx (3pi