PRIMITIVE CHURCH OFFICES. ESSAYS ON THE PRIMITIVE CHURCH OFFICES. REPRINTED BY PERMISSION FROM THE PRINCETON REVIEW, WITH * CORRECTIONS AND ADDITIONS BY THE SAME WRITER. NEW-YORK: CHARLES SCRIBNER, 145 NASSAU-STREET. 1851. ENTERED, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1851, by CHARLES SCRIBNER, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern District of New-York. JOHN. F. TROW, ~ Yintn ian %tturetpptt, g49 ANN-STREXIT. E GO~J ADVERTISEMENT. THE essays here collected were originally published in different numbers of the Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review during a period of several years. A desire having been expressed for their republication in a separate form, the author has not only given his consent, but made a number of corrections, chiefly verbal, and two additions of considerable length, to wit, the whole of the fifth essay and the conclusion of the fourth, comprising the argument in reference to the apostleship of Titus. Both these additions formed a part of the original manuscript, from which the essays were transferred to the Review, and are necessary to complete the argument. An occasional want of uniformity in the use of the singular and plural pronoun has arisen from a partial restoration of the original form, which was afterwards abandoned, as a superfluous labour in a mere republication. CONTENTS. ESSAY I. ON THE ORIGIN OF THE CHRISTIAN ELDERSHIP,.. 1 ESSAY II. ON THE POWERS OF THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS,... 29 ESSAY III. ON THE PERPETUITY OF THE APOSTLESHIP,.... 68 ESSAY IV. ON THE OFFICIAL RANK OF TIMOTHY AND TITUS,... 101 ESSAY V. ON THE ANGELS OP THE CHURCHES AND THE FALSE APOSTLES, 184 ESSAY VI. ON THE APOSTOLICAL SUCCESSION,.... 144 ESSAY I. ON THE ORIGIN OF THE CHRISTIAN ELDERSHIP. IN various living languages there are titles of honour and respect, the etymological origin of which is to be sought in the idea of old age or seniority. Such are Sire, as addressed to kings, and the cognate expression Sir, as used in common parlance, and also in the title of an English knight or baronet. Such too are the French Sieur, Seigneur, the Spanish Senor, the Italian Signore, with their various compounds, Monsieur, Monseigneur, Monsignore, Messire, etc., all which may be traced back to the Latin Senior, considered as. the comparative of Senex. We find, moreover, that terms thus derived have been extensively employed, riot only as expressions of personal respect, but also as designations of official dignity. This is the case with most of the words already mentioned, to which may be added Alderman (elder man), Senator, Patres Conscripti, the Arabic Sheikh, and many others. This extensive use of words, which properly denote 1 2 ESSAY I. old age, to signify official rank, might possibly admit of explanation on the hypothesis, that what was first used to express a merely personal respect was afterwards employed to express the same feeling with respect to public or official dignity; that as any respected person might be called a father or an old man, so a ruler or a magistrate might be so called by way of eminence. But the usage now in question may be ~still more satisfactorily accounted for, by the fact, that as we trace the history of governments backwards, we find them all to terminate in the patriarchal system. It is this which exists in families among all nations. It is founded on the natural relation between parents and children. It' has no concern with artificial theories respecting social compacts and equality. Among those races which have retained most. of a primitive simplicity in their mode of life, this organization of society is still found. As the father governs his own household, so the head of the family, i. e. of the elder'branch, governs the younger, and the head of the whole tribe governs both. This system- lingers still among the Highland clans of Scotland, and continues in full force among the wandering Arabs. Hence their strict regard to genealogy, which existed also among the ancient Hebrews. Under all the changes in the Hebrew form of -government, this patriarchal system still remained as the substratum of the whole theocracy; and its peculiar phraseology is constantly recurring in the sacred history. As the natural heads of houses, families, and tribes, were the hereditary magistrates, the name ti., old men, elders, was the common appellation for the rulers of the people. ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 3 The same usage of the term occurs in application to domestic arrangements. Eliezer of Damascus, Abraham's steward, is called (Gen. 24: 2) ns:. T i., not " his eldest servant of his house," as our translation has it, but "his servant, the elder (i. e. ruler) of his house." So in Gen. 50: 7, we read of " all the servants of Pharaoh, the elders of his house," as well as " all the elders of the land of Egypt." These elders and the senators of Ps. 105: 22 are identical in Hebrew. During the residence of Israel in Egypt, the patriarchal system seems to have been maintained, as one suited to every change of circumstances. Hence, when the people were to be delivered, the communications from Jehovah were made, not directly to the mass of the nation, but to the Elders, as their national and acknowledged representatives. When God commanded Moses (Ex. 3: 14), " Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you," he immediately explained the way in which the command was to be executed, by adding, "Go and gather THE ELDERS of Israel together, and say unto them," etc. (v. 16), " and thou shalt come, thou and THE ELDERS of Israel, unto the king of Egypt" (v. 18). Again we read (Ex. 4: 30, 31), that Moses and Aaron " did the sogns in the sight of THE PEOPLE, and THE PEOPLE believed." But immediately before it had been said (v. 29), that they "went and gathered together all THE ELDERS of the children of Israel," which would be a nugatory statement, if it did not mean that the people, who saw the signs and believed in consequence, were the elders of the people. In Ex. 12: 3, the Lord says unto Moses and Aaron, "Speak ye unto all the congregation of Israel;" but in 4 ESSAY I. executing this command " Moses called for all the elders of Israel," and gave them the necessary orders (v. 21). When Moses smote the rock by divine direction, it was "in the sight of the elders of Israel" (Ex. 17 I 5, 6), as the representatives of the people who were to be relieved, and at the same time reproved for murmuring. When Jethro offered sacrifices and made a feast, "all the elders of Israel" came, as a matter of course, "to eat bread with Moses' father-in-law before God" (Ex. 18: 12). ~A still more remarkable instance of the Elders being taken for the people is in Ex. 19: 8, where it is said that "ALL THE PEOPLE answered together and said, all that the Lord hath spoken we will do; and Moses told the words of THE PEOPLE unto the Lord;" whereas in the verse immediately preceding it is said, that " Moses came and called for THE ELDERS of the people, and laid before their faces all these words which the Lord commanded him." Another example of the same thing may be found in Dent. 5: 23, where Moses, addressing the people, says, "Ye came near unto me, (even) all.the heads of your tribes and your elders." In the Mosaic ritual, the Elders are recognized as the-representatives of the people, not only by being joined with Aaron and his sons in the directions with respect to certain sacrifices (Lev. 9: 1), but in the solemn ceremony of imposing hands upon the victim, as a symbol of the transfer of the sins of the whole people to the substitute (Lev. 4: 15). The " seventy elders" (Num. 11: 25), who acted as assistants to Moses and Aaron in certain cases, were not ordained to a new office, but merely selected for a special purpose fromi a body of men already in exist ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 5 ence. They are expressly called " seventy of the elders " (Ex. 24: 1), " seventy men of the elders of Israel, whom thou knowest to be the elders of the people and officers set over them" (Num. 11: 16). Nothing could more clearly intimate the previous existence and official standing of the elders. In this case it is plain that the word " officers" is in apposition with " elders" and explanatory of it, a remark which admits of a very extensive and important application. The use of the same term in reference to other nations, if it does not prove that the same natural and simple organization obtained among them, proves what is more important, that the Hebrew writers were so perfectly familiar with this government by Elders, and this representation of the people by their Elders, that they naturally used expressions borrowed from it, to describe the institutions of other countries. In Num. 22: 4, we read that "Moab said unto the Elders of Midian," which might seem to imply a difference of organization; but that Moab means the Elders of Moab, appears from v. 7, where we find the full phrase, " and the Elders of Moab and the Elders of Midian departed." In Joshua 9: 11, the Gibeonites describe their rulers by the name of Elders. In the laws of Moses which have a prospective reference to the settlement of the people in the promised land, he mentions not only the Elders of Israel collectively (Lev. 4: 15, Num. 11: 16) and the Elders of the several tribes (Deut. 31: 28. 29: 10), but the Elders of cities and districts, who are represented as the local magistrates or judges (Deut. 19: 12. 21: 2, 3, 4, 6, 19. 22: 15-18. 25: 7-9). The Elders are joined with Aaron in the receiving 6 ESSAY I. of the law (Lev. 9: 1), and with Moses in the giving of it (Dent. 27: 1). In like manner we find Joshua accompanied by the Elders in certain public acts (Josh. 7: 6. 8: 10).. In those cases where the people en masse were to bear a part, the Elders still appear as their official leaders (Josh. 8: 33. 23: 2. 24: 1), though in some of the cases here referred to, it is doubtful whether any other assembling of the people was intended or possible than that of a representative nature. In Josh. 23: 2, for example, we may either read " the people and their elders," or "the people. even (viz.) their elders." That the government by Elders still existed after the conquest of Canaan, is evident from history. When Gideon dealt with the people of Succoth, it was in. the person of their Elders (Judg. 8: 16); Jephthah's negotiations were with the Elders of Gilead (Judg. 11: 5-11); and at the very close of the book of Judges we find the "Elders of the congregation," i. e. of the whole church and nation, deliberating jointly on a matter which concerned their relations to a single tribe (Judg. 21: 16). The local Elders seem to have been numerous. Those of Succoth were in number seventy-seven, as appears from Judges 8: 14, where Elders and Princes (i. e. rulers, chiefs) are in apposition, and descriptive of one office. The Elders of the people are again mentioned, Ruth 4: 4. The influence of the Elders in withstanding the progress of corruption, after the death of Moses and Joshua, is twice expressly recorded (Josh. 24: 31. Judges 2: 7). In the time of Samuel, we still meet with occasional ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 7 allusions to the Elders of cities (e. g. Jabesh, 1 Sam. 11: 3, and Bethlehem ch. 16: 4), the Elders of tribes (e. g. Judah, 1 Sam. 30: 26), and the Elders of all Israel, as the collective rulers of the nation, who made war and peace (1 Sam. 4: 3), changed the external form of government (8: 4), to whom even Samuel listened with respect (ib.), and of whose contempt even Saul was afraid (15: 30). The circumstances attending the introduction of monarchy show clearly that the change was a formal one, and that after as before it the details of the government continued in the hands of the hereditary Elders..During the reigns of David and Solomon, we find the most important questions of government (as, for example, who should be king) repeatedly referred to, and decided by, the Elders of Israel (2 Sam. 3: 17.5: 3, 1 Chron. 11: 3) and Judah (2 Sam. 19: 11). When Absalom usurped his father's throne, it was with the connivance of the Elders of Israel (2 Sam. 17: 4, 15). When Solomon was about to remove the ark, he assembled the Elders of Israel, i. e. "the heads of the tribes, the chiefs of the fathers of the children of Israel;" for these words are to be regarded as explanatory of the title elders (1 Kings 8: 1, 3. 2 Chron. 5: 2, 4). The officers of David's palace are called the Elders of his house (2 Sam. 12: 17). That the king was commonly attended by Elders as counsellors and aids, may be gathered from such incidental statements as that in 1 Chr. 15: 25. 21: 16. Solomon himself alludes to this organization when, describing the husband of the virtuous woman, he says, " her husband is known in the gate, when he sitteth among the Elders of the land" (Prov. 31: 23). 8 ESSAY I. Isaiah mentions the Elder, in enumerating the public persons who were to be removed from Judah (Isa. 3: 2. 9: 14). He describes Jehovah's controversy with his people as carried on against " the Elders, even the rulers, of the people," as their representatives. In predicting the future glory of the church,.or of Jehovah in the church, he says, The Lord shall reign in Mount Zion, and in Jerusalem, and before his Elders, gloriously" (Isa. 24: 23). After the revolt of the ten tribes, the government by Elders still subsisted in both kingdoms. When Benhadad, king of Syria, sent an overbearing message to Ahab, king of Israel, the latter " called all the Elders of the land," and acted by their counsel (1 Kings 20: 7, 8). When the same king wished to obtain Naboth's vineyard, Jezebel procured the death of Naboth by her influence over "the Elders and the nobles" (or even the nobles) " that were in his city" (1 Kings 21: 8). The practice of regarding the elders as the people, in all public acts, still appears in such expressions as " the men of his city, even the elders and the nobles that were in his city" (1 Kings 21: 11), and in the statement that Josiah "went up into the house of the Lord, and ALL THE MEN OF JUDAH, and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and the priests and levites, and ALL THE PEOPLE, great and small" (2 Kings 23: 2. 2 Chron. 34: 30). Strictly understood, this was impossible. It is not, however, a mere synecdoche or hyperbole. It does not mean that some of the people went up, which would not account for the strength of the expressions. The whole people, great and small, were really present, according to the principle of representation. They ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 9 were present in the person of their Elders, for we read in 2 Kings 23: 1 (2 Chron. 34: 29), that "the king sent, and they gathered unto him ALL THE ELDERS of Judah and Jerusalem." The existence of local Elders, during this same period, may be inferred, not only from the case of Naboth above mentioned, but from the incidental statements, that " Elisha sat in his house, and the Elders sat with him" (2 Kings 6: 32); and that "Jehu wrote letters, and sent to Samaria, unto the rulers of Jezreel, the Elders" (2 Kings 10: 1). In this last case, the identity of the rulers and elders is unusually clear from the omission of the copulative, which shows that when the particle appears in other cases of the same kind, it is not distinctive but explanatory. The official existence and activity of Elders may be traced to the very end of the kingdom of Judah, as we find " the elders of the land," in the reign of Jehoiakim, interposing in behalf of Jeremiah (Jer. 26: 17). One advantage of this presbyterial constitution was, that being founded upon natural relations, it could exist wherever families existed; and we find accordingly that, as it was maintained during the long sojourn of Israel in Egypt, so the Elders were still recognized, as a distinct order, in the Babylonish exile, as appears from " the letter that Jeremiah the Prophet sent from Jerusalem unto the residue of THE ELDERS which were carried away captive," etc. (Jer. 29: 1). So, likewise, when the exiles applied to Ezekiel for information as to the will of God, it was through their Elders (Ezek. 20: 1,3). When he was transported in vision to Jerusalem, he was made to see the abominations committed by "the Elders of the house of Israel" 1* 10 ESSAY I. (Ezek. 8: 12); and at the very time when the trance fell upon him he was sitting, like Elisha, in his house, and "the Elders of Judah' sat before him (ib. v. 1). And as the official rank of the Elders was still recognized during the captivity, so it re-appears after the return from exile. The decrees made were "according to the counsel of the Princes and the Elders" (Ezra 10: 8), or, as we have seen that this construction probably means, " the Chiefs, to wit, the Elders." The combination is intended to show that the chiefs referred to were not temporary or extraordinary ones, but such as held power under the ancient theocratical constitution. So in Ezra 10: 14, where the " Rulers (or Elders) of all the congregation" are distinguished from " the Elders of every city and the Judges thereof," the last phrase seems to be exegetical of the former, and intended to show that the Elders of each city were its local magistrates, which, as we have seen already, was the ancient Hebrew polity. The "Elders of the Priests," who are occasionally mentioned (Isa. 37: 2. 2 Kings 19:2), appear to have been the heads of the several branches of the family of Aaron, the same who in the New Testament are called apXLepek or Chief Priests. In Jer. 19: 1, they are distinguished from the "Elders of the people," i. e. of the other tribes. This organization was for religious as well as civil purposes. Hence the Psalmist says, "Praise him in the assembly of the Elders" (Ps. 107:32). Indeed, the whole organization of the Hebrew commonwealth was for a religious purpose. The nation was the church. The same chiefs who presided over secular affairs, presided over sacred things, except that what ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 11 related to ceremonial matters was intrusted to the chiefs of a single tribe exclusively. Sacrifice and all that pertained to it was under the direction of the Priests at the tabernacle or temple; but when the people met elsewhere for spiritual worship, it was under the direction of their natural and ordinary chiefs, the Elders. These meetings were in later times called acvvayoyal, a name which was sometimes extended to the houses in which they were held. This view of the matter relieves the question as to the antiquity of synagogues from much of its difficulty. The common opinion is, that they arose during the captivity, when the people had no access to the temple. But the temple-service and that of the synagogue were totally distinct. The one could not be a succedaneum for the other. If the want of a local spiritual worship was felt during the exile, it must have been felt centuries before. It seems incredible that, during a course of ages, those who could not attend the temple were without any stated worship. The argument urged in favour of this doctrine is, that synagogues are not mentioned before the captivity. But this proceeds upon the supposition, that the ancient synagogue was a distinct organization within the body politic, an imperium in imperio. The difficulty vanishes as soon as we assume, that it was nothing but the stated meeting of the people, under their national organization, for a particular purpose, the worship of God. It was a civil organization used for a religious purpose; or rather, it was one organization, used both for a religious and a civil purpose; as in England the parishes are both ecclesiastical and political divisions of the kingdom. The same state of things would exist among us, 12 ESSAY I. if the townships met statedly for public worship, under the same moderators and committees who are charged with the conduct of their secular affairs. These officers would answer to. the Jewish Elders. Under such a system, church and state would not only be united but identified, as they were in the Hebrew commonwealth. The Jewish church was the Jewish nation, and the same persons were church-officers and magistrates. The instruction of the people, and perhaps the conduct of religious worship, were probably intrusted to the Levites, who, when not on actual duty at Jerusalem, lived dispersed among the people. From this tribe probably proceeded most of the Scribes, Lawyers, or Doctors of the Law, which seem to have been titles, not of an office, but of a profession, the business of which was to expound the Scriptures, and perhaps to take the lead in public worship. But the legal authority, in these as well as other things, resided in the Elders of the several communities, who, in relation to their spiritual functions were called Elders or Rulers of the Synagogue. This state of things still continued when Christ came. The people were still governed by their Elders, both in civil and religious matters. Collectively, the Elders are called Elders of the People (Matthew 21: 23. 26: 3), and Elders of the Jews (Luke 7: 3), and are continually joined with the Chief Priests (or Elders of the Priests), in all the public acts with reference to the arrest, trial, condemnation, and crucifixion of our Lord (Matt. 16: 21. 26: 47, 59. 27: 1, 3, 12. 28: 12, etc). Peter and John were arraigned before the Elders of Israel (Acts 4: 8, 23); Stephen was condemned by them (Acts 6: 12); Paul was persecuted by them ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 13 (Acts 23: 14), and by them accused before the Roman governor (Acts 24:1. 25: 15). There seems to be no doubt, then, that the government by Elders, which we have seen to be coeval with the commonwealth, and to have survived all political changes, continued until the destruction of the temple and dispersion of the people. Our Lord began his ministry by exhorting men to repent because the kingdom of heaven was at hand. In this he was preceded by John the Baptist, and followed by the twelve disciples whom he sent out for the purpose, " whom also he named Apostles" (Luke 6: 13). That which they all preached or proclaimed was the gospel of the kingdom (Matt. 4:23. 9: 35. 24:14. Mark 1:14), i. e. the good news that a kingdom was about to be established. That this new kingdom was not to be merely inward and spiritual, is clear from what is said as to the personal distinctions and diversities of ranks which were to have place in it (Matt. 5: 19. 11: 11. 18: 4). If the kingdom of heaven merely meant an inward state, in what sense could one be greater than another as a subject of that kingdom? Such expressions necessarily imply that it denotes an outward state of things, and that not merely a condition of society, but a society itself. It was called a kingdom, not merely because the hearts and lives of men were to be governed by new principles, but because they were to be brought, even externally, under a new regime, an organized government. True, the spiritual nature of this government is also asserted. Christ himself declared, that his kingdom was not of this world (John 18: 36), and Paul tells the Romans that "the kingdom of God is not meat and drink, but 14 ESSAY- 1. righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost" (Rom. 14: 17). Our Lord himself, on being asked when the kingdom of God should come, answered, "the kingdom of God cometh not eCra 77rapa'rrlpr7aeo%," in a striking and sensible manner; "for," he adds, "the kingdom of God is within you" (Luke 17: 21). All these expressions were intended to guard against the opposite extreme of considering the kingdom of God as something merely external, and to direct attention to those spiritual changes which were necessarily involved in the true doctrine of the kingdom. The very design of its establishment was spiritual. It was to exercise authority in the hearts of men. Hence, unless it did affect their hearts, it mattered not what outward signs of its approach were visible. Unless it was within them, it could not possibly exist without them, or rather they could have no part in its advantages. It did not follow from this, however, that it existed only within them, any more than it followed, from the necessity of faith to give efficacy to sacrifices, that there was no need of the outward rite at all. The kingdom of God was an outward institution for a spiritual purpose. It was to be as really a kingdom as the kingdom of David or of Herod. Was it then to take the place of the old system, as of something wholly different in kind? Not at all. It was merely to succeed it, as the end succeeds the beginning, as maturity succeeds infancy and youth. The Jews were already under a theocracy. God was their king in a peculiar sense. He did not merely rule them, as he does all nations, with a providential sway. He filled that place in their political system which is filled in other states by human sove ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 15 reigns. Jerusalem was his capital, and the temple there his palace. This was still the case during all the outward changes in the form of government. But this system was a temporary one. It had been predicted, that the time was coming when God should reign, not only over the Jews, but in all parts of the earth, not under the forms of any national organization, but independently of the kingdoms of the world. The restrictions of the ancient theocracy were to be done away. This was the kingdom which our Lord announced, and for which he called upon the people to prepare by reformation and repentance, an organized system of government distinct from all secular establishments, in other words a church. The Jews who used the Greek language were perfectly familiar with the word KcXklo-'la from its frequent occurrence in the Septuagint as an equivalent to'n,, one of the Hebrew terms denoting the whole congregation of Israel. It was not merely a collective name for many dispersed individuals having a common character or faith or practice, but a defined body, a distinct society, called out from the world at large, called together for a special purpose, and possessing within itself an organization for the attainment of that purpose. Such was the church of the Old Testament. The Jewish nation was set apart for a peculiar purpose, and received a peculiar organization with reference to that purpose. The identity of this church with the church of the New Testament may be argued from the identity of their design, which was, in either case, to preserve and perpetuate divine truth, to maintain public worship, and promote spiritual edification by means of discipline, 16 ESSAY I. mutual communion, and a common participation in the same advantages. These ends were attained in different ways under the two systems. What was prospective in the one was retrospective in the other. Christ was the end of the law and the beginning of the gospel. Both pointed to him, though in different directions; but as to their main design and fundamental principles, they were the same. Our Lord came not to destroy but to fulfil. He came not so much to institute a new church, as to give a new organization to the old, or rather to prepare the way for such a re-organization; which did not take place, and was not meant to take place, during his personal ministry. This is evident, 1. From the absence of any intimation, expressed or implied, of such organization. There is no account given in the gospels of the formation of societies, or the creation of any officers, except the twelve and the seventy, who were sent out with precisely the same powers. The only difference is this, that we hear no more of the seventy, from which we may infer, that they were appointed for a temporary purpose, perhaps to spread the first annunciation of the kingdom more extensively than the twelve could do it, although the latter body was sufficiently numerous for all its ulterior functions. 2. The appointment of these ministers does not imply an actual organization of the Christian church, because they were originally appointed, and during their Lord's presence upon earth employed, as the announcers of a state of things which was still in prospect. We have seen that our Lord and his forerunner called men to repent, because the kingdom of heaven ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 17 was at hand. To provide assistants and successors in this great work of announcing the new state of things, he began to select persons who should attend him for that purpose. Of the persons thus gradually gathered, six are particularly mentioned in the course of the narrative, namely, Andrew, Peter, James, John, Philip, and Matthew. When the number amounted to twelve, they were formed into a body and invested with official powers. The remaining six were Bartholomew, Thomas, James the sonof Alpheus, Lebbeus or Thaddeus, Simon the Canaanite, and Judas Iscariot. These twelve are expressly said to have been appointed "that they might be with him, and that he might send them forth" (Mark 3: 14). Their duties then were twofold, to be with Christ that they might learn, and to go from him that they might teach. In the one case they were,pab-ral, in the other awro-TroXot. They first remained with him as disciples, and then went forth as apostles. Hence they are sometimes called "the twelve disciples" (Matt. 10: 1. 11: 1. 20: 17. Luke 9: 1), and even the indefinite expression "the disciples" sometimes means the twelve exclusively (Matt. 12: 1. 13: 10, 36. Mark 11: 14). One of these states was preparatory to the other. They were disciples in order that they might become apostles. They remained with Christ to learn how they must act when they should go forth from him. When they did go forth, it was to announce the approach of the new dispensation, the re-organization of the church, or, as they expressed it, the coming of the kingdom of God. This was their office, to which their other powers were subsidiary. Their preaching was not so much doctrinal instruction as the announcement of approach 18 ESSAY I. ing changes. Their work was to excite attention and direct it to the proper object. To aid them in so doing, and to attest the authority b.y which they acted, they were empowered to work miracles of healing. They were also inspired, at least for purposes of self-defence when publicly accused. They were thus commissioned as co-workers with their Lord in the work of introducing the new dispensation and preparing for the reorganization of the church. But these very facts imply that it was not yet re-organized. 3. The same thing is evident from the omission of the name by which the body, after its re-organization, is invariably called. This word (KcX/cXqat^a), which according to Greek usage signifies an aggregate assembly of the people for municipal purposes, is the term applied, as we have seen, in the Septuagint version, to the whole Jewish church or congregation. In the New Testament it is applied (with some apparent reference to the peculiar use of KcaXeo and KXcaTs in the sense of calling so as to elect and qualify) to the original body of believers at Jerusalem, and then to the whole body of believers in the world, considered as forming an organized society, and also by a natural synecdoche to bodies of Christians in-particular places, as component parts or subdivisions of the whole church. In all these senses the word is familiarly employed in the Acts and Epistles, whereas in the Gospels it occurs but twice, and then, as it should seem, in a prospective application. The first is in the memorable address to Peter: " Thou art Peter, and on this rock will I build my church" (Matt. 16: 18). Without adverting here to the vexed question whether Peter was the rock, and if so, in what sense the church was to be built ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 19 upon him, it is plain, from the very form of the expression (olKoSoyo-w), that the founding of the church is spoken of as an event still future. The other case is in our Lord's directions as to the proper mode of dealing witk private offenders. " If thy brother trespass against thee, tell it to the church" (Matt. 18: 17). If this means a Christian body then in existence, why is it nowhere else recognized or called by the same name in the gospel history? If not, it must either mean the Jewish church then in existence, or the Christian church yet to be organized. From this it would seem to be at least highly probable, that there was no re-organization of the church during the period of the gospel history. 4. The same thing is evident from the many instances in which our Lord tells his disciples what shall be in the kingdom of heaven, as a state of things still future. 5. It is also evident from the manifest ignorance of the apostles as to the details of the re-organization, their gross mistakes, and their frequent inquiries, often betraying an entire misconception of the nature of Christ's kingdom. 6. Closely connected with the proof just stated is the consideration, that the twelve, though qualified to be the announcers of the kingdom, were as yet unqualified to be its rulers. Their notions, as to their Lord's character and person, were confused and erroneous. Their views were narrow; they were full of Jewish prejudices; they were slow of heart to understand and believe the Scriptures; they were selfish and ambitious; they were envious and jealous. This is the picture drawn by inspiration, and among the pens 20 ESSAY 1, employed were two of their own number. The whole account is that of persons in a state of pupilage, set apart for a work, with which they were only partially acquainted, and for which they were yet to be prepared. Witness their consternation and amazement when their Lord was taken from them, and the various instances in which it is recorded that the simplest truths were understood by them after his resurrection from the dead. Nor is this unfavourable view contradicted by the fact of their inspiration, which appears to have been limited to a special purpose, as we know that their power of working miracles was not a discretionary power. (See Matt. 17: 16.) When our Lord rose from the dead, his first address to the eleven was in the language of rebuke (Mark 16: 14). He then reassured them and enlarged their powers. He gave them indeed no new powers, but commissioned them to exercise those which they possessed already on a larger scale. At first they were commanded to go neither to the Greeks nor the Samaritans, but only to the Jews. Now they are commissioned to go into all the earth and preach the gospel to every creature (Mark 16: 15). At first they were sent out to announce the coming of God's kingdom to the Jews, now to the Gentiles also. The removal of this restriction marks the beginning of the new dispensation. As long as the gospel of the kingdom was sent only to the Jews, the old economy was still in force, and there was no room for a new organization. 7. The commission to baptize (Matt. 28: 19) was not a new one. This they had done before (John 3: 26. 4: 1, 2), as an expression of readiness, on the part of the baptized, to take part in the kingdom of God, ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 21 when it should be set up. But that this rite was not considered as ifiplying that the kingdom was set up already, is clear from the anxious question, asked by the eleven, at the very moment of their Lord's ascension, "Lord, wilt thou, at this time, restore again the kingdom to Israel?" (Acts 1: 6). It is clear from this inquiry, that they had not even formed a just conception of the nature of the kingdom, in which they were to be rulers; how much more that they had not already witnessed its erection. 8. In reply to the question just referred to,.Christ does not tell them that the kingdom was restored already, but tacitly admits that it was yet to come. "It is not for you to know the times or the seasons which the Father has put in his own power; but ye shall receive power when the Holy Ghost is come upon you; and ye shall be witnesses unto me, both in Jerusalem and in all Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost parts of the earth" (Acts 1: 7, 8). Here we have at once the removal of those restrictions which, as we have seen, were inseparable from the old economy, and the promise of that influence by which the twelve were to be qualified to organize the new one. This seems to fix prospectively the date of the actual coming of the kingdom of God, and the organization of the Christian church. Until the day of Pentecost, the apostles and brethren were merely waiting for the kingdom;' and it ought to be observed, as a significant coincidence, that the day appointed for the public entrance of the Holy Ghost into the Christian Church, was the same that had been signalized by the formal constitution of the Jewish Church in the promulgation of the law from Sinai. 22 ESSAY I. 9. The last proof to be alleged, in favour of the proposition that the church was not re-organized until the day of Pentecost, is furnished by the subsequent change in the character and conduct of the twelve apostles. We are too much accustomed to transfer to an earlier period associations which belong to a later one. If we read the Gospels by themselves, without interpolating facts drawn from the later books, we shall easily see that the twelve are there described as wholly unfit to be the supreme rulers of a church already organized; whereas after the descent of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost, they appear as new men, clothed with every intellectual, spiritual, and miraculous endowment that was needed for the right administration of that kingdom which.was now indeed set up externally, as well as in the hearts of all believers. It is now for the first time that we begin to read of a "church,"'distinct from the old organization, and consisting of the apostles "and other disciples," to the number of one hundred and twenty, who had assembled together in an upper room until the day of Pentecost, when " there were added unto them about three thousand souls," who "continued steadfastly in the apostles' doctrine and fellowship, and in breaking of bread, and in prayers" (Acts 2: 42). Here we have a society statedly assembling for prayer, praise, preaching, and communion, i. e. a church, and we accordingly find it stated in the same connection that " the Lord added to THE CHURCH daily such as should be saved" (Acts 2: 47), and afterwards that "great fear came upon all THE CHURCH" (Acts 5: 11), evidently meaning all the members of the body which had thus been gathered, and which is thenceforth usually called "the ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 23 church" (e. g. Acts 8: 1, 3), until the establishment of other churches "throughout all Judea, Galilee, and Samaria" (Acts 9: 31), after which the original society is distinguished as "the church which was in Jerusalem" (Acts 8: 1. 11: 22), the more indefinite expression being thenceforth used to designate the whole Christian body, of which "the churches" were component parts or rather subdivisions (Acts 12: 1, 5), except in cases where the context evidently limits the application of the term to a local society or congregation. But with these distinctions the word church is, in the latter books, employed with a frequency which forms a striking contrast with the total silence of the four evangelists respecting any new organization. We have seen that Christ came to establish a kingdom and re-organize the church. We may now add that this organization was to be essentially the same with that which had before existed. This is deducible from several obvious considerations. 1. As the Christian church was. to be essentially identical with the Jewish, all that was permanent, even in the organization of the one, would of course be retained in the other. The kingly, priestly, and prophetical offices were thenceforth -to be filled by Christ alone. The union of Church and State was to be done away by the extension of the church beyond the limits of a single. nation. But the government of the people by elders, local and general, was wholly independent of these temporary institutions, and survived them all. It was therefore natural to expect, that it would be continued in the Christian church. 2. It was intrinsically suited to every variety of outward circumstances, in all ages, and all parts of the world. Being origi 24 ESSAY I. nally founded upon natural relations, and the family constitution, which is universal, it was well suited, by its simplicity, for general adoption, and by its efficiency, for the'attainment of the ends proposed. 3. The intention to retain it was implied in our Lord's conduct with respect to the Jewish organization. He frequented the synagogues, or meetings of the people for public worship, in the towns or neighbourhoods where he chanced to be, and especially in the region where he was brought up. He complied with the usages of public worship, and exercised the privilege of expounding the Scriptures to the people. This respectful compliance with existing institutions he continued to the last; and his example was followed by his disciples. When they went abroad to preach, they availed themselves of the facilities afforded by existing institutions and.arrangements. They always, if they could, preached in the synagogues. The first preaching, even to the heathen, was in synagogues. It was only where they found no synagogues, or when they were shut out from them, that they began to form separate societies. 4. When a separate organization did take place, it was on the ancient model. The first Christian church, as we have seen, was at Jerusalem. Now the organization of this "church that was in Jerusalem" is entitled to particular attention upon two accounts; first, because it was the mother church, from which the other churches were derived by propagation; then, because all the twelve apostles were, for a time, members of it. So far then as apostolical practice and example can be binding upon us, the history of this church must be highly instructive, in relation to the ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 25 local constitution of the early Christian churches. Now at an early period, when a communication was made to the church at Jerusalem from one abroad, it was made to THE ELDERS (Acts 11: 30), and on a subsequent occasion to "the Apostles and Elders" (Acts 15:2, 4, 6, 22), who united in passing a decree on an important question of faith and practice (Acts 16:4). It seems, then, that even while the Apostles were in intimate connection with the church at Jerusalem, that church was governed by its Elders; and, what is particularly worthy of attention, we nowhere read of the original creation of this office in that church. We can trace the offices of Deacon and Apostle to their very origin, whereas that of Elder runs back far beyond the organization of the Christian church, and appears in the history as an arrangement, not springing out of a new state of things, but transferred from an old one. Nor was this adoption of the eldership a mere fortuitous occurrence, much less a local peculiarity of the church in Jerusalem. It was extended, as a thing of course, to all affiliated churches. When Paul and Barnabas planted churches in Asia Minor, they ordained them Elders (Acts 14: 23). Paul sent from Miletus for "the Elders of the Church" at Ephesus (Acts 20: 17). He directs Timothy how to treat Elders (1 Tim. 5: 1, 17, 19). He commands Titus to ordain Elders in every city of Crete (Titus 1: 5). James speaks of " the Elders of the Church" as of a body of men, which was not only well known to his readers, but which would exist of course in every Christian congregation (James 5:14). Peter enjoins submission to the Elders, and classes himself among them (1 Peter 2 26 ESSAY I. 5: 1, 5). John calls himself an Elder in the title of his second and third epistle. All this seems to show that the office of Elder was regarded as essential to the organization of a local or particular church. As to the mode of introducing it, we have no explicit information. The most probable hypothesis is one which I shall here state in the words of an eminent living dignitary of the Anglican Church. "It appears highly probable —I might say morally certain-that wherever a Jewish Synagogue existed that was brought, the whole or the chief part of it, to embrace the gospel, the Apostles did not there so much form a Christian church (or congregation, ecclesia), as make an existing congregation Christian, by introducing the Christian Sacraments and Worship, and establishing whatever regulations were necessary for the newly-adopted Faith; leaving the machinery (if I may so speak) of government unchanged; the rulers of synagogues, elders, and other officers (whether spiritual or ecclesiastical, or both) being already provided in the existing institutions. And it is likely that several of the earliest Christian churches did originate in this way, that is, that they were converted synagogues, which became Christian churches, as soon as the members, or the main part of the members, acknowledged Jesus as the Messiah. The attempt to effect this conversion of a Jewish synagogue into a Christian church, seems always to have been made, in the first instance, in every place where there was an opening for it. Even after the call of the idolatrous Gentiles, it appears plainly to have been the practice of the Apostles Paul and Barnabas, when they came to any city in which there was a synagogue, to go ORIGIN OF THE ELDERSHIP. 27 thither first and deliver their sacred message to the Jews and'devout(or proselyte) Gentiles;' according to their own'expression (Acts 13: 16), to the'men of Israel and those that feared God,' adding that it was necessary that the word of God should be' first preached to them.' And when they found a church in any of those cities in which (and such was probably a very large majority) there was no Jewish synagogue that received the gospel, it is likely they would still conform, in a great measure, to the same model."* In so doing, they would of course fix upon the natural elders, i. e. heads of families, as answering most nearly to the hereditary elders of the Jews. That the genealogical or patriarchal constitution was at once or by degrees disused, is not at all at variance with the supposition, that the Jewish eldership was transferred to the Christian Church, because one of the advantages of this organization is the ease with which it can adapt itself to any state of manners or condition of society, all that is really essential to it being the official preference of those who have a natural priority derived from age and family relations. Under the present constitution of society, as under that which was predominant in apostolic times throughout the Roman empire, the same ends, which were answered in the old theocracy by granting power to the chiefs of tribes and houses, are accomplished by intrusting it to those who sustain an analogous relation to society, that is, to men of mature age, and especially to actual heads of families. In either case the great end is accomplished of bringing the church under the same influence that * The Kingdom of Christ Delineated. By Richard Whately, D.D., Archbishop of Dublin. pp. 84-86 (American edition). 28 ESSAY I. rules the families of which it is composed. Whether all the heads of families were clothe; with this authority, or only some selected for the purpose, is a question of detail, not at all affecting principle, and one which might perhaps admit of a solution varying with local and other unessential circumstances. One thing, however, appears certain, as an inference from all the facts which we have been considering, viz., that while some features of the Jewish polity were laid aside as temporary, the government by Elders was retained as a permanent principle of organization in the Christian Church. And here we meet with the only explanation of the fact already mentioned, that the creation of the office of Elder is nowhere recorded in the New Testament, as in the case of Deacons and Apostles, because the latter were created to meet new and special exigencies, while the former was transmitted from the earliest times. In other words, THE OFFICE OF ELDER WAS THE ONLY PERMANENT ESSENTIAL OFFICE OF THE CHURCH UNDER EITHER DISPENSATION. ESSAY II. ON THE POWERS OF THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. THE conclusion reached in the preceding essay may be rendered still more certain by exhibiting direct proof of the fact, that presbyters, as presbyters, possessed and exercised the highest powers now belonging to the ministry, even in apostolic times, from which we may infer a fortiori, that the same authority is vested in them now. It will be recollected, that the presbyterial office is coeval with the church, and that Paul and Barnabas, during their missionary tour in Asia Minor, not only planted churches, but "ordained them elders in every city." If then we can discover with what powers these early presbyters were clothed, we shall establish a sure basis for our subsequent inquiries. And in this investigation we are greatly aided by the preservation, in the Acts of the Apostles, of a valedictory address by Paul to certain persons of this class, when he was leaving (Greece and Asia Minor for Jerusalem; in which address, we find not only stiong expressions of his pri 30 ESSAY II. vate feelings, and allusions to his ministerial labours, but advice to those whom he addressed, as to the right discharge of their official duties. It affords us, therefore, evidence, as to the functions of the primitive elders, which is none the less interesting or instructive, because furnished incidentally. The statement here referred to is recorded in the twentieth chapter of Acts, where we read that " Paul had determined to sail by Ephesus, because he would not spend the time in Asia," "and from Miletus he sent to Ephesus, and called the elders of the church." When they were come, he appealed to them as witnesses of his fidelity to the churches of that region, in declaring unto them all the counsel of God. He then announces to them that his personal connection with them was dissolved for ever, and exhorts them to the diligent performance of the duties which would thenceforth be peculiarly incumbent on them. And in so doing, it is worthy of remark, that he makes no allusion to the intended substitution of another in his place, as their official guide and counsellor, but speaks to them precisely as he might, or rather must, have spoken, on the supposition, that from that time forth they were themselves to exercise the highest powers in the church of Ephesus. If he had still expected them to act as mere inferiors and assistants, he would naturally, not to say necessarily, have comforted their grief at his departure, by the promise of a competent successor, and in warning them of dangers by which their church was menaced, would of course have exhorted them to faithful and diligent co-operation with their bishop. But the passage contains nothing of all this; a circumstance which, though it may prove little by itself, as to the THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 31 organization of the church at Ephesus, at least justifies the inference, that the powers here ascribed to the Ephesian presbyters were powers to be exercised in virtue of their presbyterial character, and not by delegation from a higher class of permanent church-officers. For if the apostle could direct them to perform these acts, not only without making his own presence and concurrence a prerequisite, but in such terms as really exclude it, how much less reason have we to believe, that their validity was meant to be dependent on the sanction of a bishop, who is not so much as mentioned, and of whose existence we have no proof elsewhere? Nor is this a mere negative deduction from Paul's silence, as to any superior authority at Ephesus; for the same thing is implied in the choice of his expressions. "Take heed, therefore, unto yourselves,'therefore, since you are now to be deprived of the extraordinary temporary supervision which you have enjoyed, and to be left with the whole burden of the church upon you; under this change of circumstances you must be watchful on your own account, not only for your personal safety and advantage, but for that of the church also-" take heed, therefore, unto yourselves, and to all the flock," not the flock of another shepherd, but their own, for which they were directly responsible-" over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers," e7rtl'cK7rovS or bishops. The bearing of this usage of the term upon the general question of episcopal organization need not be discussed in this place. All that it is necessary here to notice is, that these Ephesian presbyters were shepherds of God's flock, not described as under-shepherds, that is, as the deputies of any human shepherd, but as constituted 32 ESSAY II. such by God himself, and that not merely by his providential dispensations, but by a special designation of the Holy Ghost. This explicit mention of the jus divinum under which they acted, when viewed in connection with the absence of all reference to any higher local power, either actual or prospective, makes it not only improbable, but scarcely possible, that what they are empowered or required to do, was to be done by delegation, or in any other way than by direct authority from God himself, bestowed upon them as the highest permanent and local rulers of the church of Ephesus. With these views of the character in which the elders are addressed, and of the right by which their functions were to be discharged, let us now endeavour to determine, in the same way, what these functions were. The answer to this question is afforded by the words immediately succeeding those already quoted. "Take heed, therefore, unto yourseIves, and to all the flock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, TO FEED THE CHURCH OF GOD, which he hath purchased with his own blood." As the church has been already represented as a flock, the official duty of these elders towards it is described by a cognate metaphor. The exact correspondence of the terms is less apparent in our version than in the original, where the word rendered flock, and that rendered to feed, are collateral derivatives from a common root, and stand in the same relation to the word which means a shepherd. To the verb, both etymology and usage give the sense, not of feeding merely, but of acting as a shepherd, doing a shepherd's ditty, of which feeding is a most essential part, but not by any means the THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 33 whole, since it would either be impossible or unavailing, without further care in guiding to the fold and to the pasture, in collecting and reclaiming, in protecting from the weather and from beasts of prey, and in other slight but indispensable attentions, all included in the literal vocation of a shepherd, and in both the literal and the figurative import of the Greek verb which Paul uses. Unless then the English verb tofeed be taken with such latitude of meaning as to comprehend all this, it no more expresses the whole duty of a shepherd (as the Greek word does), than the verb to shoot describes the business of a soldier or a hunter, or to plough that of a farmer. It is highly important that our exposition of this passage should be wholly unaffected by a prejudice, connected only with the English version, and.arising from its failure to express the full sense of Paul's phraseology. Even when figuratively used, the verb n7rotuavco is employed by the Greek writers to denote not merely nourishment but care, in the most extensive sense of the expression, such care as faithful shepherds give to helpless and dependent flocks. If then the church at Ephesus was a spiritual flock, and these its elders were spiritual shepherds, the duty here enjoined upon them is not merely that of feeding them with knowledge, by public and private teaching, but also that of governing, controlling, and protecting them, as well from the effects of internal corruption, as from those of violence and fraud ab extra. It is, in short, a metaphorical description of the ministerial office, in its whole extent, as comprehending all that is essential to the continued existence of the church, and the attainment of the ends for which it was established, just as the business of a shepherd 2* 34 ESSAY II. comprehends all that is necessary to the safety and well-being of the flock. There is no more reason in the text itself, for excluding'any of the ministerial functions from the figurative import of the verb 7rotiatew, than there is for excluding some things in the nature and condition of the church from the figurative import of the substantive 7ro'lvtov; if the latter is a general description of the church, the former is a general description of the ministry, its duties and its powers. And this, which is the natural and obvious meaning of the figurative terms which the apostle uses, agrees, in all points, with his subsequent expressions.' For I know this, that after my departing shall grievous wolves"-a common figure for false teachers — " enter in among you, not sparing the flock. Also of your own selves shall men arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples after them." These are the two great evils, with which the church was threatened, error of doctrine, and schism as the consequence; for this is the relative position of the two things, as described in Scripture, not the converse, as maintained by those who make purity of doctrine to depend upon external regularity, as we shall see hereafter. To prevent these evils, whether threatened from within or from without, and to prevent them,. not by private effort merely, but by authoritative action,. is distinctly made the duty of the presbyters of Ephesus. That the apostle refers not to personal but official influence, appears from the solemn mention of their designation by the Holy Ghost, with which he prefaces his exhortation. There would be something quite incongruous in making the divine right of these presbyters the ground of an injunction which was equally THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 35 binding upon all true Christians. This would be tantamount to saying, since the Holy Ghost has placed you in high official station, be assiduous in personal' and private duties. If, on the other hand, the reference is clearly to the influence exerted by these presbyters, as such, and in the exercise of their distinctive functions, then the question meets us, How could they comply with this injunction, unless they were intrusted with the keys both of discipline and doctrine, with the power, not of teaching merely, but of maintaining purity of doctrine, by deciding controversies, trying heretics, silencing false teachers, and excluding from the ministry all such as were esteemed by them unfaithful or unfit? But these are acts supposing the possession of the highest powers now belonging to the ministry, not merely those of preaching and of ordinary pastoral control, but also those of ministerial discipline and ordination. It may be objected, that the duty, to which the elders, in the next verse, are specifically called, is not that of judging or of acting with authority, but merely that of watching and remembering his former -admonitions, and that this implies the existence of a higher power, which alone was competent to check the evil. But if this be so, how is it that he does not even mention or allude to such superior power? It cannot be imagined, that he merely meant to terrify the elders by predicting future evils to the church, without suggesting a preventive or a remedy; and yet this is undoubtedly the case, if those whom he addresses could do nothing more than watch and bear in mind his warnings. If it be said, that the elders must have been aware of the existence of these "higher powers," 36 ESSAY II. and needed not to be informed of it by Paul, it then becomes impossible to understand why he addressed his exhortations to the presbyters, and not to their superiors, who alone had power to prevent or remedy the threatened evil. Nor can this difficulty be removed by taking it for granted, first, that there was a bishopric of Ephesus, above the eldership, and then that it was vacant, so that Paul was under the necessity, at this time, of addressing the "inferior clergy." For in that case he could hardly have omitted all allusion to the fact assumed, and all injunction to obey the bishop, when he should be sent, and co-operate with him for the prevention of the evils to be feared; whereas, he seems, as we have seen, to throw the whole responsibility upon the elders, and addresses them precisely as he must have done, if he expected and intended theentire care of the Ephesian church to be devolved on them. To take the contrary for granted, in despite of the obvious tenor of Paul's language, is, in effect, to destroy the value of all proof derived from language, except in the case of an explicit, categorical assertion, which is granted, upon all sides, to be wanting here. A simple test of probability, in this case, is afforded by the fact, that no one, reading the apostle's exhortation, either could or would derive from it the notion of an ecclesiastical authority at Ephesus, above that of the presbyters, to whom the exhortation is addressed; and on the other hand, that no one so reading it, could fail to gather from it, in itself considered, that these elders were invested with official right and power to prevent or to redress the evils here predicted. The truth is, that the other supposition rests upon the foregone conclusion, that a prelatical authority, THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 37 distinct from the presbyterate, did certainly exist at Ephesus, and that the subjection of the elders to it is implied or presupposed in the apostle's exhortation. But, those who deny that any proof of such authority exists in any quarter, and interpret Paul's language by itself and by the context, without reference to any preconceived hypothesis whatever, will be forced to the conclusion, that he here addresses the Ephesian elders as the rulers of the church, and that when he exhorts them to be watchful and remember, he refers not to private but official vigilance, and to such a recollection of his warnings as would lead to the due exercise of their authority in quenching the insidious fires of heresy and schism, which they could not do without possessing all the power which a bishop, or derivative apostle, on the opposite hypothesis, could possibly have exercised. The objection to the argument from this address of Paul, that it does not ascribe to the Ephesian elders the specific powers of discipline and ordination, proves too much; for it would prove that they.were not even authorized to preach or to administer the sacraments, since these are not specifically mentioned, though included in the figurative meaning of rrot,/alvetv, which, however, includes more, and is descriptive of the ministerial work in general, as we have seen already. The apostle speaks of them, either as having all the ministerial powers, or as having none; because the terms which he employs are those of general description, not minute specification, and must either be descriptive of the office as a whole, or not at all. But even granting, for the sake of argument, that 7rotLatlveL merely means to feed, and that feeding is a 38 ESSAY 1P, metaphor for preaching and the sacraments, it does not follow, that the powers of discipline and ordination, although not specifically mentioned, are excluded. It is clear, not only that the whole includes its parts, but also that the greater may include the less. As the general ascription of the ministerial powers to these elders would imply that they possessed each separately, so too the ascription of a higher ministerial power might imply that they possessed a lower. Now discipline and ordination, it will be admitted, derive their value from the ends which they promote, and which they were intended to secure. The end of discipline is to preserve purity, and to exclude the unworthy from the privileges of the church. The end of ordination is to secure a valid ministration of the word and sacraments. But the word and the sacraments themselves have an independent and intrinsic value. If the power of dispensing them had been conferred on any who thought proper to make use of it, without any. special ordination to an office, whatever inconveniences might have attended that arrangement, it could not have impaired the intrinsic value of the word and sacraments. But if, on the other hand, there were no word or sacraments, ordination would be useless. And the same may be said, mutatis mutandis, as to government or discipline. These then, to wit, ordination and discipline, are subsidiary functions, which derive their value from the relation they sustain to others. The possession of these powers, therefore, might have been inferred from the possession of the higher powers upon which they are dependent, even if the latter had alone been mentioned. But the fact, as we have seen already, is, that all the powers of the ministry collec TIfE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 8-9 tively are comprehended in the metaphor of acting as a shepherd to the flock of Christ. If it should be alleged in this case, as it has been in some others, that the powers, apparently ascribed to presbyters, were really intended to be exercised by bishops, here included under the generic name of elders, it may be replied, that such a mode of reasoning precludes the possibility of proving any thing, except so far as the opposing party may think proper to allow it. If the ascription of a certain power to a certain class of officers, distinctly named, is not a proof of their possessing it, the fact is not susceptible of proof at all. And this extraordinary process, let it be observed, is equally available on either side of a disputed question. If one man may explain away the acts ascribed to presbyters as the exclusive acts of bishops, then another may explain away the acts ascribed to deacons as the exclusive acts of presbyters. It should also be observed, that if one of the official acts ascribed to presbyters may be explained away as the exclusive act of a superior order, any other of the acts so ascribed may be explained in the same manner. If, when presbyters are spoken of as exercising all the ministerial powers, one may argue that bishops are the only elders who are thus empowered to ordain, another may, with equal right, allege that bishops are the only elders authorized to preach or to baptize, and that the primitive presbyters did neither, by themselves or in their own right, but merely united, as assessors, in the preaching and baptizing acts of their superiors in office. To an argument which naturally leads to such results, it is sufficient to oppose a simple negative, by saying that as bishops or apostles are not mentioned in the 40 ESSAY II. text, the official acts ascribed to presbyters were meant to be considered as performed by them alone in that capacity. When therefore Paul describes the presbyters of Ephesus as having been divinely called to act as shepherds of God's flock, we must regard it as a proof that all the powers of the ministry, including those of discipline and ordination, were possessed and exercised by elders, even in the days of the apostles. A large part of what has now been said applies, with equal force, to 1 Tim. 5: 17, where the same apostle speaks, on a different occasion, not only of the same office, but of the same men, not only of elders in general, but of Ephesian elders in particular. Assuming that 7rpEto-rvTepol is here a name of office, it cannot be descriptive of the office of apostle or apostle-bishop, partly for the reason above given in another case, that the assumption is entirely gratuitous, partly because Timothy, according to the adverse theory, would then be represented as a hyper-apostolical church-officer, not only equal but superior to Paul, who was merely an apostle. If, on the other hand, the word denotes presbyters or elders, in the proper sense, then the apostle must be speaking of the powers which belonged to them in that capacity, and not as the mere agents of a higher power. That no superiority of Timothy to these Ephesian elders is implied in the apostle's words, will be proved in another place, and may be here assumed. Since then it is of elders that he speaks, and of elders acting in their own right, we have only to inquire what official functions are ascribed to them, in order to determine what were the powers of a presbyter or elder in apostolic times. "Let the EL THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 41 DERS THAT RULE well be counted worthy of double honour." They are here distinctly recognized as rulers in the church, and this must surely comprehend the right of discipline, if not of ordination. It may be said, however, that 7rpoeoa-TreF merely means presiding, holding the first place in the society, and therefore denotes relative position, but not office or official power. It will scarcely be disputed, however, that 7rpeo-'vTrepot denotes official rank; and whether 7poeo-Tr6,Te does not signify the exercise of an official power, is a question which can only be determined by a reference to usage. In Rom. 12: 8, o rrpoio-T'aLevo cannot denote mere priority of rank or conspicuous position, for two reasons: first, because a man could not be exhorted to hold such a position with diligence; and secondly, because all the other terms connected with it signify specific actions. The same thing is evident from the collocation of 7rpoio'TaLevovs< in 1 Thess. 5: 12, between KcortcOvTaas and vov'erovvTa'ra both denoting specific functions of the ministry. In 1 Tim. 3: 4, the bishop is described as one that ruleth well (KaXC0) 7rpoior-Ta/evov) his own house, which can hardly mean one who holds the first place in it, without any original jurisdiction over it. Let the sense which T'poi'o-TrpL evidently has in all these cases, be applied to that before us, and it follows of course, that presbyters or bishops are here spoken of as ruling the church, just as really as they are elsewhere said to rule their families. That the government referred to is that of the church, appears from what follows in the same verse, as to labouring in word and doctrine. If, then, 7rpeof/3TrpoL is here a name of office, which will scarcely be denied by those, who use this text to prove Timothy's superiority to presby 42 ESSAY II. ters, then the officers described by it are clearly recognized as rulers in the church, without any reference whatever to a superior human power. Where shall we find an equally distinct ascription of the ruling power to apostles, not of the original thirteen? Here then are two passages, in which the same apostle speaks of the Ephesian elders, first metaphorically as the shepherds of Christ's flock, then literally as the rulers of the church. Whatever doubt might be supposed to rest upon the meaning of the terms employed, in either case, may be disposed of by comparing them together. That 7roL/aitveLw does not merely denotefeeding, whether literal or spiritual, but the whole extent of the pastoral care, including government, may now be argued from the Wrpoe-(rsTCe of the parallel passage. And that 7rpoe-cTWTeF, on the other hand, includes the powers of discipline and ordination, is rendered still more probable by Paul's exhorting these same elders, in the other case, to duties which imply the possession of these powers. The two texts, taken in conjunction, so as to explain each other, warrant us in stating as a general fact, that the Ephesian elders are twice spoken of by Paul as rulers of the church, without any intimation that the power of ordination is to be excepted, or that they acted in subjection to a bishop. Now the terms of this description must be applicable, either to presbyters in general, or to the presbyters of Ephesus exclusively. The latter supposition would imply, that there was no uniformity in primitive church-government, the same class of officers possessing different powers in different cases, an hypothesis destructive of all arguments against presbyterian orders, THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 43 founded on alleged deviations from the apostolic model. We have moreover a direct proof that this organization was a general one in the first epistle of Peter, where he addresses the elders, not of one church merely, but of Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia; calls himself their fellow-elder, and exhorts them to "feed the flock of God "-the same expression used by Paul to the Ephesian elders-" taking the oversight thereof, not by constraint but willingly, not for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind; neither as being lords over God's heritage,"-implying that they were under a temptation so to do, which could scarcely be the case, if they were mere assessors to a bishop " and when the chief shepherd shall appear"-this clearly implies that they were under-shepherds only to the head of the church-" ye shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away." If it can be supposed that all the churches of Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia, were accidentally deprived of bishops at this time, it would go far to prove that the privation was a matter of but little moment. If, however, this description has respect to presbyters in general, we have proof that the primitive presbyters were rulers of the church, and no proof that discipline and ordination were excepted from their powers. With the general view, which we have thus obtained from Scripture, of the presbyterial office as a whole, let us now compare the more specific language of the apostle Paul to Timothy: "Neglect not the gift that is in thee, which was given thee by prophecy, with the laying on of the hands of the presbytery" (1 Tim. 4: 14). If this does not relate to ordination, there can be no reason for supposing that 44 ESSAY II. the parallel passage in 2 Tim. 1: 6 relates to ordination; and as the transaction recorded in Acts 13: 1-3 was nothing more than a solemn designation to a special service, the result is, that we have in the New Testament no proof that any rite of ordination was considered necessary, nor any instance of its having been performed, the word sometimes rendered by the English verb "ordain" being a general expression for the act of constituting or appointing. So far, then, from the act of ordination, as distinct from that of designation or appointment, being formally reserved, as the peculiar prerogative of a superior order in the ministry, it does not seem to have been used at all, and the general terms in which the presbyters are spoken of, as rulers of the church, are to be understood as comprehending all the powers necessary to its maintenance and government. But even granting that the text relates to ordination in the proper sense, it has been alleged that the ordaining act is not ascribed to presbyters, as such, but to apostles. In support of this assertion, very different positions have been taken. In the first place it has been alleged, that the presbytery may have consisted wholly of apostles. Not to reiterate the reasons which have been already given, for resisting all gratuitous assumptions, tending to reverse the natural import of language, and to render proof impossible, we answer this objection by a counter allegation, that the presbytery may have consisted wholly of mere presbyters. The two possibilities will balance one another, and in choosing between them, the word 7rpeo-IvTepLov must have due weight. It is certainly more likely, in the absence of explicit proof, that wrpeoflvrTepov, if it means a body of men at all, THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 45 means a body of mere presbyters, than that it means a body of apostles. The apostles, being presbyters, might be included in the name; but as they had a distinctive title of their own, it is natural to suppose, that if their distinctive functions were the subject of discourse, their distinctive title would be used, and, on the other hand, that when the generic title is employed, the functions spoken of are not the peculiar functions of apostles, as apostles, but those which are common to them and presbyters. Or even if wrpeo-/3vTrepov here denotes apostles, the use of the name in this connection shows that it was in the character of presbyters that they ordained. It seems incredible that if they held two offices, a higher and a lower, those acts which they performed by virtue of the former should be connected with the title of the latter. The bishops of the Protestant Episcopal Church are in some cases rectors of particular parishes. When we read, therefore, of a manias rector of a certain church, we may be reading of a bishop; but no one acquainted with the true facts of the case would speak of a bishop by the other title, when ascribing to him acts which, according to the customs of that church, could only be performed by him as bishop. On the other hand, the official record of a baptism, as having been administered by the rector of a church, would be regarded as conclusive evidence that parochial clergymen have power to baptize; nor would it be invalidated by the allegation, that as the -rector in question was a bishop, it was in the latter character alone that he baptized; much less by the suggestion that he may have been a bishop, and that ordinary rectors therefore had no such authority. If, then, the 46 ESSAY II. apostles are here mentioned as ordainers, and as forming a 7rpea-,vveptov for the purpose, it must have been in the character of presbyters that they ordained. Supposing, then, that 7rpeaf1opvTpLov means a body of men, it matters not of whom it was composed; for, whatever else they may have been, they must have been presbyters, and as such they ordained. To escape from this dilemma, it has been alleged, that 7rpeo-t3VTEpLov denotes, not the ordainers, but the office of a presbyter. To this there are two very serious objections. In the first place, the construction is unusual and unnatural, the laying on of the hands of an office. According to all usage and analogy,.the genitive after XElpPv must denote the persons to whom the hands belonged, and by whom the imposition was performed. Can it be fortuitous that, out of more than a hundred other cases, in which some form of Xelp is followed in construction by the genitive, there is not one in which it can be supposaed to signify any thing except the person whose hlilds are mentioned? Or can it be supposed, that the relation of rov 7rpeo-lvTrplov to Xelpwv, in the case before us, is different from that of,ov to the same word, in the precisely parallel expression, 2 Tim. 1: 6? The other objection to this interpretation of the word is, that in the only other places where it occurs in the New Testament (Luke 22: 66. Acts 22: 5), it means, and can mean, nothing but a body of 7rpeot8vTepot. Before we can explain it of the office, therefore, we must adopt, first, an unnatural and unparalleled construction, and then, an unauthorized meaning of the principal word. That is to say, it cannot be so explained without doing violence both to lexicography and grammar. THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 47 But there is still another method of evading the conclusion, that presbyters are here represented as ordaining. This is by asserting, that even if 7rpeo-,vrTeptov does mean a body of elders, pe-ra does not mean by but with, denoting mere participation, not authoritative action, so that presbyters are not represented as ordaining, but merely as joining in the ordination. This view of the passage takes for granted, first, that the preposition cannot mean by, but must mean with; and then, that if it does mean with, it must connect the action of the presbyters, as mere assessors, with the authoritative act of the apostles, as ordainers. Both these assumptions are ehtirely unauthorized. The Greek pETar, like the English with, has sometimes the secondary sense of by, by means of: The origin of this secondary meaning seems to be, that the agent acts with his instrument, in the strict sense, i. e. in company with it; and thus the preposition, which strictly conveys this idea only, conveys by implication that of instrumentality. The transition from the one sense to the other may be seen in such expressions as the following: "Pursue him with the sword, and then destroy him with the sword." In the first phrase, with denotes merely that the sword is to accompany the pursuers; in the second it denotes, that the sword is the instrument, by which they are to act. This etymological analysis is confirmed by the usage of the New Testament. "Thou shalt make me full of joy with (,UCtE) thy countenance" (Acts 2: 28). This cannot mean'thou, together with thy countenance, shalt make me full of joy'-nor,'thou shalt make me, together with thy countenance, full of joy'-but'thou, by means of thy countenance (or presence), shalt make 48 ESSAY II. me full of joy.' The same thing, in substance, may be said of Acts 13: 17, "and with an high arm brought he them out of it." In Acts 14: 27 we read, that when Paul and Barnabas returned to Antioch, "they gathered the church together and rehearsed all that God had done with them (/er' azvrTv)," and again, Acts 15:4, "they declared all things that God had done with them." This does not mean "to them," as it might possibly in English, because even if ie-ra is used elsewhere in that sense, the context here shows that the historian means what God had done to the Gentiles by them or through them, as his instruments. These examples will suffice to show, that eTra may mean by, as well as with, and that it is not, therefore, to be taken for granted, that it here expresses a different kind of action. Granting, however, that it does mean with, in the strict sense, what two things does it connect? The imposition of hands with what? The adverse argument assumes, not only that it may, but that it must, connect the imposition of hands by the presbytery with the ordaining act of the apostle, which is not mentioned at all. Now if any rule of construction can be looked upon as fixed, it is, that what is expressed, other things being equal, must be preferred to what is not expressed but merely conjectured or supposed. According to this principle, te,6, if it merely means together with, must connect the imposition of the hands of the presbytery with the prophecy or revelation, mentioned just before. How was the gift conferred on Timothy? By means of a divine communication, 8ta TrpoT1TElaq. By that alone? No, but by that, together with the laying on of hands, which THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 49 is essentially equivalent to saying,'by revelation and the imposition of hands.' Whatever force the 8ai has in relation to?rpor/Tela's it has in relation to 6r776o-eWo, the LEara serving merely to connect them. We are then reduced to this alternative. If Hera is a mere connective, it connects Trpofr7retla with 67t60re-o69, and implies that the ordination was as much effected by the one as by the other, or that both were alike instruments or channels of communication, by which the gift of God was conveyed to Timothy. But if f/Lra is more than a connective, and itself denotes by means of, then the act of the presbytery is itself described as the medium or instrument of ordination. On the whole, then, it appears, that unless we give to 7rpeo6f/VT'plov a meaning which it has not elsewhere, and connect it with the words before it in a manner which is utterly at variance with the usage of the lan-, guage, or assume, without necessity or right, that it here denotes a body of apostles, or that the action of apostles, although not expressed, is understood, and that of the presbytery made dependent on it, we are under the necessity of drawing the conclusion, that presbyters, in apostolic times, ordained. And this, which is the only exposition of the text that harmonizes fully with the usage of the words and with the principles of grammar, that supposes nothing and imagines nothing, but allows the text to speak for itself, is moreover recommended by its perfect agreement with the natural and obvious meaning of the passages before considered, in which presbyters are spoken of as bearing the.whole burden of church government, and called to duties which imply the power not only of discipline but of ordination. 50 ESSAY II. But although these passages contain enough to warrant the conclusion, that the primitive presbyters possessed and exercised the highest powers now belonging to the ministry, it cannot be denied, that this conclusion would be rendered more completely satisfying, if it were possible to cite a case, in which there could be no dispute or doubt, in relation either to the acts described, or to the persons represented as performing them, on both which points there is some room for diversity of judgment in the cases just considered, though the balance of probabilities appears to be decidedly in favour of the ground already stated. But this preponderance would be rendered more decided and conspicuous by the collateral evidence even of a single case, in which all parties could agree that certain persons are described as exercising certain powers. Now there happens to be not only one case of the kind supposed, but two, which require to be distinctly stated. It is granted, upon all sides, that Timothy in Ephesus, and Titus in Crete, possessed and exercised the highest powers now belonging to the ministry. So fully is this fact admitted by most Episcopal writers, that they build upon it their most specious argument, to prove that the apostolic office is perpetual. The objections to that argument have been already stated; but the fact upon which it is founded, we agree with our opponents in asserting. We maintain, with them, that there are no ministerial functions now existing in the church, which were not exercised by Timothy and Titus, who are clearly recognized as having power, not only to preach and administer the sacraments but to dain and govern. It is, however, a matter of some THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 51 moment to observe the nature of the evidence, which forms the ground of this unanimous conclusion. The point at which we differ is the question whether the possession of these powers necessarily supposes a superiority of permanent official rank in Timothy and Titus above presbyters. The reasons for believing that it does not, have already been detailed, and what is now designed is merely to direct attention to the nature of the evidence, by which the opposite opinion is sustained, and which is certainly not destitute of plausibility. The argument may be succinctly stated thus, that since the right of ordination and of ministerial discipline is recognized by Paul, in his epistles to these two men, as belonging to them, they must of necessity have been superior to the presbyters whom they were to ordain and discipline. This conclusion is vitiated by the false assumption, upon which it rests, that ordination to an office in the church can only be derived from one who holds a higher office, and that ministers of equal rank cannot mutually discipline each other. But for this defect, the reasoning would be conclusive. They are clearly commanded to ordain and exercise authority, and this, if inconsistent with equality of rank and identity of office, would demonstrate their superiority to presbyters. It will not, however, be contended, even by the warmest advocates of this opinion, that the evidence of this superiority, contained in Paul's epistles, is the strongest that can be imagined. They will grant, not only that a formal categorical assertion of the fact disputed would be stronger proof than that which is derived by inference from Paul's instructions, but that even in default of such assertion, the contested point might pos 52 ESSAY II. sibly have been much more indisputable than it is. If, for example, it had been recorded, as a historical fact, that Timothy and Titus acted towards the presbyters of Ephesus and Crete as their official inferiors, directing their movements and controlling the discharge of their official duties by minute instructions, the proof of their superiority would no doubt be regarded by our opponents as stronger than it now is. And the evidence would surely be considered as still more decisive, if among the books of the New Testament there were epistles written by Timothy and Titus to the presbyters of Ephesus and Crete; containing no recognition of equality, beyond what is habitually used by modern bishops to their youngest clergy; directing the movements of the elders in a positive and peremptory manner, without any reference to their own inclination or opinion; the superior rank of the two writers would be looked upon as quite indisputable. But if, in addition to all this, the elders were required to exercise their highest powers as the representatives or delegates of Timothy and Titus, with directions to pursue a certain course, until the writers should be personally present, and with kind but authoritative hints as to the personal improvement of the presbyters addressed; it must be owned that the denial of superior official rank in Timothy and Titus would be hopeless. Now it happens, unfortunately for the adverse argument, that no such evidence exists, in reference to Timothy and Titus, whose superiority to presbyters must stand or fall with the assumption, that the power of ordination and of discipline implies a permanent diversity of rank. But what especially deserves attention is the interesting fact, that the very THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 53 evidence, which would be universally acknowledged as sufficient to establish the superiority of Timothy and Titus with respect to presbyters, does certainly exist in the case of Paul with respect to Timothy and Titus themselves. The facts which constitute this evidence have been already stated in detail, but in different connections. That their bearing on the question now before us may be seen, a brief recapitulation will be necessary, under several particulars. And first, let it be observed, that in the other books of the New Testament, that is to say, excepting the three epistles to Timothy and Titus, they are mentioned in a manner, which not only furnishes no proof of their equality to Paul, but naturally leads to the conclusion of their being his inferiors in rank and office. In the Acts of the Apostles, it will not be disputed, that Timothy appears as Paul's inferior, a young man chosen to attend him in his missionary travels, as a helper and a confidential messenger. It may be said, indeed, that it would not be fair to argue, from the first stage of Timothy's career, that he was always Paul's inferior; and this is true. But if we find Paul subsequently speaking of and to him, in a tone precisely suited to this original relation of the parties, it will surely make it highly probable, to say the least, that this relation still continued to subsist. And that this is really the case will be perceived upon comparing the place occupied by Timothy, as Paul's personal attendant, in the Acts of the Apostles (16: 2. 17: 15. 18: 5. 19: 22. 20: 4), with the way in which Paul speaks to the Corinthians of having sent Timotheus to them, and requests that he may be among them without fear, and that no man may despise him, and that he may be sent back to the 54 ESSAY II. Apostle in due time (' Cor. 16: 10, 11). It is plain from these words, noc only that Timothy was acting as Paul's messenger and under his direction, but also that the service was a temporary one, and that when it was accomplished, he was to return to his accustomed duties, as the apostle's personal attendant. And that this was not a solitary case of such employment, is apparent from the first epistle to the Thessalonians, where Paul speaks first of having sent' Timotheus to them (ch. 3: 2), and then of his return and of the news which he brought back (v. 6); to which may be added Phil. 2: 19, where he intimates his purpose to send Timotheus to them, not to remain there, but to bring him an account of their condition. In this last case, the execution of the purpose is left dependent upon Paul's own movements and convenience (v. 23), with an intimation that the sending of Timothy was merely meant to be a substitute for the apostle's personal attendance (v. 24). The relation between Timothy and Paul, apparent in these passages, may be compared to that between an aid-de-camp and his commander, the two main duties, in both cases, being those of personal attendance and of active service in communicating orders. That the relative position of Titus was the same, may be inferred from Paul's allusion to "the coming of Titus," as of one who had been absent upon special duty, to the report which he had made of the state of things at Corinth, and to the effect produced upon him by his visit to the church there (2 Cor. 7: 6, 7, 13, 15). It may also be observed that the Apostle speaks of the obedience and respect with which the Corinthians had treated Titus, as a mark of their submission to his own apostolical authority (vs. 15, 16). THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 55 Another incidental reference to Paul's employing Titus in this manner may be found in 2 Tim. 4: 10, where he is mentioned among Paul's immediate followers. " Demas hath forsaken me, having loved this present world, and is departed unto Thdssalol.ica; Crescens to Galatia; Titus to Dalmatia; only Luke is with me; take Mark and bring him with thee; for he is profitable to me et tLaKcovlav," not "for the ministry" in general, but as a 8caKovoS or personal assistant in my labours. It seems plain that all the persons here named bore the same relation to the apostle, and were equally under his authority. Although Titus, therefore, is not mentioned in the Acts, there can be no doubt that his course began, like Timothy's, in personal attendance upon Paul in his journeys, to which indeed we find express allusion in Gal. 2: 1, 3, where his Greek descent and circumcision are referred to, and the fact recorded of his having gone with Paul and Barnabas, on a particular occasion, to Jerusalem. Both from the history and the epistles, therefore, independently of those addressed to Timothy and Titus, it would naturally be inferred, that these men were inferior to Paul, and acted under his direction. It may, indeed, be said, that they are clearly recognized as ministers; that Timothy is mentioned as Paul's workfellow (Rom. 16: 21), "one that worketh the work of the Lord even as I do" (1 Cor. 16: 10), as a "brother" (2 Cor. 1: 1), who had "served" with Paul "in the gospel" (Phil. 2: 22); that Titus likewise is described as his "brother" (2 Cor. 2: 13), his "partner and fellow-labourer" with respect to the Corinthians (2 Cor. 8: 23). All this is very true, and proves conclusively that Timothy and Titus were duly ordained ministers, 06 ESSAY II. and as such held the rank of presbyters or elders. But this, so far from proving their equality to Paul, strengthens the proof of their inferiority, by bringing their acknowledged ministerial standing into contrast with the manifest assumption of superiority on Paul's part. His continuing to regulate their movements after their admission to the ministry, shows clearly that he was superior, not only as a minister to private Christians, but as an apostle to mere presbyters or elders. If it should be alleged, however, that Timothy and Titus were themselves invested with this same superiority, and that it is in this capacity that Paul addresses them, this is a question which can only be determined by an examination of the three epistles. If it be true that Paul's superiority to Timothy and Titus ceased before the date of his epistles to them, we may certainly expect to find the tone of his address to them materially altered, and the —habit of express command exchanged for that of broth6rly suggestion. And we do indeed find many strong expressions of fraternal or rather of paternal love, but mingled with peremptory and direct commands, as well as incidental intimations of superior authority upon the writer's part, some of which might be considered dubious or of little moment, if we did not know the mutual relation of the parties at an earlier date. The hypothesis that Timothy had now attained equality of rank with Paul, though not contradicted, is certainly not favoured by those parts of these epistles, in which Paul speaks of having left him tt Ephesus for a special purpose (1 Tim. 1: 3) and renews the commission under which he acted (v. 18), gives him particular directions for his conduct until he shall come'(ch. 3: 14 15. 4: 13, 14), and summons Timo THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 57 thy to come within a certain time (2 Tim. 4: 21) and take the place of those who had just left him (ch. 4: 9-12), bringing Paul's cloak and parchments with him (v. 13). Titus also is described as being left in Crete by Paul, to finish that which he had left undone (Tit. 1: 5), and is required to rejoin him, when relieved by Artemas or Tychicus (Tit. 3: 12). All this goes to prove that no such change had taken place in the relations of these men to Paul as would make them no longer his inferiors in office. And the same thing, though it could not be directly proved, is certainly corroborated by the numerous advices which he gives them with a view to their personal improvement; as when he exhorts Timothy to hold faith and a good conscience (1 Tim. 1:19), to refuse profane and old wives' fables and exercise himself unto godliness (1 Tim. 4: 7), to give attendance to reading, exhortation and doctrine (v. 13), to let his proficiency appear to all (v. 15), to take heed to himself and to the doctrine that he may be saved (v. 16), to avoid covetousness and follow after righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience, meekness (ch. 6: 11), to fight the good fight of faith and lay hold on eternal life (v. 12), to keep Paul's commandment without spot, unrebukable, until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ (v. 14), to avoid profane and vain babblings and oppositions of science falsely so called (1 Tim. 6: 20. 2 Tim. 2: 16), to be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus (2 Tim. 2: 1), to endure hardness as a good soldier of Jesus Christ (v. 3), to avoid foolish and. unlearned tuestions (v. 23), to flee youthful lusts aid follow righteousness, faith, charity, and peace (v. 22), to con3* 58 ESSAY II. tinue in the things which he had learned of Paul (2 Tim. 3: 14), and to endure afflictions (2 Tim. 4: 5). It may be said, that all these are expressions, which might naturally be used by a man of Paul's celebrity and standing in the church, even to those holding the same office, if much younger than himself, and still more if they were his spiritual children. Admitting this to be a sufficient explanation of the general tone of Paul's epistles, and of his exhortations to mere personal and private duties, will it answer the same purpose, with respect to his authoritative directions for the exercise of their official functions? Can it be supposed that such minute instructions, as to public worship, ordination, discipline, and the duties to be enjoined upon different classes of society, would have been given to any but inferiors in rank and office? Such a hypothesis nright be admissible, if every thing else in the epistles favoured it; but not when their whole drift and tenor make it scarcely possible to doubt that Timothy and Titus are addressed.as Paul's inferiors. There are several classes of objections to the opposite opinion, every one of which would seem decisive unless countervailed by other circumstances. The general tone of the epistles is almost enough to show that Paul was their superior in office. It would fail to do so, if there were express recognitions of equality; but there are none. His dictation to them, with respect to the discharge of their official functions, would be almost enough to prove the point. Above all, the distinct allusions to their acting merely as Paul's messengers and delegates, without renouncing their relation to him as his personal attendants, make it almost certain. Now as each of these THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 59 distinctive features of. the three epistles is almost sufficient of itself to prove what is alleged, and as none of them detracts from any of the others, it may be safely stated as the most probable conclusion from the data generally, that the men, to whom these three epistles were addressed, were no less subject Jo Paul's authority, and consequently no less inferior in official rank, when labouring at Ephesus and Crete, than when attending him in Greece or Asia Minor or Judea. If any should still think, however, that the supposition of their inferiority is not necessary to explain the tone and contents of these epistles, let them look at the question in another point of view. Let them suppose, though merely for the sake of argument, that these men were not only younger than Paul, and his spiritual children, but inferior in office, and that Paul, in writing to them, had this inferiority in view, and was influenced by it, both in matter and in manner. How could he, without saying totidem verbis, you are my inferiors, have more distinctly conveyed that idea than he has done here? What form of address, what selection of topics, what turn of expression, what peculiar tone, what allusions to his own superiority and their subjection to him, could have made the matter clearer than it is? If an air of paternal condescension, if repeated exhortations to fidelity, if positive commands as to official acts, if peremptory orders as to times and places, and express injunctions to return to personal attendance on the writer, do not prove inferiority of rank in those who are addressed, it must be because no proof of the fact is possible, except by formal categorical assertion. If, however, it. be true that 60 ESSAY II. Paul addresses these two men precisely as he must have done if they were his inferiors in office, most readers will probably think this a decisive proof that they were so. Nor can it be rejected, without flagrant inconsistency, by those who plead for a perpetual apostleship. The proof of that opinion rests, almost exclusively, upon the fact, that Timothy and Titus are directed to ordain and discipline presbyters, frot which it is inferred that they were something more themselves. But if their being thus directed can prove their superiority to elders, how much more does Paul's directing them prove his superiority to them? Those very powers, the imputed exercise of which is made a proof that they were more than presbyters, were exercised at Paul's command, and in conformity with his minute instructions. The least that can be argued from this fact is, that Paul's superiority to Timothy and Titus is as clearly proved as theirs to presbyters. But this is only a small part of the whole truth; for while the proof of their superiority to presbyters is wholly insufficient, that of Paul's superiority to them is perfect. The former, as we have before seen, rests upon the false assumption that a presbyter could neither be ordained nor disciplined by those of the same order. But the fact of Paul's superiority to Timothy and Titus does not rest upon his having ordained them or acted as their judge; but upon his actual control of their official functions, and their actual subjection to his apostolical authority. The very fact of their ordaining and exercising discipline at all may be described as doubtful, in comparison with that of Paul's governing themselves. That they governed and ordained, is a mere inference from Paul's advising them how they THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 61 should exercise these powers. But that they themselves were ruled by Paul, is no such inference. The fact itself is upon record in these three epistles, which are nothing more nor less than three solemn acts of apostolical authority. The fact, then, that Timothy and Titus were inferior to Paul in rank and office, is not only upon all common principles of reasoning, but even upon those which are peculiar to the adverse argument, fully established. But if they were inferior to Paul in office, they must either have been presbyters, or something intermediate between that and apostles. The assumption of an intermediate order sweeps away, of course, all arguments to prove that certain persons were apostles, simply because they were superior to presbyters. It also gives a license to assume as many intermediate orders as may be required to demonstrate different hypotheses. In point of fact, however, it is never now assumed. It is one of the conceded points, on which the parties to this controversy meet, that there was no office in the primitive church system, above that of presbyter, exepting the apostleship. If, then, Timothy and Titus were inferior to Paul, they could not have been more than presbyters,. and must in that capacity have exercised the right of ordination and of discipline. If, as a last resort, it be alleged, that these powers were exercised by virtue of a special commission, and not as ordinary functions of the eldership, it still remains true, even granting this assertion, that presbyters were competent to exercise these powers, without being elevated to a higher office. What they were thus occasionally authorized to do by the original apostles, they might still do, even if there were apos 62 ESSAY II ties in the church; but if, as we shall see hereafter, there are none, then what was occasionally done by presbyters at first, must now be done habitually by them, as the highest class of officers existing, by divine right, in the church. Much more must they possess this right as the successors of the primitive elders, if the latter, as we have the strongest reason to believe, possessed it, not occasionally merely, but as a necessary function of their office. The result of our inquiry may be briefly stated thus: that Paul addresses the presbyters of Ephesus, as if the whole care of the church was to devolve on them, representing them as shepherds of Christ's flock, a metaphor implying the possession of the highest powers and employed here in its widest sense, because connected with the prediction of dangers which could only be averted by the exercise of great authority, and also because Peter, in addressing the presbyters of Asia Minor, speaks of them as shepherds, subject to no chief shepherd but the Lord Jesus Christ, and possessing powers which might easily become despotic in their exercise. We find too that Paul elsewhere speaks of the presbyters of Ephesus as " ruling," the word employed being one used to denote the government of families, and therefore, in its application to the church, implying the possession of the highest powers, not excepting those of discipline and ordination. And accordingly we find the ordination of Timothy ascribed to a " presbytery," which, on any natural interpretation of the term, can only mean a body of presbyters acting in that character. We find too that Timothy and Titus, while actually exercising the highest powers now belonging to the THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 63 ministry, are distinctly recognized as Paul's inferiors in rank and office, and therefore as something less than apostles, and nothing more than presbyters, whether acting in the ordinary course of duty, or by virtue of a special commission. From these special testimonies, singly and together, it appears that presbyters, in apostolic times, possessed and exercised the highest powers now belonging to the ministry. This position having beenestablished by direct proof, it may not be improper to advert to certain passages and detached expressions, which, although they may prove nothing by themselves, and are susceptible of different explanations, and have therefore not been used above in argument, may nevertheless serve as incidental confirmations of the truth already ascertained. One of these is the account of the council at Jerusalem, to which the church of Antioch referred an interesting and important question, sending Paul and Barnabas and others, "unto the apostles AND ELDERS, about this question" (Acts 15: 2). "And when they were come to Jerusalem, they were received of the apostles AND ELDERS" (v. 4). " And the apostles AND ELDERS came together, for to consider of the matter" (v. 6), and after due deliberation and discussion, " it pleased the apostles AND ELDERS (V. 22) to send a letter to the church at Antioch, with this inscription, " The apostles AND ELDERS and brethren send greeting," etc. (v. 23); and we afterwards read that Paul and Silas, in their missionary tour through Asia Minor, "as they went through the cities, delivered them the decrees for to keep, that were ordained of the apostles AND ELDERS which were at Jerusalem" (Acts 16: 4). All that it is now meant to infer from 64 ESSAY II. this transaction is that, even while most.of the apostles were still present at Jerusalem, the church there had elders, and that these were not regarded as mere teachers, or leaders in public worship, but as men clothed with authority. If any should object that the same reasoning would prove the other members of the church to have possessed the same authority, because it was "the church" that received the messengers from Antioch, (Acts 15: 4), because it was " the apostles and elders WITH THE WHOLE CHURCH" that decided the question (v. 22), -and because the epistle was written in the name of "the apostles and elders AND BRETHREN," (v. 23), it may be answered, first, that though the brethren,' or church at large, are mentioned in these cases, they are not in the others which have been already quoted, whereas the elders are invariably named whenever the apostles are. In the next place, according to the principles of government laid down both in the Old and the New Testament, the church would of course act through the apostles and the elders, and especially the latter, who were really the representatives of the church at Jerusalem, so that it does not even certainly appear, that the church-members were in any sense present except in the person of their representatives; the word translated "multitude" in v. 12 being indefinite and relative in meaning. Lastly, this case is cited only in corroboration of the fact, already proved from other quarters, that the presbyters were rulers, whereas no such proof exists of the powers of government having been exercised by the people generally. That this constitution of the mother-church was THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 65 copied into others, as they were organized, is plain from the practice of Paul and Barnabas, who, as they passed through Asia Minor, "ordained them elders in every church" (Acts 14: 23), and from Paul's leaving Titus.in Crete to "ordain elders in every city" (Tit. 1: 5). The powers of these elders were no doubt the same as in the mother-church, and though they are not often mentioned, it is always in a manner to confirm the supposition that they were familiarly regarded as the highest local rulers of the church; as when James says, " Is any sick among you? let him call for the elders of the church" (Jas. 5: 14); and John calls himself, in the inscriptions of two epistles, o 7rpeo-tv-,epo,; and Peter tells the presbyters of Asia Minor, that he is their fellow-elder (o avpu7rpeo/36repo, 1 Pet. 5: 1). That in John's case it denotes the senior apostle, and that in the others it is a generic title for church-officers in general, is no doubt possible; and all that is here intended is to point out how completely even the incidental notices of presbyters agree with the presbyterian hypothesis. It may be a matter of surprise and even of objection on the part of some, that so few positive testimonies to the truth of that hyyothesis are found in Scripture. But let such remember that church-government is very seldom spoken of at all, and ordination scarcely ever, so that in proportion to the space allotted to the general subject, the foregoing proofs may be considered ample. One effect of the comparative neglect of all such matters by the sacred writers is that something, upon any supposition, is to be supplied by inference or analogy. The only question is, which hypothesis requires least to be conjectured or assumed? As this 66 ESSAY II. is no unfair criterion of truth, we are willing to submit our doctrine to a rigorous comparison, in this respect, with that of our opponents. They admit that the presbyterial office was established in the primitive church and was intended to be permanent; that it was clothed with the important powers of preaching the gospel and administering the sacraments; and that it is repeatedly spoken of in terms which, taken by themselves, would'imply the possession of the highest powers now belonging to the ministry. But this conclusion they avoid by assuming that although the office was intended to continue, and intrusted with some functions of the greatest moment, it was not empowered to ordain or exercise supreme authority, that these prerogatives were specially reserved to a superior order. This, however, cannot be maintained without supposing, that on various occasions when the mention of this higher class would seem to have been almost unavoidable, the sacred writers did nevertheless pass it by in silence, and not only pass it by, but apply the very language that would best describe its powers to the lower order which had no such powers. However this extraordinary fact may be accounted for, it must be assumed, or the adverse doctrine cannot be maintained. The presbyterian hypothesis, on the contrary, takes words and phrases in their usual sense and their most natural construction, and adds nothing to the facts which are admitted by both parties, but setting out from the conceded fact that presbyters were officers of high rank and intrusted with important powers, it concludes that, when they are referred to as the highest local rulers of the churches, they were so in fact; that when certain duties are enjoined upon them, it was THE PRIMITIVE PRESBYTERS. 67 meant that they should do them; in a word, that the obvious and natural meaning of the passages which speak of elders is the true one, and that no other need be sought by forced constructions or gratuitous assumptions. By the application of this safe and simple method of interpretation, we have reached the conclusion that presbyters, as presbyters, possessed and exercised the highest ministerial powers, including those of discipline and ordination, in the days of the apostles; that the same rights and powers belong to them at present; and that no ministrations can be charged with invalidity, because they'are performed under authority derived from presbyters. ESSAY III. ON THE PERPETUITY OF THE APOSTLESHIP. IN the foregoing essay an attempt was made to prove that the highest permanent office in the church is that of Presbyter, by showing that the primitive Presbyters exercised the highest ministerial functions. In opposition to this doctrine, some allege the superiority and perpetuity of the Apostolic office. If this office was superior to that of Presbyter, and if it was designed to be perpetual, it follows of course that no church authority can rightfully be exercised, except by those who have succeeded the Apostles in the powers which belonged to them as such, and as distinguished from the Elders of the Church. Let it be observed, however, that in order to justify this conclusion, two things must be made out. If the Apostles were not an order of church-officers, distinct from and superior to the Presbyters or Elders, the strongest proof that the office was perpetual only proves that that of Elder was designed to be perpetual, which all admit. If, on the other hand, the Apostolic office was a temporary one, it matters not how far it may have been superior PERPETUITY OF THE APOSTLESHIP. 69 to that held by Presbyters, who still remain, in that case, the highest permanent office-bearers in the Christian Church. In order then to the decision of the controversy, two distinct questions are to be determined 1. Were the Apostles superior to Presbyters? 2. Was their office, as distinct from that of Presbyter, designed to be perpetual? By some Presbyterian writers both these questions have been answered in the negative, while all Episcopalians, who assert the jus divinum of prelatical episcopacy, answer both affirmatively. In the remainder of the present argument the first point will be conceded; that is to say, it will be granted that the Apostles were church-officers superior to Presbyters or Elders. At the same time an attempt will be made to prove, exclusively from Scripture, that the Apostolic office was a temporary one. I. The first argument in favour of this proposition is, that the continuance of the office is nowhere expressly stated. To this it might be answered, that an office being once created, its continuance must be presumed, without an explicit declaration to the contrary. The general principle is not denied; but in this case there are peculiar circumstances which afford strong ground for a contrary presumption. 1. The original Apostles are uniformly spoken of as constituting a distinct and well defined body of men, not only in the gospel history, but in the latest books of the New Testament. " But beloved, remember ye the words which were spoken before by THE APOSTLES OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST, how that they told you there should be mockers in the last time who should walk after their own ungodly lusts" (Jude, vs. 17, 18). This 70 ESSAY III. mode of expression seems to intimate, that'"the apostles".belonged to a preceding period, and that most of them were actually gone. Jude could hardly have expressed himself in this way, if the title had already been extended to a multitude of others. "Rejoice over her, thou heaven, and ye holy APOSTLES AND PROPHETS; for God hath revenged you on her" (Rev. 18: 20). Can there be any doubt that this apostrophe is addressed to the original Apostles? And would John have so described themif the name, in his day, had been rightfully assumed by many others, equal and equally " supreme" in power? That he was not familiar with any such extension of the name, may also be inferred from Rev. 21: 14, where he speaks of "the twelve apostles." It may be urged, however, that the case of Paul destroys the force of the presumption drawn from the mention of the Apostles as a limited number; for he was a thirteenth, and if one might be added, why not more? This objection would be valid, but for one consideration, which converts the case of Paul into a strong corroboration of the doctrine against which it is alleged. That case is every where referred to and described as an anomalous exception. He speaks of himself as'the least of the Apostles (1 Cor. 15: 9), and not only as morally unworthy to be called one, but as almost too late to be an Apostle, as one born out of due time (1 Cor. 15: 8), while at the same time he asserts his equality with the rest as to official rank and power. Now if the Apostolic office was intended to be regularly continued, and if many others were to be brought into it, and invested with its "supreme PERPETUITY OF THE APOSTLESHIP. 71 powers,". even during Paul's lifetime, and by his agency, how was he like one born out of due time? Or how could he call himself the least of the Apostles? Can any degree of humility make it consistent with his truth and candour, to pronounce himself inferior, as an Apostle, to Timothy, Titus, Epaphroditus, Silas, Junias, and Andronicus, who were all officially his equals on the opposite hypothesis? Since then the case of Paul is represented by himself as an anomaly, it serves, as a sole exception, to confirm the general statement that the Apostles are referred to as a limited body, not to be increased. This is the first ground of presumption that the office of apostle, as distinguished from all others, was intended to be temporary. 2. A second is, that some of the apostolic powers are acknowledged by both parties in this controversy to have been temporary. The presumption, therefore, is, that all the rest were temporary likewise, except so far as the continuance of any can be clearly shown from Scripture. Now it is not and cannot be denied, that some of them were thus continued, and that for this purpose the offices of Presbyter and Deacon now exist. But this very fact adds greatly to the strength of the presumption, that the apostolic office was a temporary one. For if the cessation of some apostolic powers makes it a priori probable that all the rest ceased likewise, how much more does the acknowledged transfer of some of the remaining powers to distinct church-officers, continued in existence for that very purpose, make it a priori probable, that all the apostolic powers, which did not thus cease, were thus transferred? 72 ESSAY III. 3. The power exercised by the Apostles was a general ambulatory power, not confined to particular districts. This was'exactly suited to the infant condition of the church, but could not supersede the necessity of permanent and local officers, after the planting of particular churches. Now the elders and deacons, of whom we read in the New Testament, are the elders and deacons of particular churches, after whose appointment the irregular supervision of the Apostles might be expected to cease, as being no longer needed. On the hypothesis, that the Apostles were commissioned merely to plant the church in various countries, and ordain permanent officers who should exercise such of the apostolical powers as were necessary for the continued existence of the church, while all the others ceased, the course of things could hardly have been different from that which is recorded. This then affords a third ground of presumption that the supposition is coincident with fact. 4. A fourth ground is, that the apostolic functions, which all admit to have been subsequently exercised by Presbyters, are precisely those which, in their own nature, are the most important, namely, the preaching of the gospel and the administration of the sacraments. However important the powers of ordination and discipline may be, they derive their importance from the others. The end of discipline is to preserve purity and exclude the unworthy from the peculiar privileges of the church. The end of ordination is to secure a valid administration of the word and sacraments. If the Head of the Church had left this ministration to any one who chose to perform it, without special ordi PERPETUITY OF THE APOSTLESHIP. 73 nation to an office, whatever inconveniences might have attended that arrangement, it could not have impaired the intrinsic value of the word and sacraments. But if, on the other hand, there were no word and sacraments, ordination would be useless. And the same may be said, mutatis mutandis, of government or discipline. These then (ordination and discipline) are subsidiary functions which derive their value from the relation they sustain to others. Now if the office of a Christian Presbyter had been invested with powers of a subordinate nature, i. e. such as derive their value from their being necessary to the exercise of others, it might have been alleged, with some degree of plausibility, that the Apostolic office was designed to be perpetual for the sake of those functions which were not bestowed on Presbyters, and yet were essential to the being of the Church. But when we find that the lower office was invested with those powers which possess a necessary and intrinsic value, this, to say the least, adds strength to the presumption that the Apostolic office, which was thus succeeded by another order in its most important functions, was intended to be temporary. 5. On the supposition, that some apostolic powers were neither shared by Presbyters nor discontinued, there is no means of determining what these reserved powers were. For if it be said that all which were not extended to Presbyters were thus reserved, this, in the first place, presupposes the decision of the question whether Presbyters ordained and governed; and, in the next place, supposing that they did not, the successors of the apostles must, according to this rule, possess the power of working miracles, which certainly 4 74 ESSAY III. belonged to the original apostles. If it be said that this was a temporary gift of an extraordinary nature, then the power of bestowing the Holy Ghost was also temporary. But'this many are unwilling to admit. There is, in fact, no unity among'Episcopalians, as to the precise powers which have been continued in their Bishops as successors of the Apostles. Some confine their claims to ordination. Some add discipline, as rightfully belonging only to the Bishop. Others add the power of bestowing the Holy Ghost. This last is inseparable from the gift. of miracles. Whenever the effects of the gift of the Holy Ghost, conferred by the Apostles, are described, they are of a miraculous nature. The power of bestowing the more inward and spiritual influences of the Holy Ghost, is not only never claimed, but is expressly disclaimed. The Church of Rome is therefore more consistent than the advocates of High Church Episcopacy, in claiming not only the power of conferring the Holy Ghost, but also its inseparable adjunct, that of working miracles. What is here designed, however, is not to disprove the possession of this power, but to show the want of'harmony among those who maintain that certain apostolic powers are continued in the church, by means of minister- distinct from and superior to Presbyters. And the design of showing this is to illustrate the impossibility of drawing any line between the powers which ceased or were transferred to Presbyters, and those which are alleged. to have been continued in the apostolic office. And the use to be made of this impossibility is simply to strengthen the presumption which has been already raised in favour of the doc trine that. the Apostolic office, as distinct from that of Elder and superior to it, was a temporary one. PERPETUITY OF THE APOSTLESHIP. 75 The grounds of the presumption, then, are, that the twelve apostles are referred to in the New Testament, as a well-known body of men, limited in number, and not to be increased, except in the extraordinary case of Paul, which he himself describes as a remarkable exception; that some of the powers exercised by the original apostles are no longer in existence; that some which still exist are exercised by Presbyters, and were so exercised in apostolic times; that those which are thus exercised by Pres-byters are in themselves the most essential to the existence of the church; that the office of Presbyter has been continued in the church for the very purpose of succeeding the apostles in these functions, and with a view to permanent action within fixed- local bounds; that the advocates for the perpetuity of the apostolic office are not agreed among themselves as to the powers which now belong to it, ahd that this want of agreement arises from the silence of Scripture, and the impossibility of fiiig any principle, by which a line may be drawn between the powers which are thas continued and those which have ceased or been transferred to Presbyters. Without insisting on the positive conclusions which might not unreasonably be deduced from these premises, they may be described as furnishing a strong presumption, that the apostolic office was intended to be temporary, bearing the same relation to the permament ministry that a constituent assembly or convention bears to the legislative body which succeeds it. There is presumptive proof of this, so strong that it can only be countervailed by positive evidence from Scripture. The facts, which have been stated as the grounds of this presumption, may be clearly proved 76 ESSAY III. froth Scripture. It is not too much to ask, then, that if another fact is to be added to the list, viz. that some of the apostolic powers were neither discontinued nor transferred to Presbyters, and that for the exercise of these reserved powers the apostolic office was itself continued, some explicit declaration of the fact may be adduced to countervail the strong adverse presumption. And this brings us back to our first position, that THE CONTINUANCE OF THE APOSTOLIC OFFICE, IN ADDITION TO THOSE WHICH RELIEVED IT OF ITS MOST IMPORTANT FUNCTIONS, IS NOWHERE EXPLICITLY ASSERTED IN THE SCRIPTURES. AS the presumptions are so strong agtinst the supposition of a permanent apostleship, the very silence of the Scriptures might be urged as a decisive proof. It cannot be denied, however, that the force of this negative argument would be destroyed by proving that the Scriptures indirectly recognize the Apostolic office as perpetual. This leads us to another view of the subject. II. A second argument in favour of the proposition, tl;at the Apostolic office was a temporary one, is that the name. Apostle, in its strict and proper sense, is not applied, in the New Testament, to any persons who were not of the original thirteen. The passages, in which such an application of the title is alleged, are the following. 1. "But the multitude of the city was divided: and part held with the Jews, and part with THE APOSTLES [meaning Paul and Barnabas] —" which when THE APOSTLES, Barnabas and Paul, heard of, they rent their clothes," etc. (Acts 14: 4, 14). 2. "Salute Andronicus and Junias my kinsmen and my fellow-prisoners, who are of note among THE PERPETUITY OF THE APOSTLESHIP. 77 APOSTLES, who also were in Christ before me" (Rom. 16: 7). 3. "Yet I supposed it necessary to send to you Epaphroditus, my brother and companion inf labour and fellow-soldier, but your messenger ('a7roraoXov), and one that ministers to my wants" (Phil. 2: 25). 4. " Whether any do inquire of Titus, he is my partner and fellow-helper concerning you; or our brethren be inquired of, they are the messengers (ra7roCrXot) of the churches, and the glory of Christ" (2 Cor. 8:'23). 5. "Paul and Silvanus and Timotheus unto the church of the Thessalonians" (1 Thess. 1: 1), compared with " Nor of men sought we glory, neither of you, nor yet of others, when we might have been burdensome AS THE APOSTLES of Christ" (1 Thess. 2: 6). From these texts it is inferred by some that Barnabas, Andronicus, Junias, Epaphroditus, Silas, Timothy, and certain brethren who accompanied Titus to Corinth, were Apostles, in the same sense in which Paul was an Apostle; and from this the obvious conclusion has been drawn, that the Apostolic office was intended to be permanent. It might well be made a question whether the strong antecedent probability, that the Apostolic office was a temporary one, could be wholly set aside by the application of the title in five places, however clear the application might be, and however obvious the sense in which the word is used. The advocates of this interpretation themselves protest against all objections to their system founded merely on the scriptural use of the word Bishop, which they own to be convertible with Presbyter. They have no right,* therefore, to make that of the word Apostle the foundation of a per 78 ESSAY III. featly exclusive system. If the laufulness of a superior order were the point in question, incidental proofs of this kind ought to have du'e weight; but when attempts are made to prove, that the continuance of the Apostolic order, as distinct from that of Presbyters, is essential to the being of a church, and that in the face of such presumptions to the contrary as have been stated, a sober reasoner would have good cause to hesitate before receiving, as conclusive evidence, the application of the name in a few cases, even if the proposed interpretation of the passages referred to were undoubtedly correct. But this is very far from being certain. Of the five texts cited, there are two, in which the application of the title is at least very doubtful. 1. In the first epistle to the Thessalonians, the word a7r6-ToXot is not in juxtaposition or apparent connection with the names of Timothy and Silas, but separated from them by fourteen intervening verses. It is not even alleged, that the joining of other names with Paul's, in the beginning of a letter, makes it necessary to refer the whole of its contents to all the persons thus included in the title; because, after such a joint address, he often uses the first person singular. Nor is it, on the other hand, alleged, that the use of the plural we requires such a reference; because that mode of speech is so habitual with Paul, that it may almost be regarded as one of his characteristic idionis; and, as if to guard against such a construction, he says, near the conclusion of this very passage, " Wherefore we would have come ulto. you, EVEN I PAUL, once and again" (1 Thess. 2: 18). This explanation is, at least, sufficient to outweigh the argument derived from the plural form PERPETUITY'OF THE APOSTLESHIP. 79 CaToaroXot, which is, no doubt, strictly inapplicable to a single person, but not when preceded, as in this case, by a particle denoting resemblance or comparison. Though Paul could not call himself "the APOSTLES of Christ," he could assert his right to do a thing " AS (i. e. like) the apostles of Christ." He could disclaim having sought glory of them or of others, when he might have been burdensome, AS the apostles of Christ-collectively had.a right to be. This construction of the sentence is, to say the least, as natural as that which makes the plural form in chap. 2: 6 refer to Timothy and Silas, who are mentioned only in the title (1: 1), and neither there nor elsewhere called apostles. But even granting that this is a more probable explanation of the plural form, which is a mere gratuitous concession, it would not follow necessarily that Timothy and Titus were Apostles in the sense contended for; because another supposition is still open to us, namely, that arr6o-roXot is here used in a different sense. For which is it easier to believe, that Silas and Timothy were as much Apostles as Paul himself, but nowhere called so except here by implication and remote allusion; or that when he calls them by that title, he uses it in a wider sense than when it is employed to designate our Lord's immediate followers? We are willing that this question should be answered without any reference to the reasons, hereafter to be stated, for believing that the word apostle is employed in a plurality of meanings. Even if there were no other reason for attaching to it a double sense, this case would be just as good a reason for supposing one, as it is for supposing Silas to have been an Apostle, in the absence of all proof from any other quarter. The one 80 ESSAY III. argument is this: Paul says, "we, the apostles of Christ," and as Silas and Timothy are inentioned with him in the title of the epistle, they must be included; they were therefore Apostles, in the same sense in which Paul was one. The other argument is this: The Apostles were a limited number, and Paul elsewhere speaks of his addition to it as an extraordinary thing; but Silas and Timothy, though often mentioned, are nowhere else called Apostles; therefore, when Paul so calls them, he uses the title in a wider sense. If these two arguments be only equal in conclusive force, they balance one another, and the passage cannot be employed as proof, that Timothy and Silas were "supreme Apostles." This is the case, be it observed, on the supposition that the c'rr-o-ToXot in ch. 2: 6 refers to all the men named in ch. 1: 1. But we have already seen that this reference is doubtful, and that a different construction is, at least, as plausible. The adverse argument, then, rests on two assumptions; that a7rTo-ToXo in ch. 2: 6 refers to Timothy and Silas, as well as Paul, and that it must be taken in its strict and highest sense; whereas it is at least as probable that it does not refer to them, and that if it does, it does not denote Apostles in the strict sense. To say the least, then, after every concession, this passage is too doubtful to be made the basis of an argument to prove, in opposition to such strong presumptions, that the office of Apostle was continued. 2. The other case, in which there is a doubt as to the application of the name APOSTLE, is Rom. 16: 7. Here the phrase E7rt'UoTOL Ev TO~Z, 4rooTToXoL may mean either eminent apostles or highly esteemed among (i. e. by) the apostles. Admitting, for the sake of argument, that the PERPETUITY OF THE APOSTLESHIP. 81 former is the better construction, we are not shut up to the conclusion that Andronicus and Junias (or Junia, as Bishop Onderdonk writes it, even while claiming him or her as an apostle) were Apostles in the strict sense. We have just as much reason to believe, that they were Apostles in another sense. Even supposing, for the present, that no such sense of the term can be proved from usage, we have just as much reason to infer it from this passage, as to infer that these two persons were Apostles in the strict sense. For against this inference lies, first, the whole weight of the strong presumption that the apostolic office was a temporary one; and, secondly, the extreme improbability that two eminent apostles, in the strict sense of that title, would be thus named, among a crowd of private Christians, and never heard of elsewhere. Is it easier to believe this than that the word apostle has a double meaning, even supposing this to be incapable of proof from any other quarter?'We are not now determining the true sense of the passage. We are only showing that a passage which admits, first of two grammatical constructions, and then (assuming that contended for by our opponents) of two interpretations, cannot be regarded as decisive of so difficult and grave a question as the one respecting the perpetual or temporary nature of the apostolic office. In these two cases, it is doubtful to whom the name Apostle is applied; but in the other three there can be no such doubt. It is admitted that Barnabas, Epaphroditus, and the' brethren who accompanied Titus, are expressly called a'r6o-aoXoL; and from this the inference'is drawn by some that the Apostolic office, strictly so called, was conferred upon these persons, *4 82 ESSAY III, and that it consequently did not cease with the original incumbents. This inference involves the assumption that the term aVrr6oroXo0has always the same meaning, namely, that of Apostle in the strict sense, as denoting one of the original thirteen, or a person equal to them in official rank and power, as a ruler of the church under Christ himself. In order to estimate the probability of this assumption, it is necessary to refer to the analogy of other terms, used to denote office in the Christian church. The other terms admitted, upon both sides, to be so employed are 7rpeo'-/3repo', E7rt'Ko7ro9, 8laKovo., 7roL4rzV, BL8arTKaXos, rpo