S. THOMAS' PRIORY, RUGELEY. UCSB LIBRARY library of tfje Bomimcan Jfatfjerg WOODCHESTER Case.. Shelf.. THE SYMMETRICAL STRUCTURE OF SCRIPTURE. THE SYMMETRICAL STRUCTURE OF SCRIPTURE: OR, THE PRINCIPLES OF SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM EXEMPLIFIED, IN AX ANALYSIS OF THE DECALOGUE, THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT, AXI) OTHER PASSAGES OF THE SACRED WRITINGS. BY THE REV. JOHN FORBES, LLD. DONALDSON'S HOSPITAL, EDINBUBGH. EDINBURGH:" T. & T. CLARK, 38 GEORGE STREET. LONDON : HAMILTON, ADAMS, & CO. DUBLIN : JOHN ROBERTSON, AND HODGES & SMITH. MDcccLnr, PRINTED BY STEVENSON AND COMPANY, 32 THISTLE STHEET, EDINBURGH. PREFACE. THE views advanced in the Work now submitted to the Public, and the rules of Scriptural arrangement proposed, have not been hastily adopted, but are the result of long sus- tained investigation of a much more extensive range of passages than the examples selected for the present publication. The more the Author examines the subject, the more deeply is he convinced of the great importance of Bishop Lowth's discovery of the Parallelism of Scripture, as furnishing one of the most valuable aids ever presented to the interpreter, and calculated, when its principles have been more fully developed, to throw a new and clearer light on a great part of the Sacred Volume. Under the powers of this new instrument of investigation, the Sermon on the Mount is shewn to be one of the most perfect compositions that can be conceived, not only from the depth of wisdom which it displays, but for the exquisite arrangement of all its parts, which constitute one grand symmetrical whole, while yet each smaller portion is finished with the most consummate skill and minuteness of detail. The Seven Beatitudes, in parti- cular, with which the Lord opens this discourse, exhibit a combi- nation of the most surprisingly beautiful arrangements and con- nexions, disclosing a fulness and comprehensiveness of meaning, even beyond what these Divine utterances were already known to contain. The structure of the Lord's Prayer is, in like manner, shewn to be most remarkable, revealing a deeper significance in this perfect model of Christian devotion ; while the closest cor- vi PREFACE. f respondence is detected between its seven petitions, and the seven Christian graces which the Beatitudes successively unfold. The Ten Commandments, when examined by the same analytical pro- cess, are discovered to embrace the mutual relations of God and man with a fulness, spirituality, and perfection, marvellous in so condensed a code, and with a precision of arrangement so definite, that not a single line could be displaced without impairing the connexion ; amounting to a demonstration that we possess them in the original form in which they proceeded from the mouth and finger of the Lord. The Psalms of David furnish instances of admirable order in the very numbers of the verses, lines, and words, suggestive of the internal coherence and bond of connexion between the thoughts. The very irregularities in the succession of the letters in the Alphabetical Psalms, which have occasioned so much perplexity to critics, instead of arguing any derange- ment in the text, become evidences for its integrity, and enhance our admiration of the exquisite order, so remarkable in the composition of these inspired songs. The examples adduced, however, are but a slight earnest of the rich harvest to be reaped, should the principal object which the Author proposes to himself be attained, of inciting Biblical Scholars to become fellow-labour- ers in the new field of research thus opened up. But the Work is not designed for the Scholar alone. It has been the Author's endeavour to avoid the parade of learning, by which the meaning is too often overlaid in works of criticism, and to exhibit as far as possible only results, in language intelligible to ordinary readers. With few exceptions, the rendering of the Authorized Version has been retained (unless in the extracts from Bishops Lowth and Jebb), in order to prove to the unlearned reader, how little the exact correspondence of the Parallelisms is dependent on any questionable changes in the translation. PREFACE. Vll The Author is fully aware of the preliminary objection which will be taken by many to the artificial character of the arrange- ments of Scripture given in the following pages. Such extremely minute attention to numbers and order, as is here alleged to pervade much of the Holy Scriptures, will repel some minds as a littleness unworthy of the Oracles of God. The Author candidly confesses that, when first he began to remark these niceties of composition, he felt extremely jealous of himself lest he should be allowing his mind to be carried away by the creations of his own fancy, and, instead of humbly following the guidance and teaching of the Spirit, should make the Scriptures speak his own conceits. But the truth has gradually forced itself upon him by its irresis- tible evidence, and forms only another illustration of the maxim, that God's " thoughts are not our thoughts, neither are his ways like unto the ways of the children of men." Yet why should it be thought a thing incredible that a God of order should have stamped this impress on the Book of Revelation ? and that atten- tion to number, the symbol of order, should characterize His works of revelation, as well as His works of nature ? If so won- derful is the symmetry of the heavenly orbs, that the planets are placed at the most exactly proportionate distances from each other, so that the observation of this proportion led to the suspi- cion, and eventually to the discovery, of a new group of planets filling up the void which appeared in the series, why should not a like symmetrical proportion hold in Scripture, directing at- tention to, and leading to the discovery of, truths which otherwise might have escaped observation ? One of the grandest triumphs of modern science has been the discovery of the new planet Nep- tune, in October 1846 a discovery to which the observers were led solely by the science of number and quantity, and which was predicted with undoubting confidence by Sir John Herschel in the following beautiful language, addressed to the meeting of the British Association. " Among the remarkable events of the last twelvemonth, it has added a new planet to our list. It has done viii PREFACE. m0 re it has given us the probable prospect of the discovery of another. We see it, as Columbus saw America from the shores of Spain. Its movements have been felt, trembling along the far- reaching line of our analysis, with a certainty hardly inferior to that of ocular demonstration." If by the discovery of atomic pro- portions in chemistry we find a like beautiful progression of com- binations guiding the chemical analyst in his investigations, why should it be deemed unworthy of the Divine Intelligence that similar definite rules should regulate the composition of His Word, by whom " the very hairs of men's heads are numbered ?" Whether such minuteness and delicacy of finish exist in God's Word must be decided, we submit, not by any foregone conclu- sions what mode of composition it became the Sacred Writers to adopt, but by a calm and sober induction from a variety of ex- amples, taken from the several books both of the Old and New Testaments. This method it has been the writer's humble en- deavour to pursue ; and he has not ventured to publish this first specimen of his inquiries, until he had tested the accuracy of his principles by their application to a great portion of the Sacred Volume, and in some cases even to entire books. He now dismisses his Work with an earnest prayer to the Father of Lights, that He may bless this humble attempt to the promotion of a more devout and discerning study of " the won- drous things" contained in His Law. CONTENTS. SECTION I. Paga Discovery of Parallelism due to Bishop Lowth Definition Pro- wress in the Study made by Bishop Jebb and Rev. T. Boys Reply to the Objections of Professor Alexander, . . 1-8 SECTION II. Parallelism not confined to strictly poetical composition, . 3-5 SECTION m. Different species of Parallel Lines Synonymous, Cognate, or Gra- dational Parallelism Climax in Psalm i. 1, pp. 7-10 ; and in Matt. v. 44, pp. 10, 11 Respective functions of the Grada- tional and Antithetic Parallelisms Antithetic Parallelism, p. 13 Synthetic or Constructive Parallelism Remarkable instance from 2 Cor. xi. 22-27 analysed, pp. 15-17, . . . 5-17 SECTION IV. Combinations of Parallel Lines Couplets Triplets, pp. 18-20 Quatrains, pp. 20-23 Use of Parallelism in deciding on vari- ous Readings, p. 22 Five-lined Stanzas, pp. 23-33 Remarks on John xi. 9, 10, pp. 24, 25 Romans ii. 17-29 illustrated, pp. 28-32 Six and Seven Lined Stanzas, . . . 17-34 SECTION V. Introverted Parallelism Extensively employed even in Prose Plan of Epistle to Philemon, p. 40 Remarkable instance in Psalm Ixxxix. 28-45, pp. 40, 41, . . . . . . 35-41 X CONTENTS. SECTION VI. Page Epanodos closely allied to the Introverted Parallelism Defined Rationale Romans ii. 12-15 analysed, .... 42-46 SECTION VII. Rule of Scriptural Arrangement exemplified in Gen. ii. 1-3 Ap- plied to the elucidation of the difficulties connected with the accounts of the early history of David in 1 Sam. xvi.-xviii. Solutions attempted by the Translators of the Septuagint, Bishop Horsley, and Dr Davidson Unsatisfactory Solution proposed, which requires no omission nor transposition of any part of the Text, 46-55 SECTION vm. Co-ordinate dependence on a common antecedent Exemplified, 50-58 SECTION IX. The Principles of Parallelism advocated by Bishop Jebb must ex- tend to the arrangement of entire compositions Proved by an examination of some of his own examples, Acts iv. 24-30, pp. 59-67 Reference in the Threefold Division to Past, Present, and Future John v. 19-30 examined, pp. 68-81 Relations and Signification of the Ternary or Threefold Division, p. 75 Elucidation of John v. 31 and following context, pp. 78-81, 58-81 SECTION X. Psalm xxviii. illustrated, pp. 82-87 Psalm xxix. pp. 87-90 Con- nexion between the two Psalms, p. 90, . 82-90 CONTENTS. SECTION XI. Page The three first Alphabetical Psalms all arranged by Sevens Subdi- vision of Seven into 3, 1, 3 Apparent irregularities in the Letters accounted for Psalm xxv. illustrated, pp. 91-102 Psalm xxxiv., pp. 102-105 Psalm xxxvii. pp. 106-114 Connexion of the three Psalms, pp. 106, 107, . . 91-114 SECTION XII. Psalm li. illustrated, pp. 115-132 Divided like the three preceding Psalms into three Sevens Catchword, p. 126 Division in the Epistles to the Seven Churches of Asia into Classes of Three and Four, p. 133 ; of the Seven Parables in Matt, xiii., into Four and Three, p. 134 The whole Psalms divided into Seven Books Subdivisions Psalms of Degrees Similar arrangement of the Book of Proverbs, ' ...... 115-136 SECTION XIH. THK DECALOGUE, ....... 137-158 SECTION XIV. THE SEVEN BEATITUDES and THE LOHD'S PRAYER Symbolical sig- nificance of Seven ; of Three ; of Four ; and of Twelve, pp. 159, 160 Binary Division of Seven Ternary Divisions Order of Creation, pp. 162-165 Light, a triune emblem of the Deity, p. 165 Structural Arrangement of the Seven Beatitudes and the Lord's Prayer, pp. 166, 167 Examination of the Order of the Seven Beatitudes, and Si^ni- * O ficance, pp. 167-188 Spirit, Soul, and Body, pp. 175-177 Parallel between the Material and Spiritual Creations, p. 178 Use of Parallelism in fixing the order of the Text in the case of various Readings (comp. p. 22), pp. 182-188 The Lord's Prayer, pp. 188-190 Correspondence between its Petitions and the Beatitudes, pp. 190-194 Remarkable Tri- plicity in Scripture, pp. 194-195 Threefold Temptations of Adam and Christ The Devil, the World, and the Flesh Threefold offices of Christ Three principal attributes of God Trinity, ...... . . * 158-195 XIV CONTENTS. Page Person and Life of our Lord presented in different, yet not conflicting, aspects by the Evangelists, p. 325 Definition of Inspiration, p. 327 Necessity of distinguishing between Objec- tive and Subjective Inspiration, as confounded by Mr Maurice, pp. 327-331 Plenary Inspiration claimed by Scripture itself, p. 331 Prevalent misapprehension of the doctrine Theory of Partial Inspiration self-confuting Leads to inconsistencies Answer. to Objection from Luke's Preface, pp. 335, 336 Plenary Inspiration a question only for the Believer Demon- strable Historical Mistakes asserted by Mr Alford, p. 337, 1st, in Acts vii. 15, 16 Reply, pp. 337-341 2d, in Acts vii. 4 Reply, pp. 342-344 Scripture probably one organic whole, . ..... . . . 324-345 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. SECTION I. To BISHOP LOWTH we owe the discovery of the true nature of the rhythm in Hebrew Poetry. Its essential characteristic he has shewn to consist in a correspondence of the lines, not, as in modern languages, in sound, but in sense ; in the recurrence of a regular measure dependent not on the quantity or length of syl- lables, but on the agreement of ideas ; proposing as its highest aim, therefore, not to gratify the ear, but to satisfy the reason. This correspondence he has denominated Parallelism, which he defines to be " a certain equality, resemblance, or relationship be- tween the members of each period ; so that in one or more lines or members of the same period, things shall answer to things, and words to words, as if fitted to each other by a kind of rule or measure." 1 By this discovery he furnished the interpreter of Scripture with a key by which he is enabled to resolve many difficulties in the poetical parts of the Old Testament ; that which is obscure in one line or member being frequently rendered per- fectly clear and unambiguous, by comparison with the parallel expression in the corresponding line or member. Bishop Jebb, in his " Sacred Literature," has proved that this mode of composition, being perfectly independent of any peculia- rities of the Hebrew language, is by no means confined to the Old Testament, but pervades a great portion of the New. In this elegant and instructive work, he has thrown much light on the structure and arrangement of the Sacred Volume : and by a fuller 1 See Lowth's Lectures on Heb. Poetry, Pnelec. xix. A 2 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. development of the principles of Parallelism than had been given by Bishop Lowth, he has shewn that we are thereby enabled to group a series of lines into paragraphs or stanzas, and thus to fix more accurately the meaning of the whole, and the connexion of each part with the context. The Rev. T. Boys, in his " Tactica Sacra," and subsequently in his " Key to the Book of Psalms," has extended still further the limits of parallelism, and has proved that it is not confined merely to a correspondence of lines one with another in the same paragraph, but that whole paragraphs are themselves so arranged as to present a mutual correspondence or parallelism, similar to that which single lines exhibit to each other ; nay, that entire compositions, such as many of the Psalms and of the Epistles of the New Testament, are thus arranged in the most systematic form. The importance of the study of parallelism, to all who desire to investigate the full meaning and connexion of Scripture, and the extent to which its principles have influenced the composition of the whole Sacred Volume, seem nevertheless to have been hitherto but very inadequately apprehended. The general impres- sion on the minds even of those who have paid some attention to the study appears to be, that it is a subject more of learned curio- sity than of any real practical utility. The charge has been brought against it, that it has rarely, if ever, " been the means of eliciting any new sense in Scripture not known before ;" and one of our latest critics, Professor Alexander of America, sees so little advantage in the parallelistic arrangements, that in the introduc- tion to his valuable Commentary on Isaiah, 1 he strongly protests against what he denominates " the fantastic and injurious mode of printing most translations of Isaiah, since the days of Lowth, in lines analogous to those of classical and modern verse." He objects that this mode of typography disappoints by exciting the expectation, which cannot be realized, of a poetical metre in the strict sense of the term. Surely this is a prejudice, which a very little trouble on the part of the reader, when once warned of the fallacy of his pre-conceptions, might enable him easily to stir-' mount. And if the practice has commended itself to the good 1 P. XL. of the Glasgow edition. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 3 taste and sense of most nations not to print poetry continuously like prose, as we sometimes see done in German hymn-books, but to aid the ear by the eye in tracing the harmony and correspond- ences in the sound, why should exception be taken to the employ- ment of the same auxiliary to serve the far more important end of tracing the harmony and correspondences in the sense ? With- out the assistance thus afforded by marking to the eye the termi- nation of the lines, it would often be very difficult to discover those which correspond, and next to impossible, in a passage of any length, to trace out the complicated relations which, in the subsequent pages it will be shewn, often subsist between them. The object, therefore, proposed in the following Work, is to attempt to rescue the study of parallelism from the disrepute into which it has fallen, and to evince, by a variety of examples, and by the examination, according to its principles, of one entire com- position, Christ's Sermon on the Mount, that it is calculated to furnish to the student a most valuable aid for the investigation of the true meaning and connexion of Scripture. SECTION II. Before proceeding to lay before the reader a short account of the labours of others in this department of Scripture criticism, it may be of consequence to anticipate an objection which will pro- bably present itself at the outset, on examining several of the examples about to be given. In stating Parallelism to be the formal characteristic of He- brew poetry, as rhyme or metre is of modern verse, it is by no means to be understood that its use is therefore confined to those compositions, which on other grounds, such as their elevated dic- tion or splendour of imagery, we should pronounce to be poetical. Whenaver a prophet or moral teacher was affected by any strong emotion, or became at all excited by his subject, his language naturally assumed the measured step, and rhythmical cadence of the sententious parallelism. Thus, when Moses descended from Mount Sinai accompanied by Joshua, and the sounds of Israel's revelry around the golden calf first struck on their ears, Moses' 4 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. spirit was kindled within him, and to Joshua's remark, " The voice of war is in the camp," he replied : Not the voice of the shout for victory, Nor the voice of the shout for defeat, But the voice of mirthful song I hear. EXODUS xxxii. 18. On Saul's return from the expedition against the Amalekites, whom God had commanded him to go and utterly destroy with all that belonged to them, to his very inadequate excuse for the imperfect fulfilment of this commission that " the rest of the sheep and oxen had been spared to sacrifice unto the Lord in Gilgal," Samuel began, " more in sorrow than in anger," to repeat to him the heavy message with which God had, the night before, charged him to the monarch ; but when the king impatiently repeated his former plea as if it had formed a full justification for his partial obedience, the excited feelings of the prophet found*vent in the indignant strains : Hath the LORD as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, As in obeying the voice of the LORD ? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, And to hearken than the fat of rams ; For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, And stubbornness is as iniquity and idolatry. Because thou hast rejected the voice of the LORD, He hath also rejected thee from being king. 1 SAMUEL xv. 22, 23. The few brief words of lamentation which escaped from David over the grave of Abner form a rhythmical stanza of four lines, of which the fourth corresponds to the first, and the third to the second : As dieth a criminal, did Abner die? 1 Thy hands were not pinioned, Nor thy feet put in fetters : As one falleth before treacherous men, so fellest thou ! 2 SAMUEL iii. 34. 1 " Died Abner, as a felon dieth ? " That is : Were Joab's excuse available that Abner deserved to die as a rebel, then should he have been legally apprehended and im- prisoned, in order subsequently to be tried and convicted according to the full forms of justice, and not have been basely and foully murdered under the guise of friendship. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 5 We need not therefore be surprised nay, it would be strange were it otherwise to find the style of the ancient prophets adopted in all the longer addresses of our Saviour, or in the many fervid and impassioned appeals which a Paul or a Peter address to the disciples in their epistles. But even where the subject is essentially prosaic, if we recol- lect that metre is occasionally employed among ourselves with the simple view of impressing dry details on the memory, we cannot in fairness object to the use of Parallelism, should it be shewn to extend even to the Decalogue and Laws of Moses. SECTION III. As the subject will probably be new to many readers, we shall begin with giving some account of the different species of Paral- lelism hitherto noticed by previous writers. Parallel lines were classified by Bishop Lowth under three species : I. Parallel lines synonymous (or gradational) ; II. Parallel lines antithetic ; III. Parallel lines synthetic, or constructive ; the two first being dependent on the two great laws of the asso- ciation of ideas, resemblance, and contrast ; while the third is founded simply upon a resemblance in the form of construction and progression of the thoughts. Bishop Jebb has added a fourth species, which he has named, IV. Parallel lines introverted. I. PARALLEL LINES GRADATIONAL. These were termed by Bishop Lowth synonymous, because he conceived that they expressed the same sense in different but O SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. equivalent terms. Bishop Jebb, however, has ably vindicated the language of Scripture from the imputation of such unmeaning tautology to which it would thus be justly liable ; and has shewn that the second or responsive clause always diversifies the pre- ceding clause, generally so as to rise above it, forming a sort of climax in the sense, though sometimes by a descending scale in the value of the related terms. He accordingly proposed the term Cognate as more correctly descriptive of this species ; but since there is always a gradation in the sense either in the ascending or descending scale, a subsequent critic 1 has suggested the term Crradational as still more expressive of its distinctive character ; and this designation we shall therefore adopt as being the most appropriate. Bishop Lowth had given, as an example of parallel lines syno- nymous, the following passage from Isaiah, consisting of three couplets, the second line of each of which he considered merely as a sort of echo or repetition of the first, designed to deepen its im- pression by reiteration : Seek ye Jehovah while he may be found ; Call ye upon him, while he is near : Let the wicked forsake his way, And the unrighteous man his thoughts : And let him return to Jehovah, and he will compassionate him ; And unto our God, for he aboundeth in forgiveness. ISAIAH Iv. 6, 7. Here, however, as Bishop Jebb has pointed out, we may ob- serve a gradation of member above member, and line above line, in each couplet of the stanza. " In the first line, men are invited to seek Jehovah, not know- ing where he is, and on the bare intelligence that he may be found ; in the second line, having found Jehovah, they are en- couraged to call upon him, by the assurance that he is NEAR. In the third line, the wicked, the positive and presumptuous sin- ner, is warned to forsake Ms way, his habitual course of iniquity ; in the fourth line, the unrighteous, the negatively wicked, is called to renounce the very thought of sinning. While in the last line, the appropriative and encouraging title OUR GOD, is substi- 1 British Critic for 1820, pp. 585, 586. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 7 tuted for the awful name of JEHOVAH ; and simple compassion is heightened into overflowing mercy and forgiveness." \ " Who shall ascend the mountain of Jehovah? And who shall stand within his holy place ? The clean of hands, and the pure in heart. PSALM xxiv. 3, 4. " To ascend marks progress ; to stand, stability and confirma- tion : the mountain of Jehovah, the site of the divine sanctuary ; his holy place, the sanctuary itself : and in correspondence with the advance of the two lines which form the first couplet, there is an advance in the members of the third line : the clean of hands ; and the pure in heart : the clean of hands, shall ascend the moun- tain of Jehovah : the pure in heart, shall stand within his holy place." 2 How blessed is the man ! Who hath not walked in the counsel of the ungodly ; Nor stood in the way of sinners ; Nor sat in the seat of the scornful. PSALM i. 1. Here the last three lines alone come under the denomination of gradational parallelisms, the first line, " the exclamation with which the Psalm opens, belonging equally to each line of the suc- ceeding triplet. In the triplet itself, each line consists of three members ; and the lines gradually rise, one above the other, not merely in their general sense, but specially throughout their cor- responding members. To walk, implies no more than casual in- tercourse ; to stand, closer intimacy ; to sit, fixed and permanent connection : the counsel, the ordinary place of meeting, or public resort ; the way, the select and chosen footpath ; the seat, the habitual and final resting place : the ungodly, negatively wicked ; sinners, positively wicked ; the scornful, scoffers at the very name or notion of piety and goodness." 3 Bishop Jebb has most justly protested against the false criti- cism of Gataker, who " denies the existence of this triple climax, and would work up this beautiful series of well-discriminated moral pictures, into one colourless and undistinguished mass. Gataker's sentiments have been re-echoed by several of the later 1 Jebb's Sacred Literature, p.p. 37, 38. 2 Ibid. p. 40, 8 Ib'td\ p. 41. 8 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. German commentators on the Psalms, among whom we are sur- prised to find the most distinguished of living Biblical scholars, Professor Hengstenberg. Nothing, however, can, we think, be more evident than the reality of this climax, even on his own shewing. " The word * (rasha), which we translate " ungodly," he remarks, " as coming from a verb which in Arabic signifies to be strongly moved with desire and lust, and in Syriac, to be excited in mind, and therefore properly denoting passionate, rest- less, 1 designates the wicked with reference to his inward state, his passionate excitability, and the restlessness, produced by sinful desires, which constantly urges him on to new transgressions ; whereas the term translated sinner, designates him in respect to the continued series of sinful acts which emanate from him/'* Now, inward desires precede the outward acts ; and the progress of vice would be thus described as beginning in the excited pas- sions of the carnal heart tempting the young to walk in their evil counsel, 3 and to enter the forbidden territory of sin. To the rest- lessness, which Hengstenberg considers to be implied in the word that in our version is rendered " ungodly," corresponds, most ap- propriately, the first of the three verbs, " walk," which, when placed as here, in opposition to " stand" and " sit," would seem intended to depict that feverish state of agitation which permits not the novice in sin to rest, but keeps him in a state of continual excitement, walking to and fro, like an " evil spirit seeking rest and finding none ;" impelled hither and thither, as each fitful pas- 1 Compare the locus classicus for the idea, Isaiah Ivii. 20. " The wicked /s*ya~n [har'shaim] the same word as that translated ungodly in the Psalm) are like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest." 8 Hengstenberg's Psalms, i. 1. 3 The word translated " counsel" (~"s.y aitzah) never has the meaning which Bishop Jebb would assign to it of " a place of meeting ; but always, according to Hengsten- berg, signifies " counsel;" sometimes that which one gives to another, but more gene- rally that which one forms for himself, i.e. his plans, purposes. If therefore the paral- lelism demands, as Ilengstenberg thinks, that as " way" and '' seat" are both designa- tions of place, the first noun must be so regarded also ; we may consider " the counsel of the ungodly" in which the transgressor walks, to be that devious way in which passion first leads him astray, which has no one definite direction, but many by-paths, which ho follows according to the lust which bears sway for the moment ; but all of which end at last in that beaten and " broad way of sinners that leadeth to destruction." Compare Psalm Ixxxi. 12, where ' l They walked in their own counsels" stands in parallelism with " So I gave them up unto their own hearts' lust." SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 9 sion may direct j 1 till by-and-by, growing bolder and more fami- liar with vice, he ventures, having joined the multitude which he sees thronging along " the broad way that leadeth to destruc- tion," to " stand' fearlessly with sinners, and take his fill of every pleasure he meets ; until at length, reaching the last and hope- less stage, settling on his lees, he sinks down iiito the seat of the reckless scorner. Nothing can be more graphic, or more calculated to impress with a dread of the first fatal step, than the picture here drawn 1 That this is the image which the Psalmist intends to convey to the mind of the reader by the use of the word " walk," is confirmed by reference to the corresponding term in Psalm ii. 1, IBJ" 1 (rag'shoo) " rage tumultuously. " (For we may remark, in anticipation, that the parallelism already shewn to exist between two successive lines extends much further, so that as we have pairs of lines gradational, we have, in like manner, pairs of stanzas, and even pairs of Psalms gradational.) Without entering far- ther at present into the connection between Psalms i. and ii., which has, in part, been traced by Hengstenberg, we shall only remark, that in correspondence with the picture presented to us in Psalm L, of the progressive stages of vice, from which the righteous man is preserved by meditating in the law of God, we have the same picture reproduced in Psalm ii., but in heightened colours, in the expostulation addressed to the unrighteous Jews and Gentiles for their presumptuous combination against the Lord and his Anointed : "Why do the heathen rage tumultuously, And the people meditate a vain thing, The kings of the earth set themselves, And the rulers sit together consulting, Against Jehovah, and against his Anointed ? The verbs here employed have an evident reference to those in Psalm i., but rise above them in intensity. In Psalm i. 1, we have the ungodly " walking" to and fro in feverish agitation, ac- cording as their passions impel them. In Psalm ii. 1, we find the heathen in " tumul- tuous movement." In Psalm i. 2, the true people of God are represented as " meditating in the law of the Lord." In Psalm ii. 1, the people of Israel are " meditating 1 a vain thing" to " break the bands of his law asunder." Compare v. 3. " Standing in the way of sinners," in Ps. i. 1, is heightened into " setting themselves against the Lord," or taking up a determined stand against him ^siST 1 ' (yithyatz'- voo) in Psalm ii. 2. " Sitting in the seat of the scorner," in Ps. i. 1, making a mock at God and goodness, becomes in Ps. ii. 2, in aggravated form, " sitting together consulting" openly to resist his authority, for such we believe to be the meaning of the verb 1~V~3 (nos'doo). Compare the meaning of the derivative "10 (sood) consessus inter se consultantium, a company of persons sitting together for consultation. Compare also the cognate roots 1%-tftcti, l$-tv(tai, '/-, fifvu ; sed-eo ; sit, set ; sitz-en, setz-en, &c. 1 The same word 13?* yeh'goo, as in Ps. i. 2. 10 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. of sin, which, beginning in the thoughts and secretly cherished lusts of the unhallowed heart, gradually manifests itself in the acts of the confirmed sinner, till it reaches its last and most fearful stage of development in those words of heaven-defying impiety and scorn, wherewith the hardened infidel endeavours to draw others into the same recklessness and ruin with himself. What Christian, who is sensible that such, but for the prevent- ing grace of God, he himself might have been, experiences not the joyful emotions of gratitude to his Eedeemer for his own rescue swell higher and higher, as he contemplates successively each progressive stage here depicted in the downward career of the wicked, or can fail to discern the beauty, and to respond to the propriety, of the climax 1 in the Psalmist's exclamation, O the blessedness of the man ! Who hath not walked in the counsel of the ungodly ; Nor stood in the way of sinners ; Nor sat in the seat of the scornful ! This passage finds a counterpart in the Lord's Sermon on the Mount, Matt. v. 44. Love your enemies : Bless them that curse you, Do good to them that hate you, And pray for them that despitefully use you, and persecute you. Here, as in the opening of the first Psalm, the first line is com- mon to the three succeeding, being the enunciation of the gene- ral principle of which they form special precepts, enumerating the three different modes in which love to enemies can be exhibited and cultivated ; 1st, in word, *2dty, in deed, and 3dty, in thought. In the triplet there is a regular gradation in the development of the character of the enemies of the Christian ; who first, when they feel their own conduct tacitly reproved by his righteous ex- ample and conversation, begin by cursing and speaking evil of 1 The alleged climax is an ascending series, not in the scale of moral goodness (as Gataker's objection implied), but in the scale of conscious happiness, flowing out of an exemption from certain stages of moral evil ; and in each of the ascending terms, the consciousness of happiness must be measured by the magnitude of the evil from which the good man is exempted. The Psalmist's exclamation is not, " the goodness," but " the happiness," &c. Jebb's Sacred Literature, p. 44. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 11 him. As this inward feeling of self-dissatisfaction increases, it gradually becomes confirmed into settled hatred against him who occasions it, till at length, becoming intolerable, it seeks to alle- viate its torment by venting itself in despiteful usage and persecu- tion of its detested object. Nor is the climax in the manifestation of love by the Chris- tian less remarkable. In proportion as the malice of his enemies increases in virulence and outrage, he is required, by the perfect law of his Saviour, to meet every new insult with ever-increasing meekness, and to overcome every rise in evil by a still higher ad- vance in good. Not only must he, by a mild answer, strive to turn away wrath, returning blessings for the curses uttered against himself; but even when he has perceived indubitable tokens that the original dislike has now ripened into settled hate, he must omit no fitting opportunity that offers of shewing effectual kind- ness to his neighbour and doing him good. " If his enemy hun- ger, he must feed him ; if he thirst, he must give him drink," 1 that by such a manifestation of godlike benevolence he may heap coals of conviction upon his head, and, if possible, melt down his hardened enmity into ingenuous relentings and confession of his fault. And should his enmity, notwithstanding, proceed to such outrageous persecution as to repel every manifestation of benevo- lence in act, he can still give him his prayers, and intercede for his persecutors with Him who can turn the hearts of men whither- soever he listeth. If he would become one of " the children of his Father who is in heaven," (compare the next verse, Matt. v. 45), he must imitate the example of Him who prayed even for his mur- derers : " Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do." From the examples given, it will be evident that the distin- guishing excellence of the gradational specieS of parallelism is its admirable adaptation to mark the nicest shades of moral good and evil, and thus to train the Hebrew people, habituated to its use, to this discrimination. Bishop Jebb has done essential service to the cause of Scripture criticism in pointing out so clearly the true nature and advantages of this species of parallelism, and vindica- ting the language of Scripture from the imputation of gross tau- tology ; an imputation, which, as he remarks, " could not easily 1 Compare St Paul's commentary on this passage, Romans xii. 14 21. 12 SCRIPTUKE PARALLELISM. be repelled, if the Sacred Volume were admitted to abound in consecutive pairs of lines strictly synonymous. The imputation is not new, and the defence has been long since almost antici- pated : * Nothing is thought more impertinent in Scripture than the frequent repetitions ; but the learned need not be told, that many things seem to the ignorant bare repetitions, which yet ever bring along with them some LIGHT, or some ACCESSION/ Boyle on the Style of Scripture, p. 90." " But another and not less important consideration," the Bishop adds, " remains. It can, I apprehend, be satisfactorily shewn, 1 that a great object of the duality of mem- bers in Hebrew poetry, accompanied by a distinction, and com- monly either a progress or antithesis, in the sense of related terms, clauses, and periods, is to make inexhaustible provision for marking, with the nicest philosophical precision, the moral dif- ferences and relations of things. The Antithetic Parallelism serves to mark the broad distinctions between truth and falsehood, and good and evil. The Cognate [or Gradational] Parallelism discharges the more difficult and more critical function, of discri- minating between different degrees of truth and good on the one hand, of falsehood and of evil on the other. And it is probable that full justice will not be done to the language, either of the Old Testament or of the New, till interpreters, qualified in all re- spects, and gifted alike with sagaciousness and sobriety of mind, shall accurately investigate these nice distinctions." 2 II. PARALLEL LINES ANTITHETIC. " Parallel lines antithetic are those in which two lines corre- spond with one another by an opposition of terms and sentiments ; when the second is contrasted with the first, sometimes in ex- pressions, sometimes in sense only. Accordingly the degrees of antithesis are various ; from an exact contra-position of word to word, singulars to singulars, plurals to plurals, &c., down to a general disparity, with something of a contrariety in the two pro- positions ; for example, 1 This Bishop Jebb does in his subsequent pages, some examples from which have already been given. 2 Jebb's Sacred Literature, p. 39. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 13 Faithful are the wounds of a friend ; But deceitful are the kisses of an enemy. PROVERBS xxvii. 6. Here every word has its opposite : faithful, deceitful ; wounds, kisses ; friend, enemy. A wise son maketh a glad father ; But a foolish son is the heaviness of his mother. PROVERBS x. 1. They have bowed down and fallen ; But we have risen, and stand upright. PSALM xx. 8. Many seek the ruler's favour ; But every man's judgment cometh from the Lord. PROVERBS xxix. 26. where the opposition is chiefly between the single terms, the ruler, and the LORD ; but there is an opposition likewise in the general sentiment ; which intimates the vanity of depending on the former without seeking the favour of Him on whom depend the issues of all things. This species of parallelism is peculiarly adapted to adages, aphorisms, and detached sentences, and abounds in the Proverbs of Solomon, much of the elegance, acuteness, and force of which arise from the antithetic form, the opposition of diction and sen- timent/' 1 III. PARALLEL LINES SYNTHETIC. " Parallel lines synthetic, or constructive, are those in which the parallelism consists only in the similar form of construction ; in which word does not answer to word, and sentence to sentence, as equivalent or opposite ; but there is a correspondence and equality between the different propositions in respect of the shape and turn of the whole sentence and of the constructive parts ; such as noun answering to noun, verb to verb, member to member, negative to negative, interrogative to interrogative." 51 1 Lowth's Isaiah, Preliminary Dissert., p. xiv. 2 Ibid p. xv. 14 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. f Praise Jehovah from the earth, 8 I Ye sea monsters and all deeps ; voices. J Fire and hail, snow and vapour ; [ Stormy wind, executing his command ; {Mountains, and all hills ; Fruit-trees, and all cedars ; Wild beasts, and all cattle, Creeping things, and birds of wing : Kings of the earth, and all people ; Princes, and all judges of the earth ; Young men, and also maidens, Old men, with children : Let them praise the name of Jehovah ; For his name alone is exalted ; His majesty, above earth and heaven. PSALM cxlviii. 7-13. Four and twenty voices from earth are called upon to unite in the universal hymn of praise to the Lord, which heaven and all its hosts (ver. 1-6) had begun. They are divided into three choirs, with eight companies in each. First, one blended chorus is heard from earth, and sea, and air ; the deeps, with their mighty tenants, and the resistless elements of air, fulfilling in all things his com- mands, conspiring together to proclaim the Creator's glory ! Next, each individual object on earth is invited to swell the strain the loftiest features of the land, with all its productions and in- numerable tribes of living beings, be they wild or tame, formed to creep on the surface beneath, or to soar into the regions above ; and, lastly, man, the whole family of the redeemed on earth, of every rank, and age, and sex, are summoned with intelligent voice to join and fill up the universal acclaim of heaven, and earth, and sea, and air ! We have a beautiful instance of this species in Psalm xix. in which the lines are bi-meinbral, that is, they consist each of double members, or two propositions : The law of Jehovah is perfect, reviving the soul ; The testimony of Jehovah is sure, making wise the simple ; The precepts of Jehovah are right, rejoicing the heart ; The commandment of Jehovah is pure, enlightening the eyes : The fear of Jehovah is clean, enduring for ever ; The judgments of Jehovah are truth, they are righteous altogether: SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 15 More to be desired are they than gold, yea than much fine gold ; And sweeter than honey, yea than the dropping of the honey-comb. PSALM xix. 7-10. This species is frequently employed in an enumeration of parti- culars, for the purpose of forming into groups a variety of details. A striking instance of this occurs in 2 Cor. xi. 22-27, where the Apostle is recounting his numerous labours and sufferings in the cause of Christ : 22. (Are they Hebrews? So am I. < Are they Israelites ? So am I. (Are they the seed of Abraham? So am I. 23. Are they ministers of Christ? (I speak as a fool) I am more. In labours more abundant, DCS above measure, imprisonments more abundant, (In labour In stripes In impris In deaths oft ; 24. Of the Jews five times received I forty stripes save one. 25. b j Thrice was I beaten with rods, once was I stoned, thedeep; Thrice I suffered shipwreck, a night and a day I have been in 26. 1 r In journeyings oft; In perils of rivers, in perils of robbers, b < In perils from mine own countrymen, in perils from the heathen, In perils in the city, in perils in the wilderness, * In perils by sea, in perils by false brethren : 27. /-In labour, and painfulness, In watchings often, hunger and thirst, In fastings often, In cold, and nakedness. /-In a < In The correspondence in the constructions and expressions will be still more apparent in the original Greek : 22. *Ea/b/ siffi ; 'l6sar,Xira.i siffi 23. A/axovo/ XI/OTOU siffi ; (<7raoa.ai) OTSO Jyw. I' Iv xocro/s crsff/ufforspwj, a ^ EC -n-Xjjya/j u f y?.ax.a7; TEM 16 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. sv Quvdroig ToXXccx/j* 26. f 65o/T00/a/s xivdvvoig b -< xivfivvoig ex. y'tvovg, Kivfrjvoig e% edvuv, M&WMf Jv TcXs/, xtv&vvois sv gj],,/ in the first pair ; but Ears have they ) There are their hands There are their feet >- in the next pair ; the first couplet denying to idols the possession of all percep- tion, the second of all powers of action. This form of parallelism Mr Boys has shown to prevail most extensively throughout the Sacred Writings ; " not only in doc- trine and discussion, but in narration and dialogue ; not only where we might expect to meet with something like stanzas, but where poetry, according to our ideas of it, is out of the question." Thus a Take ye heed every one of his neighbour, b And trust ye not in any brother. b For every brother will utterly supplant, a And every neighbour will walk with slanders. JEREMIAH ix. 4. In a and a we have neighbours ; in b and b brothers, a Though he heap up silver as the dust, b And prepare raiment as the clay : 6 He may prepare it, but the just shall put it on v a And the innocent shall divide the silver. JOB xxvii, 16, 17._ 38 SCBIPTURE PARALLELISM. In a and a we have silver, in b and b raiment. The corre- spondence of b and b is more strongly marked in the original, than in our translation ; the noun in b for " raimenf w*\, malboosh, being derived from the verb in b " array one's self in," or " put on" |^r yilbosh. a Whom he would he slew ; b And whom he would he kept alive ; b And whom he would he set up ; a And whom he would he put down. DANIEL v. 19. In a and a those towards whom he exercised severity ; in b and b those to whom he showed favour. Ashkelon shall see it, and fear ; Gaza also, and be very sorrowful ; And Ekron : For her expectation shall be ashamed ; And the king shall perish from Gaza ; And Ashkelon shall not be inhabited. ZECHARIAH ix. 5. The catalogue of Abraham's riches, given in Gen. xii. 16, seems, according to our ideas, to be very strangely arranged. " And he had sheep and oxen, and he asses, and men servants, and maid servants, and she asses, and camels." Why are the she asses separated from the he asses, and men servants and maid servants thrust in between them ? If we arrange the passage in the form of an introverted parallelism, every want of methodical arrangement disappears. And he had sheep and oxen, And he asses, And men servants, And maid servants, And she asses, And camels. Here we have maid servants answering to men servants in the two central lines, and she asses to he asses in the fourth and second, and camels in the last line to sheep and oxen in the first. In one respect there seems to be some little want of symmetry ; namely, that we have two particulars, " sheep and oxen," in the first line, but only one in each of the succeeding. In the SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 39 Hebrew, however, sheep and oxen here go together as one kind of property ; and therefore the two words are coupled together by a hyphen (or makkaph as it is called in the Hebrew) ; thus "=1"^, tzon oovakar, as if we were to write them " sheep-and-oxen." 1 As well the stranger as he that is born in the land, when he blasphemeth the name of the Lord, shall be put to death. And he that killeth any man, shall surely be put to death, And he that killeth a beast shall make it good, beast for beast. ( And if a man cause a blemish in his neighbour, ( As he hath done, so shall it be done to him : Breach for breach, eye for eye, tooth for tooth : As he hath caused a blemish in a man, so shall it be done to him again. And he that killeth a beast, he shall restore it. And he that killeth a man, he shall be put to death. Ye shall have one manner of law, as well for the stranger, as for one of your own country : for I am the Lord your God. LEVITICUS xxiv. 16 22. 2 ARISE ! Shine, for thy light is come, And the glory of Jehovah is risen upou thee. For, behold, darkness shall cover the earth, And gross darkness the people ; But on thee shall Jehovah arise, and his glory upon thee shall be seen ; And the Gentiles shall walk in thy light, And kings in the brightness of thy rising. ISAIAH lx. 1-3. In the first and eighth lines, we have the rising of the Church ; in the second and seventh, the light which it receives and re- flects ; in the third and sixth, the glory of the Lord : in the two central lines, the spiritual darkness of mankind. 3 The entire Epistle of St Paul to Philemon, as Mr Boys has shown, forms an introverted parallelism of eighteen members. I 1 Boys' Key to the Book of Psalms, pp. 37, 38. It is not, however, without design, that two particulars are specified in the first line, instead of the single term " cattle," which would have included both. The whole of the articles enumerated are thus made to amount to the sacred number SBVEN, the import of which we shall afterwards examine. * Ibid. p. 41. 3 Ibid. p. 40. 40 SCRIPTUEE PARALLELISM. give only its plan, referring those who wish to see it filled up and illustrated to the author's Tactica Sacra, pp. 61-68. A 1-3 . Epistolary. B 4-7. Prayers of St Paul for Philemon Philemon's hospitality. C 8. Authority. D 9, 10. Supplication. E 10. Onesimus, a convert of St Paul's. F 11, 12. Wrong done by Onesimus, amends made by Paul. G 12. To receive Onesimus the same as receiving Paul. H 13, 14. Paul, Philemon. I 15. Onesimus. I 16. Onesimus. H 16. Paul, Philemon. G 17. To receive Onesimus the same as receiving Paul. F 18, 19. Wrong done by Onesimus, amends made by Paul. E 19. Philemon a convert of St Paul's. D 20. Supplication C 21. Authority. B 22. Philemon's hospitality Prayers of Philemon for St Paul. A 23-25. Epistolary. The eighty-ninth Psalm is a remarkable instance of a series of introverted parallelisms formed by verses, not lines. Let us take as specimens two of the stanzas or strophes : 28. My mercy will I keep for him for evermore, And my covenant shall stand fast with him. 29. His seed also will I make to endure for ever, And his throne as the days of heaven. 30. If his children forsake my law, And walk not in my judgments ; 31. If they break my statutes, And keep not my commandments ; 32. Then will I visit their transgression with the rod, And their iniquity with stripes, 33. Yet my mercy will I not utterly take from him, Nor prove false in my truth. 34. My covenant will I not break, Nor alter the thing that is gone out of my lips. 35. Once have I sworn by my holiness ; Unto David will I not lie. 36. His seed shall endure for ever, And his throne as the sun before me. 37. It shall be established for evermore as the moon, And the witness in the sky standeth fast. SELAH. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 41 38. But them hast cast off, and abhorred, Thou hast been wroth with thine anointed. 39. Thou Last made void the covenant of thy servant, Thou hast profaned to the earth his crown, 40. Thou hast broken down all his hedges ; Thou hast brought his strongholds to ruin. 41. All that pass by the way spoil him : He has become a reproach to his neighbours. 42. Thou hast set up the right hand of his adversaries ; Thou hast made all his enemies to rejoice. 43. Thou hast also turned the edge of his sword, Thou hast not made him to stand in the battle, 44. Thou hast made his glory to cease, And his throne to the earth thou hast cast down. 45. The days of his youth hast thou shortened : Thou hast covered him with shame. SELAH. The parallelisms here are evident. To God's mercy kept for David for evermore, and his covenant standing fast with him in v. 28, corresponds in v. 37 the establishment for evermore of Davids throne sure as the witness in the sky standeth fast. In ver. 29 and 36 we have his seed enduring for ever, and his throne as the days of heaven and as the sun. Though his children prove unfaithful, v. 30. Yet will not God prove unfaithful, v. 35. Though they break God's statutes, v. 31. Yet will not God break his covenant, v. 34. In v. 32, God's chastening in measure is made to correspond with (v. 33) the exercise of his mercy and truth, to show that the two, so far from being inconsistent, may run parallel side by side. The limits of the next introverted parallelism (ver. 38-45) are marked out by SELAH at the beginning and at the close. To God's seeming rejection of his Anointed in v. 38 corresponds the shame which he casts upon him in v. 45 and as in Psalm xc. 7, with which psalm the one before us has many points in common, the shortening of the sufferer's days (v. 45) is connected with the wrath of God (v. 38) as its cause. In ver. 39 and 44, his throne and crown are represented as having been profaned and cast down to the earth. In ver. 40 and 43, his defences fail him, and in ver. 41 and 42, his neighbours and enemies triumph over him. 42 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. SECTION VI. Closely allied to the Introverted Parallelism is a peculiarity or artifice of construction, called Epanodos, which Bishop Jebb de- fines to be " literally a going back ; speaking first to the second of two subjects proposed ; or, if the subjects be more than two, resuming them precisely in the inverted order : speaking first to the last, and last to the first." The rationale of this artifice in composition he thus explains : " Two pair of terms or propositions, containing two important, but not equally important notions, are to be so distributed as to bring out the sense in the strongest and most impressive manner : now, this result will be best attained, by commencing, and concluding, with the notion to which pro- minence is to be given ; and by placing in the centre the less im- portant notion, or that, which, from the scope of the argument, is to be kept subordinate." 1 Of this Bishop Jebb gives the following examples : " No man can serve two masters : For either he will hate the one, and love the other ; Or he will adhere to the one, and neglect the other : Ye cannot serve God and Mammon. MATTHEW vi. 24. " In this quatrain at large there is a clear epanodos: in the first line, the impossibility is in general terms asserted, of serving two masters ; that is, two masters of opposite tempers, issuing oppo- site commands : in the fourth line, this impossibility is re-asserted, and brought personally home to the secular part of our Lord's hearers, by the specification of the two incompatible masters, GOD and MAMMON. These two assertions, as the leading members of the passage, are placed first and last ; while, in the centre, are subordinately given the moral proofs by which the main proposi- tions are established. But the two central members are so dis- posed, as to exhibit an epanodos yet more beautiful and striking. " For either he will hate the one, And love the other ; Or he will adhere to the one, And neglect the other. 1 Jebb's Sacred Liter, p. 335. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 43 In a divided service, the dispositions and conduct of the servant, towards the opposite powers who claim his obedience, are distri- butable into two classes ; each class containing two degrees : on the one side love, or at least, adherence ; on the other side, hatred, or at least, neglect. Now, since it was our Lord's purpose to establish the great moral truth, that every attempt to reconcile the service of opposing masters must terminate in disappoint- ment, the question is, By what arrangement of the four existing terms, may the utmost prominence be given to that truth ? The answer is obvious : let hatredbe placed first, and neglect last, and let love and adherence be relegated to the centre ; the conse- quence will be, that the first impression made, and the last left, must be inevitably of a disagreeable nature ; strongly enforcing the conclusion, that such a service cannot be any other than most irksome and most fruitless bondage." 1 " Give not that which is holy to the dogs ; Neither cast your pearls before the swine ; Lest they trample them under their feet ; And [those] turn about and rend you. MATTHEW vii. 6. " That is, adjusting the parallelism : " Give not that which is holy to the dogs, Lest they turn about and rend you : Neither cast your pearls before the swine, Lest they trample them under their feet. " The more dangerous act of imprudence, with its fatal result, is placed first and last, so as to make and to leave the deepest prac- tical impression. To cast pearls before swine, is to place the pure and elevated morality of the Gospel before sensual and besotted wretches, who have " . . nor ear, nor soul, to comprehend The sublime notion, and high mystery, but will assuredly trample them in the mire. To give that which is holy (the sacrifice, as some translate it) to the dogs, is to pro- duce the deep truths of Christianity (the ra $a6n roS 0oD), before 1 Jebb's Sacred Liter, pp. 336, 337. 44 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. the malignant and profane ; who will not fail to add injury to neglect ; who will not only hate the doctrine, but perse- cute the teacher. In either case, an indiscreet and over-profluent zeal may do serious mischief to the cause of goodness : but in the latter case, the injury will fall with heightened severity, both on religion, and religion's injudicious friends. The warning, there- fore, against the DOGS is emphatically placed at the commence- ment and the close." * Mr Boys has remarked, that the introverted form of parallelism is employed in the tenth chapter of G-enesis, in giving the enume- ration of the sons of Noah and their descendants. " The first verse of this chapter runs thus : ' Now these are the generations of the sons of Noah, Shem, Ham, and Japheth ;' but in proceed- ing to enumerate the descendants of each, the sacred writer inverts the order. The sons of Japheth come first, then the sons of Ham, and, last of all, the sons of Shem. Shem, Ham, And Japheth. The sons of Japheth, &c. (25.) And the sons of Ham, &c. (6-29.) Unto Shem also, the father of all the children of Eber, &c. (21-31.) " GENESIS x. 1-31. The reason of this arrangement, however, Mr Boys has omitted to notice. Why should Shem be placed either first or last, since he was neither the eldest of the sons of Noah (" unto Shem also .... the brother of Japheth the elder," &c., Gen. x. 21), nor the youngest (" And Noah awoke from his wine, and knew what his younger son had done unto him," Gen. ix. 24) ? The inten- tion of the sacred historian evidently was to mark the pre-emi- nence which God designed for Shem in his generations, as the progenitor of the chosen people, and of that promised seed " in whom all the nations of the earth were to be blessed." But the importance of attention to the epanodos will' be parti- cularly evident by taking an example in which the parallelism consists not of lines, but of periods or whole sentences. Thus in Romans ii. 12, we have two propositions stated, and in verses 1 Jebb's Sacred Liter, pp. 339, 340. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 45 13-15 we have the arguments given for each respectively, but in inverse order : 12. . f For as many as have sinned without law, "^ Shall also perish without law ; n f And as many as have sinned in the law (_ Shall be judged by the law ; 13. ( FoR 1 not the hearers of the law are just before God, \ But the doers of the law shall be justified. 14. C FoR 1 when the Gentiles, which have not the law, Do by nature the things contained in the law, These, having not the law, A < Are a law unto themselves : 15. Which shew the work of the law written in their hearts, Their consciences also bearing witness, And their thoughts the meanwhile accusing or else excusing one another. Here, according to the principles of the Epanodos, the case of the Gentiles is put first and last (A and A), as furnishing the strongest apparent objection to the equity of the doctrine laid down by the Apostle, that " all are under sin, and brought in as guilty before God ;" while the statement with regard to the Jews' guilt (B), and its proof (B), are placed in the middle and subor- dinate place. An acquaintance with this common rule of Scrip- tural arrangement might have saved Whitby, Macknight, and others, from giving utterance to the very erroneous doctrinal views which will be found in their commentaries on this passage, at direct variance with the main scope of St Paul's argument in the Epistle to the Romans, but for which they imagined they found a sanction in the supposed connexion between verses 13 and 14. These two verses, however, have no immediate con- nexion, but verse 14 corresponds with the first two lines of verse 12 (A). The first proposition stated by St Paul in A is, that the Gentiles, though they " have sinned without law, shall also perish without law." The proof of the equity of this proceeding, the Apostle, after having parenthetically disposed of the case of the Jews (in B and B), reserves for the conclusion (A), to make and leave the stronger impression ; and vindicates the severity of 1 On the two consecutive FORS, see Section VIII. 46 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. God's judgment even in this case, by the argument that the Gen- tiles, though destitute of a written law, yet shewed, by their prac- tising at times, however imperfectly, certain virtues required by the law, and by the possession of a conscience, with that inter- nal conflict of opposing thoughts which it at times awakens, that they had a law written in their hearts, the violation of which rendered them also wholly inexcusable. SECTION VII. Though not strictly falling under the subject of parallelism, yet as being somewhat akin to the Epanodos, and closely allied to the great object of our investigation, the connexion of Scrip- ture, we may here advert to another rule of Scriptural arrange- ment, inattention to which has involved in obscurity the con- nexion of the early part of David's history. The rule is this : That wherever attention is wished to be drawn to the relation between two events separated by an interval containing important details, the sacred writer omits for the present the intermediate events, and brings into close connexion the two related circum- stances. He then returns back, and fills up the details that had been omitted. A clear instance of this usage is to be found in the very com- mencement of the Book of Genesis. In order to present at one view the connexion between the six days occupied in the creation of the world, and the sanctifying of the seventh day as a Sabbath, and to place prominently in the very front of Revelation the solemn sanction which the Creator intended to stamp on the uni- versal observance of the Sabbath so long as the earth should endure, by His having accommodated the whole order of His creation to this purpose, the sacred historian omits some impor- tant details relating to the sixth day, and concludes his introduc- tory account of the origin of all things with the words : Thus the heavens and the earth were finished, And all the host of them. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 47 a And on the seventh day God ended his work which he had made ; b And he rested on the seventh day c From all his work which he had made. a And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it : b Because that on it he had rested c From all his work which God created and made. GENESIS ii. 1-3. This crowning ordinance being thus presented in its proper connexion and bearing, Moses returns back on the course of his narrative, and records in the remainder of Chap. II. a variety of interesting particulars, all connected with the sixth day. Let us apply this rule to the elucidation of the history of David, as contained in 1 Sam. xvi.-xviii. From a very early period, the difficulties which have been found in reconciling the supposed discrepancies in these chapters have appeared so great, that in the Vatican copy of the Septua- gint translation, an attempt has been made to remove them by omitting very considerable portions of the text, particularly of Chap, xvii., and several modern critics, such as Kennicott, Michaelis, Dathe, Houbigant, and Boothroyd, have seen no other resource but to resort to this violent remedy, and to reject about thirty verses as interpolations. Some of the difficulties on the face of the narrative are these. In ch. xvi. 18, David is described as "a mighty valiant man, and a man of war, and prudent in matters ;" and yet, in the fol- lowing chapter, he is spoken of as a youth, unused to arms, ver. 33, 39. In xvi. 19-22, we have an account of David's introduc- tion to Saul, of Saul's loving him greatly, and making him his armour-bearer, and his residing constantly at his court : yet in ver. 56 of the next chapter, Saul bids Abner " enquire whose son the stripling is :" and when David is brought before him after the combat, Saul speaks to him as an entire stranger, " Whose son art thou, thou young man ?" In order to remove these difficulties, it has been supposed by Bishops Hall, Warburton, and Horsley, that the encounter with Goliath took place previously to David's being required to play the harp before Saul. Bishop Horsley's arguments seem most satisfactorily to establish this point. " It appears," he remarks, " from many circumstances of the story, that David's combat with Goliath was many years prior in order of time to Saul's madness, 48 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. and to David's introduction to him as a musician. 1. David was quite a youth when he engaged Goliath (xvii. 33-42) : when he was introduced to Saul as a musician, he was of full age (xvi. 18). 2. His combat with Goliath was his first appear- ance in public life (xvii. 56) : when he was introduced as a musician, he was a man of established character (xvi. 18). 3. His combat with Goliath was his first military exploit (xvii. 39) : he was " a man of war" when he was introduced as a musi- cian (xvi. 18). He was unknown both to Saul and Abner at the time he fought with Goliath. He had not, therefore, yet been in the office of Saul's armour-bearer, or resident in any capacity at the court." Founding on these premises, Bishop Horsley concludes that the last ten verses of ch. xvi. which relate Saul's madness and David's introduction to the court upon that occasion are misplaced. "The true place for these ten verses (xvi. 1423)," he affirms, " seems to be between the ninth and the tenth of the eighteenth chapter. Let these ten verses be removed to that place, and this seventeenth chapter be connected immediately with the 13th verse of ch. xvi., and the whole disorder and inconsistency that appear in the narrative in its present arrangement will be removed." There are two great objections to this solution of the difficulty. 1. We are obliged to resort to a violent dislocation of the text, and to suppose that ten verses, by some unaccountable accident, have been transposed. 2. If some inconsistencies are removed by this supposition, others equally great remain, as Dr Davidson has shown : e.g. From the reception which Saul gives to David when introduced to play the harp before him, it is evident that he was a stranger, whom if he had ever before seen he had forgotten. But is this within the bounds of probability if we adopt the connexion of the events as proposed by Bishop Horsley ? According to his arrangement, David, after the conquest of Goliath, continued with Saul, " went out whithersoever he sent him and behaved himself wisely, and Saul set him over the men of war, and he was accepted in the sight of all the people," insomuch that Saul be- SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 49 came jealous of his rising reputation, and eyed David with suspi- cion and envy. Can we suppose that, after all this, Saul so entirely forgot David and his jealousy, that when David came again before him, it could be said, that " he loved him greatly," and that he made him " his armour-bearer" P 1 Dr Davidson's own solution, in his last work on Biblical Criti- cism, is still more unsatisfactory, as he attributes the disjointed and contradictory appearance, which the narrative in his estima- tion presents, to " the compilatory, fragmentary character of the books, the writer of which put together materials derived from various sources, without believing it to be either necessary or essential to bring them into exact accordance in their historical sequence and relationship," a theory which seems hardly recon- cilable with a belief in the inspiration of the Books of Samuel. The solution which we would propose, requires no omission nor transposition of any part of the text. It is simply to consi- der the whole of chap, xvii., and the first four verses of chap, xviii. as an episode introduced, detailing the earlier circumstances of David's conflict with Goliath, which had taken place many years previously. If the end of chap. xvi. and the fifth verse of chap, xviii. are read in connexion, the discrepancies will be found to vanish. To enable the reader to judge the more readily, we give as much of the narrative as is necessary to shew the connexion, and shall distinguish the part which we consider to be episodical, and relating to an earlier period of David's history, by Italics : 1 SAMUEL xvi. 13 xviii. 11. CHAP. xvi. Ver. 13. Then Samuel took the horn of oil, and anointed him in the midst of his brethren : and the Spirit of the Lord came upon David from that day forward. So Samuel rose up and went to Ramah. Ver. 14. But the Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul, and an evil ,, 15. spirit from the Lord troubled him. And Saul's servant said unto him, Behold now an evil spirit from God troubleth thee. Let ,, 16. our Lord now command thy servants, which are before thee, to seek out a man, who is a cunning player on an harp : and it shall come to pass, when the evil spirit from God is upon thee, that 1 For other objections see Dr Davidson's Hermeneutics, pp 542, 543. D 50 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. CHAP. xvi. Ver. 17. he shall play with his hand, and them shalt be well. And Saul said unto his servants, Provide me now a man that can play well, 18. and bring him to me. Then answered one of the servants and said, Behold, I have seen a son of Jesse the Bethlehemite, that is cunning in playing, and a mighty valiant man, and a man of war, and prudent in nfatters, and a comely person, and the Lord ,, 19. is with him. Wherefore Saul sent messengers unto Jesse, and 20. said, Send me David thy son, which is with the sheep. And Jesse took an ass laden with bread, and a bottle of wine, and a 21. kid, and sent them by David his son unto Saul. And David came to Saul, and stood before him ; and he loved him greatly ; ,, 22. and he became his armour-bearer. And Saul sent to Jesse, say- ing, Let David, I pray thee, stand before me ; for he hath found ,, 23. favour in my sight. And it came to pass, when the evil spirit from God was upon Saul, that David took an harp and played with his hand : so Saul was refreshed, and was well, and the evil spirit departed from him. Earlier incident in David's history : CHAP. xvn. Ver. 1. Now the Philistines had gathered 1 together their armies to battle, and were gathered together at Shochoh, which belongeth to Judah, and pitched between Shochoh and Azekah, in Ephesdammim. And ,, 2. Saul and the men of Israel were gathered together, and pitched by the valley of Elah, and set the battle in array against the Philis- 3. tines. And the Philistines stood on a mountain on the one side, and Israel stood on a mountain on the other side : and there was a valley ,, 4. between them. And there went out a champion out of the camp of the Philistines, named Goliath, of Gath, whose height was six cubits and a span ,, 10. And the Philistine said, I defy the armies of Israel this day ; give 11. me a man that we may fight together. When Saul and all Israel heard those words of the Philistine, they were dismayed, and greatly afraid. 1 So ought the verb ^ a .^!* (vaiyaas'phoo), we conceive, to be translated, as is fre- quently the case with the Future in Hebrew, with 1 conversive. See Exod. xxxii. 29, xxxiii. 5, &c. The connexion of the whole of this episode with the preceding context seems evi- dently to be this. The introduction of David into Saul's court, which has just been narrated in the end of chap, xvi., was not, the historian informs us, the first time that Saul and David had met. It was preceded by an interesting interview many years pre- vious, which led indeed to no continued intercourse or intimacy, yet was not without its effect in preparing David for his future destiny, as it occasioned his being detained in the army, and gradually trained up till he had acquired the character of which we find him in possession (ch. xvi. 18) on his subsequent introduction at a later period of life to Saul. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 51 ClJAP. XVII. Ver. 12. Now David was the son of that Ephrathite of Bethlehem- Judah, whose name was Jesse ; and he had eight sons : and the man went 13. among men for an old man in the days of Saul. And the three eldest sons of Jesse went and followed Saul to the battle ; and the names of his three sons that went to the battle were Eliab the first- born, and next unto him Abinadab, and the third Shammah. And ,, 14. David was the youngest : and the three eldest followed Saul. But ,, 15. David v:ent and returned from Saul 1 to feed his father's sheep at ,, 16. Bethlehem. And the Philistine drew near morning and evening, and presented himself forty days. Ver. 17. And Jesse said unto Dacid his son, Take now for thy brethren an ephah of this parched corn, and these ten loaves, and run to the ,, 18. camp to thy brethren; and carry these ten cheeses unto the captain of their thousand, and look how thy brethren fare, and take their 20. pledge And David rose up early in the morn- ing, and left the sheep with a keeper, and took, and went, as Jesse had commanded him 81. And when the words were heard which David spake, they rehearsed 32. them before Saul: and he sent for him. And Dacid said to Saul, Let no man's heart fail because of him ; thy servant will go and ,, 33. fight with this Philistine. And Saul said to David, Thou art not able to go against this Philistine to fight with him : for thou art but ,, 34. a youth, and he a man of war from his youth. And David said unto Saul, Thy servant kept his father's sheep, and there came a lion, ifc 42. And when the Philistine looked about, and saw David, he disdained him : for he was but a youth, and ruddy, and of a fair counten- ance " 48. And it came to pass when the Philistine arose, and came and drew nigh to meet David, that David hasted and ran toward the army to meet the Philistine. And David put his hand in his bag, fyc. 54. And David took the head of the Philistine, and brought it to Jeru- salem ; a but he put his armour in his tent 1 This, and the preceding verse, as Horsley remarks, are to be taken in connexion. " The three eldest followed Saul," that is, remained constantly with the army. " But David went and returned from Saul," that is, from the army, going only occasionally when his father commanded him to inquire after the welfare of his brethren. See ver. 17 and 18. 2 This is evidently a proleptical statement, as is also the one immediately succeeding, " he put his armour in his tent. 1 ' As David was not attached to the army, this must either refer to the tent which Was now assigned him, as Saul retained him in the army (see ch. xviii. 2) : or perhaps, as Otto Thenius thinks (Exegetisches Handbuch zum alten Testament), he took the armour with him home, when he returned to his father's house. One's TENT, at this period of the Hebrew history, was the usual expression for his house or home. Compare 1 Sam. xiii. 2, 2 Sam. xix. 8, xx. 1. " Every man to his tent, O Israel," xx. 22, 1 Kings xii. 16, &c. 52 SCKIPTURE PAKALLELISM. CHAP. xvii. Ver. 55. And when Saul saw David go forth against the Philistine, he said unto Abner, the captain of the host, Abner, whose son is this youth ? And Aimer said, As thy soul liveth, O king, I cannot tell. 56. And the king said, Inquire thou whose son the stripling is. And 57. as David returned from the slaughter of the Philistine, Abner took him, and brought him before Saul with the head of the Philistine 58. in his hand. And Saul said to him, Whose son art thou, thou young man 2 And David answered, I am the son of thy servant CH. xvni. Jesse the BethleJiemite. And it came to pass, when he had made an end of speaking unto Saul, that the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of David, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul. 2. And Saul took him that day, and would let him go no more home to his father's housed Then Jonathan and David made a cove- 4. nant, because he loved him as his own soul. And Jonathan stripped himself of the robe that was upon him, and gave it to David, and his garments, even to his sword, and to his bow, and to his girdle. Kesumption of the narrative broken off at the end of chapter xvi : Ver. 5. Now David went out whithersoever Saul sent him, and be- haved himself wisely ; and Saul set him over the men of war, and he -was accepted in the sight of all the people, and also in the sight of Saul's servants. Ver. 6. And it came to pass, as they were coming in, on David's re- turning from the slaughter of the Philistine [army, or, as in the margin, of the " Philistines "}, that the women came out of all the cities of Israel, singing and dancing to meet king Saul, with 7. tabrets, with joy, and with instruments of music. And the women answered one another as they played and said, Saul hath slain his thousands, And David his ten thousands. ,, 8. And Saul was very wroth, and the saying displeased him ; and he said, They have ascribed unto David ten thousands, and to me they have ascribed but thousands ; and what can he have more 1 As he had been in the habit of doing hitherto, going and returning, as we have already seen (xvii. 15), to keep up intelligence between his father and brethren. The true import of the expression, " Saul took him, and would let him go no more home to his father's house, appears from chap. xiv. 52. " And there was sore war against the Philistines all the days of Saul ; and when Saul saw any strong man, or any valiant man, he took him unto him." Concluding from the adventure of the day that the young man was likely to form a good soldier, Saul kept him to serve in the army, and made him, like his brothers (xvii. 14), " follow him'' : but there is nothing said of his being, as at a later period, about Saul's person. When the campaign was over, he would return to his father's house, till his services were again required. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 53 CHAP. XVI. Ver. 9. but the kingdom ? And Saul eyed David from that day and forward. Ver. 10. And it came to pass on the morrow, that the evil spirit from God came upon Saul, and he prophesied in the midst of the house ; and David played with his hand as at other times ; and 11. there was a javelin in Saul's hand. And Saul cast the javelin ; for he said. I will smite David even to the wall with it. And David avoided out of his presence twice. Let us first observe the reason that led to the present arrange- ment of the narrative, and to the anticipation, in the end of chap xvi., of part of David's history. If we read over chap. xvi. carefully, we shall see that the evident object of the historian is to contrast the king who ruled after his own will and for his own purposes, with " the man after God's own heart," whom He chose while yet quite a youth to supply the place of Saul, that he might rule not for himself but for God ; and to enforce on his readers the great principle of God's moral government, illustrated by the opposite destinies of the two, that " whosoever hath, to him shall be given, and he shall have more abundance ; but whosoever hath not, from him shall be taken away even that he hath." (Matt, xiii. 12.) Accordingly, immediately after narrating the selec- tion and anointing of David by Samuel, xvi. 1-12, consequent on the rejection of Saul, the sacred historian remarks, " And the Spirit of the Lord came upon David from that day forward," (ver. 13). This naturally leads him, without regarding any of the intermediate events (which are afterwards introduced episo- dically in chap, xvii-xviii. 4), to remark the opposite dealings of God's providence with Saul. " But the Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul., and an evil spirit from the Lord troubled him" and to pass on by anticipation to the time when events were now approaching a crisis by the two principal personages of the succeeding narrative being brought into close relation with each other. Saul's fortunes had now manifestly begun to wane, while David's were on the increase. The hand of the Lord had fallen heavily on Saul, To alleviate his malady, his servants sought him out a man who could play skilfully, and David is recommended, not only as one whose fame as a practised musician was high, but who was by this time become distinguished for his prowess in war and his prudence in counsel. He is brought into 54 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. the presence of Saul ; and we need not wonder, that after the lapse of many years, Saul, who perhaps had never seen David again after his conflict with Goliath, and who, amidst the multi- plicity of his wars and cares, and those anxious self-tormenting thoughts which now so often troubled him, had probably forgot- ten all the circumstances, should not recognize the ruddy strip- ling whom he had before seen in the manly form of the son of Jesse. He pleases the king ; is introduced as a resident member into his court, " for Saul had sent to Jesse, saying, Let David, I pray thee, stand before me : for he hath found favour in my sight ;" and he is promoted to the high and responsible office of armour-bearer. Let us now read on, in connexion with the end of chap, xvi., the 5th verse of chap, xviii. : " And David went out whitherso- ever Saul sent him, and behaved himself wisely ; and Saul set him over the men of war, and he was accepted in the sight of all the people, and also in the sight of Saul's servants." Now that David had risen to so eminent a station, and was beginning to rival the martial fame and popularity of the king himself with all ranks of the nation, we see how natural was the jealousy excited in the mind of the suspicious monarch by the superior honour ascribed to David above himself, as they were returning on one occasion from battle, by the women who came out of all the cities of Israel singing, Saul hath slain his thousands, And David his ten thousands. That this occurrence is not to be referred to the time of David's first appearance and victory over Goliath, but to a long subse- quent period when David was now resident in Saul's court, for the purpose of alleviating his malady with his harp, seems placed beyond question by the words immediately succeeding : " And it came to pass on the morrow, that the evil spirit from God came upon Saul, and he prophesied in the midst of the house : and David played with his hand, as at other times : and there was a javelin in Saul's hand. And Saul cast the javelin," &c. The ascription of such praise too (" David hath slain his ten thousands") to a mere stripling, till that day unknown, for having slain with a sling and a stone the single champion of Gath, SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 55 would have been so extravagant and exaggerated, that it could scarce have called forth jealousy, but rather a smile on the part of Saul. Besides, had Saul's envy been thus early excited against David on his very first appearance, and continued to pursue him (for we are told that " Saul eyed David from that day and for- tvard"), David's career would have been checked at the very com- mencement, and Saul would certainly have given him no farther opportunities of becoming distinguished as a warrior, far less would have made him " his armour-bearer, set him over his men of war," and changed his hatred of him into love for " he loved him," we are expressly told, " greatly." Only when David was come to mature age, and had acquired such influence as to render him a dangerous rival, even to the monarch, by his known valour, and prudence, and acceptance " in the sight of all the people and of Saul's servants," was such a manifestation of public feeling calcu- lated to excite so inveterate rancour in the breast of Saul ; " They have ascribed unto David ten thousands, and to me they have ascribed but thousands ; and what can he have more but the kingdom ? And Saul eyed David from that day and for- ward.'' " The slaughter of the Philistine," therefore (as our translators seem to have seen by their marginal rendering "of the Philis- tines)," in ch. xviii. 6, has nothing to do with the slaying of Goliath ; but refers to some one of those numerous engagements with the common enemy, "the Philistine," ("for there was sore war against the Philistines all the days of Saul ;" xiv. 52) that took place when David was now captain, after Saul had " set him over the men of war" (xviii. 5). " The Philistine" is here used, as Gentile nouns frequently are, to denote the whole people, as in Exod. xxxiii. 2. " And I will drive out the Canaanite, the Amorite, and the Hittite, and the Perizzite," &c. Compare Gen. xii. 7, xiii. 7, &C. 1 1 Should it be objected that throughout the rest of this history ^T^rr (p'lishtim), the Philistines, in the plural, is always used when the whole people are intended, though averse in general to have recourse to conjectural criticism, yet we see a very natural explanation in the present instance how the mistake might have been committed of writing the singular, while the plural was the true reading. The transcriber having but a lew verses before written, " And as David returned from the slaughter of the Philistine," (ih. xvii. 57) and finding almost the very same words occurring again so soon after- waids, would be very apt to assimilate them to the former: or if he attended as little as has 56 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. SECTION VIII. For tracing the connexion and dependencies of the sacred text, it is important also to keep in view a peculiarity of construction which has been well illustrated by Bishop Jebb. " It sometimes happens," he remarks, in the Parallelisms of the New Testament, " that a precept is delivered, an assertion made, or a principle laid down, co-ordinate reasons for which are independently assigned ; without any repetition of the common antecedent, and without any other indication of continued reference to the original propo- sition, than the repeated insertion of some causative particle ; a FOR (rAP), for instance, or a BECAUSE ('OTI). Of this peculiarity of construction, he brings several examples from the Sermon on the Mount. Blessed are ye when men shall revile you, and persecute you, And shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake : Rejoice, and be exceeding glad : FOR great is your reward in heaven ; FOR so persecuted they the prophets which were before you. MATTHEW v. 11, 12. Here two co-ordinate reasons are assigned, why our Lord's perse- cuted disciples should rejoice : 1. they shall obtain a great reward in heaven ; 2. they are assimilated to the prophets. The re- ference to a common antecedent is, in this place, too clear to be overlooked : it could never be supposed, that the resemblance in point of suffering between the disciples and the prophets was assigned as the cause why the former should obtain a great re- ward." ' Be not, therefore, anxious, saying, What shall we eat ? or what shall we drink ? Or wherewithal shall we be clothed ? FOR after all these things do the Gentiles seek : FOR your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things. since been so generally done to the real connexion of the narrative, and hastily concluded that they referred to the immediately preceding incident, he might think himself justi- fied in altering the text as being an error of previous transcribers. 1 Jebb's Sacred Lit., pp. 375, 376. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 57 Here the precept against worldly solicitude is supported by two reasons : 1. this solicitude is heathenish ; 2. it is needless. Enter ye in at the strait gate : FOR wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction ; And many there be that go in thereat : FOR strait is the gate, and narrow is the way which leadeth unto life ; And few there be that find it. MATTHEW vii. 13, 14. The difficulties found by commentators in this passage are at at once " removed by resorting to the principle of a double refer- ence to a common antecedent. Two co-ordinate reasons are assigned, why we should enter in through the strait gate ; 1. a negative reason ; the wide gate is the way, not to life, but to destruction : 2. a positive reason ; the strait gate is the way to life. The passage, accordingly, may be thus reduced to a six- lined stanza : Enter ye in at the strait gate ; For wide is the gate, and broad is the way that leadeth to destruction j And many there be which go in thereat ; Enter ye in at the strait gate ; For strait is the gate, and narrow is the way which leadeth unto life ; And few there be that find it. To each reason a powerful corroboration is annexed. The wide gate is frequented by multitudes ; we should be heedful, there- fore, lest we be drawn into the vortex : the strait gate not only is not frequented by multitudes, it is found only by a few ; since, therefore, it is freely and plainly disclosed to us, we ought thank- fully to use our privilege, and enter in." x " Who hath not daily necessity, like the high-priests, First, for his own sins to offer sacrifice, Then, for the sins of the people : FOR this {latter] he did once for all, when he offered up himself : FOR the law constituted men who have infirmity, high-priests ; But the word of that oath, which is beyond the law, [constituted] the Son, perfected for evermore. HEBREWS, vii. 27, 28. The division of the proposition in this passage is clear and expli- * Jebb's SacivdLit, pp. 381, 383. 58 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. cit : 1. Our great High-priest is under no necessity of offering daily sacrifice for his own sins ; 2. He is under no necessity of offering daily sacrifice for the sins of the people : the two-fold proof, of this two-fold assertion, is divided also with much dis- tinctness into two clauses ; each commencing with the causa- tive particle TAP, FOR : the proofs, however, are arranged in the inverted order, so as to form an epanodos : the second assertion is first proved ; He needs not offer daily for the sins of the people ; FOR this he did, once for all, when he offered up himself: The first assertion is then proved ; He needs not offer daily for his own sins : FOR he is not, like the legal high-priests, a man with sinful infirmity ; But, in virtue of the covenant, is the sinless Son perfected for evermore. The non-necessity of offering for his own sins, is first asserted, and last proved, in order to give prominence to the grand dis- tinction between him and the legal high-priests : he DID, once for all, offer sacrifice for the sins of the people : he NEVER did, NEVER could, and NEVER will, offer sacrifice for his own sins ; because he is, and was, and shall be, everlastingly PERFECT, and FREE FROM SIN." 1 Another most important passage, in respect to the general arrangement of the Sermon on the Mount (Matt. v. 17-20) has also been happily explained on this principle by Bishop Jebb but I shall reserve his explanation till we come to its consideration in our examination of the exquisite order which pervades the whole of the Sermon on the Mount. SECTION IX. The examples that have been adduced may serve to indicate so far the advancement made by Bishop Jebb in the study of paral- 1 Jebb's Sacred Liter, pp. 385, 386. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 59 lelism : but to all who wish to prosecute this interesting investi- gation for themselves we would beg strongly to recommend the study of the whole of the examples and illustrations which he has given in his " Sacred Literature." If, however, the Bishop's views are correct, it seems scarcely possible to stop short without extending them much farther than to the arrangement of a single paragraph. A people trained, as the Hebrews thus were, to trace an orderly connexion between the different lines and members of a paragraph, must have soon come to feel the want of a similar correspondence and harmony as necessary to unite together the separate paragraphs of an en- tire composition, so as to form one connected and consistent whole. To illustrate what we mean, let us take one of the Bishop's own examples that perhaps in which he himself has made the nearest approach to the view now advocated. 1 Acts iv. 24-30. 1 O Lord, thou art the God, Who didst make heaven and earth ; And the sea and all things that are in them : "Who by the mouth of thy servant David didst say : 2. " Why did the heathen rage, " And the peoples imagine vain things, " The kings of the earth stand up, " And the rulers combine together, " Against the Lord, and against his anointed ?" 3. For of a truth there have combined, Against thine holy child Jesus, whom thou hast anointed, Both Herod and Pontius Pilate, With the heathen, and the peoples of Israel, To do -whatsoever things thy hand, And thy counsel predetermined to be done. And now, Lord, look down upon their threatenings, 4. And give unto thy servants, With all boldness to speak thy word : While thou art stretching forth thine hand for healing, And while signs and wonders are performed, Through the name of thine holy child Jesus. 1 See Jebb's Sacred Liter, p. 132. 60 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. " This noble supplicatory hymn," he observes, " poured forth at once by the whole Christian people, under the immediate influ- ence of the Holy Spirit, is worthy of that inspiration from whence it flowed. No one part of it can be deemed inferior to another, 1 the same sacred vein of poetry animates the whole : and yet, amidst all this poetic fervour, we may discern much technical nicety of construction. " The entire of the third stanza is an exact and luminous com- mentary on the prophetical quotation which forms the second stanza. Commencing with the illative particle ya> (For) it leads us to understand a short previous sentence ; which, according to an elegant usage in the Greek language, is not verbally expressed, somewhat to the following effect : ' This prophecy is now fulfil- led ; FOR, of a truth,' &c. We are thus prepared to expect in what follows, a full equivalent for every part of the preceding prophecy ; nor is our expectation disappointed ; no topic of the citation is omitted. " The combination is first re-asserted as fulfilled : For, of a truth, there have combined : " The rebellious nation [nature ?] of that combination is then declared, together with the nature and office of that kingly po- tentate, against whom it was formed : Against thine holy child Jesus, whom thou hast anointed. " In the next couplet, the heathen, the peoples, the kings of the earth, and the rulers, that is all the rebellious personages of the second psalm, are brought forward as fulfilling what- soever it was pre-appointed they should do ; but, in a diversified order : Both Herod, and Pontius Pilate ; With the heathen, and the peoples of Israel : " This is an epanodos : ' Herod, with the peoples of Israel ; 1 This passage is adduced by the Bishop as an instance of the mode in which, in the Ts'ew Testament, " passages quoted from the poetical parts of the Hebrew Scriptures are connected and blended with original matter, so that the compound forms one homogeneous whole : the sententious parallelism equally pervading all the component members, whether original or derived." SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 61 Pontius Pilate, with the heathen ;' Herod, the Jewish ' ruler' or tetrarch, is mentioned, first, and the peoples of Israel are men- tioned last, to mark the greater forwardness, and more grievous criminality of the Jews : he ' came unto his own, and his own received him not :' Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor, repre- sentative of ' the kings of the earth,' with the heathen under his control, as subordinate actors, are placed in the centre. " The equivalent terms, in the prophecy, and in the declara- tion of its fulfilment, may be thus exhibited : PSALM II. ACTS IV. The rulers. Herod! The kings of the earth. Pontius Pilate. The heathen. The heathen. The peoples. The peoples of Israel. 1 The Lord and his anointed. ] Thine holy child Jesus whom thou hast anointed." 9 " The last two lines of the third stanza form the connecting link between that stanza and the fourth : 1 Instead of the last pair of equivalent terms, as here stated, Bishop Jebb has given The Lord (Jehovah). Thine holy child Jesus. The Lord's anointed. Whom thou hast anointed. He bespeaks the particular attention of his readers to these, and endeavours to deduce from them an argument for the divinity of our Lord : and this notwithstanding that lie is aware of the objection that thus the anointer would be represented as the same with the anointed, and the Lord Jehovah with his own Jio/y child Jesus ; that is, that the Father would be confounded with the Son ! This startling proposition he en- deavours to found on the supposed necessity of maintaining a mathematical exactness of relative proportion between the respective parallel terms of the lines : and as all the other terms of the Psalm find their corresponding equivalents in the interpretative stanza, he argues that least of all could we suppose the most important, the incommu- nicable name of Jehovah or the Lord, to have been left without equivalent, especially as " this name is the keystone at once of the argument and the prayer." Strange that it should not have occurred to so acute a critic, that in the prayer of the Christian dis- ciples the highest prominence is given to the LORD (the Father) by his being made the direct object of their address, and that the LORD of Psalm ii. finds its complete equiva- lent in the thine and thou of the comment. Besides the LORD was opposed when he " whom He had anointed" was opposed. 1 need scarce remark that the example which the Bishop adduces in justification from Psalm xlv. (v. 6 and 7) gives no countenance whatever to such a confusion of ideas as making God's holy child Jesus to anoint the Messiah. The divinity of the Saviour stands in need of no such strained arguments for its support. 2 Jebb's Sacred Lit. pp. 132-135. 62 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. To do whatsoever things thy hand, And thy counsel predetermined to be done ; ( thy hand/ that is, thine overruling power ; ' thy counsel/ that is, thy predisposing wisdom. These two topics give the subject of the next stanza ; in which, by an epanodos, they are taken up in the inverted order. First, an appeal is made to the wisdom or ' counsel' of God : And now, Lord, look down upon their threatenings, And give unto thy servants, With all boldness to speak thy word : that is, ' And, as thy wise counsel predetermined, that, through the confederacy of Jews and Gentiles, of kings and rulers, Christ should surfer ; so, let the same wise counsel be now made conspi- cuous, in the undaunted preaching of Christ crucified/ * c Next, the { hand/ or power of God, is brought forward : While thou art stretching forth thy hand for healing ; And while signs and wonders are performed, Through the name of thy holy child Jesus : that is, ' What is now taking place, is to us thy servants an ar- gument of confidence : thy hand was lately raised, to give that power to Christ's enemies, which, without thy permission, they could not have attained: the same hand is now miraciilously raised to heal diseases, and to work wonders, through the name of Jesus : we accept the blessed indication ; arid, trusting in thy mighty power, we will go forth, to proclaim the glories of that name, which we now behold thus signally efficacious.' " 1 Thus far Bishop Jebb has traced most successfully the train of ideas in this supplicatory hymn : and while in almost every other instance which he has adduced, we find only single lines corre- sponding to single lines, he has in this instance observed that a whole triplet, or combination of three lines, may l>e parallel to a single line : for the two triplets that form the concluding stanza correspond respectively to the two last lines of the third stanza. Still, we feel the want of some associating link to combine more closely together all the parts of this hyrnn, and especially to con- 1 Jebbs Sacred Lit. pp. 140, 141. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 63 nect with the subsequent topics the opening address of the prayer, O Lord, thou art the God, Who didst make heaven and earth, And the sea, and all things that are in them : which, so far as the Bishop's exposition goes, seems to stand dis- jointed from the rest, and has been passed over by him, as if a mere general form of address to God for which almost any other might with equal propriety have been substituted; whereas it constitutes a most essential part of the whole. It is a quotation from Psalm cxlvi. 6 ; and we have but to turn to the Psalm to see how apposite is its application to the circumstances in which the Apostles were placed, threatened by the rulers of the Jews ; and commanded to be silent, while God on the contrary required of them to preach boldly in the name of Jesus. The question for their consideration was, whether they were to " obey God or man." Acts iv. 19. Under such circumstances, what quotation could be more appropriate, or what passage of Scripture could be adduced better calculated for allaying their fears and strengthening their faith, than that wherein the Spirit of God commands them, 3. Put not your trust in princes, Nor in the son of man, in whom there is no help. 5. Happy is he that hath the God of Jacob for his help, Whose hope is in the LORD his God : 6. Which made heaven, and earth, The sea, and all that therein is : who therefore had all power in heaven and in earth to defend those that hearkened unto Him, and not unto " man, in whom there is no help " ! To Jews, to whom, from having their Scriptures mostly by heart, the quotation of a few words was sufficient to recal instantly the whole context, the exceeding appositeness of almost every part of the Psalm to their present circumstances would be obvious. 6. The LORD keepeth truth for ever : 7. He executeth judgment for the oppressed. The LORD looseth the prisoners: 64 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 8. The LORD raiseth them that are bowed down : The LORD loveth the righteous : 9. But the way of the wicked he turneth upside down. 10. The LORD shall reign for ever, Even thy God, O Zion, unto all generations. In short, the appeal throughout the whole Psalm is to thepotuer of God, as being all sufficient to protect his servants from the utmost might of their enemies. Thus of the two attributes of God, to which as we have seen from Bishop Jebb's analysis appeal is made throughout the hymn, the prominence is given to the one which was fitted, under the circumstances, to impart the highest consolation the power of God by assigning to it the first and last place. The true division of the hymn we conceive to be that which is far the most usual in Scripture, into three parts or stanzas, in each of which it will be observed, God's power and wisdom are brought forward. I. (Past.) ( O LORD, thou art " the God, Power. < Who didst make heaven and earth ; ( And the sea and all things that are in them ; " Wisdom. Who, by the mouth of thy servant David, didst say : "Why did the heathen rage, " And the peoples imagine vain things, " The kings of the earth stand up, " And the rulers combine together, " Against the LORD, and against his Anointed?" II. (Present.) For of a truth, there have combined, Against thy holy servant Jesus, whom thou hast anointed, Both Herod, and Pontius Pilate, With the heathen, and the peoples of Israel, Power. < To do whatsoever things thy hand, Wisdom. -< And thy counsel predetermined to be done. SCHIPTUHE PARALLELISM. 65 IJI. (Future.) ( And now, Loan, look down upon their threatenings, Wisdom. < And give unto thy servants, ( With all boldness to speak thy word ; ( While thou art stretching forth thine hand for healing, Power. -< And while signs and wonders are performed, (^ Through the name of thy holy servant Jesus. The argument of the whole prayer will thus be found to be : I. 1st. Thy poiver, God, is almighty ; 2d. Thy wisdom foresees and predisposes all things : the first, as avouched to us in Psalin cxlvi. ; the second, as exhibited in Psalm ii. In Psalm cxlvi., thou hast enjoined us, in the hour of trial and persecution from ungodly men, to look not to man, but to the Lord. In Psalm ii, thou hast given us a most remarkable proof of thy foreknow- ledge and predisposing wisdom in predicting so clearly before- hand the opposition that would be made by a combination of Jews and Gentiles against thine own Son, when he should appear on earth, whom, to accomplish thy wondrous purposes of mercy to our race, " it behoved to suffer these things :" assuring us neverthe- less that their " imaginations against him would be vain : " warn- ing therefore the mightiest to submit themselves to thy Son, and pronouncing those " blessed who put their trust in him." II. These things are now beginning to be realized in our expe- rience. As therefore thy power and thy wisdom have been exhi- bited in our enemies, in making them the instruments to work out what we now see clearly to have been the doing of the Lord, and "known unto God from the beginning:" for "those things which God before had shoived by the mouth of all his prophets, that Christ should suffer, he hath so fulfilled ; v Acts iii. 18. 1 1 Compare Acts ii. 23. " Him, being delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge, of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have crucified and slain." E 66 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. III. So let now thy wisdom and thy power be exhibited in us thy servants. Let thy wisdom be exhibited in thy word preached boldly and in all fulness by us : let thy power-be exhibited in our continuing to be enabled to perform miraculous cures and to work wonders through the name of thy blessed Son and in attestation of his Gospel. The prayer indeed may be said to form a regular syllogism or logical argument, of which Stanza I. is the major proposition, Stanza II. the minor, and Stanza III. the conclusion. In the three stanzas, as frequently in the threefold division in Scripture, we find a reference to the Past, the Present, and the Future. The first stanza is retrospective, looking back to the declarations of God's perfections " in past times by the prophets :" the central stanza describes the striking fulfilment and illustra- tion of these exhibited in the present circumstances of the church : while the last stanza is prospective, supplicating the continuance of the manifestation of God's wisdom and power in his servants for the future. Before leaving this passage finally, I would beg to draw parti- cular attention to the great importance of parallelism in enabling the student to discriminate between words that at first sight appear to be synonymous. In the first two verses of Psalm ii : Why have the heathen tumultuously assembled, And the people meditate a vain thing ? [Why] do the kings of the earth set themselves, And the rulers have sat together consulting, Against Jehovah, and against his Anointed ? commentators in general have seen in the first four lines but a mere tautological repetition of synonymous terms, " the people" being considered equivalent to " the heathen," and " the rulers" to " the kings of the earth." But when by attending to the paral- lelism of the lines we observe that " the heathen" and " the kings of the earth" are connected, and " the people" with " the rulers," we are led, in the very opening of the Psalm, to see that we have a prediction of a combination of Gentiles, and Jews, with their SCKlPTUltE PARALLELISM. 67 respective kings, and rulers* against the Lord and his Anointed, such as found no fulfilment in any event in David's life, and con- sequently that a greater than David is here. That such is the true interpretation is placed beyond doubt by the inspired commentary in Acts iv. 27 : For of a truth there have combined, Against thine holy servant Jesus whom thou hast anointed, Both Herod and Pontius Pilate., with the heathen and the people of Israel 5 where, as we have seen (p. 61) we have four terms corresponding exactly to those in the Psalm, though arranged in a different order, " Herod (the head and representative of the Jewish rulers) with the people of Israel being placed first and last, to mark the greater forwardness and more grievous criminality of the Jews ; while Pontius Pilate, the Koman governor (representative of the kings of the earth) with the heathen, as subordinate actors, are placed in the centre." The next example which we shall give is also taken from Jebb's Sacred Literature. 2 The first four stanzas of the follow- ing passage (John v. 19-30) the Bishop has adduced (p. 171) as examples of quatrains or four-lined stanzas, without seemingly the slightest suspicion that these themselves form but parts of a 1 These four lines, though alternately parallel as Bishop Jebb has stated, yet, viewed in another light, may, as is frequently the case, be regarded as directly parallel, " the heathen" corresponding with " the people" in the first two lines, while " the kings of the earth" correspond with " the rulers" in the last two. Still in this view, according to the principles of the yradational parallelism, there must be a difference, and advance in meaning, in the second line of each couplet above the first, and greater cause for astonishment and reprehension in dispeople taking part in such an unhallowed con- spiracy than the Jieathen, and in the rulers than the kings of the earth. In either view, therefore, we are conducted to the same conclusion. 2 This example, which occupies the remainder of section IX., has already appeared in Kitto's Journal of Sacred Literature for Oct. 1851. Though introduced here for the reason just specified, we would recommend to less critical readers to reserve its perusal till they have studied the rest of the volume, as it requires closer attention and more sustained thought to follow the reasoning in all the details into which we have entered, than perhaps any of the examples which succeed. Indeed, judging from the experience of some friends who have read the work in manuscript, we would ad- vise the general reader to pass on at once to the Decalogue (Section XIII.) and the Lord's Sermon on the Mount, and then to return back and to conclude with the inter- vening sections. G8 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. long introverted parallelism, the component parts of which, how- ever, are stanzas, not lines. But we have a farther object in the selection of this passage : not only as it is extremely interesting and important in itself from the doctrinal views which it contains, but as it affords an opportunity of refuting an objection which has been brought against the study of parallelism, that it seems " incapable of eliciting any new meaning in Scripture, not known before." The whole of the passage, John v. 19-30 (or indeed to the end of the chapter) is but an extension and farther vindication of the brief reply which our Saviour had given in John v. 17 to the objection of his adversaries against his healing on the Sabbath day, " My Father worketh hitherto, and I work." The meaning which we are led to assign to these words from attention to the principal point of Christ's argument, as indicated by the parallel- istic arrangement in John v. 19-30, presents, if we mistake not, our Lord's reply to the Jews in an altogether new, beautiful, and consistent point of view. JOHN v. 19-30. Verse 19. ( The Son can do nothing of himself, ' "A TC t. But what he seeth the Father do : < For what things soever he doeth, ( These also doeth the Son likewise. 20. 21. 22. 23. B ( For the Father loveth the Son, (. And sheweth him all things that himself doeth ; , ( And he will shew him greater works than these, (. That ye may marvel. FOR as the Father raiseth up the dead, and quickeneth them ; Even so the Son quickeneth whom he will : FOR the Father judgeth no man, But hath committed all judgment unto the Son : T ( That all men should honour the Son, (. Even as they honour the Father : ( He that honoureth not the Son, ( Honoureth not the Father which hath sent him. Ven 21. 25. 27. 28. 29. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. f f Verily, verily, I say unto you, I He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, j Hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation, I But is passed from death unto life. I Verily, verily, I say unto you, , J The hour is coming, and now is, 1 When the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, I And they that hear shall live. FOR as the Father hath life in himself, So hath he given to the Son to have life in himself: AND hath given him authority to execute judgment also, Because he is the Son of man. f Marvel not at this : , J For the hour is coming, ] In the which all that are in the graves shall hear his voice, I And shall come forth : They that have done good, Unto the resurrection of life : And they that have done evil, Unto the resurrection of damnation. 30. Negative I can of mine own self do nothing : p,uiTe As I hear, I judge : A And my judgment is just : Because I seek not mine own will, But the will of the Father which hath sent me. The occasion which gave rise to the weighty discourse of our Saviour, of which this forms a part, was his having healed an impotent man at the pool of Bethesda on the Sabbath-day ; on which the rulers of the Jews accused him of breaking the Sab- bath. Christ's reply to this accusation, according to the view suggested by the parallelistic arrangement which follows, is most conclusive and unanswerable. " My Father [it is that] worketh hitherto [in all that I do], and I work." The work of healing which you censure is not mine only, but my Father's. If there- fore you find fault with me, you find fault with my Father. The interpretation usually put upon these words by all com- mentators, so far as we are aware, is, that " as the Father had not ceased to work in carrying on the great operations of nature and providence even on the Sabbath-day, so the Son was authorized to 70 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. perform works of mercy and goodness on the same day, without being justly chargeable with any breach of the Sabbath." The other interpretation, however, needs, we think, but to be men- tioned to commend itself at once as the true one ; and, did any doubt remain, it would be dispelled by observing its exact coinci- dence with the idea to which such prominence is given in the subsequent Introverted Parallelism, or Epanodos (v. 19-30), by placing it first and last. The leading proposition, with which the Epanodos opens, is (v. 19), " The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father do ;" which is equivalent to " My Father worketh hitherto [in all my works], and [in concert with him] I work :" and the conclusion from the whole reasoning in the close of the Epanodos (v. 30) runs in the same terms : " I can of mine own self do nothing," that is, inconsistent with my Father's will. My work of healing therefore on the Sabbath-day, so far from being a violation of God's holy Sabbath, is, on the contrary, a work of my Father's, and an attestation to my divine mission. Let us now trace the course of thought as pointed out to us by the parallelistic arrangement. Our Lord, instead of softening the enmity of the Jews by his first reply, had given them still deeper offence by the terms which he employed. By calling God " my Father," instead of " our Father," he had evidently implied that God was, in a peculiar sense* his Father, thus, as they accused him, " making himself equal with God." So far from denying the justice of this infer- ence, he re-asserts it in the most emphatic manner, affirming, with the strongest asseverations, 9 that there was the most entire union, both of purpose and of agency, between the Father and himself. This he does, first negatively (v. 19, " The Son can do nothing of himself, but," &c.) by denying the possibility of his performing any self-willed act, which was not at the same time the Father's act ; and secondly, positively (" For what things soever he doeth, these," &c.) by asserting that every power which the Father possessed the Son possessed. The negative assertion is intended to remove the objections of the Jews, as if any act of 1 Uartoa 75 /Of t^-fyt rov Situ. John V. 18. 2 ' Verily, verily, I say unto you." SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 71 Christ's, such as healing the lame man on the Sabbath, could be inconsistent with the mind of the Father, and a breach of his commandment: while the positive view is intended to elevate their minds, if possible, to an apprehension of the majesty of his person and office, and the honour and obedience due to him as the alone Mediator and Saviour. These two topics accordingly are taken up, but in inverse order, and enlarged upon in the two central members of the Intro- verted Parallellism, B and B ; the first of which, B, directs the attention chiefly to the person of Christ ; the second, B, more to the Jews themselves, 1 to warn them of the awful responsibility under which they were now laid by his appearance in the midst of them, and the momentous consequences which would result to themselves from their acceptance or rejection of him. B. As regards me. I have said (A, 2d distich), " What things soever the Father doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise." Now (v. 20) this arises from the perfect unity between me and my Father, and his love to me, which leads him to communicate to me, even in my mediatorial capacity, every power. Not only, therefore, has he imparted to me the power of performing such miracles as those you have heretofore witnessed, but he will manifest to me still greater ; even his own two highest and distinguishing preroga- tives : the power, 1st, (v. 21,) of imparting life (spiritual as well as bodily) ; and 2dly, (v. 22,) of judging, or deciding the destinies of all mankind (both here and hereafter, according as they believe or 1 Compare a similar division in John vL 39, 40 : Ver. 39. " And this is the Father's will which hath sent me, [viz. with regard to my conduct,] " That of all which he hath given me, " I' should lose nothing, " But should raise it up again at the last day." Ver. 40. " And this is the will of him that sent me, [viz., with regard to your conduct towards me,] " That every one which seeth the Son, and bellevelh on him [and none else] " May have everlasting life ; " And I will raise him up at the last day." 72 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. not on me). And the object, he concludes (v. 23), for which the Father had communicated to him all this dignity and authority was, that the same honour might be paid to him through whom the Father revealed himself, as to the Father himself. Whoso- ever, therefore, did not pay him this honour, resisted the will of the Father, and did not honour Him, however much he pretended it. This was in answer to the Jews, who pretended to be so jealous of the honour due to God, as to be indignant at our Sa- viour in any way trenching upon it, or pretending to claim an equality of honour and power with God. This leads him naturally to the second part of his subject, viz. the duty of the Jews to believe on him, and the momentous con- sequences which were dependent upon their acceptance or rejec- tion of his claims. B. As regards you. I have ended by saying negatively, " He that honoureth not the Son, honoureth not the Father which hath sent him." I now say affirmatively, " He that heareth my word/' and so evidences his belief in him that sent me, can alone be saved. 1 On this is suspended your doom as to the two all-important points which I have mentioned, life and judgment. V. 25. Now, I conjure you 3 to reflect ; is the accepted time. Hear me, and your souls shall live, though dead in trespasses and sins : for the time is at hand, on the completion of my work, nay is already begun, when the spiritually dead (and as a pledge and emblem thereof, some of the naturally dead) shall hear my voice and live. V. 26 and 27. For again I would repeat (see v. 21 and 22) as 1 Compare John iii. 18, " He that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God." It will be observed that verses 23 and 24 are so connected as to form a transition between the two stanzas B and U. In verse 23 Jesus had said, " He that honoureth not the Son, honoureth not the Father which hath sent him." This proposition is again taken up in the beginning of verse 24, with the difference only that it is now- expressed affirmatively instead of negatively, " He that heareth my word, and (so) believeth on him that sent me," &c., which is equivalent to, " He that honoureth the Son, and (thereby) honoureth the Father," &c. 3 " Verily, verify, I say unto you." SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 73 the main point on which I would have all your thoughts to centre i 1 To the Son the Father directs you as the one to whom are committed by him the sovereign powers of creation and of judgment life now, and deliverance from all fear of judgment already : (see v. 24). V. 28, 29. Which need excite no astonishment in you, when I farther assure you that the final resurrection to life and judgment of all are entrusted to me. V. 30. I sum up, therefore, this part of my subject as I began : 1st. (negatively). " I can of mine own self do nothing," that is, without the co-operation of my Father. Therefore the miracle which I have performed, so far from being, as you unjustly allege, a breach of God's holy Sabbath, is on the contrary a work of the Father's as well as of mine, and thus a proof of the truth of my pretensions. 2dly, (positively.) If you reject it and me, then when I claim the high prerogative of the Father to judge you for your unbelief, I do but what the Father has already done. As I before said (v. 19, 2d distich), " For what tilings soever the Father doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise ;" so now I say with peculiar application to you, " As I hear [from the Father], I judge" and as my work of healing on the Sabbath-day was just, unless you will impugn the works of the Father himself, so " my judgment" of you " is just" also : because I pursue no private ends of my own, but act in entire accordance with the commission intrusted to me by my Father. Having thus seen the structure and connexion of the whole Introverted Parallelism, let us next advert to the arrangement of its parts, which will be found to be constructed with equal nicety and care. B and B are themselves each Introverted Parallelisms. First let us examine B. The two distichs of v. 20 correspond to the two distichs of v. 23 respectively, a to a, and b to 6, while the two central verses, 21 and 22, mutually correspond. 2 1 Marked out by these verses being the central lines in each stanza. 2 Observe the two co-ordinate reasons introduced by For in each verse. See pp. 56-58. So also in verses 26 and 27 ; only that here the second For is exchanged for And. 74 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. In verses 20 and 23 (especially in a and a), we find one of those profound harmonies, which exist not so much in any paral- lelism of words as of thoughts. In both distichs a and a, the subordination of the Son to the Father in one respect, as media- tor and man, is prominently brought forward. It is the Father that sheweih him all things (a), that has sent him as his ambas- sador to men (a). Still in both cases, in what the Father sheivs to the Son, and in the treatment wherewith men receive him whom he has sent, our Saviour impresses earnestly upon his hearers that the Father identifies himself so completely with him that the Son could truly say, " All thine are mine, ( = a), and mine are thine," (= a). Not only in good but in evil, the love and sympathy of the Father towards the Son are entire. Every good that he him- self possesses, he imparts to the Son (a) : every dishonour that is offered to the Son, he counts as done to himself (a). The other two distichs, b and b, correspond, in both expressing the end which the Father has in view in the gifts which he im- parts to the Son ; in order, if possible, to overpower their minds with believing admiration, and honour of the Son " that ye may marvel" 1 " that all men should honour the Son." In B the correspondences are so obvious as to require little remark. Verses 24 and 25 are parallel to verses 28 and 29. On the all-powerful voice of the Son of God depend everlasting life and judgment: verses 24 and 25, in this world ; verses 28 and 29, in the world to come. c and c are connected thus. Everlasting life and escape from judgment depend upon the conduct of individuals : c) on their believing, or not believing on the Son of God. c) on their consequent works. In d and d, the last three lines of each quatrain answer almost verbally to each other : Line 2. " The hour is coming." ,, 3. " The dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God." ,, 4. " And shall be quickened thereby." 1 The words in the original are "vet vpCts 3-auftti%r l ) is true and valid, and though divine testimony is not to be restricted to the same rules, even this double testimony I can adduce to my divi- nity. " I am one that bear witness of myself, and the Father that sent me beareth witness of me." In ch. viii. there is no recall, on the part of our Lord, as gene- rally supposed, of any concession that he had made to the Jews for the sake of argument. Both parties maintain their original position. The Jews still obstinately persist in looking on Jesus as a mere man, and in closing their eyes wilfully on the mani- festation of divine perfections which he was continually exhibit- ing ; while our Lord is still anxiously endeavouring, as frequently throughout the intermediate chapters, to impress on their minds, 1 The words in the Greek are exactly the same as in chap. v. 31, though our trans- lators have here used " record" instead of " witness." 82 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. that " spiritual things are only spiritually to be discerned," and that instead of listening to their own carnal reasonings, they should humbly ask of God himself to teach them (John vi. 45), and to give them willing minds to " do his will, that they might know of Jesus' doctrine whether it were of God, or whether he spake of himself." John vii. 17. SECTION X. In the examples which follow, a new element will be observed to be introduced, a parallelism of numbers, which enters much more largely into the arrangements of Scripture than has been generally suspected, and attention to which will often enable us to detect the divisions of a subject, or, when these are discovered by other means, will give assurance, by the symmetry of parts which it introduces, of our having , discovered the true order and connexion. The xxviii. and xxix. Psalms, which form one connected com- position, the subject of which is THE LORD is THE STRENGTH OF HIS PEOPLE/ are each divisible into three parts or strophes, ar- ranged in the most systematic form according to the numbers of the verses. PSALM xxvin. [A Psalm] of David. 1. Unto thee will I cry, O LORD ; My Rock, be not silent to me : Lest, if thou be silent to me, I become like them that go down into the pit. 2. Hear the voice of my supplications, when I cry unto thee, "When I lift up my hands towards thy HOLY ORACLE. 1 Compare Psalm xxviii. 7, 8, " The LOUD is my strength," " The LORD is their strength," and Psalm xxix. 11," The LORD will give strength unto his people ;" and Ps. xxix. 1, " Give unto the LOUD glory and strength." SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 83 3. Draw me not away with the wicked, And with the workers of iniquity, Which speak peace to their neighbours, But mischief is in their hearts. 4. Give them according to their work, and the wickedness of their endeavours : Give them after the deed of their hands : Render to them their desert. VOICE from the HOLY ORACLE. 5. Because they regard not the works of the LORD, Nor the deed of his hands, He shall pull them down, and not build them up. 6. Blessed be the LORD, Because he hath heard the voice of my supplications. 7. The LORD is my strength and my shield ; My heart trusted in him, and I am helped : Therefore my heart exulteth, and with my song will I praise him. 8. The LORD is their strength, And he is the saving strength of his anointed. 9. Save thy people, and bless thine inheritance : Feed them also, and lift them up for ever. The plan of this Psalm may be thus represented. Verses Verses 2 Personal - The words of David. 2.'} 3. ) 3 1 >" f I A f Relating to others. 5. The VOICE in reply from Jehovah. 6 - . 7 " ersona '- -l 1 6.") f 71 The words of David. H J 9.} The words of David. e ~ Relating to others. The great object of David in this Psalm seems to have been to comfort the heart of God's people in trouble with that same " comfort wherewith he had himself been comforted of God." The answer of Jehovah to his supplication, which forms the cen- 84 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. tral subject of the Psaltn, was originally, in all probability, the answer of faith given by God to David in secret prayer. But his own experiences and private coinmunings with God, are here as usual prepared by " the sweet Psalmist of Israel" as a hymn for the use and edification of the Church. In order to enter into the full significance and beauty of many of these compositions, we must keep in mind that to adapt them for the Temple service they were frequently thrown into a dramatic form, where, as in the ii. and xxiv. Psalms for instance, different persons are intro- duced as speaking. These distinctions would be marked in the public worship by assigning the various parts to the different choirs into which the singers appointed for the service of the Temple were divided. In following the train of thought suggested by the divisions of this Psalm, let us endeavour to call up to ourselves the whole accompaniments and associations of the scene as they would pre- sent themselves to an Israelite. In a season of great distress, when iniquity seemed triumphant, David alarmed lest he and his people should be involved in one common ruin with the wicked, whose acts were marked by treach- ery towards their fellow-men (ver. 3), and with utter disregard of the purposes of God (ver. 5), enters the court of the Tabernacle, accompanied by a crowd of worshippers, and turning his face towards the Holy Oracle, which was in the inner sanctuary (ver. 2) prefers to God his petition. After an introductory supplication contained in verses 1 and 2, that God would not be silent to him, but would hear and answer the voice of his prayer, while he lifted up his hands towards His Holy Oracle, in verses 3 and 4 he brings the great subject of his prayer before God that He would not confound the righteous with the wicked, 1 but would speedily execute judgment on the ungodly despisers of his appointments. A solemn pause ensues. At length, amidst the profound 1 Such is the interpretation usually given, by most at least of the more recent com- mentators, of ver. 3, " Draw me not away with the wicked," which they compare with Psalm xxvi. 8 "Gather not my soul with sinners." But we cannot help thinking that a farther and still more important meaning is involved, and that this prayer is dictated not so much by the Psalmist's distrust, of a righteous discrimination being made by God between the pious and the ungodly in the hour of judgment, as of his own weak heart, lest if God should longer delay to punish the wicked, he might be tempted SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 85 silence, a voice is heard issuing as from the Holy Oracle, assuring him of God's interposition in his behalf, aud vindication of His own honour against the godless workers of iniquity (ver. 5.) 1 Ver. 6. David now resumes. In verses 6 and 7 we have his thanksgiving for his prayer having been heard, and his resolution to make known to others God's mercy towards him by his offer- ing " a song" of praise before the congregation of God's people. These indeed are ever present to David's mind, as being the flock over which God had made him overseer, and the chief object of his care on earth. He therefore speaks of them at first without naming them when the Psalm was publicly sung in the Taber- nacle, perhaps pointing them out more definitely by turning round towards them and declares that the Lord as He is his strength ver. 7, so is He theirs ver. 8 ; he is God's " anointed" pastor over the people ; and in the Lord's hearing and saving him, He has heard and saved them : he therefore concludes with a prayer in their behalf, that as the Lord had now done, so He would continue for ever to " save His people and bless His inhe- ritance," Himself to feed them as their true Shepherd, and while He pulls down the wicked ver. 5, to " lift them up for ever." Observe how beautifully God is represented as hearing and answering with the minutest attention the prayers of His ser- vants, by the exact correspondence of the reply in ver. 5 to the petition in ver. 4, not in substance merely, but of line to line, and almost word to word. PRAYER OF DAVID. 4. a Give them according to their work, and the wickedness of their endeavours : b Give them according to the deed of their hands : c Render to them their desert. in despair to give over the struggle against the example of " the ungodly who prosper in the world," and yield to the current and say, " Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain, and washed my hands in innocency," (Ps. Lxxiii. 13). The prayer, " Draw me not away with the wicked," would thus be equivalent to, Suffer me not to be drawn away and enticed to ray ruin ; like the similar petition in the Lord's prayer, " Lead us not into temptation," that is, Let us not, by our being placed in circumstances too trying for our faith| be led away into sin. 1 In the Temple service, this answer was probably pronounced by the High Priest, or chaunted by a chorus of priests within the Holy Place, as being the mediators be- tween God and his people. 86 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. ANSWER FROM THE HOLY ORACLE. 5. a Because they regard not the works of the LORD, b Nor the deed of his hands : c He shall pull them down, and not build them up. In his supplication against the wicked ver. 4, David urges as pleas for God's interposition, 1. The mischievous working and wicked endeavours of the ungodly against the righteous (a). 2. The deed of their own hands (b). 3. The necessity of God's retributive justice interfering and causing their evil to return on their heads (c). In the answer of the Lord, each of these points is taken up in its regular order : 1. God will " give them according to their work," " because they regard not the works of the Lord" (a). 2. God will " give them according to the deed 1 of their hands," because they regard not the deed of His hands" (b). 3. The full recompense which David invoked shall be " ren- dered to them according to their desert." God will " pull them down and not build them up" (c). Most commentators refer the origin of this Psalui to the time of Absalom's rebellion : but in the sudden outbreak of that conspiracy, no time was permitted to David, who was obliged to flee instantly from Jerusalem for his life, to enter into the Taber- nacle, and to present his supplication " towards the Holy Oracle" 1 Our translators, by their want of uniformity in rendering the same words in these two verses, have in a great measure concealed from the English reader the mutual re- lation between David's prayer and the Lord's answer. The Hebrew word ??3 (poal) " work" is rendered by " deeds'* in ver. 4, line 1st, and by " works" in ver. 5, line 1st ; and, as if to render the confusion complete, a different word altogether r '^?.^. (maaseh) " deed" in ver. 4, line 2d, is translated " work," while in ver. 5, line 2d, it is translated " operation" ! Excellent as our version is on the whole, this is but one of many instances in which these delicate allusions, and plays on words (parono- masias), of which the Hebrews were particularly fond, have been obscured by our Translators from their undue fondness for varying the expression. The verb '?" (r aa O " to work," when distinguished as in this instance from i" 1 *** " to do,'' refers more to the first contriving and setting about any work (moliri, parare, Gesenii Lexic.), while "':'? (asah) denotes more the actual execution. This is evi- dent from the order in which the two verbs are placed in Isaiah xli. 4. " Who hath wrougld and done, it ?" c. Compare Psalm Iviii. 2 (3). " Yea, in heart ye work [contrive] wickedness." See also Micah ii. 1. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 87 (ver. 2). A more appropriate occasion seems to be that imme- diately succeeding the treacherous murder of Abner by Joab, when David yet felt himself too weak to inflict the merited punisliment on this overbearing " son of Zeruiah," while the ten tribes still rejected him as their sovereign, and might be expected to rise and overwhelm him in righteous indignation and vengeance for his supposed participation in the assassination of their favour- ite captain. Viewed in this light, several passages of the Psalm will be found to gain in significance. Verse 3 would strikingly depict the character of Joab and his perfidious conduct towards Abner. " Draw me not away with the wicked, and with the ivorkers of iniquity, who speak peace to their neighbours, but evil is in their hearts." Compare 2 Sam. iii. 26, 27. Verse 4 coin- cides remarkably with the words of David in 2 Sam. iii. 39, " And I am this day weak, though anointed king ; and these men, the sons of Zeruiah, be too hard for me : the Lord shall reward the doer of evil according to his wickedness." The very sin of Joab in respect to God is exactly described in v. 5, his disregard of the working of God's providence in seeking, by criminal means, pre- maturely to secure for David the sovereignty, which the Lord had promised, without waiting for God's time. The designation of David in v. 8, as being " the Anointed' of Jehovah, though not yet installed fully into the kingly office, would be especially in point (compare the passage just quoted from 2 Sam. iii. 39) ; and in like manner in Psalm xxix. the allusion to the kingdom being the Lord's, v. 10, and the prayer in v. 11 for the restoration and full establishment of the blessing of peace unto God's people would be most appropriate. PSALM xxix. A Psalin of David. 1. Give unto tbe LORD, O ye Mighty, Give unto the LORD glory and strength. 2. Give unto the LOKD the glory due unto his name : Worship the LORD in the beauty of holiness. 3. The VOICE of the LORD is upon the waters : The God of glory thundereth : The LOUD is upon many waters. 88 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 4. The VOICE of the LORD is powerful : The VOICE of the LORD is full of majesty : 5. The VOICE of the LORD breaketh the cedars ; Yea, the LORD breaketh the cedars of Lebanon. 6. He inaketh them also to skip like a calf; Lebanon and Sirion like a young unicorn. 7. The VOICE of the LORD divideth the flames of fire. 8. The VOICE of the LORD shaketh the wilderness ; The LOUD shaketh the wilderness of Kadesh. 9. The VOICE of the LORD maketh the hinds to calve, And strippeth bare the forests : And in his temple doth every one speak of his glory. 10. The LORD sat upon the Flood : Yea the LORD sitteth King for ever. 1 1 . The LORD will give strength unto his people ; The LORD will bless his people with peace. Psalm xxix. forms the sequel or complement to Psalm xxviii. David Lad lifted up the voice of his supplication to the Lord Ps. xxviii. 2, and was answered by the voice of Jehovah from the Holy Oracle Ps. xxviii. 5. In the fulness of his gratitude for the consolation thus imparted, David had promised " a song" of praise (Ps. xxviii. 7). But he feels how incompetent is the feeble voice of man adequately to celebrate the praises of that mighty voice which He has but to " utter and the earth melts and the pillars of heaven tremble." In the exordium, therefore, which consists of two verses (v. 1 and 2), David calls upon the mighty angels to ascribe the glory due unto God's name. Then follows, in a grand chorus of seven verses, a description of the various powerful effects produced by the voice of God, in that most magnificent and awful form in which it reveals itself to mortals, in the thunder of heaven. To appreciate aright the sublimity of this chorus, we must conceive of it as performed by the combined voices of the whole people 1 uniting their praises as it were with the heavenly choir above. The Lord is represented as sitting enthroned over the storehouse of waters that are above the firmament (v. 3; compare Gen. i. 7). Seven times the VOICE of the LORD is heard peal, as it were, re- 1 There were 4000 singers specially set apart by David to praise the Lord in the Temple service, 1 Chron. 23, 5. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 89 verberating upon peal, while its resistless effects are described, extending over the mightiest as well as the lowliest objects of nature (v. 3-9). The " seven thunders having uttered their voices" (see the allu- sion to this passage Kev. x. 3), the single voice that began in the first two verses of the Introduction with calling - on the angels to ascribe all majesty and power unto God, now resumes in the two verses of the Conclusion, ver. 10, 11, But this mighty God is our God mighty to destroy, mighty to save. The LORD sat en- throned on the Flood ; 1 presiding over that deluge which sepa- rated between the godly and ungodly an earnest that he will not now confound the righteous in the same judgment with the ungodly (see Psalm xxviii. 3-5), " Yea, the LOKD sitteth King for ever." " The LORD will give strength to his people" even now, to withstand their present enemies and trials, and hereafter in his own due time will give unto the meek to inherit the earth and to delight themselves in the abundance of peace. The plan of the Psalm may be thus exhibited : > Introduction, The LORD occurs 4 times. * ) 3. 1 The voice of the LORD, If The voice of the LORD, The voice of the LORD, 5. I The voice of the LORD, 7 verses. 7 thunders or voices of 6. the LORD. 7. 1 The voice of the LORD, 8. > The voice of the LORD, 9. J The voice of the LORD, J > Conclusion, The LORD occurs 4 times. The Introduction here answers to the Conclusion, each con- sisting of two verses, and each containing the LORD four times repeated. The seven verses containing the praise of the LORD'S voice of power are arranged with remarkable symmetry, so as to bear upon them the impress of the Divine signature, Three. The seven is divided into what we shall afterwards see is its most beautiful 1 Vl2*3 mabbool is never used but of the historical deluge. 90 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. and perfect division, into three parts consisting of 3 , 1 , 3 , the single central verse (v. 6) being distinguished from the three verses on either side of it by the absence of the " VOICE of the LORD" which is found in all the others. The seven VOICES of the LORD too, it will be observed, are distributed with much art, so as still to preserve the triplicate form, two of them being grouped together in the central verse of the first three, so as, in this rela- tion, to count for one. It remains only to remark how clearly the formal arrangement of the two Psalms points to their connexion and unity, as forming two members of one entire composition, or to use the expression of Hengstenberg, constituting a pair of Psalms. 1. The Voice of the LORD forms the central subject in both Psalms : in Psalm xxviii. attention is concentrated on the Voice of the LORD as issuing from the Holy Oracle ; in Psalm xxix. we hear the praises of the Voice of the LORD. The main subject of each Psalm may thus be defined to be Psalm xxviii. " The voice of the LORD speaks comfort and strength to his servants, when ready to be overwhelmed by their enemies." But, Psalm xxix., " this voice of the LORD is the same Almighty voice which speaks with such majesty and irresistible power in the thunder !" 2. We find here, as in all the pairs of Psalms, (e. g. Psalms i. and ii., ix. and x., xlii. and xliii., cxi. and cxii. &c.) a recurrence of similar expressions in" each. The concluding ideas of both Psalms correspond. Psalm xxviii. 8, " The LORD is their strength." Psalm xxix. 11, " the LORD will give strength unto his people." In Psalm xxviii. 9, David prays that God will " bless his inheri- tance." In Psalm xxix. 11, in the confidence of faith he affirms, " The LORD will bless his people with peace." 3. Indications are given by the more recondite arrange- ments (to which the Hebrews seem to have paid particular atten- tion) that Psalm xxviii. is imperfect and requires something to complete it. " The LORD" occurs in it five times the number of incompleteness, being the broken Ten, the symbol of complete- ness, 1 and it requires the eight " LORDS" in the Introduction and Conclusion of Psalm xxix. along with the seven " voices of the LORD" to form twenty, or two complete wholes. 1 Sue Ba'ir's SymloUk, Hungsteuberg's Psalms, Fairbairn's Typology, &c. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 91 Iii like manner, the nine verses of Psalin xxviii. are incomplete without the addition of the eleven verses of Psalm xxix., which together make up twenty. 1 SECTION XL PSALM xxv. Psalm xxv. is still more symmetrical in its arrangements. It is Ihe first of the Alphabetical Psalms as they are called, in which each successive verse begins with a new letter of the Hebrew Alphabet. It has been generally maintained by commentators that, as this artifice of composition seems to have been employed for the purpose of aiding the memory, these Psalms are destitute of any close connexion or consecutive train of ideas. How mis- taken this opinion is we hope to show by the following analysis of the Psalm, which discloses a very beautiful gradation of thought. The occasion on which David composed this Psalm was evi- dently one of great distress (vv. 16-18), when God appeared to hide from him the way of salvation (vv. 4, 5), and seemed almost about to permit his numerous and cruel enemies (v. 19) to triumph over him. In these alarming circumstances he flees to God in prayer as his alone trust and refuge, entreating deliver- ance from every enemy and evil. (A PSALM) OF DAVID. DAVID PRAYS. s 1. Unto thee, O LORD, do I lift up my soul. ss 2. O my God, I trust in thee : Let me not be ashamed, Let not mine enemies triumph over me. 5 3. So also shall none that wait on thee be ashamed : Ashamed shall they be who act treacherously without cause. t 4. Shew me thy ways, O LORD ; Teach me thy paths. 1 See Hengstenberg's Commentary on Psalms XX V1IJ. and XXIX. 92 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. n 5. Lead me in thy TRUTH, and teach me : For thou art the God of my salvation ; On thee have I waited all the day. t 6. Remember thy tender compassions, O LORD, and thy MERCIF.S, For they have been ever of old. I"! 7. Remember not the sins of my youth, nor my transgressions : According to thy MERCY remember thou me, For thy GOODNESS' sake, O LORD. ANSWER from the ORACLE of GOD. a 8. GOOD and UPRIGHT is the LORD : Therefore will he instruct sinners in the way. "< 9. The meek will he guide in judgment ; And the meek will he teach his way. 3 10. All the paths of the LORD are MERCY and TRUTH Unto such as keep his covenant and his testimonies. DAVID. V 1 1 . For thy Name's sake, O LORD, Pardon mine iniquity ; for it is great. Again THE ORACLE replies. 12. What man is this that feareth the LORD? Him shall he instruct in the way that he should choose. 5 13. His own soul shall dwell at ease, And his seed shall inherit the earth. o 14. The communion of the LORD is with them that fear him ; And his covenant, to make them know it. DAVID resumes his Prayer. y 15. Mine eyes are ever toward the LORD, For He shall pluck my feet out of the net. E 16. Turn thee unto me, and be gracious unto me ; For I am desolate and afflicted : - 17. The troubles of my heart they have enlarged ; O bring me out of my distresses. " 18. Look upon mine affliction and my pain, And forgive all my sins. " 19. Look upon mine enemies, for they are many, And they hate me with cruel hatred. ~ 20. O keep my soul and deliver me : Let me not be ashamed ; for I put my trust in thee. n 21. Let integrity and uprightness preserve me ; for I wait on thee. (s) 22. Redeem Israel, O God, out of all his troubles. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 93 Much animation and beauty are added to the Psalm, the mo- ment we perceive the dramatic form in which it has been cast, like Psalm xxvii. ; it is divided into three strophes of seven verses each : in the first of which David prays to God for spiritual direc- tion and help ; the second strophe contains the answer of the Oracle of God to David's prayer ; in the third strophe David resumes his prayer, and in consequence of the gracious assurance which he has received becomes still more urgent in his sup- plications for speedy deliverance from his distress. To this last strophe is appended an additional verse (ver. 22), (out of the alpha- betical series which ends with v. 21) entreating full redemption for all Israel, and probably sung in chorus by the whole people. Each strophe is again subdivided into three parts, consisting of 3, 1, 3. This division is particularly observable in the central strophe, in which the answer to David's prayer, contained in ver. 8-10, and 12-14, is interrupted by a short ejaculatory prayer of David in v. 11. In this threefold division, as generally in Scripture, the first three verses will be found to have more of an introductory and preparatory character, leading on to, and summed up as it were in, the middle verse which contains the central subject : and this again is developed and enlarged upon in the last three verses which 'form the result or conclusion of the whole. (Compare pp. 75, 76). Let us now attempt to trace the train of thought. STROPHE I. (Ver. 1-7.) V. 1-3. First, on the ground of his trust and humble waiting on God, David pleads that God should make a distinction between those who served him and those who served him not, and not allow his servants to be disappointed in their hope, and overcome by their enemies, who, in his case, persecuted him for no cause except that his uprightness reproved their wickedness. V. 4. Having thus prepared the way in the first three verses, he now prefers his chief petition in the central verse, " Shew me thy ways, LORD," thy ways of " salvation" (v. 5), for I am in desolation and affliction (vv. 16 and 17), seemingly forsaken by 94 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. thy guidance. Thou hast hid thy way from me, and left me in a path of darkness and distress. The phrase, " Shew me thy ways," is taken from the expression of Moses in Exod. xxxiii. 13, when God threatened to his people after their making the golden calf, that he would no longer send the Angel of his presence before them, but would leave them to walk in a way of their own choos- ing. Moses, however, made intercession with God for himself and his people. " Now therefore, I pray thee, if I have found grace in thy sight, shew me now tliy way" by leading us as heretofore by thy pillar of cloud and fire ; and he received the gracious answer, " My presence shall go with thee," v. 14. In like man- ner David here, in an hour of dark despondency, thinking that God had withdrawn his presence and was leaving him to wander unprotected in a way of destruction, addresses the prayer to God, " Shew me thy ways." Ver. 5-7. In the last three verses, David enforces this prayer by two topics, God's truth and mercy, "Lead me in thy truth" (ver. 5) : but he especially appeals to his mercy, which he invokes repeatedly under different names, " thy tender compassions and thy mercies" v. 6 ; " according to thy mercy," " for thy goodness sake" v. 7. The pleas thus urged are equivalent to an expostulation with God. " Shew me thy ways," for the ways to which I am at present left can surely not be thy ways thy ways of truth and mercy ! Where is now thy truth, and faithfulness to thy servants, that thou per- mittest the enemies of righteousness to triumph over them that' place their trust in thee ? Where is now thy mercy ? Is it clean gone for ever ? STROPHE II. (Vv. 8-14. To these expostulations the three first verses of the second strophe form a complete answer. The topics are taken up as usual in the reverse order. 1. Where is thy mercy ? " remember me for thy goodness' sake ! " The answer is, (v. 8) " Good is the Lord." 2. Where is now thy truth ? Answer : (v. 8) " Good and upright (= true) is the Lord," and therefore will He instruct sin- ners, such as thou has acknowledged thyself to be, in His ways. But (v. 9) they must meekly submit to His guidance and teach- SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 95 ing, and wait for His judgment without impatiently demanding, Where is His mercy ? Where is His truth ? " All the paths of the Lord," however afflictive and dark they may appear at the moment to the sufferer, " are mercy and truth unto such as keep His covenant and His testimonies," v. 10. V. 11. During the pause which follows, David in deep self- abasement bows himself meekly to God's reproof and prefers only the lowly plea, " For thy name's sake, LORD, pardon mine ini- quity : for it is great." I confess my sin, as if he had sdid, which deserves thy severest chastisement, and only ask forgiveness for thy Name's sake, which, as thou didst reveal it to thy servant Moses, is, " The Lord, the Lord God merciful and gracious, long suffering, and abundant in mercy'* and truth." Exod. xxxiv. 6. For thy mercy and truth's sake, which I ought not for a moment to have doubted, I pray thee to " pardon mine iniquity : for it is great." V. 12-14. Again the Oracle replies, What man is this that shows a submissive fear of God ? Such is the man that He will teach His ways, and show that all lead to salvation and to his real good. All blessings shall be his. His own soul shall dwell at ease : his seed shall inherit the earth. The Lord will admit him to secret communion with Himself, and manifest to him in his experience the blessings of His covenant. STROPHE III. Ver. 1 5-17. Strengthened in his faith by this gracious answer to his prayer, David professes his steadfast confidence which would wait meekly and perseveringly for the promised deliverance of the Lord. Mine eyes are ever toward the Lord For He it is that shall pluck my feet out of the net. But he prays that He would speedily deliver him : Turn thee unto me, and be gracious unto me, 1 In the Hebrew -ran chesed, " mercy," the game word as in the 10th verse of this Psalm. 96 SCRIPTUBE PARALLELISM. because of and this is the plea on which he would now specially insist the extremity of the sufferings to which he was reduced ; For I am desolate and afflicted : The troubles of my heart they mine enemies] have enlarged : O bring me out of my distresses. 18. Nay, a third time he repeats this plea, and assigns to it the central njace in the strophe. Look upon mine affliction, and my pain ; but at the same time he again meekly acknowledges that these are the just punishment of his numerous offences, And forgive all my sins. Ver. 19-21. The central petition is here, as in the 1st strophe, taken up and repeated in the succeeding verses. In the 1st strophe, the petitions in v. 4 " Sheio me thy ways, LORD, Teach me thy paths" were again urged in v. 5, " Lead me in thy truth, and teach me." In like manner, in this last strophe, the senti- ment of the central verse (v. 18) is taken up and repeated in v. 19 " Look upon mine enemies, c." In order to draw attention to this connexion, the regular alphabetical sequence is broken through, and the same letter, and even word, (" Look upon" n ^, r'eh) are made to begin both ve'rses. 1 There were two petitions in v. 18th. 1. " Look upon mine affliction and my pain," 2. " And forgive all my sins." The subject of the first (his affliction and pain) proceeded from his enemies, of the 2d (his sins) from himself. The 1st has been enlarged on in vv. 19 and 20 ; the second is now touched on and qualified in v. 21. "Let integrity and uprightness preserve me: for I wait on thee." Notwithstanding his sins which he had confessed as justly meriting in themselves God's utmost wrath, lie could yet appeal to the Searcher of hearts for the general sincerity and uprightness of that repentance whicli by His grace he had been enabled to exer- 1 Versos 18th and 19th are thus made both to hegin with a -, whereas v. 18 ought regularly to have begun with a ~. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 97 else, and of his endeavours, amidst all his imperfections, to serve God and humbly wait on Him. This plea is noticed, though slightly, since it had been men- tioned in the answer of God, as necessary to entitle him to God's favour, v. 10, " All the paths of Jehovah are mercy and truth unto suck as keep his covenant and his testimonies." Slightly, we say : not that it is not most important, nay an indispensable condition on the part of the suppliant, but because this was to form the main plea of the next psalm, Psalm xxvi., which is the sequel or complement of this : XXVI. 1. Judge me, O Jehovah : For I have walked in mine integrity. 2. Examine me, O Jehovah, and prove me, Try my reins and my heart. 3. For notwithstanding my losing sight, in a moment of darkness and distress, of thy mercy and truth, yet in the habitual tenor of my life, thy mercy * is before mine eyes ; And I have walked in thy truth [as my guide]. V. 22. David winds up the Psalm with a prayer for the whole Church, that the time of Israel's redemption from every evil may be hastened. It may be useful to present in a more condensed form the train of thought in the three Strophes, as brought out by attention to the threefold division of the 7 verses, 3-1-3, reminding the reader that the first member of a ternary series states an introductory proposition, the second contains the central or main thought, of which the third forms the expansion or development. 1 The same word ~3l^ hesed, mercy, as in Psalm xrv. 7 and 10. 98 SCRIPTUEE PARALLELISM. STROPHE I. Verses ( 1-3. I trust in thee : and none that trust in the Lord should be "^ ashamed. ( 4. Therefore shew me thy ways, which thou seemest to have " "^ N hidden from me. 8. 5-7. Thy ways of truth and mercy. STROPHE n. Answer of the Lord. 8-10. All God's ways are mercy and truth to his people, even those of afflictive discipline for sin, if they will meekly submit to his chastisement. David. 11. I confess my sin which deserves thy severest chastisement, and only ask forgiveness for thy Name's sake, " The Lord, the Lord God, abundant in mercy and truth." Answer of the Lord. 12-14. If thou thus submit with true fear unto the Lord, he will direct thee, prosper thee and thy seed, and shew thee the blessings of his communion and covenant. STROPHE ITT. 15-17. Now will I look without unbelieving impatience to the Lord, in assured confidence to be brought out of my distress, the severity of which I would plead for speedy deliver- 18. Yes mine affliction only would I now plead, which is be- yond my strength to bear and my sin, which thou only canst remove. 19-21. My afflictions proceed from numerous and cruel enemies, to whom thou canst not abandon my soul and put my trust to shame. My sins, though so great and frequent, I am struggling in sincerity and uprightness to resist, 22. and to serve thee perfectly : and I long and wait for thy redemption for myself and my people. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 99 There are irregularities as to the order and number of the let- ters in this and several of the alphabetical Psalms, which have been eagerly caught at by certain critics as incontestable proofs of the very corrupt and mutilated state of the text of the Hebrew Scriptures : while to others they have given occasion to rash at- tempts at emendation to remove the supposed defects. The efforts of both parties we consider to be altogether futile and superfluous. The more closely the Old Testament is examined, the greater reason has the sober critic to admire the wonderful care with which God lias watched over the integrity of his own blessed Word, by inspiring the people entrusted with its preser- vation, with a superstitious reverence for the very letter of Scrip- ture : and one of the important services which we expect the study of Parallelism to perform for the Scriptures is to prove, by its arrangements being preserved still intact, the remarkably pure and uncorrupted state in which the text has been handed down to us. The tendency of all the later investigations of the sounder portion of the German school of criticism has been to vindicate the genuineness and authenticity even of those pas- sages of sacred writ which had been generally set down as later additions and interpolations, such as the titles of the Psalms, and many incidental notes of time and other minor circumstances in the books of Moses. 1 We hope to be able to shew satisfactory reasons for all the irregularities which occur in the alphabetical Psalms : but at all events sufficient marks of design are observ- able, as Hengstenberg in several instances has shewn, to prove that they are not unintentional, but proceeded originally from the author. In the Psalm before us, for instance, one of the most remark- able deviations from the alphabetical order is that the letter 1 is omitted, and in order to make up the number of the alphabet, 22, a supernumerary verse is added at the end (v. 22) beginning with the letter B. Now that this is not attributable to any error on the part of the copyists, is evident from a comparison with the next alphabetical psalm, the xxxiv., which in many respects pre- sents striking points of resemblance, and in which the ornis- 1 Such as " unto this day," &c. See especially Hengstenberg's admirable work on the Authenticity of the Pentateuch, passim, and his remarks on the titles of the Psaluis in his Commentary. 100 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 8ion of the same letter 1 occurs, and a similar additional verse is appended to the end, beginning with the same letter, nay with a part of the same verb redeem ( n ;| padah), denoting apparently, by the marked similarity, that as Psalm xxv. is sprayer for the redemption of the righteous from the evils that oppress them, Psalm xxxiv. is a thanksgiving for a particular instance of deli- verance vouchsafed to David, in which he sees an earnest and pledge of that full and final redemption which God has in store for his people. Such coincidence and method in the midst of apparent disorder cannot be the effect of chance, or the careless blunder of transcribers : no more than the transposition of the same two letters ( y and B ) in each of the three central elegies of the five in the Lamentations of Jeremiah, can be without signifi- cance or design. Nor are we at any loss to perceive a good reason for the omis- sion of this letter, in Psalm xxv. Since each of the three Strophes was to consist of seven verses, beginning each with a separate letter of the alphabet, one of the 22 letters behoved to be dropped. 1 Still, had the Psalm been thus left with only 21 verses, it would have failed to manifest by the number its alphabetical character. 2 An additional verse was therefore necessary to be superadded to make up the number 22. So skilfully has this addition been managed, that the symmetry of the Psalm is not impaired but improved. This verse consists of a single line and clause, the only instance that occurs throughout the Psalm, with the exception of the first verse, with which it is thus brought into correspondence, and these two verses in a manner stand out by themselves apart from the alphabetical series: for the 2d verse begins again with " the first letter of the alphabet. Verse 1 and verse 22 thus enclose the whole Psalm (by this means made to consist of 20 verses, or two tens) between them, of which they, form a brief compendium or quintessence = I trust in thee (v. 1) : therefore deliver me (v. 22). 3 1 The same reason is applicable to Psalm xxxiv. 2 By which the Psalm was marked as a composition so far complete in itself and rounded off. 3 The condition necessary for successful prayer on the part of the worshipper is trust in God, and not impatiently asking, Where is thy truth ? Where is thy mercy ? (see SCRIPTUKE PARALLELISM. 101 To mark this intended isolation of verse 1st, it might have been thought, on a first consideration, that not sbut some let- ter distinct from the alphabetical series, as in the case of the 22d verse, should have been chosen to begin the Psalm. But to use the expression of Hengstenberg, it was necessary that the Psalm should " bear, as it were, on its front the signature of an alpha- betical Psalm" by beginning with the 1st letter s. Attention was drawn to this still more, as not being accidental but inten- tional, by the 2d verse again being made to begin with the same letter K : but as justice had already so far been done to this let- ter, the whole verse is not appropriated to it, but the second word is made to begin with 3 , the second letter of the alphabet. What still further shews the nicety of design in the structure of the Psalm, and disproves entirely the supposition thrown out by some critics that verse 22 did not originally form a part of the Psalm (but was added at some subsequent period, perhaps when the people were groaning under the Babylonish captivity), is the necessity of both these lines to complete the symmetry of the verses if we regard the parallelism alone without reference to the alphabetical letters, or the number of the verses. The first three verses will thus be found to form six lines consisting of three regular couplets. Unto thee, O Jehovah, do I lift up my soul. O my God, I trust in thee : Let me not be ashamed, Let not mine enemies triumph over me. So also shall none that wait on thee be ashamed : Ashamed shall they be, who act treacherously without cause. The 1st verse and first line of the 2d verse thus correspond, and form the first couplet, which is followed by two others : and the anomaly is removed of a single line appearing to stand alone followed by a triplet, and couplet. p. 94). Compare Heb. xi. 6. " He that coraeth to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him." James i. 6, 7, " But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering. For he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea, driven with the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord." 102 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. In like manner, the last 4 verses (19-22), if we regard the parallelism alone, form six lines, consisting of a couplet (v. 19) and a quatrain (ver. 20, 21, 22) arranged as an introverted paral- lelism of four members. 19. Look upon mine enemies, for they are many, And they hate me with cruel hatred. 20. a | O keep my soul and deliver me ; b | Let me not be ashamed ; for I put my trust in thee. 21. b | Let integrity and uprightness preserve me ; for I wait on thee. 22. a | Redeem Israel, O God, out of all his troubles. Here a and a are simple petitions, while b and b are bi- membral lines, consisting each of a petition and its plea. Thus perfect symmetry is restored. The parallelism too is thus rendered more exact between the first sub-division (ver. 15-17) and the third sub-division (ver. 19-22) of Strophe III., as each thus consists of a couplet and a four-lined stanza ; for ver. 16-17 form like ver. 20-22 an intro- verted parallelism. a | Turn thee unto me, and be gracious unto me, b | For I am desolate and afflicted ; b | The troubles of my heart they have enlarged ; a | bring me out of my distresses. Here a and a are petitions : b and b are their respective pleas. The probable reason of the letter P having been omitted, and * substituted in its place, has already been stated. (See p. 96). PSALM xxxiv. A Psalm of David : on his feigning madness before Abimelech And he drove him away, and he departed. s 1 . I will bless the LORD at all times : His praise shall continually be in my mouth. - 2. My soul shall make her boast in the LORD ; Let the meek hear, and rejoice. '3. O magnify the LORD with me, And let us exalt his name together. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 103 i 4. I sought the LORD, and he answered me, And delivered me from all my fears. n 5. They looked unto him, and were lightened : And their faces let them not be ashamed ! t 6. This poor man cried, and the LORD heard him, And saved him out of all his troubles. ri 7. The Angel of the LORD encampeth round about them that fear him, And delivereth them. a 8. O taste and see that the LORD is good ; Blessed is the man that trusteth in him. * 9. O fear the LORD, ye his saints : For there is no want to them that fear him. 210. The young lions do lack and suffer hunger : But they that seek the LOUD shall not want any good thing. ^ It. Come, ye children, hearken unto me ; I will teach you the fear of the LORD. to 12. What man is he that desireth life, And loveth many days that he may see good ? 3 13. Keep thy tongue from evil, And thy lips from speaking guile, fc 14. Depart from evil, and do good; Seek peace, and pursue it. 15. The eyes of the LORD are upon the righteous. And his ears are open unto their cry. 16. The face of the LORD is against them that do evil, To cut oft' the remembrance of them from the earth, s 17. They cried, and the LORD heard, And delivered them out of all their troubles. p 18. The LORD is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart ; And saveth, such as be of a contrite spirit. "! 19. Many are the afflictions of the righteous ; But the LORD delivereth him out of them all. t? 20. He keepeth all his bones : Not one of them is broken. i" 1 21. Evil shall slay the wicked : And they that hate the righteous shall be held guilty. 22. The LORD redeemeth the soul of his servants. And none of them that trust in him shall be held guilty. 104 SCKIPTURE PARALLELISM. Psalm xxxiv. has been formed exactly on the model of Psalm xxv. It is divided in like manner into three Strophes of seven verses each ; which again are subdivided into three parts, consist- ing of 3, 1, 3. The letter \ as in Psalm xxv. is omitted, so that the 21st verse ends the alphabet, and the 22d verse (which gives the sum of the whole Psalm, and corresponds with the Title), stands without the alphabetical series, and as in Psalm xxv. begins with 3 . This Psalm, as the title shews, was written by David on occa- sion of the signal deliverance vouchsafed to him, when he was in terror of his life from the Philistines to whom he had fled for refuge from the persecution of Saul. The first and third Strophes (ver. 1-7, and 15-21) are more didactic, detailing the experience and convictions of David and the more matured saints of God with regard to afflictions : while the central Strophe (v. 8-14) is hortatory, exhorting all, but par- ticularly the young, to trust and filial reverence towards the Lord, The argument of the Psalm, if we analyze it according to the divisions given, may be thus stated. It will be observed that, as in the preceding Psalm, the first three verses of each Strophe are introductory to the central sub- ject, which is contained in the fourth verse ; and this again is amplified in the three concluding verses. STROPHE I. 1-3. Bless the Lord with me, all ye his saints, and let his praise be our constant theme. 4. For he hath delivered his servant in extreme distress. 5-7. Magnify, I say, the Lord with me : for many such instances have God's saints to recount from their own experience in afflictions (v. 5) ; but every fresh example of remarkable interposition for one of the brethren (v. 6) ought to be specially improved to im- print on the mind the truth taught to our forefather Jacob by a vision of angels at Mahanaim (Gen. xxxii. 2), The Angel of God's presence encamps with all his attendant hosts around those that fear him, and delivers them from every enemy and evil (v. 7). SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 105 STROPHE II. X 810. Let me then invite all to prove the goodness and overflowing bounty of the LORD, and to fear nought but the living God alone, who will supply their every want. 11. On the young especially would I call, to hear what this fear is which banishes every other fear : what it gives ; what it requires. 12-14. Life and every good are its gifts : its requirement is purity in words (ver. 13), deeds, and heart (v. 14.) STROPHE III. To enforce this exhortation, the Psalmist contrasts the widely different results of affliction to the righteous and to the wicked. 1517. God is no indifferent spectator of the righteous and the wicked. His providence watches over the former for good, over the latter for evil. He hears and delivers the righteous in then: afflictions. 1 8. He is ever nigh to save them, if their afflictions have answered their intended end, in breaking the stony heart and softening it. 1921. Many indeed are the strokes wherewith God sees it necessary to chasten his children : but not a bone of them shall be broken ; l while the calamities of their ungodly enemies are judgments of God for their destruction. 22. To sum up the whole : Redemption from all evils and guilt, shall be theirs who serve and trust the Lord. 1 There is an evident antithesis designed between the two uses of the word " broken " in verses 18 and 20. Tf the heart of the believer is broken for sin, not a bone of him shall be broken. No fatal evil shall overtake him. His strength ( c - : ? etzem means both " bone " and " strength " in Hebrew) shall be unbroken. If he fall, it is but to rise again. " He may be perplexed, but he shall not be in despair ; persecuted, but not forsaken ; cast down, but not destroyed." 1 Cor. iv. 8, 9. This was eminently true of the Righteous One. Though " it pleased the Lord to bruise him," and to give his " body to be broken for us," yet " not a bone of him was broken." His strength remained unbroken even in death. See John xix. 33, 36, and compare Ex. xii. 46. 106 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. PSALM xxxvu. Psalm xxxvii., the next in succession of the alphabetical Psalms, affords strong confirmation of the correctness of the arrangement which we have given of Psalms xxv. and xxxiv. It differs from these, in each letter of the alphabet having two verses assigned to it, with the exception of three (see ver. 7, 20, and 34) which have only one verse each. The position of these letters is remarkable, the first and last occurring at the exact interval of seven verses from the beginning and the end of the Psalm ("> begins ver. 7, and ? v. 34), while the other concludes the half of the psalm (=> begins ver. 20). The verses to which these are prefixed differ also in being triplets, while the rest are generally couplets. tStill so long as I confined my attention to the number of verses (which in the two former Psalms coincides with the number of the letters} I could discover no very definite arrangement : but the moment that it occurred to me to count by letters instead of verses, I found that the arrangement of the Psalm was exactly the same as that of the two former, the whole being divisible into three strophes of seven letters each ( y being omitted), which again are subdivided into three parts, 3, 1, 3, but with this demonstra- tion of the correctness of my previous theory, that the unit in the centre is marked as standing alone, l>y that letter having but a single verse assigned to it. The object of David in this Psalm was to encourage believers under one of the severest trials of their faith to which they were exposed under the Old Testament dispensation, from observing the apparent prosperity and triumph of the wicked. It may be considered as the third and closing Psalm of the first series of Alphabetical Psalms [in all seven] all of which relate to the < one subject of the afflictions of God's people. In Psalm xxv. we have before us a sufferer in the deep waters of affliction " lifting up his soul to God," overcoming through the power of faith the suggestions of the Tempter prompting him to call in question the " mercy and truth " of God, and strengthened to put up in renewed confidence the prayer, " Be- deem thine Israel, God, out of all his troubles." Psalm xxxiv. calls on the meek and suffering saints of God to have the praise of the Lord continually in their mouths from the SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 107 many fresh instances which from time to time He affords to His afflicted servants of deliverance from extreme perils, and to hold fast the belief that the redemption prayed for in the former Psalm shall be accorded by the Lord. " The Lord shall redeem the soul of his servants." Psalm xxx vii. is an encouragement and warning, meantime never to murmur at the present prosperity and triumph of the wicked, and above all never to be drawn away through envy of their apparent success to follow their evil ways, so as to be in- volved in their punishment and ruin. " Fret not thyself in any wise to do evil, For evil-doers shall be cut off." Ver. 8, 9. Their prosperity is but transitory. The afflictions of believers are but for a moment, and will issue in their deliverance and salva- tion. The time of judgment is fast approaching, when the wicked shall vanish like " smoke," " but the meek shall inherit the earth, and shall delight themselves in the abundance of peace." The whole Psalm is but a series of variations on this one theme, yet is not without a certain regular order. PSALM xxxvn. [A PSALM] OF DAVID. I. x 1 . Fret not thyself because of evil-doers, Neither be thou envious against the workers of iniquity. 2. For they shall soon be cut down like the grass, And wither as the green herb. a 3. Trust in the LORP, and do good ; So dwell in the land, and feed on truth ; 4. Delight thyself also in the LORD ; And he shall give thee the desires of thine heart. J 5. Commit thy way unto the LORD ; Trust also in him, and he shall bring it to pass ; 6 . And he shall bring forth thy righteousness as the light, And thy judgment as the noonday. i 7. Rest in the LOKD, and wait patiently for him : Fret not thyself because of him who prospereth in his way, Because of the man who bringeth wicked devices to pass. 108 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. n 8. Cease from anger and forsake wrath : Fret not thyself in any wise to do evil. 9. For evil doers shall be cut off; But those that wait upon the LORD, they shall inherit the earth. i 10. For yet a little while, and the wicked shall not be : Yea thou shalt diligently consider his place, and it shall not be : 11. But the meek shall inherit the earth ; And shall delight themselves in the abundance of peace. * 12. The wicked deviseth evil against the just, And gnasheth upon him with his teeth. 13. The LORD shall laugh at him ; For he seeth that his day is coming. IT. ft 14. Their sword the wicked have drawn out, And have bent their bow, To cast down the poor and needy, To slay the upright, in walk. 15. Their sword shall enter into their own heart, And their bows shall be broken. ts 16. A little that a righteous man hath, Is better than the riches of many wicked, 1 7. For the arms of the wicked shall be broken, But the LORD upholdeth the righteous. 11 18. The LORD knoweth the days of the upright: And their inheHtance shall be for ever. 19. They shall not be ashamed in the evil time : And in the days of famine they shall be satisfied. 3 20. For the wicked shall perish : And the enemies of the LORD, as the fat of lambs They have consumed into smoke have they consumed away! V 21. The wicked borroweth, and shall not repay; But the righteous is ever shewing mercy, and giving : 22. For those that are blessed of Him shall inherit the earth : And those that are cursed of Him shall be cut off. & 23. By the LORD are a man's steps established ; And He will delight in his way. 24. Though he fall, he shall not be utterly cast down ; For the LORD upholdeth him with his hand. 3 25. I have been young, and now am old ; Yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken, Nor his seed begging bread. 26. He is ever merciful, and lendeth ; And his seed is blessed. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 109 m. 8 27. Depart from evil, and do good, And dwell for evermore. 28. For the LORD loveth judgment And forsaketh not his saints ; "^] They are preserved for ever : But the seed of the wicked shall be cut off. 29. The righteous shall inherit the land, And dwell therein for ever. E 30. The mouth of the righteous speaketh wisdom, And his tongue talketh of judgment. 31. The law of his God is in his heart : His steps do not swerve. s 32. The wicked watcheth the righteous, And seeketh to slay him. 33. The LOUD will not leave him in his hand, Nor condemn him when he is judged. P 34. Wait on the LORD and keep his way, And he shall exalt thee to inherit the land : When the wicked are cut off, thou shalt see it. ^ 35. I have seen the wicked in great power, And spreading himself like a green bay tree. 36. Yet he passed away, and, lo, he was not : Yea, I sought him, but he could not be found. *> 37. Mark the perfect man, and behold the upright ; For there is a future to the man of peace. 38. But the transgressors shall be destroyed together : The future of the wicked shall be cut off. ni 39. And the salvation of the righteous is of the LORD ; He is their strength in the time of trouble. 40. And the LORD has helped them, and delivered them : He will deliver them from the wicked, and save them j Because they have trusted in him. The first and last strophes are more hortatory, " Fret not thy- self, &c." " Depart from evil, &c." while the central is didactic, proving the reasonableness of the duty required, 1st, negatively, by removing the objections arising from the apparent disadvan- tages on the part of the righteous (ver. 14-19), the main argu- ment being again repeated and placed in the central position (ver. 20), of the speedy destruction of the enemies of the Lord and 110 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. of his people : and 2dly, positively, by showing the advantages which the righteous man even now enjoys amidst all his trials. The following is an analysis of the Psalm according to the divi- sions indicated by the letters. STROPHE I. 16. Be not disturbed at the prosperity of the wicked, for it is short-lived : but look only to do the duty of thine own station in full confidence in the protection and truth of the Lord, assured that He will bestow every blessing, vindicate thy cause, and bring every thing to a pros- perous issue. 7. Wait, I say, in stillness God's time : neither 1st, envying the pros- perity of the wicked, nor 2dly, fearing their evil devices against thyself. These two points are then enlarged on under the next three letters, or six verses. 8-13. 1st, Avoid all impatience at God's permitting the prosperity of evil- doers, lest thou shouldst thus be tempted to do evil also, and be in- volved in their punishment, which shall be speedy and utter destruc- tion, while those that meekly suffer and look to God to avenge them, shall have an abiding inheritance and unalloyed peace (Ver. 811). 2dly, Fear not the devices and rage of the wicked, for God's approaching judgment will shew how futile they are (ver. 12, 13.) Here, however, (in the mention of the present apparent triumph and superiority of the wicked) a sensitive chord was struck in the persecuted sufferer's heart, which could not be made all at once to cease to vibrate. The Psalmist therefore takes it as the key note of his next strain. STROPHE II. 1. Negative. Removal of objections. Whatever may be the ultimate fate of the righteous and the wicked, the mourner is ready to exclaim, the immediate difficul- ties and disadvantages of the righteous are too hard for flesh and blood to bear. 14-19. 1st, The devices of the wicked threaten them with instant destruc- tion, (ver. 14.) SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. Ill True : but their devices shall return on their own heads. 1 (ver. 15.) 2d, The righteous are often poor, while the wicked abound in riches. True : still better is a little with God's blessing. Their riches and strength cannot save the wicked from final destruc- tion, whereas God upholdeth the righteous, (vers. 16 and 17.) 3d, Times of evil and famine come on the righteous as well as on the wicked. True : but God will never forsake the righteous, but will give them length of days, and an enduring inheritance, preserve them in evil, and satisfy all their wants, (ver. 18 and 19.) 20. Yes, again I repeat as the central point to be kept in view : Repine not from discouraging comparisons of thine own present state with that of the wicked. Their prosperity is momentary. They shall perish. They are the Lord's enemies as much as thine ; and I already see, and foretell as accomplished their utter dis- appearance from God's laud. 2. Positive. Statement of Advantages. Nay, God's promises in his Word are true, and verified to the righteous and wicked far more even in this mixed state of things than first appearances would suggest. 2126. The wicked lend not, but borrow often; yet their riches thrive not, because God's curse is upon them and they have not the 1 In the original we have a fine instance of that artifice in composition by which " the sound becomes an echo to the sense." The order' in the Hebrew is : 14. Their sword the wicked have drawn out, And have bent their bow, To cast down the poor and needy, To slay the upright in walk. 15. Their sword shall enter into their own heart, And their bows shall be broken. Here not only are the two verses (14 and 15"), by both beginning with the same letter n, marked as being closely connected together (so as to form an introverted pa- rallelism) but in the same word " sword" a"h cherev, with which ver. 14 had begnn, returning again at the beginning of ver. 15, we see, as it were, the recoil upon the wicked themselves of the weapon which they had unsheathed for the destruction of others. With this may be compared the well-known instance of Pope : Up the high hill he heaves the huge round stone : The hvge round stone, resulting with a bound, Thunders impetuous down, and smokes along the ground. 112 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. means to repay : whereas the righteous has ever a little to give f and wants not because God's blessing rests upon it. 1 (ver. 21, 22.) It is on the Lord's blessing that all permanent prosperity must rest : therefore no fatal evil can befal him who possesses his favour. (Ver. 23, 24.) In confirmation the Psalmist states the result of his own long experience in life. (Ver. 25, 26.) STROPHE III. , 27-38. " Depart" then, once more I repeat, "from evil, and do good." The Psalmist returns again in the last strophe to the exhorta- tions with which he had commenced in the 1st strophe ; " Trust in the LORD and do good." (Ver. 3.) " Fret not thyself in any wise to do evil" (ver. 8.) : and thus shalt thou secure an abid- ing rest with Him who is " the dwelling-place" of the righteous " in all generations." (Ver. 27-29.) But by the righteous I mean those whose mouth utters no murmur, nor heart frets at what is God's appointment ; but who in word, heart, and deed 2 are directed by wisdom, the law of God, and unswerving rectitude. (Ver. 30, 81.) Such need fear no plots of the wicked. (Ver. 32.) 34. Wait therefore patiently (is the central point of my exhortation), on the Lord, and soon shalt thou see the wide distinction which he puts between the righteous and the wicked. 3540. Such has ever been my own experience (ver. 35, 36) : such will be that of those who will attentively mark the providential dealings of God : and strengthened in faith they will be enabled to say that as " the Lord has helped and delivered" the righteous in times 1 The wicked borroweth, and shall not repay : But the righteous showeth mercy, and is ever giving : For those that are blessed of Him shall inherit the earth : And those that are cursed of Him shall be cut off. Such, we believe to be the true transition and meaning. (See Hengstenberg, &c.) Observe the parallelism of the lines, the 4th giving the reason for the statement in the 1st, and the 3d for that in the 2d, and compare Deut xv. 6. " For the Lord thy God blesseth thee, as He promised thee : and thou shalt lend unto many nations, but thou shalt not borrow." Compare also ver. 26 of this Psalm where the words " He is ever merciful and lendeth" express not so much what the righteous does from libera- lity of disposition, as what he is enabled to do from the blessing of God on his sub- stance, since the Psalmist is stating from his own experience in life the prosperity which he has observed always to attend the righteous. 2 " These two verses exhibit the same threefold division as the Decalogue. Ver. 30 refers to word, the second hemistich'of ver. 31st to deed, and in the middle between both stands the heart." Hengstenberg's Commentary on the Psalms. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 113 past, full and final deliverance and salvation will be the portion of those who " have trusted in Him." 1 The principal apparent irregularities in this Psalm, besides the three letters " >= and ? which have only one verse each, are that the letter * seems to be altogether omitted, and the stanza assigned to the preceding letter is of a most disproportionate length, as it consists of three verses, and eight lines. 27. Depart from evil, and do good, And dwell for evermore. 28. For the LORD loveth judgment, And forsaketh not his saints ; |>'] They are preserved for ever : But the seed of the wicked shall be cut off. 29. The righteous shall inherit the land, And dwell therein for ever. According to Hengstenberg the three verses assigned to this one letter are in designed contrast to the three letters which have but one verse each. The stanza too, he remarks, is artfully con- structed, so that " two verses of the usual length (two lines) enclose a third of unusual length (four lines) between them," thus form- ing a sort of constructive triplet, consisting of Distich, Tetrastich, Distich. But besides, the stanza may be considered as an Intro- verted Parallelism, in which verses 27 and 29 correspond, both being expressive of the same idea, " If thou art righteous and doest good, thou shalt dwell in the land for evermore ;" while the intermediate tetrastich of verse 28 assigns as the reason the righteousness of the Lord which will never fail his people, but must interpose to judge between the righteous and their enemies. Still when we look more narrowly into this stanza in the Hebrew, we find that the third line of verse 28 has the want- ing y (ayin) concealed within its first word ^5^ Tolam, and only partially hidden by the prepositional prefix '-> (for ever). By restoring its rights to the , we should have two stanzas, each with the usual number of lines attached to them. 1 I must beg of my less critical readers to excuse the following remarks which are necessary to justify my assertion of the uncorrupted state of the present text of Scrip- ture, and of the extreme nicety exhibited by the sacred writers in the formal arrange- ment of their compositions. They can omit them and pass on to the next Psalm. H 114 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. Depart from evil and do good, And dwell for evermore. For the LORD loveth judgment, And forsaketh not his saints ; y For ever they are preserved : But the seed of the wicked shall te cut off. The righteous shall inherit the land, And dwell therein for ever. Hengstenberg observes that one cause of the deviation from the exact alphabetical order in this Psalm was the desire which the Psalmist had of giving a place to the Ten, the number of Per- fection, so as to form in all 40 verses or four Decads, instead of 44 verses which would have resulted from assigning two verses to each of the 22 letters. It is corroborative of this that in the last stanza beginning with ver. 39, the n is concealed behind a i (ry^i oo-th' shoo-ath), so that with the apparent omission of the y also, the ostensible number of letters in the alpha- betical series is only 20 or two Tens ; just as in Psalm xxv. the number of 20 is obtained by concealing a behind in ver. 2, and omitting ' altogether. In the present Psalm, the twenty letters will be found to be symmetrically divided by the three letters which have but a single verse under them. Counting the letters always till we are stopped by one of these three letters, the arrangement is 3, 7, 7, 3. The reason of selecting the y for omission will be evident on inspection of the strophes. The beginning of Strophe II. had been marked by the n stanza having six lines instead of the usual number four, forming an Introverted Parallelism. In like man- ner, the beginning of Strophe III. is marked by the unusual number of lines assigned to the D stanza through the apparent omission of the y , and forming like the other an Introverted Parallelism. Thus every irregularity is satisfactorily accounted for. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 115 SECTION XII. PSALM LI. This, though not one of the alphabetical Psalms, yet resembles closely in its structure the three which we have examined, as it consists in the Hebrew of 21 verses, which are divided into three Strophes of seven verses each. This is one of the most profoundly interesting Psalms of the whole collection, from the insight which it gives us into the views entertained by the Old Testament saints respecting sin, repent- ance, and renewal by God's Spirit, as drawn from the depths of Da- vid's personal experience shewing us how nearly these approxi- mate to the views held by believers under the brighter light of the Christian revelation. What St Paul has said of the father of the faithful, that " God preached before the Gospel unto Abra- ham" (Gal. iii. 8), may with equal truth be applied to the man after God's own heart, when he was inspired to compose the Psalm before us. Nowhere have we a clearer or fuller description of the nature and requisitions of a true evangelical repentance than that which the Spirit here dictates to David. Nowhere do we find a more profound appreciation of the true nature of all sin, or a more thorough renunciation of every attempt at self-justifica- tion and keen apprehension of the inherent corruption of human nature, 3-7 (1-5) a more entire recognition of the necessity of regeneration being from first to last the work of God's Spirit, 8-14 (6-12) or finally, of the true nature of that return which is required of the justified sinner for the unmerited and inesti- mable blessings which have been conferred upon him, 1521 (13-19.) The subject of each of the strophes may shortly be stated to be Strophe I. Confession of sin the previous requisite on the part of the sinner, for obtaining the great blessing of the Central Strophe. Strophe IT. Regeneration the work of God's grace alone. Strophe III. The acceptable return to God on the part of the sinner : or, as the whole Psalm is in the form of a prayer, we may regard 116 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. it as an earnest pleading of David with God for deliverance from the three great evils of sin, 1. from its guilt (A.), 2. from its defile- ment (B), and 3. from its miserable bondage (C), and for the bestowal of the corresponding blessings, 1. justification, 2. sancti- fication, 3. the free spirit of adoption on the ground of three distinct pleas : In Strophe I. Because he now makes full and unreserved con- fession of sin ; and thus has fulfilled the previous condition neces- sary on the part of the sinner. In Strophe II. Because God alone can bestow the blessings prayed for. In Strophe III. Because His granting these blessings will call forth the only return which man can ofler acceptable to God, viz. " the sacrifice of praise" and of a heart truly grateful for His blessings, and anxiously desirous to proclaim and extend His mercies to others. PSALM LI. Confession of sin the previous requisite on the part of the sinner. 1. To the Chief Musician. A Psalm of David. 2. When Nathan the Prophet went in to him, As he had gone in to Bathsheba. 1. r A 3. Have mercy upon me, O God, according to thy loving- kindness ; According unto the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions. - 2. B 4. Wash me throughly from mine iniquity, I And cleanse me from rny sin. 3. a 5. FOR I ACKNOWLEDGE MY TRANSGRESSIONS : b AND MY SIN IS EVER BEFORE ME. 4. (-06. Against thee, thee only, have I sinned, And done the evil thing in thy sight : That thou mightest be justified when thou speakest, And be clear when thou judgest. 5. b 7. Behold I was shapen in iniquity : And in sin did my mother conceive me. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 117 Regeneration the work of God's grace alone. 6. f A 8. Behold them delightest in truth in the inward parts ; And in the hidden part thou shalt make me to know wisdom. 17. 18. 19. 7. ! B 9. Thou shalt purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean : Thou shalt wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow. c 10. Thou shalt make me to hear joy and gladness : The bones which thou hast broken shall rejoice. 9. A 11. HIDE THY FACE FROM MY SINS, AND BLOT OUT ALL MINE INIQUITIES. 10. B 12. Create in me a clean heart, O God ; J And renew a right spirit within me. 1 1. 13. Cast me not away from thy presence ; And take not thy holy Spirit from me. 12. C 14. Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation ; And uphold me with thy free Spirit. The acceptable return to God on the part of the sinner. 13. r A 15. Then will I teach transgressors thy ways ; i And sinners shall be converted unto thee. 14. 16- Deliver me from blood (-defilement), O God, Thou God of my salvation ; And my tongue shall sing aloud of thy righteousness. 15. C 17. O Lord, open thou my lips ; And my mouth shall shew forth thy praise. 16. 18. FOR THOU DELIGHTEST NOT IN SACRIFICE ; ELSE WOULD I GIVE IT : THOU HAST NO PLEASURE IN BURNT OFFERING. ^ 19. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit : A broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise. 20. Do good in thy good pleasure unto Zion : Thou shalt build the walls of Jerusalem. 21. Then shalt thou delight in the sacrifices of righteousness,. In burnt offering, and whole burnt offering : Then shall bullocks go up on thine altar. Let us now examine more minutely the structure and contents of the Psalm. 118 SCUIPTURE PARALLELISM. STROPHE I. Each strophe, as we have already observed, consists of an equal number of verses, seven. But to form the seven verses of the first Strophe, the Title must count, as in the original, for two verses. This is one of many proofs which serve to shew that the Titles are all genuine, and formed originally an integral portion of the Psalms. In- the present instance, both parts of the Title are most significant. The inscription " To the Chief Musician" rendered at once the Psalm and the confession public. No surer evidence of the depth and sincerity of his penitence could have been afforded than this public humiliation of a king of Israel, and open acknowledgment before the whole world of his guilt and shame. In the words which follow we have a similar acknowledgment of the righteousness of the condemnation pronounced upon him by Nathan that God was " justified when he spake, and clear when he judged." The sentiment expressed by the words in ver. 2, is that where sin has found entrance, there God's judg- ment quickly follows. But there is more than a mere connexion of time implied by the word rendered in our version " after." The word in the original ("*?'*: ca-asher) signifies " as, accord- ing as he had gone in to Bathsheba," " suggesting the ideas of analogy, proportion, and retaliation." 1 David would mark and humbly acknowledge the just retribution of God in the judgment pronounced, so exactly proportioned to the offence. " Thou hast killed Uriah the Hittite with the sword." " Now therefore the sword shall never depart from thine house." " Thou hast taken his wife to be thy wife." " Behold I will raise up evil against thee out of thine own house, and I will take thy wives before thine eyes, and give them unto thy neighbour, and he shall lie with thy wives in the sight of this sun." 2 Sam. xii. 9-11. Thus we see that the double Title forms no unimportant part of the Psalm ; and by its being counted as two verses, and com- pleting the number seven in the first strophe, it renders the sym- metry of the three strophes perfect, as far as regards the formal arrangement by verses. But, as we have already remarked, we often find in Parallelism i Alexander On the Psalms. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 119 more than one arrangement running side by side with each other without confusion or interference. The five verses which follow of Strophe I. form a whole in themselves, consisting of the usual three parts, with the mutual dependence and connexion of the threefold division. PETITIONS. (" Have mercy upon me, O God, according to thy loving kindness : A < According unto the multitude of thy tender mercies, blot out my t transgressions. T> C Wash me throughly from mine iniquity, "^ And cleanse me from my sin. GENERAL PLEAS a FOR A, AND b FOR B. a < For I acknowledge my transgressions : b -< And my sin is ever before me. SPECIAL PLEAS a FOR A, AND b FOR B. / Against thee, thee only, have I sinned, J And done the evil thing in thy sight ; J That thou mightest be justified when thou speakest, ^ And be clear when thou judgest. , (Behold, I was shapen in iniquity : in sin did my mother conceive me. In A and B we have two petitions, enforced respectively by the general pleas a and b, which again are more fully developed in what may be termed special pleas for each, a and b. The first petition A is for deliverance from the guilt of sin (justification), and the second B, from its defilement (sanctification). 1 1 That the distinction here made between the two petitions is just, and that both do not refer only to forgiveness of sin, as Dr Hengstenberg asserts in opposition to Stier, will I trust be still more evident to the reader as he proceeds and observes the beauti- ful order and progression of thought which are thus introduced into the Psalm, and the parallelism of the verses marked B, B, B, IB. Dr Hengsteuberg maintains that puri- fication of heart is only first mentioned in ver. 12-14. The comparison, however, of the first expression in ver. 12, ' Create in me a clean heart, with the corresponding ex- pressions in ver. 4, " cleanse me from my sin," and ver. 9, " Thou shalt purge me with hyssop and I shall be clean," proves that all three refer to the same subject. 120 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. Both petitions are then based upon what David feels to be the indispensable pre-requisite on the part of the sinner, unqualified confession of sin, which accordingly forms the central thought of the first strophe. Each of its two lines refers evidently to one of the preceding petitions : " Blot out my transgressions " {A) : " For I acknowledge my transgres- sions," (a). " Cleanse me from my sin " (B) : " For my sin is ever before me." (b) : and, as usual in the Gradational Parallelism, the second line makes an advance upon the first. The penitent who would be delivered from sin must not be satisfied with a mere passing con- viction and acknowledgment of the guilt of his individual trans- gression, but must keep ever before him the inherent loathsome- ness and pollution of the source from which it sprung the sin that is in him. 1 In the next two verses, we have two most profound views dis- closed of the true nature of sin : 1st, (ver. 6) that all sin is in reality, and looking at it in its truest light, sin against God. Even sin against our neighbour is a violation of that relation which the sovereign Lord of all has con- stituted between him and us, and is a rebellion against His ordi- nance. Murder is a defacing of God's image ; adultery, a viola- tion of God's holy law of marriage. " Your murmurings " was the warning of Moses to the Israelites, when raising their voice against him and Aaron for want of water, " Your murmurings are not against us, but against the Lord." Ex. xvi. 8. It is God's law that enjoins the duties of the Second Table, as well as those of the First. Whatever we do, we are commanded to " do, not as unto man, but unto God." All sin is thus a transgression 1 The argument of these three verses, or indeed of the first strophe, might he summed up in the words of the Apostle John, 1 John i. 9. If we confess our sins, He is faithful, And righteous, [3/xa/s;] To forgive us our sins, And to cleanse us from all unrighteousness : [$;*/;] - that is. " He is faithful, to forgive us our sins : he is righteous, to cleanse us from all unrighteousness." See p. 34. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 121 of God's appointments, a rebellion of the creature against the Creator : and in comparison with this, every other view of sin dwindles so completely into nothing in David's eyes that he ex- claims, Against thee, thee only, have I sinned, And done the evil thing in thy sight. Various attempts have been made to escape from the obvious meaning of the words that follow, That thou mightest be justified when thou speakest, And be clear when thou judgest, which, in connexion with the previous words, "Against thee have I sinned," &c. seem plainly to imply that David's sin had been over- ruled by God, and rendered so heinous and glaring, for the pur- pose of vindicating His righteousness beyond all cavil in the severe sentence pronounced against it. Hengstenberg has ably shewn this to be the only legitimate interpretation of the words, and to be entirely in accordance with the teaching of Scripture in other passages. " Sin," he observes, in its first rise and continued in- dulgence in the heart, " belongs indeed to man. He can at any moment by repentance release himself from its power. But if he neglects to use the aids of God's Spirit offered him for this pur- pose, the forms in which it may manifest itself remain no longer in his power, but are subject to God's disposal, who determines them as it pleases Him, as it suits the plan of His government of the world, for His own glory, and at the same time also, so long as the sinner is not absolutely hopeless, so as to subserve his sal- vation. He places the sinner in situations in which he shall be assaulted by this or that particular temptation ; He directs the thoughts to some determinate object of sinful desire, and secures that they continue wedded to this, and do not start off to some other object. It is from the consideration of sin in this point of view that David proceeds, when in 1 Sam. xxvi. 19 he derives the hatred of Saul from the Lord's having ' stirred him up against him,' when in 2 Sam. xvi. 10, &c. he says of Shimei, ' The Lord hath said unto him, Curse David. Who shall then say, Where- fore hast thou done so ? Let him curse, for the Lord hath bidden 122 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. him.' Thus also in another passage we find asserted a secret in- fluence over David's mind, as directing the sinful inclination already present in his heart to a determinate object : compare 2 Sam. xxiv. 1, * And again the anger of the Lord was kindled against Israel, and he moved David against them to say, Go, number Israel and Judah/ * In the matter here referred to, such a co-operation on the part of God is quite undeniable. That David, through his own guilt filled with sinful lust, must see pre- cisely Bathsheba, that she became pregnant, that Uriah did not comply with the wishes of David, who that believes in a Provi- dence generally can overlook such a co-operation in this combina- tion of circumstances ? Pointing now to this co-operation of God, David here says that he must commit so heinous a sin in order that in the judgment which God pronounced upon him through Nathan, His righteousness, purity and holiness might be mani- fest, and thus His name be glorified and His honour advanced." " Besides the exposition now given is that followed by the Apostle in Rom. iii. 4, whose commonly misunderstood words are thus first placed in their true light. Paul must have taken the passage in a sense, which appeared to yield the result that human un- righteousness was not punishable, since it ' commended/ or ren- dered conspicuous, ' the righteousness of God,' so that one must sin for the honour of God allegations, which in the following context he partly refutes (ver. 6), partly rejects with abhorrence, The only point in which Hengstenberg's interpretation seems defective is, that, to render the connexion of the first and last clauses of ver. 6 complete, we feel a want of some expression to mark the lieinousness of the guilt incurred. David does not mean to say simply " I have sinned that thou migbtest be justified," but as Hengstenberg himself explains it, " he must commit so heinous a sin " the form which his previously cherished lust was to assume must be so aggravated, that God might not only be, but appear to be just in punishing it. And such accordingly is the import of the expression which he has employed, " I have 1 From a comparison of the parallel passage in 1 Chron. xxi. 1, we learn that the *ery wrath of Satan himself is overruled to work out God's purposes. 2 Hengstenberg, Commentary on Ps. li. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 123 done the evil thing in thy sight/' 1 This phrase (to " do the evil thing in the sight of the Lord") occurs more than 60 times in the Old Testament, and I believe it will be found I am correct in affirming, signifies in every instance, to be guilty of apostasy and rebellion against God. The first occasion on which it is used is by Moses in Numb, xxxii. 13, to designate the consummating act of Israel's rebellion against the Lord, which brought down His final sentence of utter rejection against them. " And the Lord's anger was kindled against Israel, and he made them wander in the wilderness forty years, until all the generation that had done the evil thing in the sight of the Lord was consumed." (Compare Deut. ix. 18). Thenceforth it became the standing expression to designate defection from the living God. Thus in the next in- stance in which it occurs (Deut. iv. 25), it is employed to denote idolatry. " When thou shalt beget children, and children's chil- dren, and ye shall have remained long in the land, and ye shall corrupt yourselves and make a graven image, or the likeness of anything, and shall do the evil thing in the sight of the Lord tliy God, to provoke him to anger." Thus also in chap. xvii. 2-5, " If there be found among you man or woman that hath wrought the wicked thing in the sight of the Lord thy God in transgres- sing his covenant, and hath gone and served other gods and wor- shipped them then shalt thou bring forth that man or that woman, which have committed that wicked thing unto thy gates, even that man or that woman, and shalt stone them with stones, till they die." The next and last passage in which the phrase occurs in Moses' writings is in Deut. xxxi. 29, where he predicts to the Israelites that after his death they would be guilty of com- plete rebellion against the Lord (ver. 27), and would " utterly cor- rupt themselves ; and evil will befal you in the latter days : be- cause ye will do the evil thing in the sight of the Lord to pro- voke him to anger through the work of your hands." The exact verification of this prediction in the subsequent his- tory of the Israelites, and the anger of God, yet tempered with mercy, at their frequent rebellion and idolatry, is the great sub- i -rii'i'y ^:*l > 2 y"n (hara b'ene"cha aseethee). Not as our translators have rendered " this evil thing," nor as Hengstenberg, Ewald, &c. " what is evil in the sight of the Lord "but " the or that evil thing," S ~J^ ha ra. 124 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. ject which the author of the Book of Judges proposed to himself to illustrate. Accordingly this phrase forms the characteristic expression of his history, the main central division of which is subdivided into seven sections, 1 each commencing with this phrase, " And the children of Israel did the evil thing in the sight of the Lord and served Baalim : and they forsook the Lord God of their fathers," &c. Compare Judges ii. 11, iii. 7, iii. 12, iv. 1, vi. 1, x. 6, xiii. 1. The next passage in which it occurs is equally de- cisive (1 Sam. xii. 17), where Samuel upbraiding the people for their rebellion against the sovereignty of God, calls God himself to bear witness to their guilt by sending thunder and rain, " that ye may perceive that your wickedness is great, which ye have done in the sight of the Lord in asking you a king" 8 a demand which God himself had already characterized (1 Sam. viii. 7) : " They have not rejected thee, but they have rejected me, that I should not reign over them." The last passage which we shall quote at length in proof of the alleged signification of this phrase is the remonstrance of Samuel to Saul (1 Sam. xx. 19), " Where- fore then didst thou not obey the voice of the Lord, but didst fly upon the spoil, and didst the evil thing in the sight of the Lord f In what this " evil thing in the sight of the Lord" consisted, Samuel's subsequent words leave in no doubt : For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, And stubbornness is as iniquity and idolatry : Because thou hast rejected the word of the Lord, He hath also rejected thee from being king. 1 SAMUEL xv. 23. Lastly, it is the established expression employed in the Books of Kings and Chronicles in speaking of the idolatries of the kings of Israel and Judah (1 Kings xi. 6, xiv. 22, xv. 26, 34, &c.) This invariable usage, surely, fully authorizes us to attach the same meaning to the phrase when employed by Nathan in the 1 See Kurzgefasstes exegetisches Handbuch xum alien Testament. Das Buck der fiichler von Ernst Bertheau, p. xxv. 2 The word here employed is = r.r?? ra-ath-chem, " your wickedness." This is the only instance in Scripture in which the article is wanting, but its place is supplied by the pronominal suffix. In every other case the expression is y ~^ ha ra, " the evil thing." SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 125 rebuke which the Lord commissioned him to address to David (2 Sam. xii. 9) : " Wherefore hast thou despised the command- ment of the Lord, to do the evil thing in his sight?" and in David's application of the terms to his own conduct in the Psalm before us : "I have done the evil thing in thy sight." The heinous crimes of adultery, treachery, and murder of which he had been guilty, have now opened his eyes, by the grace of God, to the true source from which such fearful wickedness could alone have proceeded, the previous falling away of a proud and lustful heart from that God to whom he owed all his exaltation and blessings. Ah ! yes, he now exclaims, my sin against my neigh- bour was sin against thee. " Against thee, thee only, have I sinned," and in righteous judgment, yet mercy, hast thou left me so far to myself, that, like him whom thou didst reject before me, I " have flown upon the forbidden spoil" of my neighbour's wife, " and done the evil thing in thy sight, that thou mightest be justified when thou speakest, and clear when thou judgest" in counting so severe a sentence to be necessary to undo the effects of my deplorable fall. The acknowledgment contained in this 6th verse (a) that all sin is truly against God, and is rebellion against His sovereign authority, is the plea urged by David for granting his first peti- tion (A. ver. 3) for pardon of sin ; since he alone can forgive a trespass against whom the trespass has been committed. 2d. The next verse (b. ver. 7) contains, if possible, a still more profound view of sin: that each individual sin is but an outcoming and visible manifestation of that inward entire corruption, which has defiled our whole nature. This forms David's plea for grant- ing his second petition (B. ver. 4), that God would deliver him from the pollution of sin. Attention is drawn to this connexion by the parallelism of B. and b., which answer line to line : " "Wash me throughly from mine iniquity" (B) : for, " Behold I was shapen in iniquity" (6). " And cleanse me from my sin" (B^ : for " in sin did my mother conceive me" (i). No power but God's, he urges, can " throughly wash" a tho- roughly corrupted nature : for " who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean ? not one." If born, nay " conceived in sin," the 126 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. inference is irresistible, that " except a man be born again of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God." This important truth, thus shortly touched upon in the conclu- sion of the first strophe, forms the principal subject of the suc- ceeding STROPHE II., the subject of which we have already stated to be, the necessity of regeneration through God's grace and Spirit alone. We had before occasion to remark that in the Scriptural arrangements, the succeeding strophe or stanza often catches up and repeats the concluding idea and sometimes even words of the preceding. (See Psalm xxxvii. 14, compared with ver. 12, 13, p. 110, and Psalm xxv. 19, compared with 18, p. 96). Such a caichioord, indicative of the intimate connexion of the ideas, is the word " Behold ! " repeated in ver. 8 from ver. 7. Behold ! I was shapen in iniquity, Nay in sin did my mother conceive me. So thorough and inward is my corruption ! But Behold ! 1 thou requires! truth in the inward parts ! Almighty power alone, God, can affect such a change : And in the hidden part thou shall make me to know wisdom. This central portion of the Psalm exhibits the three great bless- ings which the sinner requires, viz. : (to state them in their nega- tive form) deliverance from the threefold evils of sin ; 1. from its guilt (A, A} ; 2dly, from its defilement (B, B) ; and 3dly, from 1 Behold ! is an expression of wonder designed to point attention to some new and remarkable truth or event. In the first instance (ver. 7), it is used to introduce the doctrine, so hard of digestion to the natural man, of original sin and the universal de- pravity of human nature. The fearful complication of his guilt and the spiritual insen- sibility which had so long benumbed his soul, till the voice of the Lord by Nathan aroused it from its slumbers, revealed to David the depth of that inward corruption which could alone explain his lamentable fall. In the second case (ver. 8) " Behold ! " points to a truth as strange and which rea- soning pride would deem irreconcilable with the former, that God should still require of a creature declared to be thus utterly false and inwardly corrupted, " truth in the in- ward parts." SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 127 its miserable bondage (C, (T) ; or (to state them in their positive form), 1. forgiveness of sin (justification) : 2. purity of heart (sanc- tification) : 3. joy and peace in believing (the free spirit of adop- tion) twice repeated : the first three verses (A, B, C,) declaring the necessity of God's bestowing these gifts from man's utter inabi- lity to produce them in himself: followed up in the last four verses (A, B, C,} by earnest prayer to God for their communica- tion. Each petition A, B, C, corresponds to, and is founded on the previous pleas A, B, C, respectively. This orderly connexion is clearly pointed out in the original Hebrew by the distinction so exactly observed between the tenses of the first three verses, and those of the last four. In A, B, C, the tenses are all Futures, " thou shalt make me to know," " thou shalt purge me," &c. In A, B, C, on the contrary, they are all Imperatives, " Hide thy face," " Create in me," &c. The first three verses acknowledge the necessity of being in- debted to God's free grace alone for deliverance from the three evils of sin. And, 1. As to its guilt. Here a slight modification was called for. Instead of saying that God alone can deliver from the guilt of sin, which no one could doubt (since it is the prerogative of the offended sovereign alone to forgive) David gives utterance to the important truth that the sinner must be indebted to God even for the preliminary condition necessary on his part for the pardon of his sin, viz. conviction of his guilt, or as here expressed " truth" to acknowledge sincerely and unreservedly his guilt, and " wis- dom" clearly to discern, and avoid henceforth the ways of error. Behold ! thou delightest in truth in the inward parts ; And in the hidden part thou shalt make me to know wisdom. The prayer for pardon of guilt corresponding to this plea is A, Hide thy face from my sins, And blot out all mine iniquities. 2. In ver. 9 B, David pleads that God alone can deliver from the defilement of sin. Thou shalt pnrge me with hyssop, and [so] I shall be clean : Thou shalt wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow. 128 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. The corresponding petition in ver. 12, 13 (B) is, Create in me a clean heart, O God ; And renew a right spirit within me. Cast me not away from thy presence ; And take not thy holy Spirit from me. 3. In ver. 10 (C), David pleads that God alone can deliver from the miserable bondage of sin under which he had groaned, and impart joy and gladness in believing : Thou shalt make me to hear joy and gladness : The bones which thou hast broken shall rejoice ; and to this corresponds the petition in ver. 14 ((7) : Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation ; And uphold me with thy free Spirit, that is, with " the Spirit of adoption," not of a slave, but of a child, who obeys with the free and joyous spirit of delighted obedience. STROPHE III. In the third strophe, David pleads with God to grant him the three blessings prayed for, on the ground that the conferring of them will lead to God's receiving the only return which the sin- ner can make, the sacrifice of praise continually offered up from a grateful heart magnifying and declaring his goodness to others. This is a mark of the truly justified and regenerated man which will never be wanting. He cannot rest in self. The experience of the wondrous love of God to his own soul will expand his heart towards others, and beget an ardent desire to glorify God's salvation by inducing others to " taste and see that the Lord is gracious." The same threefold division, and twice repeated, obtains in this as in the second strophe. 1. Ver. 15 (A). His blessed experience of God's justifying mercy will lead him to teach other sinners God's" ways of forgive- ness, whereby they shall be induced to return and cast themselves on his tender compassion. If delivered from the guilt of sin, SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 129 Then will I teach transgressors thy ways ; And sinners shall be converted unto thee. 2. Ver. 16 (B), He pleads that if God would deliver him from the defilement of that blood, which like Abel's he heard " crying from the ground" for vengeance unto God, and would not " cast him away from his presence" (compare the corresponding petition ver. 13 B, and Gen. iv. 14, 16, 1 ) like Cain, but would prove his " salvation" by " washing him throughly" (ver. 4 B.) in the cleansing blood of atonement, " creating in him a clean heart and renewing a right spirit within him," (J5,) then would his tongue sing aloud of that righteousness 3 of God's own creating, which he had put upon him : 16. Deliver me from blood [-defilement], O God, Thou God of my salvation ; And my tongue shall sing aloud of thy righteousness. 3. Ver. 17 (C) He pleads that God would for His own praise deliver him from th^t joyless state of slavish fear induced by sin, which had sealed his lips : 17. O Lord, open thou my lips ; And my mouth shall shew forth thy praise. Ver. 18. Such he feels will be the true offering unto the Lord, not the mere material sacrifice, but that sacrifice with which the Apostle to the Hebrews says " God is well pleased, the sacrifice of praise offered to God continually, that is, the fruit of the lips giv- ing thanks to his name," Heb. xiii. 15, 16 the consecration of the whole man as a living sacrifice unto the Lord, holy and accept- able, and his leading thereby others to devote themselves as sacri- fices to Him. The last three verses, accordingly, develop more fully this cen- tral idea by defining the nature of the spiritual sacrifices thus required. To be either acceptable to God, or to benefit others, in 1 Gen. iv. 14, " Behold thou hast driven me out this day, and/row thy face I shall be hid." Ver. 16, " And Cain went out from the presence of the Lord." 2 Compare, He shall receive the blessing from the LORD, Even righteousness from the God of his salvation. PSALM xxiv. 5. I 130 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. accordance with the threefold division which we have seen per- vades this Psalm, 1 1. ($\) They must proceed from " a heart broken and contrite" through a deep and humbling conviction of guilt, v. 19 (17). 2. (HO They must be " sacrifices of righteousness" pure from the defilement of sin, leading others to offer " sacrifices of right- eousness" (ver. 21). For this, however, David keenly feels his own incompetency. " My sin is ever before me," marks the deep and ever present sense of his guilt that was pressing on his mind when he wrote the Psalm before us. So far as the first requisite of an acceptable sacrifice was concerned, he might teach and benefit others : but how dare he hope that he, who by his uncleanness and unrighteousness had given such cause to the enemies of God to blaspheme, and to the weak to be offended, could edify and build up others, or lead them to glorify God by " sacrifices of righteous- ness" ? In deep self-humiliation, therefore, he betakes himself in prayer to the Source of all righteousness, entreating Him that He would avert the evil which his sins were calculated to do to the Church, and Himself carry on the good work: 1 20. Do good in thy good pleasure unto Zion : Thou shalt build 2 the walls of Jerusalem, which his sins, he felt, had tended so much to pull down. 21. Then shalt thou delight in the sacrifices of righteousness. And 3 (), These sacrifices would possess the third and last characteristic essential to acceptable sacrifices, of being entire, un- reserved, free-will offerings of the worshippers themselves unto God. Not only would they be " burnt offerings" C^'"*, olah literally " an ascension"), every earthly and selfish desire " being consumed and going up in a flame to the Lord," 3 but "whole burnt offering" (^^ calil, so called from "the entire consumption")* 1 To mark that this work must be God's exclusively, the resulting " sacrifices of righteousness " to be offered, in which man is to have a share, are excluded from vcr. 20, and transferred to the beginning of ver. 21. 2 The Future in the Hebrew text, denoting, " Thou must thou alone canst build" as the Futures in ver. 8-1 0. 8 See the Typology of Scripture. By Rev. Patrick Fairbairn, vol. ii. p. 352. Ibid. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 131 a surrender and consecration of the whole man, spirit, soul, and body, to the service of God, nay a spontaneous self-dedication through the free Spirit of adoption : Then shalt thou delight In burnt offering and whole burnt offering : Then shall bullocks go up on thine altar, as parallel living, spontaneous sacrifices an expression which finds its rallel in Isaiah Ix. 7, The rams of Nebaioth shall minister unto thee ; They shall come up with acceptance on mine altar. The changes that have been made on the authorized version in this Psalm are : 1. In ver. 2, " When Nathan the Prophet went in to him, As he had gone in to Bathsheba," by which the Psalmist indicates the analogy between the enter- ing of Nathan and the entering of David, and the retributive justice whereby " the Lord God of recompenses requites into men's bosoms their iniquities, causing them to eat the fruit of their own way, and filling them with their own devices." (See Jer. li. 56, Isa. Ixv. 6, and Prov. i. 31.) 2. In ver. 6, "And done tJie (or that) evil thing in thy sight." 3. In ver. 9, 10, the Imperatives " purge me," " wash me," " make me to hear," are changed into the Futures " thou shalt purge me," &c., and in ver. 10, " The bones which thou hast broken shall rejoice ;" by which the antithetical correspondence between ver. 8-10, and ver. 11-14 is clearly shewn. 4. Uniformity is observed in rendering the same words V^ haphetz, " to delight," in ver. 8, 18, and 21, and n *7 ratzah, " to take pleasure in," in ver. 18, and its derivative 'C*1 ratzon, " good pleasure" (in ver. 20), in order to mark to the English reader the designed allusions in the different verses in which they occur. Behold ! thou delightest in truth in the inward parts. Ver. 8. Thou delightest not in [outward] sacrifice : else would I give it ; Thou takest no pleasure in burnt offering. Ver. ] 8. Do good in thy good pleasure unto Zion. Ver. 20. Then shalt thou delight in the sacrifices of righteousness. Ver. 21. 132 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. It is of the Lord's gift alone, if his worshippers have any thing acceptable to offer unto Him. 5. In ver. 16, the literal translation of the Hebrew, as will be seen by the marginal rendering, is " Deliver me from blood," that is, as the paraDelism shews, not from the guilt of sin for which the sinner fears to be condemned, but from its defilement, from which he desires to be " washed and made clean." 6 In ver. 21, " Then shall bullocks go up on thine altar" See Hengstenberg, Ewald, &c. It is worthy of remark by the student how frequently the recur- rence of the same word will enable him to trace the parallelism and discover the lines which correspond in meaning. Compare " blot out" in ver. 3 and ver. 11, " wash me," " cleanse me," in ver. 4, with " thou shalt wash me," " I shall be clean," in ver. 9 ; " a clean heart," ver. 12, and "joy," ver. 10 and ver. 14. According to the arrangement of the Psalm which has been given, it will be observed that if we take the central verse of each strophe, we have in brief an epitome of the whole Psalm : Con- fession of sin being signified to be the necessary preparative on the part of the penitent, in the central verse of Strophe I. (ver. 5.) . For I acknowledge my transgressions, And ruy sin is evet before me : forgiveness, as the primary blessing sought from God, in Strophe II. Hide thy face from my sins, And blot out all mine iniquities, and spiritual, not material sacrifices, as the acceptable return to God from the justified sinner in Strophe III. For thou delightcst not in sacrifice : else would I give it : Thou hast no pleasure in burnt offering. It may, however, be objected to the arrangement given of the seven verses of Strophe II. that ver. 11 does not possess that in- termediate character between the first three and the last three verses, which we have stated to be a very common characteristic of the fourth member of a septenary series, and that there is a want of coincidence between the diA r ision by verses, and that indi- SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 133 cated by the letters, A, B, c ; A, JB, C. The deviation here from the usual order may be for the purpose of giving the greater pro- minence to the great fundamental blessing of justification (as involving the other two blessings B and (7) by the central posi- tion which it is made to occupy, not only in the second strophe, but in the whole Psalm, the llth verse forming the middle with ten on either side. At the same time its due importance is pre- served to the no less essential blessing of inward purification of heart, by its being dwelt upon in two verses (12 and 13). Should, however, the explanation now offered not be deemed satisfactory, the reader must bear in mind, that the ternary division of the SEVEN is not the only one of which it is sus- ceptible. The other arrangements of the Psalm will in no way be affected, if it should be considered preferable to adopt in Strophe II. the binary division of the seven into three and/owr, 1 which is equally common, and which indeed is generally found in combination with the ternary division into 3 1 3, as the central member is usually more intimately connected with one of the threes, than with the other. Thus in Strophe III. the 18th verse has a closer correspondence with the last three verses (19-21), since all relate to sacrifice, than with the preceding three (15-17). A clear instance of the binary division into three and four, is found in the Epistles to the seven churches in the Revelation. " The closing part of all the epistles exhibits a remarkable uni- formity, which still is mingled with variety. Each close exhibits the admonition, ' He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches/ In connexion with this the words, ' He (' him 'or 'to him ') that overcometh ' appear, and to each person thus characterized, promises are made. In the first three epistles, the monition, ' He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches ' precedes the pro- mises connected with the words ' He that overcometh,' &c., while in the last four of the epistles, ' He that hath an ear,' &c. follows such promises, and stands at the very close of the epistles. There is doubtless a designed and significant division into classes of three and four." 3 : . 1 The reason of this division and the symbolical meaning of the numbers will be considered afterwards. 2 Moses Stuart's Commentary on the Apocalypse, pp. 462, 463. Edin. edit. 134 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. The first septenary series of parables delivered by our Lord Matt. xiii. are on the contrary divided into four and three, the first four parables being spoken publicly to the people, or world in general, while the last three were addressed to the inner circle of his disciples, and in private. Four Parables addressed to the People. 1. Sower. Open. Seed, as regarded by itself. 2. Tares. Hidden. Seed, as mixed with a foreign element. 3. Mustard Seed. Open. Gospel, as regarded by itself. 4. Leaven. Hidden. Gospel, as mixed with a foreign element. Three Parables addressed to the Disciples. 1. Treasure. 2. Pearl. 3. Net. Of the other division of the SEVEN, the ternary, I subjoin two striking examples, as I am aware how sceptical most readers, whose attention has for the first time been turned to the numeri- cal arrangements of Scripture, will be of the reali ty of their exist- ence. The Psalms are very distinctly divided into seven parts or Books, as will be seen from the following tabular arrangement. Book I. comprehends Psalms i. to xxr. Its conclusion is marked by the doxology, Blessed be the LORD God of Israel From everlasting to everlasting. Amen and Amen. Book II. comprehends Psalms XLII. to LXXII. It concludes with the doxology, Blessed be the LORD God, The God of Israel, Who only doeth wondrous things. And blessed be his glorious name for ever : And let the whole earth be filled with his glory. Amen and Amen. The prayers of David, the son of Jesse, are ended. Book III. comprehends Psalms LXXIII. to LXXXIX. It concludes with the doxology, Blessed be the LORD for evermore. Amen and Amen. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 135 Book IV. comprehends Psalm xc. to cvi. This Book begins with the Psalm of Moses, and concludes with the doxology, Blessed be the LORD God of Israel, From everlasting to everlasting : And let all the people say, Amen. Praise ye the LORD (Hallelujah). Book V. comprehends Psalms cvn. to cxvii. Psalm cvii. begins with O give thanks unto the LORD ; for he is good : For his mercy eudureth for ever. Psalm cxvii. begins with O praise the Lord and ends with Praise ye the LORD CHallelujah). Book VI. comprehends Psalms cxvm. to cxxxv. Psalm cxviii. begins with O give thanks unto the LORD ; for he is good : For his mercy endureth for ever. Psalm cxxxv. begins and ends with Praise ye the LORD (Hallelujah). Book VII. comprehends Psalms cxxxvi. to CL. Psalm cxxxvi. begins with O give thanks unto the LORD ; for he is good : For his mercy endureth for ever. Psalm cl. begins and ends with Praise ye the LORD (Hallelujah). The first three books are grouped together by ending each with a doxology, in which the words " Blessed be the LORD for ever Amen and Amen " occur in each. The last three Books begin each with O give thanks unto the LORD ; for he is good : For his mercy endureth for ever, and end with Praise ye the LORD (or Hallelujah). 1 1 This Hallelujah at the end of the Psalms, though occurring in other Psalms than the above, still distinctly marks the division of the last three Books, since in the Cen- 136 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. The central Book of the seven combines the characteristics of both, as it ends with the doxology of the first, and the Hallelujah of the last. Its concluding Psalm too, Ps. cvi. strikes the key note for all the succeeding melodies, since it begins with an invi- tation to " praise the Lord," followed by the words with which each of the three last Books commences : O give thanks unto the LORD ; for he is good ; For his mercy endureth for ever. 1 The central Book of the last three has its limits also defined by the Psalms which compose it. With the exception of its opening and concluding Psalms, it consists wholly of the great Alpha- betical Psalm the cxix., and the remarkable group of the Psalms of Degrees. These last again are arranged with much precision, the central Psalm cxxvii. being Solomon's, with seven Psalms on either side of it : thus, Psalm cxx. Psalm cxxviii. ,, cxxi. cxxix. ,, cxxii. cxxiii. ,, cxxiv. Psalm cxxvii. of Solomon. cxxx. cxxxi. cxxxii. cxxv. cxxxiii. ,, cxxvi. cxxxiv. The Book of Proverbs, in like manner, consists of seven parts or sections, arranged as follows. 1 . ( Chaps. i.-ix. 2. -? x.- i x.-xxii. 16. xxii. 17-xxiv. Introductory Part. " The Proverbs of Solomon." " The Words of the Wise." . J xxv.-xxix. 0. ( xxx. 6. I xxxi. 1-9. 7. \ xxxi. 10-31 All written or collected by Solomon. of '' Proverbs of Solomon which the men Hezekiah king of Judah copied out." " The Words of Agur." " The Words of King Lemuel." An. Alphabetical Poem. Description of a virtuous wife. tral Book, Psalms cxviii.-exxxv., it is found only in Ps. cxxxv., and it does not occur again in the last Book for the first ten Psalms ; after which it both begins and ends each of the remaining five Psalms. 1 See Burkii Gnomon Psalmorum, Pnefatio. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 137 But the finest example of this division of the seven, and the one which first suggested to the author the intermediate character of the fourth number of a septenary series, is the group of Seven Beatitudes in the beginning of the Sermon on the Mount. The examination of these however we shall reserve till we come to examine the whole of this most perfect composition. SECTION XIII. The instances already produced will perhaps have prepared the reader to hear without surprise that the series of laws which Moses received on Mount Sinai to deliver to the Israelites, as con- tained in chapters xxi., xxii., and xxiii. of Exodus, is not a mere detached set of isolated precepts, which it would be very difficult for any memory to retain, but that along with the Ten Command- ments, specially so called, and which commence the series, they form seven groups (the covenant number, in reference to Exod. xxiv. 7) consisting each of ten commandments, which severally have their respective internal arrangements. 1 The study of these is cal- culated to throw much light on the mutual relation of the laws to each other, and to develop the spirit of the whole, and was no doubt intended, by the pleasing exercise which it afforded to the reflective faculties, to excite a love to " meditate in God's law," and to discover if possible, by the clue thus afforded, the " won- orous things " contained therein. 1 Bcrtheau, in his "Die, sieben Gruppen Mosaischer Gesetze" "the seven groups of the Laws of Moses," has attempted to show that the seven groups, of ten com- mandments each, referred to above, form together but the first complex group (com- posed of seventy commandments) of seven similar complex groups, so that the whole code would consist of 490 commandments, or seven times seventy. 138 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. PIETY. I. God is to be honoured and loved in himself. I. I am the LORD thy God, Which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage : Thou shalt have no other gods before me. H. f f Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness, ( Of any thing that is in heaven above, -< Or that is in the earth beneath, ^Or that is in the water under the earth ; Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor serve them ; For I the LORD thy God am a jealous God, ("Visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, Unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me ; { And shewing mercy Unto thousands of them that love me, and keep my command- ments. HI. Thou shalt not take the name of the LORD thy God in vain : For the LORD will not hold him guiltless, That taketh his name in vain. rv. r 1 . f Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy. 2.1 3. 1 Six days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work : But the seventh day is the sabbath of the LORD thy God : In it thou shalt not do any work, Thou, 2 3 Nor thy son, nor thy daughter, 45 4 { { Nor thy man-servant, nor thy maid-servant, 6 Nor thy cattle, 7 Nor thy stranger that is within thy gates : For in six days the LORD made heaven and earth, the sea, and And rested the seventh day : [all that in them is ; _ Wherefore the LORD blessed the sabbath day. and hallowed it. II. God is to be honoured in those to whom he has imparted honour. V. Honour thy father and thy mother, That thy days may be long in the land, Which the LORD thy God giveth thee. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 139 BROTHERLY LOVE. III. God is to be loved in those who are made in His image. VI. VII. 3Tccti: VTH. Thou shall not kill. Thou shall not commit adultery. Thou shall nol steal. IX. 22Uorl) : Thou shall nol bear false witness againsl thy neighbour. Thou shall not covet thy neighbour's house : f Thou shall nol covet thy neighbour's wife : C J)OUCj!)t : " 1 N r his man-servant, nor his maid-servant, Nor his ox, nor his ass, . Nor any thing thai is thy neighbour's. 140 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. THE DECALOGUE. The most perfect of these arrangements, as we might be pre- pared to expect, is the Decalogue or " the ten words " spoken by the mouth of Jehovah himself, and, in token of their everlasting obligation, engraven by His own finger upon stone ; the mutual relation and significance of which, as unfolded by the Parallelism, we shall now attempt briefly to trace. Ten being the symbol of completeness, since it closes the series of fundamental numbers, and contains in itself as it were the germ of all numbers, the rest being but a repetition of the first ten and a further development of them, the commandments by being ten in number are thereby indicated to be a complete whole, 1 and, as they evidently relate to man's duty both to his God and to his fellowmen, are intended to form a perfect sum- mary of religious and moral duty. 2 TWOFOLD DIVISION OF THE DECALOGUE. The first and most simple division of the Decalogue is into two parts. So far there can be no question, as we are distinctly in- formed in the sacred record that there were " two tables of the testimony," Exod. xxxii. 15. The first table, we have the autho- rity of our Lord to say, prescribes our duty to God, and the second our duty to our neighbour. The twofold division always marks an antithetical relation, such as that of God and man, Positive and Negative, Active and Passive, &c. By the relative order in which the two tables are placed to each other in the Decalogue, the second being secondary or subordinate to the first, we are taught that love to man can only flow from love to God ; in other words, that true morality can be based only on true piety. " The first and great commandment is, Thou shalt love the Lord thy 1 Hence the dedication of the tithe or tenth part to God, as presupposing the pre- ceding nine (compare the Greek phrase ^ixccros auras himself the tenth, that is, he and nine others,') was equivalent to the dedication of the whole, to God's service, and was an humble acknowledgment of owing all to his bounty. Compare Bahr's Symbolik or Fairbairn's Typology of Scripture. 2 The Decalogue, or first group of ton commandments, differs in this respect from the other groups of ten commandments, which form indeed a complete code, but only with reference to a special part of duty. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 141 God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neigh- bour as thyself/' Mat. xxii. 37-39. But with respect to the division of the commandments them- selves, and the number that was in each table, there has existed a considerable difference of opinion. The Masoretes, probably from their knowledge of the significance attached to the nume- rical arrangement in Scripture, and, following them, Augustine and the Roman and Lutheran Churches, have assigned three com- mandments to the first table and seven to the second, by uniting the first and second commandments into one, and separating the tenth commandment into two parts. The erroneousness of this division has been often shewn. That the words " Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's house " form part of one and the same com- mandment with those that follow, and cannot be disjoined from them so as to form a distinct commandment by themselves, is seen at once by reference to Deut. v. 21, where they are trans- posed and placed after the words, " Neither shalt thou desire thy neighbour's wife." 1 The division proposed by Origen, and which has been most generally adopted by Protestant divines, places four command- ments in the first table, and six in the second. One objection to this arrangement is that it destroys the significance of the num- bers. By the division which we adopt, on the contrary, and which was first, we believe, proposed by Hengstenberg, 2 the ten commandments are equally divided between the two tables, the significance of the numbers is preserved, and a most perfect sym- metry of parts is found to pervade the whole Decalogue, which 1 If it be correct to argue from Exod. xx. that " Thou shalt not covet thy neigh- bour's house " is a separate commandment, it follows equally from Deut. v. that " Neither shalt thou desire thy neighbour's wife " is also a distinct commandment. We should thus have two competing commandments for the honour of standing ninth in the series. We can scarce regard it otherwise than providential, that we thus possess in Scrip- ture itself so incontestable a demonstration of the fallacy of that arrangement which assigns a subordinate place to the second commandment as a mere appendix to the first, and of which the Romish Church has availed itself to conceal from its adherents this protest against idol worship by omitting the second commandment altogether in those transcripts of the Ten Commandments which it places before the people. * Authentic des Pentateuch. Vol. ii. p. 605. 142 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. any other division would destroy. That this is the true arrange- ment is proved, we think, by the following considerations : 1. A presumption in its favour arises from its being the arrangement adopted by the ancient Jews according to both Josephus and Philo. Josephus' words are, " When he (Moses) had said this, he shewed them the two tables, with the ten com- mandments engraven upon them, five upon each table"* 2. It is the more natural arrangement. The numbers on each table, we should expect, would exactly correspond. If the entire number ten was significant, its parts would probably be significant also. Now, as ten denotes a complete whole, five, as Bahr in his Symbolik has shewn, being the broken ten, is the symbol of in- completeness, and points to another half as its requisite comple- ment. Our obedience, we are thus taught, to avail us in God's sight, must be complete. In vain shall we plead our observance of the first table, if we have neglected the more palpable com- mandments of the second. " He that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath not seen ?" (1 John iv. 20). 3. The common division by which the fifth commandment is united to the second table, instead of to the first, is inconsistent with that which lies at the basis of the summary of the second table, which is given by our Lord, " Thou shalt love thy neigh- bour as thyself." None of the terms here employed apply to the fifth commandment. The idea uniformly attached in Scripture to the word translated " neighbour" is that of fellow, companion, equal. But our parents are not our neighbours or equals, but our superiors. Again, the sentiment with which we are ordered in this commandment to regard them is not that of " love" but of " honour." We are called upon not merely to love them " as ourselves," that is, as our equals, but to " honour" them as our superiors, set over us by the Lord. 4. Another argument for uniting the fifth commandment to the first table in preference to the second, but which will have its due weight only with those who have been accustomed to observe how frequently the true arrangement is indicated in Scripture by the recurrence of the same or similar expressions in those passages 1 Joseph. Antiq. B. iii. ch. 5, sect. 8. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 143 which are meant to be connected, is that the words, " the LORD thy God," while they are found in none of the commandments of the second table, occur in the fifth commandment as in all the previous four of the first table, denoting that it, like them, has a special reference to " the LORD our God." 5. A fifth argument arises from the beautiful threefold sym- metry which, as we shall see, is introduced by this division, into both tables, and which by the common division would be wholly destroyed. By including then our parents in the same table which lays down the duties which we owe to himself, God teaches children to consider their parents as standing in a very intimate relation to him, as his representatives on earth, for whom he demands a portion of that honour which is due to himself. 1 A peculiar sanctity is thus stamped upon the parental relation, God hereby, as it were, appropriating it to himself: and hence the endearing title in which above all others he delights, and by which he would have us in the true spirit of filial reverence and affection to ad- dress him, is " Our Father, who art in heaven." Honour belongs not to man as such before his fellows, but is derived alone from his relation to God. The doctrine of Scrip- ture is that " there is no power, but of God : the powers that be are ordained of God. Whosoever resisteth the power, resisteth the ordinance of God." (Eom. xiii. 1, 2). Accordingly we find the very name of God applied to those placed in stations of ho- nour and authority : e. g. to judges, as in Psalm Ixxxii. 6. " I have said, ye are gods." (Exod. xxi. 6). " Then his master shall bring him unto the judges." (Heb. the gods). Compare Exod. xxii. 8, 9 : and to Moses, as having a special commission and authority delegated to him by God. (Exod. vii. 1). " See, I have made thee a god to Pharaoh." If God thus communicates his name to those who are entrusted with authority over their equals, need we be surprised that parents, to whom children under God owe their being, and in whom the creative, life-giving power of God is first manifested to them, should by the place assigned to 1 " God intends us to learn, how we ought to feel towards Him, by feeling first so to- wards our parents : they are a child's first appointed objects ofjaith, and hope, and love" [and therefore stand, as it were, in the place of God to him.J Dr Arnold's School Strmons. Serm. I. p. 5. 144 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. them in his Law be hallowed in the eyes of children as his repre- sentatives on earth, and that they should be taught to regard them with that reverence which is due to God, and to give obe- dience unto them as unto the Lord ? Compare Eph. vi. 7. 1 According to this division, the first table prescribes the duties of Piety, the second those of Brotherly Love : Piety including, in accordance with the universal idea among the ancients, both Jews and Gentiles (and this association of ideas forms an addi- tional argument for the correctness of the present arrangement), both piety to God and piety to parents, or, as this last is usually called, filial piety. In this sense we find the word employed by St Paul in 1 Tim. v. 4, " But if any widow have children, or ne- phews, let them learn first to shew piety (svae&Tv) at home, and to requite their parents." THREEFOLD DIVISION OF THE DECALOGUE. Still we cannot rest in the conclusion that a division which has so generally prevailed in the Christian world, and which is so natural as that of "duty to God" and " duty to man" is wholly without foundation. Besides it may be urged with much force that the fifth commandment, if for the reasons stated it ought to be joined to the first table rather than to the second, is still, in another point of view, as widely separable in idea from the four first commandments, and has an obvious affinity with the second table. The justness of this reasoning will be found recognised in the threefold division of the Decalogue, to which we would next entreat the reader's attention. Nor let it be objected that these two divisions are incompatible and mutually destructive of each other. The study of Parallelism reveals many such diverse divi- sions in Scripture, each intended to present another side of the truth, and to exhibit it in some new light. This is but another in- stance of that wonderful "manifoldness" of Scripture (the " many- hued wisdom," ToXvjro/x/Ao? to le the the firmament."! &** . \ 3. Stars, for signs, and I seasons, &c. 5th DAY. C FISH for the waters below. "S (. FOWLS for the firmament above. 6th DAY. LIVING CEEATCRES j ' for the earth. '' ate ; t , . (_ 3. Creeping thing. fl. The fish of the sea. MAN to have j 2. The fowl of the air. dominion over j 3. The animals on earth. II. 7th DAY. The SABBATH. 2. Good. 3. Good. 4. Good. 5. Good. 6. Good. { ( 7 1ood.'. C V MAN. On the Production of I. LIGHT. II. ORDER. In the arrangement of 1. Waters above sepa- 1 rated from the waters below And these last from the dr land. 2. Three grand classes of plants distributed over the earth, each " after his kind." 3. Heavenly bodies de- tined to regulate the times, seasons, &c. III. LIFE. In the creation of 1. Fishes, and fowls, 2. Terrestrial lower animals. 164 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. Here it will be observed that the seven divisions, marked out by the recurrence of the word " good," are not exactly coincident with the division of the days. On the third and sixth days God twice expresses his satisfaction in His work, thus giving, to the third term of each tertian series of days, that prominence and terminating character which we so often find it to exhibit ; while the work of the second day is destitute of any mark of approbation leading us to regard it, though complete in one aspect, yet as incomplete in another. The distribution of the waters begun on the second day is not perfected, till those below are separated from the dry land, and " gathered together into one place" on the third day. The separate arrangement thus indicated has reference to the supply of " the wants or defects of the chaotic earth. These were three : the want of order, of life, and of light. (It was ' without form ' ; ' void,' empty, or destitute of life ; and l darkness was upon the face of the deep/) Light is first provided : then order is given that the earth may be fitted for the habitation of living beings ; and these finally are placed in it. Now, the series of operations by which this threefold object is accomplished, is exactly marked by the intervals at which it is said, ' God saw that it was good/ Thus, 1. On the introduction of LIGHT, which is a simple act, the Creator's delight in it is expressed only once. (Ver. 4.) 2. The ORDERING of the world is a more compli- cated and elaborate process, so to speak, implying, first, the adjust- ment of the waters the separation of the cloudy vapour, consti- tuting the material heavens above, from the waters on the earth's surface below, by the air or elastic atmosphere, being interposed, as well as the separation on the earth's surface of the dry land from the sea ; secondly, the arrangement of the dry land itself, which is to be clothed with all manner of vegetation and stored with all reproductive trees and plants ; and thirdly, the esta- blishment of the right relation of the heavens and the heavenly bodies to the earth, as the instruments of light to it, and the rulers of its seasons. Accordingly, at each of these three stages of this part of the work, the reducing of the shapeless mass of earth to ORDER,- the language of Divine approbation is employed (Ver. 10, 12, 18.) 3. The formation of LIFE also,r of the living beings for whose use the world is made, admits of a similar SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 165 subdivision ; -first, the fishes and the fowls are produced, secondly, the terrestrial beasts, and thirdly, Man himself. And, still, as the glorious work rises higher and higher, there is at each step, the pause of congratulation, as over all there is the full con- tentment of Infinite Wisdom ; ' rejoicing in the habitable parts of the earth, his delights being with the sons of men.' Ver. 21, 25, 31, and Prov. viii. 31.)" 1 Thus then, in the earliest record of the human race we find already recognised the symbolical significance of numbers, and two distinct ternary divisions of the seven, each with its appropriate meaning. The first arrangement by days is, as we have seen, 3, 3, 1 : the other is in the reverse order, 1, 3, 3. The design of the first, in which two groups of Three are followed by a simple unit, is evidently to symbolize, by the single One, standing by itself at the close, the unbroken, undivided rest of the Sabbath appointed us to enjoy after the works of the six days are finished. In the second arrangement, by the One being placed first, a pre- eminence and one-ness is ascribed to LIGHT, eminently suitable to that most glorious of God's productions, which alone of all ma- terial things He has chosen, from its brightness and purity, and universal diffusion, as a fitting emblem of Himself: " God is light," 1 John i. 5 ; nay, which has been selected to typify His last and highest manifestation of Himself which He will make to His glo- rified people : " The sun shall be no more thy light by day, neither for brightness shall the moon give light unto thee : but the LORD shall be unto thee an everlasting LIGHT" (Isaiah Ix. 19) : shining ever upon them through Him who is " the brightness of His glory," as we learn from Kevel. xxi. 23 : " And the city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon to shine in it : for the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is the LIGHT thereof." 2 1 Dr Candlish's Contributions towards the Exposition of Genesis, vol. L pp. 24-26. a Let it not be objected, that by subsequent discovery it has become known to us, that light, which appears at first sight so simple, is yet resolvable into seven primitive colours, or as now ascertained, into three, red, yellow, and blue, the other four being but compounds of these three, and that therefore the apparent oneness of light is no fitting emblem of that One glorious LIGHT, who is " the Father of lights." For by subsequent revelation, that One God has been discovered in like manner to compre- hend in one essence three distinct persons. May we not then here recognize another of those beautiful analogies in nature, which Bishop Butler has so admirably traced, designed to aid our faith in accepting the sublime mysteries of revelation, by leading us up "from nature to nature's God v from God's lower, to His higher manifestations? 166 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. But the most symmetrical and beautiful division of the seven is into 3, 1, 3, in which the single central term partakes of an in- termediate character between the first and last group of Three, and forms the connecting link, or point of transition between them. Even where the binary division of the Seven into Four and Three, or into Three and Four prevails, this ternary division has frequently a place also. This we shall find to be the case both with the Beatitudes and with the Lord's Prayer : in the former of which the binary division is into Four and Three Four negative virtues (expressive of the wants of man) and Three positive (expressive of the fulness of God) ; while in the Lord's Prayer the division is into Three and Four Three petitions re- lating to God, and Four to Man. Still both admit of a ternary division, in which the fourth term of the seven forms the centre or connecting link, in which the first three are summed up and concentrated, and of which the last three form the expansion or development. THE SEVEN BEATITUDES, OR SEVEN GRACES OF THE CHRISTIAN CHARACTER. 1, 9. Blessed are the poor in spirit : For theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are they that mourn : For they shall be comforted. Blessed are the meek : For they shall inherit the earth. 4 , Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness : For they shall be filled. And as our faith in the mysterious union of the Divine and human natures in Christ is facilitated, by our observing in ourselves the intimate union of two elements seemingly incompatible, sonl and body, the material and immaterial, so as yet to form but one person, -is not the very fact, that light, the only material emblem of himself which God has given in His word, is in one view Three and in another One, designed to faci- litate our faith in the higher truth of a Trinity in Unity, and a Unity in Trinity ? * * I find I have been anticipated in this idea by Mr Tupper in his Proverbial P/>ilo~ p. 138. And the noonday light is a compound, the triune shadow of Jehovah." SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. Blessed are the merciful : For they shall obtain mercy. Blessed are the pure in heart : For they shall see God. Blessed are the peacemakers : For they shall be called the children of God. 167 THE LORD'S PRAYER, Our Father, who art in heaven, {Thy Xame be hallowed, Thy Kingdom come, Thy Will be done, As in heaven, so on earth. Give us this day our daily bread. f And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors. < And lead us not into temptation, I. But deliver us from evil. Such is the character of those pronounced blessed, such the prayer for Christian sanctification, as uttered by Him who " spake as never man spake." Well therefore may we expect a pregnancy and depth of meaning in the words, such as no human composition could exhibit. Let us therefore with devout minds draw near and humbly meditate on their import, as determined by their order and connection. I. THE SEVEN BEATITUDES. In the Beatitudes the whole round of Christian graces is com- prehended, and in that exact order in which they must be deve- loped and manifested in the true believer. They are seven in number the number of perfection and of the covenant begin- 168 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. ning with that consciousness of our own spiritual poverty which is the first indispensable step in the Christian life, and ending with the peace-making disposition, which is the highest ornament of the followers of " the Prince of Peace" with the believer's be- ing filled with the peace of God himself, and rejoicing in it, as his purest joy, to be privileged to diffuse that peace to others. Most Christian writers reckon eight or nine Beatitudes, but we hold with the primitive Church that there are properly but seven. Our Lord's object in the beginning of the Sermon on the Mount was to delineate the essential features, which constitute the character, of the true members of that kingdom of heaven, which he was come on earth to establish. These are contained in the seven Beatitudes. The words which follow, " Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake" are not to be classed with the preceding seven Beatitudes, because persecution for righteousness' sake forms no indispensable part of the Chris- tian character, but describes merely the treatment which those, in whom the seven preceding graces have come to full maturity, may generally expect to meet from an evil world. This is not obscurely intimated even by the very form of the parallelism : for while a new and distinctive promise is attached to each of the seven Christian graces, this by some considered an eighth Beatitude, returns back as it were upon the first, having the same promise repeated, " For theirs is the kingdom of heaven." The first division of these seven which would occur to the reflecting mind is into four and three ; the first four virtues be- ing of a negative character, expressing the wants of man, while the last three are more positive in their nature. The first requisite in those who would be members of Christ's kingdom is that they be " poor in spirit." But who are the poor ? Not, unquestionably, those who are utterly destitute of every spiritual grace, for then were every natural man blessed. Not such as like the Laodiceans are " poor, and blind, and naked," and yet fancy themselves to be " rich, and increased with goods, and having need of nothing :" but this being a disposition of mind which is required of the Christian, the reference must be more to his own judgment of his state, than to the estimate formed of it by others. Thus we often speak, and with more propriety, in SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 169 reference to worldly poverty. One man, we say, may be poor with a thousand a-year, while another would be rich if possessed of only a hundred pounds. The rich man is he, who. whatever be his income, has enough and to spare : the poor is he who has ( not enough to supply his wants, whether natural or acquired. It depends therefore on the number and extent of the desires of each individual and his means of satisfying these, whether we ought to class him among the rich or the poor. The feeling of wants awakened in the mind, and which he has no means of sup- plying, is what properly constitutes a man a poor man. This is the meaning of the word here, as applied to spiritual things. "Blessed are" those in whose minds God has awakened a sense of their spiritual deficiencies " the poor in spirit" that is, as we shall afterwards shew, in their inward estimate of themselves. This is the first step which leads to the attainment of "the king- dom of heaven" and its " unspeakable riches." "Blessed are they that mourn" from a feeling of their spiri- tual deficiencies and of the evils to which they are subjected through sin. Not every kind of mourning is here pronounced blessed, for there is a " sorrow of the world that worketh death/' as well as a " godly sorrow that worketh repentance to saLvation not to be repented of," 2 Cor. vii. 10. Mourning is blessed for man, whenever it leads him to inquire why it is that an all-good and compassionate heavenly Father afflicteth His creature, and when it leads him in consequence to mourn over the sin, for the sake and cure of which God has inflicted on him the suffering. Outward mourning, therefore, as well as outward poverty, 1 are here included by our Lord, in as far only as the want of earthly treasures, and earthly comforts, leads us to seek a more enduring treasure, and a more abiding consolation. " Blessed are the meek" those who without murmuring en- dure every evil, whether sent on them by the direct hand of God or through the instrumentality of their fellow-men ; who " fret not against the Lord," nor take vengeance into their own hands : but who patiently endure every calamity and meekly suffer every wrong, feeling that all come from God, either by His appoint- 1 " Hath not God chosen the poor of this world rich in faith, and heirs of the king- dom which he hath promised to them that love him ?" James, ii. 5. 170 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. ment or His permission, and are infinitely below the desert of the sufferer, yet are sent by the chastening hand of a kind and merciful Father, who afflicteth not willingly, but for their amend- ment and good, His erring children. " Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteous- ness." Blessed are they who, deeply sensible of their own spiritual poverty, inwardly mourning over their deficiencies, and meekly suffering the needful chastening, have awakened in their minds an intense longing for the righteousness in which they feel them- selves so defective for such " shall be filled." The four preceding stages of the Christian character are all initiatory ; all express a feeling of want ; all are negative 1 and passive : while the three that follow are positive and active. Four, in short, is the number of earth, Three of heaven. The four first virtues belong to man and earth exclusively ; the last three, having the Divine number stamped upon them, belong to God, and are heavenly and divine, being characteristics of Him who is the God of mercy, of purity, and of peace. When once the longing after spiritual things, as expressed in the first four Beatitudes, is begotten in the soul of the believer, the active and divine graces are gradually developed mercy, from experiencing the mercy of God, -purity, for, as God is pure, he that hath the hope in him of seeing or enjoying God, must strive and pray to become pure, even as He is pure and thus, lastly, is he fitted for receiving peace in his own soul, and having received it him- 1 Still, though primarily negative, they yet involve a positive element, which is indicated in the appropriate blessing attached to each, and without which, indeed, they must lead to unmitigated misery instead of hliss. What would avail to us the dis- cernment of our spiritual poverty, but to plunge us in the deepest despair, without the accompanying discernment of the infinite riches of God, and the possibility of the treasures of " the kingdom of heaven " becoming ours? Or mourning, if without hope, unless assuaged by the Christian consolation ? Or the meek endurance of evil, unless a term were fixed, when the wicked shall cease from troubling and " the meek shall inherit the earth " ? The ceaseless cravings of spiritual hunger and thirst were a tor- ment unendurable, without the positive promise to the Christian of being at length satisfied and " filled." " Each of these tempers has, what may not unaptly be called its positive or heaven- ly, as well as its negative or merely human element ; has an aspect towards God as well as towards our own being ; and it is in this Godward aspect of each that we must look for, and shall find, its true principle of life and growth." Worsley's Province of the Intellect in Religion ; Book i. p. 66. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 171 self, he will become a peace-maker, diffusing and imparting this blessing to others. 1 Peace, indeed, is eminently the highest gift of God. He is " the God of Peace ;" He loveth peace, He maketh peace, He giveth peace. His Son is " the Prince of Peace/' " Peace I leave with you. my peace I give unto you," was his parting benediction to his disciples : " not as the world giveth, give I unto you" a wish on its part, often false, and unavailing. No : Christ's peace is a peace sure and abiding ; a peace which this " world can neither give nor take away ;" a " peace of God which passeth all understanding," which whoever has received is at peace with God, at peace with his own conscience, at peace with his fellowmen, at peace with all the world : and his highest and most delightful employment is to be the preacher and promoter of that peaceful and serene joy which has been shed abroad over his own soul. Before leaving the twofold arrangement of the Seven Beati- tudes, we may remark that we might have been drawn to discern the connexion of the four first by observing that the constructive parallelism 2 forms them into a group by themselves, thus, as is frequently the case, inducing the student by the mere external form to ponder and discover the higher and internal connexion. They form an alternate constructive parallelism : Blessed are the poor in spirit : For theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are the mourning : 3 For they shall be comforted. Blessed are the meek : For they shall inherit the earth. Blessed are the hungering and thirst- For they shall be filled, ing* after righteousness : Here the poor and meek evidently answer to each other, while the mourning correspond with the hungering and thirsting, the first pair being adjectives, and the second participles : the first qualities, settled habits and tempers of the soul, which, in a modified form at least, shall abide for ever even in heaven ;' while the present participles " mourning" and " hungering and thirst- \ The first four Beatitudes express the conditions of receptivity i. e. the qualifica- tions necessary to fit man to receive of the fulness of God : the last three express the actual reception. 2 See p. 13. S Maxaj/ '/ *tiivirtt. * Maxa'o arc met together : Righteousness, and ) . TJ >- have kissed each other. Peace ) In our Lord's discourse, the leading object of which was to prove that he came " not to destroy but to fulfil the law," right- eousness must have the first place, that the end may be peace : thus, Righteousness Mercy Purity ( = Truth) Peace. Thus then the fourth Beatitude appeared to be connected both with the first three, and with the last three : partaking of the negative character of the first three by its first term " hungering and thirsting," and of the positive character of the last three, by its last term " righteousness." Thus was I led to the discovery of the intermediate character of the fourth term in a group of Seven, as the connecting link between the first and last group of three ; and consequently of that most perfect and symmetrical division of the Seven which had long been rendered familiar to the mind of a Jew by its being the form of the Golden Candle- stick, the seven branches of which were divided into two groups of three on either side, supported by a connecting central one in the middle. I shall continue to follow, as probably the most natural and interesting to the reader, the order in which the significance of the various parts of this exquisite portion of our Lord's discourse dawned upon my own mind. The fir^t and last Beatitudes were now divided into two groups, 174 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. of three each : did there exist any connexion between these ? It needed but a slight inspection of them to see, that the correct- ness of the division now arrived at was strongly confirmed, by the striking correspondence between the two graces described in the terminating member of each ternary series, " the meek," and " the peace-makers ;" the latter of which differed from the former only, as in every case of Gradational Parallelism, by rising above it, as being a more matured and positive form of the same inward dis- position. That their correspondence was designed by our Lord seems placed beyond doubt, by comparison with the original pas- sage from which both are evidently taken (Psalm xxxvii. 12) : " But the meek shall inherit the earth : And shall delight themselves in the abundance of peace.' 1 '' Following the clue thus furnished, the whole of the last three Beatitudes were found to form a gradational parallelism with the first three, the negative graces of the first rising into the positive graces of the last ; the wants of man being supplied by the ful- ness To the poor in spirit is imparted .... mercy ; To those that are mourning for their sinfulness . purity; To the meek ....... peace ; and in such abundance are these blessings poured out upon them by the Holy Spirit that they become full to overflowing with the same blessings to others " merciful" or full of mercy to others ; "pure in heart" communicating and reflecting their purity to others, as " the salt of the earth," as " the lights of the world ;" full of God's peace themselves, they become " peace-makers" anxious to bring all to taste and enjoy the same blessed peace with themselves, " as ambassadors for Christ, praying all to be reconciled to God." But why classed by Threes, these graces ? was the next ques- tion. Three, I had before observed from many instances in " Of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace." (John i. 16.) = " New- grace coming upon and superseding the former." Alford's Greek Neiv Test. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 175 Scripture to form a perfect whole. But to what whole was refer- ence here made ? The first three Beatitudes refer to man's wants. It seemed reasonable therefore to conclude, that the threefold division must have reference to the threefold nature of man, who, according to St Paul, consists of spirit, of soul, and of body. Two of these seemed referred to in the Beatitudes, the spirit in the first, and the soul or heart in the sixth, which cor- responds with the second. The natural inference therefore was that the third and seventh must in some way be related to the third part of our nature, the body. But what are we to understand by these three in Scripture ? Spirit and soul are frequently used indiscriminately to denote the higher and immaterial part of our nature, in contradistinction to our material or bodily part. But at other times we find them discriminated, as in 1 Thess. v. 23 and Heb. iv. 12. If from the first place being assigned to the spirit in the enumeration in 1 Thess. v. 23, we rightly conclude that by the spirit of man we are to understand that higher and intellectual part of his nature, by which he is enabled to attain to the knowledge of God and of all his wonderful works, and to the comprehension of his own nature and its relations to God and to the universe,! what office are we to assign to the soul ? Taking the Concordance, we find that the soul is said to " rejoice," Psalm Ixxi. 23, Jer. xxxii. 41 : to " delight in," Isaiah xlii. 1 : to " be grieved," Job xxx. 25 : to " be sore vexed," Psalm vi. 3 : to " be exceeding sorrowful," Matt, xxvi. 38 : to "desire," Prov. xiii. 4, Isaiah xxvi. 9, 1 Sam. ii. 16 : to " long," Psalm Ixxxiv. 2, cvii. 9 : to " loath," Prov. xxvii. 7 : to " abhor," Lev. xxvi. 15 : to " hate," 2 Sam. v. 8, Isaiah i. 14 : to "love," Song of Solomon i. 7, iii. 1, &c. It is evidently there- fore considered as the seat of the emotions, desires, and affections. In Scriptural usage it seems to differ from the heart only in being used rather in a passive sense, as having these emotions excited in it by external things, whereas the heart is used more in an active sense, as prompting the individual to action. We 1 " But there is a spirit in man : And the inspiration of the Almighty giveth them understanding." JOB xix. 8. " What man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him?" 1 COB. ii. 11. 176 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. read of Daniel "purposing in his heart," Daniel i. 8 : of " the in- tents of the heart," Jer. xxx. 24 : of the heart heing " set upon" a thing, Job xxxiv. 14, Ex. vii. 23 : being "fxed" Psalm cxii. 7 : of David's " having in his heart to build an house to the Lord," 1 Chron. xxviii. 2 : of " standing steadfast in one's heart," 1 Cor. vii. 37: "Out of the abundance of the heart [prompting] the mouth speaketh," Matt. xii. 34. The reference then, it soon became apparent, in " spirit, soul, and body" is, as indeed we might a priori expect, in a revelation which is designed especially for the poor and unlearned, to a dis- tinction universally recognised by the common sense of mankind, and known in familiar language as " head, and heart, and hand." All the modes in which man can be employed are summed up in these three all we think, and/ee?, and do. The Spirit, or Head is the seat of the intellect, of the per- ceptive and reasoning powers ; and by means of it we perceive, know, think, judge, &c. The Soul, or Heart is the seat of the emotions, feelings, de- sires, and affections ; and by means of it we feel, rejoice, mourn, desire, love, hate, &c. The Body, or Hand, is the great instrument given us for action, 1 for executing the thoughts of our spirits and the desires of our souls, by which alone we can operate on any of the mate- rial things around us. 2 1 That action is the leading idea in the third term of the ternary series of Beatitudes will be at once apparent from, comparing the positive form which it assumes in the Seventh Beatitude " peace-makers," (itpirt-rtiti). In the corresponding third term of the negative series, " meekness" denotes the repression of the evil actings of the carnal mind. * The Body or Hand therefore is the outward seat of action, and corresponds to the inward seat of action, the Will. " The immediate and proximate seat and source of action is in the Will : in other words, the Will emphatically sustains the part of the directing, controlling, and executive power of the mind. The Will, in particular, leads to outward action." Upham's Mental Philosophy, vol. iii. p. 44, Treatise on the Will. It is most interesting to find that the classification obtained, by the examination of this portion of Scripture, is in exact accordance with the latest results of philosophical investigation, as stated in the work just quoted. Upham's Menial Philosophy bears a high character in America, and is, I find, entirely based on this threefold classification. He considers that all the phenomena of mind, and every thing involved in our mental existence, may be referred to one or other of these three great heads, the Intellect, the Sensibilities, and the Will; including under the Intellect all the perceptive and cogni- SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 177 Tims, with reference to any work in which we are engaged, The Head was given us to devise and direct. The Heart to prompt. The Hand to execute. Our duties to God are comprehended in these three particulars : We must know, love, and serve him know him with our spirits. or heads love or feel aright to him with our hearts, or souls serve him with our bodies, or hands. But alas ! our understand- ings have become darkened, our hearts estranged, and our ser- vices alienated to other masters. Our whole nature has become corrupted in its three parts ; and in order to be renewed and to become true Christians, our Lord here intimates that we must become thoroughly alive to this threefold depravation, so that 1st. With our Spirits or Heads, we must learn to be poor we must know and acknowledge our wants and entire spiritual desti- tution. 2d. With our Souls or Hearts, we must feel our wants, and mourn over them. 3d. With our Body or Hand, our active part, we must shew tive states of the mind, and under the Sensibilities, all the feelings of the mind, whether natural, as the emotions, desires, propensities, &c., or moral, viz. the conscientious feelings, or moral sensibilities. Of the propriety of this classification, though " never before formally adopted by any writer on mental philosophy," he finds many confirmations in the incidental re- marks of writers of careful observation and good sense. Thus in Drake's Essayt illus- trative of the Taller, Spectator, and Guardian, vol. i. p. 50, occur the following remarks on the character of Sir Richard Steele. " His misfortune, the cause of all his errors, was not to have clearly seen where his deficiencies lay ; they were neither of the head, nor of the heart, but of the volition. He possessed the wish, but not the poicer of volition, to carry his purposes into execution." Lord Chesterfield (Lond. edit. vol. iti. p. 137) in giving directions to his SOB as to the manner of conducting negotiations with foreign ministers, makes use of the following language : " If you engage his heart, you have a fair chance of imposing upon his understanding, and determining his will." Nor has this grand division of our mental constitution escaped the penetration of that most pro- found observer of human nature, our immortal dramatist : " Tt shews a will most incorrect to heaven, A heart unfortified An understanding simple and unschool'd. 1 * HAMJ.ET, Act i. Sc. 5. M 178 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. meek subordination and submission to God's power, 1 keeping down all our own workings that God may work within us. 2 The connexion between the first three Beatitudes and the central one, and the regular advance in the meaning, are now ma- nifest. When we have come, 1st, to know our wants, 2dly, to feel our wants, and 3dly, to act in accordance with the line of con- duct thus demanded which, as this is the negative and passive side of the subject, consists in repressing the movements of the old man within us, and restraining our own workings that God may work all in all within us, in the central Beatitude, these initiatory steps are gathered up and concentrated in an intense " hungering and thirsting after righteousness." To such the pro- mise is that " they shall be filled," and the various steps, by which this promise shall be accomplished, are indicated in the last three Beatitudes, as consisting in the communication of mercy, purity, and peace. Renewed into the image of God, believers are made like unto Him and become " partakers of the Divine nature," and 1 Meekness is generally applied to patient submission to any thing that our fellow- men make us to suffer : but as. all suffering, even when inflicted through the instru- mentality of our fellow-creatures, proceeds ultimately from God (see 2 Sam. xvi. 11, where David says of Shimei, " Let him alone and let him curse, for the Lord hath bidden him,") the Scripture considers all murmuring and impatience as directed in reality against the Lord. See Exod. xvi. 7, 8, " What are we, that ye murmur against us?" &c. Meekness, therefore, in its highest and truest sense, has reference to God, and consists in an entire keeping down of all fretfulness (Psalm xxxvii. 7) and impa- tient feelings, and a perfect submission of our evil wills to the will of God. Compare James i. 2, 3, 13, 19. 8 In the words of John, the " Light," and " Love," and " Life" of God must be im- parted to man's fallen nature. As in the spiritual, so in the natural creation, the order of God's procedure, as re- corded in Genesis (see pages 163-165) is the same. In that chaos, which, to render the analogy between the material and the moral world more complete, geology now in- forms us, arose from the ruins of a former organized world, after the Spirit of God began to move upon the face of the waters, Light first was restored, then Order, and thirdly Life. So in the moral world, Darkness, Disorder, and Death had laid waste God's fair creation : the Spirit of man had become darkened, his Affections disordered, his Powers of life enfeebled ; and the process of renewal corresponds. There is a movement of the Spirit of God, and 1. " He who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, shines into the heart, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ." 2. Harmony is next restored to the affections which were before in turbulence and disorder, and the love and peace of God rule in the heart, regulating all its movements. 3. The life of God is imparted to the soul before ' dead in trespasses and sins." See Additional Note at End of Section. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 179 have the high and ennobling privilege conferred upon them, of helping to extend these blessings unto others. But before reflecting the image of God's perfections to others, they must first have had these manifested in all their bright- ness to themselves : before becoming " merciful," for example, they must first have received God's mercy in full measure them- selves. Before they can become " lights unto the world," the light of God's mercy, purity, and peace must first have shone in upon their own souls. The Christian's requisites for himself, so soon as he has become fully alive to his wants, are, 1. Mercy to pardon or justify him. 2. Purity to sanctify him. 3. Peace to bless him, and to " restore unto him the joy of God's salva- tion, " PSALM LI. 14 (12.) 1 But these three blessings are exactly those that are stated as comprising " the benefits that those who are effectually called partake of in this life " in that admirable compend of religious truth, " the Shorter Catechism " of the Church of Scotland. For Mercy to pardon is equivalent to Justification. , , Purity to sanctify Sanctification. Peace to bless Adoption, for the promise to " the peace-makers " is that " they shall be called the children of God." In our Catechism, indeed, Sanctifi- cation is placed last, after Adoption : but this is only because by this word is generally understood the renewal of man in its whole extent, as a progressive work, not completed in the Christian till the end of life. In its germ, however, this blessing is communi- cated at the moment of conversion. The seed is implanted which in due time shall produce " first the blade, then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear." " If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature :" his whole nature is changed : whereas before he loved sin, he now loves righteousness ; and " he cannot sin, because he is bora of God," 1 John iii. 9. In point of time therefore all the great blessings bestowed on believers are simultaneous: for no i See pp. 127, 128. 180 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. one can be converted, who is not also justified, nor justified, who is not also regenerated, and in some measure renewed and sancti- fied, nor renewed, who is not also adopted. There may therefore be different arrangements, according to the aspect in which we view these blessings : still the order in which they are here placed is the true and logical order, and is most instructive. 1 It reads a warning lesson to those who by looking too exclusively to the mercy of God, and forgetting his purity and holiness, would apply to their own souls, or those of others, the blessings of salvation, saying, " Peace, Peace, where there is no peace." The order, on the contrary, in which the Saviour represents these blessings as being imparted, demonstrably teaches that where God's mercy is extended, it is only through the medium of purity, that peace can be reached. Such being the order in which God manifests these blessings to His people, the same must be the order in which they exhibit them to others, if they would be fellow-workers with God in ex- tending these blessings to their fellow-sinners. If from having themselves received mercy from God, they have been led to look with a " merciful" eye on the spiritual destitution of others, they are here impressively taught that they must first strive to have their own " hearts pure," before they can hope to " make peace " unto others. In the Epistle of James, which from the striking similarity of all its topics may be called a Commentary on the Sermon on the Mount, those who would be " masters," " wise men and endued with knowledge " to teach others, are reminded that " the ivisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable" James iii. 13. The disturbing and strifeful element must have been previously cast out of their own hearts, for " the wrath of man worketh not the righteousness of God," James i. 20. " The fruit of righteousness is sown in peace of them that make peace," James iii. 18. And in the sequel of the Sermon on the Mount, the whole of which is but a development of the truths set forth in the Beatitudes, and in which the same threefold division prevails throughout, our Lord again inculcates the necessity of previous 1 It is that which is followed, as we have seen, throughout the whole of that most perfect model of penitential devotion, Psalm li., and four several times repeated. See pp. 117 and 127-130. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 181 self -purification in all who would attempt to remedy the spiritual blindness of others. *' First cast out the beam out of thine own eye ; " And then shalt thou see clearly to east out the mote out of thy brother's eye." MATT. vii. 5. The seven Beatitudes then form one grand organic whole, con- stituting the essential elements of the Christian character, all so indissolubly connected that none, who is wholly destitute of any one of these graces, need flatter himself that he is truly possessed of any other ; and he who truly possesses one must possess all the rest, at least in germ. Even the crowning blessing of "peace and joy in the Holy Ghost" we find mentioned in Acts xvi. 34 as one of the immediate accompaniments of conversion. The jailor of Philippi, we read, " rejoiced, believing in God with all his house." " Being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ," Rom. v. 1. Still there is an exact sequence in the order of their development which cannot be deranged. The succeeding graces flow from those which pre- cede them, and which, in logical order at least, must necessarily first be in existence in order to the production of those that fol- low. Thus, no one can truly mourn for his want of righteous- ness, who has not first become sensible of his spiritual poverty. 1 No one will meekly submit to the discipline and remedies that the physician of souls judges necessary for the cure of his evils, but he who has not only become sensible of his malady, but de- plores its virulence. These three dispositions must be combined and be permanently implanted in the mind, before we shall " hunger and thirst after righteousness" as after our daily " meat and drink" According as these wants are more or less urgently present to the believer, will the supply of the positive graces be accommo- dated : and in these, in like manner, we cannot alter the order to ourselves even in our conceptions of them without injury to the truth. Eegarding these blessings first as they are imparted to our- selves by God mercy to pardon our sins must precede ike purity 1 " They that are whole need not a physician ; but they that are sick. I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance." Luke v. 31, 32. 182 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. that is to cleanse our hearts ; in other words, justification we must conceive of as previous to sanctification. True, justification cannot take place without an immediate measure of sanctification following. The mercy of our heavenly Father towards us cannot be apprehended, without a corresponding return of love which is " the fulfilling of the whole law," in other words, righteousness being necessarily called forth in the heart. Still the love of God comes first, and is the generating cause of our love to Him. " We love him because he first loved us." So also peace can only be attained through the medium of purity. " There is no peace, saith my God, to the wicked." Isaiah Ivii. 21. Again, regarding these blessings as already imparted to the believer and diffusing their blessed influence from him to others, the first indispensable step is that he become " merciful." He must learn to see with compassionate eye the wants and sinfulness of others, before he will be moved to remedy them ; but it is only through the medium of purity, as we have before stated, that he is to aim at imparting to them peace. If we are right in the view now given, we have a criterion by which to judge of the correctness of a reading that has greatly divided Scripture critics, by which the second and third Beati- tudes are made to change places, " the meek" being placed before " the mourning." This reading has the authority of the Vulgate in its favour, and has been adopted by late editors of high name, such as Lachmann and Tischendorf. It is supported, moreover, by the authority of Augustine, Neander, Trench, &c., who argue for it as required by the logical coherence of the thoughts. The argument from this last source has, we trust, been already disposed of satisfactorily, and shewn to be in favour of the received text. But the numerous correspondencies, and many-sided rela- tions of Scripture, which Parallelism opens up to us, as existing side by side without mutual confusion, will furnish us with addi- tional reasons for not departing from the usual reading ; and will in this, as we have before shewn in the case of the Decalogue, incontestably prove which is the true arrangement, since the dis- placing of any one member of the septenary arrangement would destroy the unity and symmetry of the whole. In the first place, the Beatitudes according to the reading of the received text refer, 1st. to the Spirit, 2d. to the Soul, and 3d. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 183 to the Body. Now this is the true order of these three parts of our nature relatively to each other, as indicated even by the place which the seats, or external representatives of these, occupy in the human frame (an analogy not to be slighted) the Head, the Heart, and the Hand. The Head is placed first, or at the head, to discern, devise, and direct ; the Heart in the middle, to prompt, and the Hands (or Feet) at the extremity, to execute. Or, Jf we look at these powers with a reference to the duties which we owe to our Maker, God has given us a spirit to know him, a soul to love him, and a body, or powers, to serve him. But we must first knoio him before we can love him, and love him before we can serve or obey him. The reality of our, love can only be proved by act, by the dedication of all our powers to him, and doing his will. The first or "principal thing is wisdom : therefore get wis- dom, get understanding," Prov. iv. 7. The end of all is doing good practical benefit ; but this must be prompted, and to be effectual, guided, by love. The central point in true religion is love : to which all knowledge must tend, and from which all action must emanate. The intimate connexion of the first and last is proverbial ; " knowledge is power ;" but to be sanctified, these two must be united by the principle of divine love. 2. This is the true order according to St Paul in his enumera- tion, 1 Thess. v. 23, " I pray God, your whole spirit, and soul, and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ." This order may indeed be reversed, when the intention is to encourage to active exertion as the principal ob- ject, and only to trace tliis back to the others as its necessary antecedents, as in 2 Tim. i. 6, 7 : " Stir up the gift of God which is in thee by the putting on of my hands. For God hath not given us the spirit of fear ; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind." But there will be no transposition of the terms (except under very peculiar circumstances 1 ) as would be the case by adopting the reading against which we contend, so as to place the heart at the extremity. 3. Professor Upham, in his Elements of Mental Philosophy, has shewn that this is the correct sequence of the operations of the 1 See below Matt. vi. 19-24. 184 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. human mind, which he has thus arranged, dedicating a volume to each division : 1st. The Intellect ; 2d. The Sensibilities ; 3d. The Will. " There is and can be no movement of the sensibilities, (he remarks, vol. ii. p. 17) no such thing as an emotion, desire, or feeling of moral obligation, without an antecedent action of the intellect. If we are pleased or displeased, there is necessarily before the mind some object of pleasure or displeasure ; if we exercise the feeling of desire, there must necessarily be some object desired, which is made known to us by an action of the intellect. So that if there were no intellect, or if the intellectual powers were entirely dormant and inactive, there would be no action of the emotive part of our nature and of the passions." Nor again, he affirms, can the Intellect affect immediately the Will but only through the intervention of the Sensibilities. In confirmation of this position, he adduces several passages from some of the most eminent metaphysicians. Thus Locke, in his Essay on the Understanding, Book II. ch. xxi. 46, remarks, " Thus, by a due consideration, and examining any good pro- posed, it is in our power to raise our desires in a due proportion to the value of that good, whereby, in its turn and place, it may come to work upon the will, and be pursued. For good, though appearing and allowed ever so great, yet, till it has raised desires in our minds, and thereby made us uneasy in its want, it reaches not our wills." To the same effect Mr Hume, in his Disserta- tion on the Passions, says : " It seems evident that reason in a strict sense, as meaning the judgment of truth and falsehood, can never of itself be any motive to the will, and can have no influence but so far as it touches some passion or affection." And to cite- only another authority, Sir James Mackintosh, in his General View of the Progress of Ethical Philosophy, more than once makes the remark, " that no perception or judgment, or other unmixed act of the understanding, merely as such, and without the agency of some intermediate emotion, can affect the will" 4. The alteration proposed would derange the exact parallelism which we have already shewn to subsist between each of the suc- cessive terms of the first and last ternary series of Beatitudes. For the last series, like the first, has a reference to the threefold operations of the human mind, and presents them in the same order. As in the first three Beatitudes we see the various steps SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 185 of self-renunciation which the Christian has to acquire, that he must learn, 1st, in thought, to be poor and humble ; 2d, in heart, to be contrite and penitent ; 3d, in act, to be meek and submissive : so in the last three Beatitudes, which comprehend the graces which must be possessed by the Christian before he can truly influence others and win souls unto Christ, we are taught that we must learn, 1st, in thought, to be merciful 1 to our poor brethren; 2d, in heart, to be pure, showing " love out of a pure heart ;" (1 Tim. i. 5) 3d, in act, to be peace-makers. But this beautiful correspondence would be destroyed, were the heart to be placed last in the first series. 5. There is an evident connexion between the first and third members of each of the Triplets of Beatitudes : 3 between 'Hhe poor in spirit" and " the meek ;" and between " the merciful" and " the peace-makers." Humility and meekness are classed together in all minds as kindred virtues, and mercy and peace, in like manner, go together. The distinction between humility and meekness we take to be this, that Humility denotes a lowly opinion of one's self. Meekness a lowly submission of one's will and acts to the will of God. And in the same manner, as the parallelism requires, the merciful man is he who views with compassionate eye the miseries of others : the peace-maker is. he who does his utmost to remove them. ' * Mercy has always reference to those that are " poor," and in distress of some kind, ftnd t'n need of compassion. 2 " Seeing ye have purified your souk in obeying the truth through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren, see that ye love one another with a pure hturt fer- vently." (1 Pet. i. 22). J We already had occasion to remark the frequency of this parallelism between the first and last term in a ternary arrangement. It is natural that the conclusion should correspond with the commencement, that as we begin, so we should end. 186 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM: 6. As the eoctremes are connected, so are the means or middle terms. ( The poor in spirit. A -< The mourning. (The meek. B The hungering and thirsting. f The merciful. C -^ The pure in heart. ( The peace-makers. The centre B of the whole triplet A, B, C, as well as the centres of the subordinate triplets A and C, all relate to the heart, to its 1. feelings, 2. desires, and 3. purification. It is worthy of obser- vation that the heart is thus represented as forming in every view the inmost centre or heart of the Christian character. To the heart we are directed to look as that to which every thing must tend, and from which all must proceed : for " out of it are the issues of life." 7. There is still another division of the Seven which we have not hitherto noticed, in which the first term is made to stand alone by itself, as already including implicitly within it all the rest, and out of which they evolve themselves in three connected pairs. An instance of this division occurs in Isaiah xi. 2 : And THE SPIRIT OF THE LORD shall rest upon him, The Spirit of wisdom and understanding, The Spirit of counsel and might, The Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the LORD. Here all the seven spirits are in reality but one, 1 and are impli- citly contained in the one which stands first and alone, THE SPIRIT OF THE -LORD, which however, as we see, unfolds itself into three connected pairs. 1 Just as in Rev. i 6 " The seven Spirits which are before God's throne" denote only the one Holy Spirit in the fulness of his covenant-gifts, as is evident from the arrangement : Grace be unto yon, and peace, Father : From Him which is and which was and which is to come ; Spirit : And from the Seven Spirits which are before his throne; Son : And from Jesus Christ, who is the faithful witness and the first begotten of the dead and the prince of the kings of the earth. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 187 Amidst the other arrangements of which we have shewn this most perfect Seven, with which our Lord opens his Divine dis- course, to be susceptible, the last is not wanting. Blessed are THE POOR IN SPIRIT. ( Blessed are they that mourn : ( Blessed are the meek. ( Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness : (_ Blessed are the merciful. f Blessed are the pure in heart : (_ Blessed are the peace-makers. According to this arrangement, the first great change produced in the mind of the Christian poverty in spirit is made to stand alone, in a distinct category by itself, to mark that it already includes implicitly in itself all the rest, and that those who possess this Christian grace with its accompanying blessing, already pos- sess all the rest " for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." 1 This one virtue of Humility is the foundation on which the whole superstructure of Christian graces rests the root, or living seed from which all the others will without fail gradually develop themselves in due succession. From this germ springs up a threefold stem, each branch bearing its twofold fruit : the first more of an inward and personal nature, marking the change pro- duced in the heart of the individual himself ; the other, the cor- responding outward fruit, which exhibits itself in his relation towards others. Thus in the first pair, " mourning " is the personal feeling awakened in the Christian by the view of the evils in his own 1 The remarkable distinction in the blessing attached to this disposition places it apart by itself. To all the other dispositions a promise of some future good is made, " For they shall be comforted." " For they shall inherit the earth," &c. To " the poor in spirit " the blessing is present and immediate : " For theirs is the kingdom of heaven." The great change has been effected. They have " passed from death unto life." They are " delivered from the power of darkness and translated into the king- dom of God's dear Son." Henceforth their progress and final consummation are secure. 188 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. heart. " Meekness" is the disposition wherewith he strives to meet the evils which he suffers from others, by suppressing every angry or impatient emotion towards them. To reverse this order, as Tischendorf, Neander, &c. do, is to reverse the order of Christian growth, according to which the in- ward must precede the outward. 1 Heartfelt meekness and sub- mission to the outward evil which God deems it necessary for us to suffer, can only be attained by him who has already learned to know and mourn over the depth and intensity of the true evil, which is within, sin ; for the subduing of which he will cheer- fully submit to every discipline appointed by his heavenly Father. In the second pair, the internal " hungering and thirsting after righteousness " produced in the Christian's mind from a profound sense of his own wants, is accompanied with mercy towards the deficiencies of others. In the third connected pair, we are taught that in exact pro- portion as the believer's own " heart is purified " from every thing that intercepts the genial current of love and harmony, will he desire, and be fitted, to be a " peace-maker" to others. 2. THE LORD'S PRAYER. If such then be the successive stages of Christian sanctification, as set forth by Him who knew what was in man, and the exact and unalterable order according to which believers must grow up into the stature of a perfect man in Christ Jesus, the same must be the order of the prayer for Christian sanctification. Accord- ingly we shall find tfiat each successive Christian disposition is furnished with its appropriate corresponding utterance in the suc- cessive petitions of the Lord's Prayer. Seven are the Christian dispositions, on which a blessing is pronounced ; and seven are the petitions of the Lord's prayer, the first three relating to God, and the last four to ourselves. 1 I find I have been anticipated by Bengel, in his admirable Gnomon, both in the observation of the connexion between these pairs of Beatitudes, and in the argument derived from thence for adherence to the reading in the received Text. His words are, " Sed manet ordo versiculorum : namque versui tertio subordinatur versus quartus, et versui quinto subordinatur versus sextus." SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 189 Our Father who art in heaven 1 1. ("Thy Name be hallowed, 2. -< Thy Kingdom come, 3. (Thy Will be done, As in heaven, so on earth. 4. Give us this day our daily bread, 5. (And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors, 6. -< And lead us not into temptation, 7. (But deliver us from evil. From ignorance of the principles of Parallelism, the connexion of the fifth line " as in heaven, so on earth" has been generally misapprehended, and its import confined to the third petition alone, whereas it applies equally to all the first three. In the few brief but weighty words of the Invocation, the true attitude in which the Christian is to approach God, is clearly defined. In the original it consists of three parts, 1 " Father, our (Father) who art in heaven" each profoundly significant. To what a glorious privilege are we at once elevated by the first word ! We are en- couraged to draw near to God, no longer in the spirit of fear and bondage, but in the spirit of adoption, addressing Him as our Father in Christ, with the reverential but confiding affection of children to a parent children by a new and spiritual birth, unto whom Christ has " given power to become the sons of God." Love to God, then, as a Father, is the first and leading idea of the prayer ; but combined with this as second and subordinate, yet indissolubly connected with it, love to our brethren. In addressing God as " our Father," we are taught to pray as mem- bers all of one body and members one of another, none of whom shall be perfected without the other. But while thus brought nigh, and invited to intimate commu- nion, we are by the next words reminded of the distance which yet separates between the sinner and his God. " Our Father, who art in heaven" God is in heaven, while we are on earth. To this corresponds the fifth line, " as in heaven, so on earth," which refers equally to all the three intervening petitions ; and we are taught to pray that for the advancement of His own glory, f iftat f rtif *< 190 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. God would again descend from heaven to earth, and renew the intercourse which has been broken off by otir sins, so that His " name may be hallowed," His " kingdom come," and His " will be done," " as" among the angels and glorified spirits " in heaven," " so" among men here " on earth." The Beatitudes are divided into Four and Three, beginning with man and man's wants, and ending with God and God's ful- ness. The Christian prayer, on the contrary, is divided into Three and Four, beginning with God and His glory as the first and highest object to be contemplated in prayer, second and subordinate to which must be the petitions for the supply of our own wants, however pressing. The reason of the difference is evident. In the Beatitudes Christ unfolds the order of Christian development and sanctifica- tion in its lower or human aspect. A sense of our own wants there- fore must come first, as preparatory for our reception of those graces which assimilate us to the Divine nature. We must rise from the sense of our own deep degradation and nothingness, to the contemplation and apprehension of the fulness of God, as of possible attainment by us. The creature (Four), therefore, here precedes, and the thoughts are next raised to God (Three). But in prayer, the God-ward aspect is that which predominates. Before indeed the soul can be raised in prayer to God, it must have already been so far strengthened as to look away and up from its own wants, unto that fulness from which they can be sup- plied ; and Christ teaches us by the order of the petitions, and the numbers impressed on the prayer (3 and 4), not to look principally to ourselves, which could only lead to despair, but having our eye fixed on God's glory as involved, and pledged for the accomplish- ment of those magnificent promises which He has made to His church, to make the advancement of His Name and Kingdom and Will the leading object of our desires and petitions, and in sub- serviency alone to this great end to ask those things that are ne- cessary for our own well-being, that we may be fitted for further- ing our part of the glorious work. Three therefore here precedes, and Four follows. Finally, let us endeavour to trace the correspondence between the individual Beatitudes and Petitions, (see pp. 166, 167.) 1st Beatitude, and 1st Petition. If we have truly made our SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 191 own the first Christian temper, " Blessed are the poor in spirit," and in the very depths of our spirit have come to know and acknowledge that "in us dwelleth no good thing," that "God alone is good," and the author of all good, then will every proud and self-exalting thought be mortified within us ; and we shall be prepared with understanding to enter into the prayer, " Thy Name be hallowed." " Not unto us, Lord, not unto us, but unto thy Name give glory," Psalm cxv. 1. Our spirits were given us that we may know God (see page 177) ; and our first and earnest prayer will be that God's Name, by which he is known, and which includes " all that whereby he maketh himself known," 1 may be more and more fully discerned and hallowed with exclusive honour and reverence by ourselves, and all his rational offspring here on earth. 2d, Beatitude, and 2d. Petition. To " the poor in spirit" is held out in prospect the central blessing, which already includes all, " the kingdom of heaven." To him who has not only learned to know his need of this blessing, but whose feelings have been touched to mourn for the absence of Christ from his soul, and to long for the presence of His kingdom, with all its spiritual riches and comfort, what prayer can be more fitting than the petition, " Thy kingdom come" ! And as the second blessed temper of mourning belongs to the domain of the Heart, the second petition must be held to ap- pertain more particularly to the same region. " Thy kingdom come," that is, first and especially in the hearts of men ; for " the kingdom of God," the Saviour assures his disciples, "is within you." 3d. Beatitude, and 3d. Petition. Meekness, we have already defined to be (see note to p. 178) in its highest and truest sense, an entire submission of our own evil wills to the holy will of God. What more appropriate utterance could be found for such a disposition, than the aspiration, " Thy will be done" ! 4th. Beatitude, and 4th. Petition. Thoroughly awakened now to the threefold wants of his nature, the believer's whole energies are concentrated in an intense "hungering and thirsting after righteousness," and the cry which ascends from the famishing 1 " Westminster Assembly's Shorter Catechism," Quest 101. 192 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM, heart is " Give us this day our daily bread" bread for our whole being, 1 for spirit, for soul, for body. 9 Day by day the Israelites received their supply of manna from heaven that they might keep ever in mind their continual need and dependence on the source of all good : and as this daily bread to which allusion seems here evidently made, even under their carnal dispensation, was not designed merely for the nourishment of their bodies, but to teach them that man "doth not live by bread only, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord," Deut. viii. 3, and typified that "true bread of life which came down from heaven," John vi. 48-58, it seems improper to confine the meaning here to bread for the animal life alone. " The petition stands in the midst of purely spiritual supplications, and hence implies a spiritual direction of the mind in the suppliant," 3 and though the sustenance necessary for the physical existence is doubtless included, it is but as a part of our whole being, and in its subserviency to our higher and spiritual life, that we are here enjoined to pray for its support. This Beatitude, and its corresponding Petition, form the centre and heart, each of its respective septenary series. This position is not without significance. " Hungering and thirsting after righteousness," if we would concentrate into one focus our ideas of a true Christian, is the most perfect description that could be given of him, as painfully conscious of the wide distance which yet parts between him and the source of all perfection, and thus "forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth 1 This seems to be the true meaning of that much contested word l*n>virios'vrli\ch our translators have rendered " daily." Thus Suidas and the Etymol. Mag. i \v\ ry cufiix ri/uwv Kgfto^ay, " that which is suitable for our being." So the Greek Fathers generally explain it (See Tholuck's Exposition of Christ's Sermon on the Mount, vol. ii. p. 183), though most of them confine it to the bodily existence. 8 Here again I am happy to discover a striking coincidence of thought in Tapper's Proverbial Philosophy, p. 113 ; Humbly, as a grateful almsman, beg thy bread of God : Bread for thy triple estate, for thou hast a trinity of nature. Again pp. 138, 139; No, thy trinity of nature, enchained by treble death, Helplessly craveth of its God, Himself for three salvations: The soul to be reconciled in love, the mind to be glorified in tight, While this poor dying body leapeth into life. * Olshatisen, Commentary on ^ SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 193 unto those tilings which are before, pressing ever forward toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus," Philip, iii. 13. So the concentrated essence of prayer in the creature coming with all his wants and desires before a throne of grace is " Give us this clay our daily bread." 5th. Beatitude, and 5th Petition. " Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy." " Forgive us our debts, as we for- give our debtors." We need but to place these side by side to perceive at once their perfect correspondence. Gth. Beatitude, and 6th Petition. "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God." The greater the progress that the Christian has made in the attainment of this grace, the more that he strives to purify his heart, the more deeply sensible and dis- trustful does he become of its native corruption and deceitfulness, and with so much the more earnestness will he breathe forth -the prayer, " Lead us not into temptation." 7th. Beatitude, and 7th Petition. Finally, the more that he comes to see that sin is the source of all dispeace and disunion, whether in his own breast or in the world around him, as being enmity with God, the source of all blessing and joy the more that he comes to love peace and to makepeace as a child of God, and as being reconciled to Him and to his brethren, the more fervent will be his prayer, that he and all his brethren may be delivered from the great enemy and destroyer of all peace, " evil" or "the Evil One." 1 For " there is no peace," saith the Lord, " unto the wicked." The petitions in the Lord's Prayer, it will thus be seen, have a reference, as might have been expected, to the three parts of human nature. In praying for the renewal of God's communion with man on earth, the change that has to be effected is not on God but on man, since it is by our spirits that his name must be hallowed, in our hearts that his kingdom must come, and by the exertion of our wills and powers that his will must be done ; so that in the first three petitions we pray in effect that our " whole spirit, soul, and body may be sanctified," so as to hasten the glori- fication of God's name, and kingdom, and will. 1 Ae some arc for rendering * nu rn;i7- N 194 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. The central prayer is for the supply of the daily nourishment necessary for each of these parts of our being. And for the accomplishment of those grand purposes of God with which our prayer began, we conclude with asking the re- moval from each of those hindrances, which at present more im- mediately obstruct their free actings that our spirits may be delivered from the conscious sense of guilt which weighs them down, by the forgiveness of past sins that our weak and foolish hearts may be saved from those temptations to sin under present trials, which would prove too strong for them and that our powers may be delivered from the evil which clogs their free exercise, so that henceforth we may be enabled to " run in the way of God's commandments, and not be weary, to walk and not to faint." Nothing could furnish a more suitable termination to the prayer than this petition for the future full and final triumph over all evil by "the redemption" even " of the body f which, according to St Paul, Rom. viii. 23, will complete our title to " adoption/' and bring us unto the perfect peace of " the children of God." (Compare the seventh Beatitude.) ADDITIONAL NOTE TO SECTION XIV. SEE PAGE 178. It is the office of the mvpa, spirit, to command, of the 4'"Z*i soul, to obey ; but by the Fall the -^u^n has usurped the dominion. Hence the -^v^ixof Ztfyavrot (" the natural man ") of St Paul, 1 Cor. ii. 14, is the emotional man, the man who is governed by the $v%v, the mere emotions or desires of the moment, instead of being guided by the fvtvp.u, the spirit, or reason. " In him the yntvft'x or spirit, being unvivified and uninformed by the Spirit of God, is overborne by the animal [emotional] soul, with its desires and its judgments." " The spiritual man, a wtuftarixof, on the contrary, is he in whom the -ryivfitt rules, being exalted by the Spirit of God into its proper, para- mount office of judging and ruling, and inspired and enabled for that office. Since by man's fall the ifiiv^a. is overridden by the animal soul, and in abeyance, this always presupposes the infusion of the Holy Spirit to quicken and inform the fvivpa. so that there is no such thing as an unregenerate rvsvf.t.KTixo;.'" Alford's Greek Testament, Comment, on 1 Cor. ii. 14, 15. We indicate briefly, for the student's farther reflection, a few of those instances of triplicity in Scripture to which the one now examined is the key. Threefold are the temptations of man, " the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life," 1 John ii. 16 the threefold temptations by which the first Adam fell, and over which the second Adam triumphed. In each case they were addressed to the separate parts of human nature in the reverse order, ascending from the lower to the higher. 1 1 The true order of Christ's temptations is that given in Luke's Gospel. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 195 1st. Temptation, " the lust of the flesh." Whatever tempts the body to indulgence the powers to ease, and avoidance of suffering and self-denial. The temptation to Adam was : " The tree was good for food."' ,, ,, Christ " Command this stone that it be made bread." lid. Temptation, "the lust of the eyes," Whatever attracts the carnal eye, and would draw to itself the heart, away from God. The temptation to Adam : " The tree was pleasant to the eyes." Christ : " The kingdoms of the world, with their glory." Hid. Temptation, " the pride of life." Whatever tempts the qririt to pride and presumption. The temptation to Adam : The tree seemed " desirable to make one wise. 1 ' ,, Christ ; To cast himself down from the pinnacle of the temple, presuming on God's delivering him even in dangers of his owu seeking, and to gain glory from the assembled multitudes below, by descending as " the Lord suddenly come to his temple." J Threefold are the enemies of human nature, " the flesh, the world, and the devil," each part having its more peculiar tempter; the flesh being the tempter of the body, the world, of the soul or heart, and the devil, of the spirit, tempting it to his own pecu- liar sin, pride, and rebellion against God the highest of all which however in some measure is involved in every sin. And though this sin is peculiarly characteristic of Satan, and therefore he is specially regarded as the tempter to it, yet he uses the world and the flesh also, as temptations inferior to his own, yet leading to it. But threefold are the offices which the Saviour holds to meet the wants of each part of our nature Prophet, Priest, and King; to impart, as need requires, "wisdom, righteousness and sanctification, (ltx.a.io for ever. AMEN. jj^nd the glory, j 14. For if ye forgive men their trespasses, Your heavenly Father will also forgive you ; 15. But if ye forgive not men their trespasses, Neither will your Father forgive your trespasses. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 203 c. In the duties owed to ourselves. 16. Moreover, when ye fast, Be not, as the hypocrites, of a sad countenance ; J For they disfigure their faces, That they may appear unto men to fast : Verily I say unto you, They have their reward. 17. f But thou, when thou fastest, Anoint thine head, and wash thy face ; 18.) That thou appear not unto men to fast, I But unto thy Father, which is in secret ; I And thy Father, which seeth in secret, l_ Shall reward thee openly. Second defect of the Pharisaical righteousness, Worldliness, or anxiety to secure both earth and heaven. God must be supremely regarded in all our affections. 19. Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, Where moth and rust doth corrupt, And where thieves break through and steal ; 20. But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, Where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, And where thieves do not break through nor steal : 21. For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also. 22. The light of the body is the eye : If therefore thine eye be single, Thy whole body shall be full of light. 23. But if thine eye be evil, Thy whole body shall be full of darkness. If therefore the light that is in thee be darkness, How great is that darkness ! 24. No man can serve two masters : For either he will hate the one, and love the other : Or else he will hold to the one, and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God, and mammon. 204 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 25. Therefore I say unto you, Be not anxious for your life, what ye shall eat, Nor yet for your body what ye shall put on. Is not the life more than meat ? Andrthe body than raiment ? 26. Behold the fowls of the air : For they sow not, neither do they reap, Nor gather into barns : Yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are not ye much better tlian the'y ? 27. Which of you by his anxiety can add one cubit to his life? 28. And -why are ye anxious about raiment ? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow ; They toil not, neither do they spin ; 29. And yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all his glory, Was not arrayed like one of these. 30. If then the grass of the field, Which to day is, and to-morrow is cast into the oven, God thus clothe, Shall he not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith ? 31. Therefore be not anxious, saying, What shall we eat' or, What shall we drink? Or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed ? 32. For after all these things do the Gentiles seek ; For your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of these things : 33. But seek ye first the kingdom of God, And his righteousness, And all these things shall be added unto you. 34. Be not therefore anxious about the morrow ; For the morrow will be anxious about the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 205 Third defect of the Pharisaical righteousness, Spiritual Pride, or Self- Righteousness. God must be supremely regarded in all our judgments. Ch vii. 1. f Judge not, that ye be not judged. 2. < For with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged : (^ And with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again. We must acquire spiritual discernment, to judge., 1. How to give. 3. And why beh oldest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, But considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye ? 4. Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye, And behold a beam is in thine own eye ? 5. Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye, And then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother's eye. 2. To whom to give. 6. Give not that which is holy unto the dogs ; Neither cast ye your pearls before swine ; Lest they trample them under their feet, And turn again, and rend you. 3. What to give. 7. Ask, and it shall be given you ; Seek, and ye shall find ; Knock, and it shall be opened unto you. 8. For every one that asketh receiveth ; And he that seeketh findeth ; And to him that knocketh it shall be opened. 9. Or what man is there of you, Whom, if his son ask bread, Will he give him a stone? 10. Or if he ask a fish, "Will he give him a serpent? 11. If ye then being evil, Know how to give good gifts unto your children, How much more shall your Father which is in heaven, Give good things to them that ask him ? 12. (Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to yoa, < Do ye even so to them : (For this is the LAW and the PROPHETS. 206 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. THE CONCLUSION ('Ei, from transcribers confining their view to the immediate context (ver. 2), but not vice versa. But besides, " righteous- ness " is required, since it evidently refers back to chap. v. 20, " except your righteous- ness shall exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees." The repetition of righteousness is particularly appropriate at the commencement of the Section, where our Lord proceeds to point out the defects of the Pharisaical righteousness. And here we may remark how admirably, for the purpose of shewing the ground- lessness of the objection that Christ came " to destroy the law," the great object and requirement of the law, " righteousness," which yet it could not effectuate, which He alone could " fulfil " (a-X{-<), or fully accomplish, who came to " magnify the law." and to bring in an everlasting righteousness " is kept continually before the mind of his hearers, as Christ's principal object, by its being made to occupy all the more pro- minent points in his discourse. First, it forms the central link of the seven-fold chain of Christian graces with which the Sermon opens. " Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness." Next, persecution " for righteousness' sake," stands in the front of the central division of the Introduction, ver. 10, where he identifies //is own cause with the cause of righteousness, ver. 11. Having laid down the leading proposition that he came " not to destroy, but to fulfil the law," immediately before proceeding to the proof, he intimates his intention of requiring a new and more perfect righteousness than that of the greatest zealots for the law, " Except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees " (v. 20.) Having shewn in A wherein that righteousness consisted, according to the true interpretation of the law, when he comes to contrast it with the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees, its name most appropriately meets us again (vi. 1), at the very commencement of If, " Take heed that ye do not your righteousness before men, to be seen of them," &c. And lastly, in the middle subdivision of B, we shall find attention is drawn to it as the first and principal object of desire on which our hearts should be set (vi. 33). " But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness" Compare LAW, pp. 29, 30. 2 Or rather " double-heartedness." 'Avij Sn^i/^of, " a double-souled, or double- hearted man [divided between God and the world], is unstable in all his ways." 218 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. presses it. (James i. 8, iv. 8). They professed to have their hearts set on heaven, while yet they were engaged in laying up treasures for themselves on earth. But " where the treasure is there will the heart be also." (ver. 19-21). Their eye was not single in its aim, and therefore their spiritual vision was clouded and obscured, (ver. 22, 23). They attempted to reconcile the in- compatible services of two opposite masters, God and Mammon, (ver. 24). They were cumbered and anxious about the things of this world, instead of seeking as their first and great concern the kingdom of God and his righteousness, with the simple faith that all other things necessary would be added unto them, (ver. 25-34). III. The third great defect of the Pharisees' righteousness was their spiritual pride, or judging others severely from conceiving themselves to be righteous, (chap. vii. 1-12). Judge not, that ye be not judged : For with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged ; And with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again : this head being summed up in that admirably comprehensive maxim, Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, Do ye even so to them ; " FOR THIS" (including the exposition given of the precepts of the law, and the dispositions with which its righteousness must be practised " is (the true spirit of) THE LAW AND THE PROPHETS." SECTION XVII. Let us now examine more in detail those parts of the Subject, or Main Body of the Discourse, on which the Parallelism is calcu- lated to throw new light. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 219 For the arrangement of the first division we are indebted to Bishop Jebb. Think not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets : I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil ; FOR verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass away, One jot, or one tittle shall in no wise pass away, From the law, till all be fulfilled. Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, He shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven : But whosoever shall do and teach them, The same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven. FOR I say unto you, That except your righteousness shall abound, More than that of the Scribes and Pharisees, Ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven. " I will confess," says Bishop Jebb, " that, for a long while, the connexion of the last paragraph with the preceding exceedingly perplexed me : I was quite unable to discover its orderly de- pendence ; nor did the commentators afford me the least aid. At length, I was led to distribute the clauses in the order now given, and immediately my perplexities were at an end : nor am I with- out hopes that my readers will go along with me, while I state the considerations which freed my own mind from all doubt upon the subject. " In the second line, then, I conceive there is a division of the subject into two branches : 1. I am come not to destroy : 2. But I am come to fulfil. The first of these propositions is then taken up and established : and the second proposition afterward under- goes a like process. This is in fact but the extension of a mode of composition, exemplified by Bishop Lowth, Prelimin. Dissert. p. xxiv. " I am black, but yet beautiful, O daughters of Jerusalem ; Like the tents of Kedar, like the pavilions of Solomon. CAKT. i. 5 ; " that is, black as the tents of Kedar (made of dark-coloured goat's hair) ; beautiful as the pavilions of Solomon. 220 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. " On her house-tops, and to her open streets, Every one howleth, descendeth with weeping. ISAIAH xv. 3 ; " that is, every one howleth on her house-tops ; and descendeth with weeping to her open streets." In a similar way the present example may be resolved into its component members : 1. I am come not to destroy the law or the prophets : FOR verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass away, One jot, or one tittle shall in no wise pass away, &c. 2. But I am come to fulfil the law and the prophets ; FOR I say unto you, That except your righteousness shall abound, &c. Throughout the first division, our Lord shews that he was come, not to supersede, or abolish the law : in the triplet, by asserting its permanent immutability ; and in the quatrain, by declaring the future degradation of him who should himself break, (AU^, referring to the previous xaraXD^a/, " destroy," literally, " break down"}, or, by his teaching, induce others to break the least of the commandments. In the second division, with equal clear- ness, though not by so many topics, or at equal length, our Lord intimates that he was come, not only not to abolish, but to fulfil the law ; as if he had said, " The Scribes and Pharisees are zeal- ous for the law ; and in their zeal, may suppose that I am about to subvert it. The very reverse, however, is the case. I am come, in my own person, to fulfil, and in the persons of my followers, both to command, and to facilitate, the fulfilment of the law. Be it known, therefore, that unless your righteous conformity to the law, both in letter and in spirit, far exceed that of the Scribes and Pharisees themselves, you can neither, in this world, be my true disciples, nor, in the world to come, partakers of my everlasting kingdom." In the first line of the concluding triplet, the verb vfeiffffsixrr), " shall abound," seems to refer to KXqpuffou, " fulfil," in the second line of the passage at large, in the same manner that Xu law of the Indi- ( vidual Life. B) 2. Thou shalt not commit adultery. i Guardian law of the Fa- ) ( mily Life. C 3. Thou shalt not steal. -? Gu f **" !* w of * NR - ( tional Life. D 4. Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour. 5. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's house ; Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's wife. Nor his man-servant, nor his maid-servant, Nor his ox, nor his ass. Nor any thing that is thy neighbour's. The commandments quoted by our Lord, MATT. v. 21-48. f Ye have heard that it was said to them of old time, 1 | 1. Thou shalt not kill. Ye have heard that it was said to them of old time, (^ 2. Thou shalt not commit adultery. Again, ye have heard that it was said to them of old time, 3. Thou shalt not forswear thyself, But shalt perform unto the LORD thine oaths. C Ye have heard that it hath been said, | 4. An eye for an eye, And a tooth for a tooth. ! Ye have heard that it hath been said, 5. Thou shalt love thy neighbour, I And hate thine enemy. 1 The introductory formulas (Ye have heard, &c.), it will be observed, agree exactly with the arrangement given : the first two corresponding with each other, and the last two in like manner, while the central formula differs from both. 230 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. Here the first and second commandments in each table are the same. The central laws in each too are evidently identical (D & P) : for as Christ came to "fulfil" or complete the law, Thou shalt not forswear thyself," with the explanations given by our Lord, will be seen to be only the fourth commandment of the Second Table (D) in its Christian fulness and spirituality, all " false witness " borne against our neighbour being now declared to be false swearing against God, and breaking our oaths and covenant unto the Lord, to whom we and our neighbour belong, and before whom we have solemnly engaged to love our neigh- bour even as Christ has loved us. Truth thus forms the centre of both arrangements " truth in the inmost parts" or heart. Our Lord so far altered the sequence of the commandments, that he might, as before in the Decalogue, indicate, by the position which he assigns to the precept enjoining truth, the central place which this virtue must hold in the discharge of every duty to our fellow men. " Love " to our neighbour must proceed " out of a pure heart." The most perfect truthfulness, as before the Lord, in all we say and do, must intimately pervade all the relations which we bear one towards another. Three of the five commandments in each table being thus evi- dently identical, the presumption is, that in the remaining two adduced by our Lord, we have an equivalent for the rest of the Second Table of the Decalogue. And such, we believe, will be found on examination to be the case. The last two commandments quoted by our Lord, " An eye for an eye," &c. and " Thou shalt love thy neighbour," &c., as explained by Him, are, it appears to us, the " perfected" form of the third great fundamental law, " Thou shalt not steal," which guards the third constituent of the Life of Man. the Life of the Kingdom or Community, If it be asked, What then has become of the Tenth Command- ment ? Has the most spiritual of all the commandments of the Second Table of the Decalogue, a commandment which seems already to transcend the limits of mere outward law, and by lay- ing its injunction on the very thoughts and springs of action of the human heart, to anticipate that new covenant under which God engages to his people to " put His law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts," (Jerem. xxxi. 33) no representa- SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 231 tive or equivalent in Christ's perfected law ? None, we answer most appropriately and significantly : no distinct, separate repre- sentative is given of what forms the living principle which per- vades and leavens all the commandments, as now transfigured and glorified by Christ. This is the new, spiritualized form which he imparts to each of the commandments. The check is laid no longer on the murderous hand, but on the murderous thought (ver. 21-26) on the slightest indication of impure desire in the heart (ver. 27-32) on the selfishness which would steal and take for itself, instead of giving readily to all, what has been bestowed for the good of the whole (ver. 38-48) on the untruthfulness whjch requires any stronger confirmation than the simple Yea and Nay (ver. 33-37). Only four commandments of the Second Table of the Deca- logue have thus their distinct equivalents. But to preserve the significant number five (the complemental half of the entire De- calogue, and which presupposes the other half as re-enacted with- out change by Christ), the third commandment of the Second Table of the Law, constituting the guardian law of the National Life in its most elementary form, is represented on its negative and positive sides by two commandments, relating to the duties of the members of a state, the first in their individual, and the second in their collective capacity. The first, or more negative law, " An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth," was intended, by the seve- rity of the penalty attached, to prevent every violation of the rights of their fellow citizens by members of the same community : while the second enjoined the positive duty which ought to unite all the members of the same community in mutual love to each other (" Thou shalt love thy neighbour"), and in jealous defence of their national life against every deadly opponent ("and hate thine enemy."). Our Lord's comments on both of these laws are directed principally against the perversions of them by the Scribes. Neither, in its genuine and original import, has been abrogated by him. The commandment, " Thou shalt not steal," lays down in its simplest form the principle which must regulate the social duties of men in both relations ; namely, that each must restrict him- self to that which God has assigned to him as his possession, and that none is to interfere with that which belongs to others. For the enforcement of this principle in the first of these rela- 232 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. tions, that of the members of a state to each other, and as the measure of punishment for each infringement of it, the com- mandment laid down in Moses' legislation, is the law of strict Retributive Justice Like for Like " an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth." Whoever violates the social rights of others, as he hath done, so shall it be done to him. Whatsoever he hath taken, let like be taken from him. This great fundamental prin- ciple has undoubtedly not been repealed by our Lord. It forms the basis on which the Civil Law of every country rests ; and the magistrate is ordained of God to be an avenger executing strict justice on each exactly as he has done to his neighbour, as a wit- ness to that eternal righteousness of God, which, as our Lord declares in a subsequent part of this discourse, shall be the rule of God's procedure at the last day, " With what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again." Matt. vii. 2. This law was designed specially and principally, as we see by examining all the three passages 1 in which it occurs in Moses' law, as a direction to the magistrate to regulate his decisions in awarding the due measure of punishment for every violation of the law ; in its relation to the injured party, it was calculated, even in its literal form, instead of fostering, to limit and subdue the spirit of revenge which would always exact more than the strict equivalent for the offence. Doubtless it implied a permis- sion to the aggrieved individual to bring the offender before the constituted authorities of his country, and to require compensation for the injury which he had sustained. But it would appear from the corrective comments of our Lord, that the interpretation put upon the precept by the Pharisees had been, that it not only per- mitted, but enjoined the injured party to demand full redress, and represented (in accordance with the spirit of the world) the re- sentment of wrong as proper and indispensable for the mainten- ance of one's due place and rights in society. In opposition to this perversion, Christ declares that the great law of his kingdom is never to resist evil with evil : that instead of always standing upon, and demanding, our rights, the meek, yielding, giving dis- position must be that of his disciples. The fundamental law of the "National Life, as if He had said, 1 Exod. xxi. 24; Lev. xxiv. 20; Deut. xix. 21. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 233 l;iid down in the Decalogue with regard to what belongs to others, is, " Thou shalt not steal :" and when another has taken ought which belonged to thee, Moses' law permitted, not required, to receive equal compensation for that which had been taken from thee : " but I say unto you," that the true spirit of this law is not to ask this compensation, except when no gentler methods of re- pressing your brother's wrong will avail. Not only shalt thou not steal, or take unjustly what is not thine own, but thou shalt not take that which is legally thine own. Be ready, at least ever in spirit, to yield to injuries whether affecting, 1. your person (represented by " smiting on the one cheek"), 2. your property (" If any man will take away thy coat," &c.), or, 3. your liberty (" Whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile," &c.) :* and when any thing has been taken from you, be not desirous to take that which the law allows as an equivalent. If thy brother feels himself in any way confined and restrained by thee, and should be led by this feeling even to smite, or in any other way to make demands upon thee, retaliate not. Nay, feeling thy self' strong under the protection and blessing of Him to whom thou hast committed himself, be ready, as the stronger, to yield to the weaker. Give, out of thy abundance, to him whose state of desti- tution asks it of thee. Not the taking, grasping, self-engrossing spirit of the world must be that of my followers ; but the giving, yielding, liberal charity, which " seeketh not her own," but her neighbour's good. The spirit in short of this, the negative side of the law for the life of the Christian community, may be sum- med up in the words of Paul, " Kemember the words of the Lord Jesus, how he said. It is blessed rather to give than to take." 2 (Acts xx. 35.) 1 These three examples form an anticlimax, descending from the greater to the less injury : 1. Attacking the very person and in person. 2. Attacking the property and through the law to use for the benefit of the indi- vidual. 3. Attacking the rights and through the despotic custom of the state to use for the public service. 2 The words and order of the original are, M*a; * ^XX> 3 To a people accustomed to trace a symbolical meaning in num- bers, no more significant number could have been chosen for such a purpose than 22, the point where the Hebrew Alphabet reaches its climax. It is enclosed by three times seven verses on either side. STROPHE III. The last strophe, like the first, contains two propositions, C and D, the first relating to the character of Israel, and the second to that of God : and these two are in like manner enlarged on in two divisions, C and D, so that the third strophe is parallel and anti- phonal to the first. C. (ver. 26). I said, I would scatter them into corners, &c. that is = They deserve utter extermination. D. (ver. 27). Were it not that I feared the provoking of the enemy, &c. that is = But the glory of my name requires that mercy should triumph over justice. These two propositions are then enlarged upon and enforced each by two topics or reasons in 8 verses, C and D, which are subdi- vided into 4 and 4, beginning each with FOR. C = They deserve utter extermination (ver. 26). C. FOR, 1st, v. 28. They are a nation void of counsel, &c. v. 29. O that they were ?ise, that they understood this, That they would consider their latter end ! that is, the fearful end, or doom, to which their infatuated con- duct will lead them ; referring to ver. 20, " I will see what their end shall be." ! 1 An additional proof, were such needed, that the " nation" here described is that of the Israelites, and not their enemies, as Castalio and other commentators maintain. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. V. 30. How can they be so devoid of understanding exclaims Moses, transferring himself in thought into those future times as if he were a spectator of the calamities of his people how is it that they do not perceive, that the reversal of the promise made to them of superiority over their enemies (Levit. xxvi. 8, comp. Deut. xxviii. 25), by their enemies, on the contrary, being so far superior to them, is owing not to the might of their adversaries, but to the LORD'S having " shut them up" in their hands ! How can they be guilty of the very error into which their idolatrous enemies are prone to fall, saying, ver. 27, " Our hand is high, and the LORD hath not done all this," since ver. 31, " their rock is not as our Rock, even our enemies themselves being judges !" FOR, 2dly, v. 32, 33, they are become entirely corrupted ! But, v. 34, their iniquity is treasured up before God (comp. Job xiv. 17, Hos. xiii. 12, Rom. ii. 5) against the day of wrath and vengeance, which, v. 35, shall overtake them in due tune, and shall make haste and not tarry. D. But the glory of my name requires, that mercy should finally triumph over justice, (ver. 27). D. FOR, 1st. v. 36, " the LORD shall judge 1 his people" for their rebellion : but when his judgments shall have accomplished their intended purpose in leading them to acknowledge God's hand in every event that befals them, then He will " repent himself for 1 It has been a question much contested among critics whether " judge" is here to bp taken in an unfavourable or favourable sense, as the verb "p*, deen, is used in both : sec Gen. xv. 14, and Psalm liv. 3 (1). The unfavourable meaning, however, is we think proved to be the true one by the definite connexion thus given to the latter part of the song, and by the beautiful antithesis produced between the two lines, For the Lord shall judye his people [for their rebellion] , And [then] repent himself for his servants, which tallies most aptly with the confession which on their conversion will be extorted from Israel : See now that. I, even I, am He : &c- I kill and I make alive ; I wound and I heal ; that is, both judgment and mercy belong to the Lord. Did any doubt, however, remain, it would be dissipated by reference to Heb. x. 30, where the unfavourable sense alone is apposite, as the author is warning the Hebrew Christians against apostasy. " For we know him that hath said, Vengeance belongeth unto me, I will recompense, saith the Lord. And again, the Lord shall judge his peo- ple. It is a fearful thing to fall [for judgment or vengeance] into the hands of the living God." 272 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. his servants." This, however, will not be until they are brought so low that all hope shall seem to be at an end (v. 36), till God, by His long abandonment of them, shall have seemed deaf to their cries for help, and to have referred them, like their fathers of old (see Judg. x. 13, 14), to the vanities which they have chosen, for deliverance from their evils (ver. 37, 38) : until at length they shall have indelibly engraven upon their own hearts the convic- tion, and be prepared to teach to all the nations the truth which they are, alas ! so slow to learn, that every event and thing, whe- ther prosperous or adverse, life and death, health and pestilence, success and defeat, all are to be referred to the immediate and direct agency of Him " who worketh all in all" without whom " a sparrow falleth not to the ground," and by whom " the very hairs of our heads are all numbered." (Ver. 39). FOR, 2dly, (ver. 40-42), every enemy who exalteth himself against the LORD must be humbled. If not even his own people shall escape judgment, how fearful will be the vengeance which shall overtake his adversaries, who will take no warning from His dealings with His people whom He has set up on high to be a light and a beacon to others, or who, instead of sympathizing with them, take delight in their persecutions and sufferings ! The song accordingly concludes with a call to all the nations to rejoice in the mercies which the Lord has in store for Israel, since their own blessings are intimately involved in theirs. " Rejoice, ye nations, 1 his people" if now by Israel's rejection taken for a time to be God's people (see ver. 21), much more so by their restoration, if only they are taught wisdom and submis- sion by God's dealings with Israel ; for " if the fall of them be the riches of the world, and the diminishing of them, the riches of the Gentiles ; how much more their fulness !" 1 There is nothing in the Hebrew answering to the word " with' 11 inserted by our translators, or to the f^tra of the Seventy, whose version St Paul follows in Rom. iv. 10 : but the meaning is substantially the same, as the call addressed to the Gentiles " Rejoice, ye nations," must be understood in connexion with the announce- ment just made of God's ultimate mercy to Israel, and is equivalent to Rejoice along with Israel. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 273 SECTION XXI. Our next example shall be Deborah's Song of Triumph (Judges v.), on occasion of the signal victory which Israel obtained over the forces of Jabin king of Canaan, who "for twenty years had mightily oppressed the children of Israel," and whose army was commanded by Sisera, a general terrible for his valour and conduct. This noble burst of patriotic song may challenge comparison with the finest specimens of lyric composition of any age or country. The strophical arrangement is that given by Bertheau, in his Commen- tary on the Book of Judges, contained in vol. vi. of the "Kurzgefass- tes exegetisches Handbuch zum Alten Testament." The translation is modelled after the spirited version of Milman, to imitate in some degree the rhythmical flow of the original ; but follows still more closely the Hebrew, preserving, as nearly as the idiom of the Eng- lish language will permit, the very order of the words, and the characteristic expressions and repetitions in the original language. The song is most symmetrically divided into three strophes, of three times three verses each, with an introductory and conclud- ing verse at the beginning and end, out of the regular rhythmical structure (vv. 1 and 30), while the commencement and close of the central strophe are in like manner distinguished by a self-ex- citing apostrophe, addressed by the poetess to herself (ver. 11, and ver. 20, last line), standing out from the regular structure of the poem. After the introductory verse, the first strophe describes the state of Israel previous to the victory : the first three verses (2-4) looking back to the glories of Israel's first separation as a people by the mighty God of Israel ; the second three (5-7), to the times of hostile oppression, consequent on their desertion of God ; the last three (8-10), summoning all classes to join in a song of praise for the happy change. This strophe may be regarded as introductory, since the song of triumph begins properly with the second strophe. The central strophe is preceded by an animated apostrophe of Deborah to herself and Barak, as the leaders of the triumph 274 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. (v. 11). She then in three stanzas, each of three verses (12-20), gives a glowing description of the mustering of the tribes, and of the battle, and lastly, scarce pausing for an instant at the deci- sive moment of the fight, in a single line 1 to excite herself to a fresh outburst of song, she hurries on in Strophe III. (2129), to describe the flight and entire discomfiture of the hostile army, and the miserable end of its chief summing up the whole in the concluding verse (v. 30) with a solemn invocation to Jehovah to overwhelm with like destruction all His enemies, and to vouchsafe a glorious triumph to them " that love Him." I. 1. For the leaders taking the lead in Israel, For the people offering themselves freely, Praise ye Jehovah ! 2. Hear, O ye kings ! give ear, ye princes ! I to Jehovah, I will lift the song, I will sound the harp to Jehovah, God of Israel. 3. Jehovah ! when thou earnest forth from Seir, When thou marchedst out from the field of Edom, The earth trembled, the heavens also poured down, Yea, the clouds poured down waters ! 4. The mountains quaked before Jehovah, Yonder Sinai, before Jehovah, God of Israel ! 5. In the days of Shamgar, son of Anath, In Jael's days, untrodden were the highways, Through winding by-paths stole the travellers. 6. Ceased had the leaders in Israel, they ceased, Until that I, Deborah, arose, Till that I arose, a mother in Israel. 7. They chose new gods : THEN war was in their gates ! Was buckler seen, or lance, Among forty thousand in Israel? 8. My heart is to the nobles of Israel ! To those who freely offered themselves of the people 1 Praise ye Jehovah ! 1 Attached to v. 20, and not forming a separate verse, -which would have deranged another symmetry in the numbers, on which I shall remark afterwards, as confirmative of the correctness of Berlheau's arrangement. SG'UIPTUttE PARALLELISM. 275 9. Ye that ride ou snow-whiu- asses, Ye that sit at ease on couches, Ye that plod on foot the way catch up the song 10. From the voice of the archers by the watering places : There they recite the righteous deeds of Jehovah, The righteous deeds of his rulers in Israel. THEN came down to the gates the people of Jehovah ! II. 1 1 . Awake, awake, Deborah ! Awake, awake, utter a song ! Rise up, Barak, and lead thy captives captive, thou son of Abinoam : 1 2. THEN " Come down [I said], ye remnant of nobles, of people ! 41 O Jehovah, come down for me, amidst the mighty !" 13. Out of Ephraim [came] those whose dwelling is by Atnalek ; After thee [came] Benjamin, amongst thy host ; Out of Machir came down the rulers ; From Zebulon, those that bore the leader's staff. 14. And one were the princes of Issachar with Deborah ; Issachar and Barak were as one : They burst into the valley on his footsteps. By the water-channels of Reuben, Great were the proposings of hearts ! 15. Why sat'st thou still amid thy sheepfolds? To listen to the bleatings of the flocks ? At the water-channels of Reuben, Great were the exposings of hearts ! 16. Gilead lingered on the farther shore of Jordan ; And Dan, why tarried he by his ships ? Asher sat still on the ocean-strand, And harboured secure in his creeks. 17. But Zebulon was a people that risked their souls unto death, And Naphtali, on the high places of the field. 1 8. On came the kings they fought : THEN fought the kings of Canaan, By Taanach, by Megiddo's waters : No prize of silver won they ! 19. From the heavens they fought Fought, in their courses, the stars against Sisera : 20. The river Kishon swept them away, That river of battles, the river Kishon. Tread on, my soul, in might ! 276 - SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. III. 21. THEN stamped the hoofs of the horses, At the headlong flight, at the flight of the mighty. 22. " Curse ye Meroz," said the angel of Jehovah, " Curse ye bitterly them that dwell therein ; " Because they came not to the help of Jehovah, To the help of Jehovah, amid the mighty. 23. Blest above women be Jael, "Wife of Heber the Kenite ! Above all women in the tent, let her be blessed 1 24. Water he asked she gave him milk, The curdled milk she reached, in her costliest bowl. 25. Her hand to the tent-pin she set, Her right hand to the workman's hammer ; And Sisera she smote she clave his head ; She bruised she pierced his temples : 26. At her feet he bowed ; he fell ; he lay ; At her feet he bowed ; he fell : Where he bowed, there he fell dead. 27. From the window looked forth and cried The mother of Sisera, through the lattice : " Wherefore delayeth his chariot to come ? " Why tarry the wheels of his chariots?" 28. The wise of her noble ladies replied, Yea, she returned to herself reply : 29. u Have they not found, not shared the spoil ? " One maiden two maidens, for every warrior? " A spoil of coloured garments for Sisera, " A spoil of coloured garments, of broidery, ' A coloured garment two broidered robes, for the necks of the spoiler ?" 30. So perish all thine enemies, O Jehovah! And they that love him be as the sun when he goeth forth in his might ! STROPHE I. The State of Israel previous to the Victory. The poem opens with an introductory verse, calling upon all the Israelites to praise the Lord for the new spirit of courage and SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. self-devotion infused into rulers and people. Then, in three times three verses, the prophetess describes the state of Israel pre- vious to the victory. In the first three verses (2-4), she calls upon the neighbouring princes and all the mighty of the earth to listen in submission and reverence to the praises of the might of Jehovah, the God of Israel and she naturally reverts to the time when He first en- tered into covenant with them as His people, and the manifesta- tion then made of the glory and power of Him, before whom all nature trembles. 1 5-7. Quickly, however, the time passed away that a lively sense of God's presence and power nerved the arm of his people in every conflict with their enemies. In striking contrast to that earlier period, the prophetess describes the late wretched state of despond- ency and oppression in Israel, when the highways were deserted and all traffic ceased, from dread of the enemy. The cause, how- ever, was but too apparent " They chose new gods," and de- serted the Kock of Israel. 8-10. In the next three verses, she expresses her own heartfelt sympathy with those of the princes and people who had shewn themselves zealous in the cause of the Lord, and she calls on the three several ranks of the people to join the warriors, in praising Jehovah for the new spirit which He had infused, and the deliver- ance which He had wrought for Israel. " THEN," ver. 7, in the years that are past " war was in their gates." But a new spirit came over the people ; and with their altered tone, as re- markable a change was wrought in the appearance of the land. " THEN," the strophe ends, bringing into marked prominence by the characteristic word of the song THEN (which indicates the various stages of its progress), the remarkable change when the people boldly issued forth from their places of concealment (com- pare 1 Sam. xiii. 6), to appear again in the place of public resort and council : THEN, came down to tbe gates the people of Jehovah ! 1 Jehovah is here represented as coming in majesty by Edom, from the laud of pro- mise where He had revealed himself to the fathers of the nation, to Mount Sinai, in order to meet with His people: whereas, in Deut. xxxiii. 2, Moses describes only His descent from Mount Sinai to enter into covenant with them, when " Moses brought forth the people out of the camp to meet with God, and they stood at the nether part of tha- Mount." Exod. six. 17. 278 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. STROPHE II. The Mustering of the Tribes to Battle, and the Victory. Having in the introductory strophe called on all of every rank to join in the song of triumph, Deborah preludes the central strophe by a sudden apostrophe to herself and Barak to celebrate the victory just obtained (ver. 11), herself by the strains of the song, and Barak by leading forth his captives in triumphal pro- cession. " THEN" she resumes (v. 12), reiterating the emphatic word with which the first strophe had closed ; and she carries back the hearer to the time when first her rousing appeals sounded in the ears of the people, and her cry was raised to Jehovah to vouch- safe to her His presence and blessing. In the two first stanzas she brings before us the various tribes of Israel preparing for the combat : in the first three verses (12-14), those who willingly offered themselves ; in the next three (15-17), those who failed to respond to the summons. It will be observed, however, that the two classes are not strictly confined to their respective stanzas. Through a skilful arrangement, the halting of Reuben between two opinions is graphically depicted by assigning the first two lines, describing the promising commencement of their deliberations, to the first stanza ; while the preponderating number, the last four lines, in which the untoward issue is recorded, class them with those who declined to come " to the help of the Lord." 1 To com- 1 This is one of the most remarkable proofs that I have yet met with, of the great accuracy of the Masoretic punctuation. On a first consideration, every one would have been inclined, with Ewald and Bertheau, to pronounce it decidedly erroneous in the present instance, and to maintain that the last two lines of ver. 14 ought to have been joined to the second stanza, and to begin v. 15. The parallelistic division into stanzas now first reveals the superiority of the other punctuation. In another aspect, however, which the parallelism developes, these two lines are con- nected with ver. 15, as they form together with it an Epanodos : By the water-channels of Reuben, Great were the proposings of hearts ! Why sat'st thou still amid thy sheepfolds? To listen to the bleatings of the flocks ? At the water-channels of Reuben, Great were the exposings of hearts ! There is a remarkable paronomasia, or play of words, in the second and sixth lines of the original, which it 1m been attempted, very imperfectly, to reproduce in the SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 279 pensate, however, for the two lines of the first stanza, occupied by Reuben, which promised at first so fair, but ended in disappoint- ment, the last two lines of the second stanza celebrate the distin- guished self-devotion of Zebulon and Naphtali, that the enume- ration might conclude, as it began, with the praise of those who shewed themselves zealous in the service of the Lord. The last stanza (18-20) describes the conflict and the utter dis- appointment of the proud hopes of the enemy, the very elements conspiring together for their destruction. STROPHE III. The Sequel of the Bottle the flight ; death of the hostile chief; and disappointment of every vain hope of the enemies of the Lord and his people. The last strophe, like the two former, consists of three times three verses, with a supernumerary verse at the close. The first stanza begins with a description of the flight ; from which the prophetess turns abruptly to curse the inhabitants of Meroz, who refused, even when the victory was gained, to aid their countrymen in cutting off the Canaanites in their flight ; and commends, in marked contrast, the conduct of Jael, a stranger to Israel, though allied to them by blood, who so identi- fied herself with their cause, as to feel called upon to cut off the chief of that accursed race, of whom Israel was commanded to " destroy all that breathed," Josh. x. 40. translation. The word first employed to denote the deliberations of Renben is com- mendatory : 3\> 'ppn hikkai-Iaiv, expressive of llieir high resolves, or " projtosings of heart." By the reiteration of almost the same words to mark the issue of their delibe- rations, the poetess seems at first to repeat her commendation ; but by the slight change of a letter, it is converted into a biting sarcasm a^"^?" hikrai-laiv disclosures by searching.? " erposings of heart." I am happy to find that Dr Robinson, in his translation of this song in vol. i. of the American Biblical Repository, agrees with me in regarding this paronomasia as no mere unmeaning change, as other commentators seem to have done. His imitation of the paronomasia is Among the streams of Reuben, Great were the resolvings of heart. Among the streams of Reuben, Great were the revolvings of heart. 280 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. The death of the chief occupies the next stanza (24-26). Suddenly, by a beautiful transition, the scene is changed ; and in the last three verses (27-29), the mother of Sisera is introduced in impatient expectation, yet confident of her son's triumphant return, and consoling herself for the delay with the thoughts of the rich booty anticipated ; the several articles of which she is represented, with the vanity and frivolity so characteristic of an Eastern female, as counting over in imagination, " repeating, am- plifying, and pausing on each, as if already in her possession." 1 The overwhelming reverse that awaits her vain exultations is strikingly indicated by the sudden and unexpected apostrophe of the prophetess, So perish all thine enemies, Jehovah ! THEN ( T az), as has been already remarked, is the character- istic word of this song, 2 marking out distinctively by its recur- rence each progressive stage of the action in the poem. Where it first occurs in the middle of Strophe I. (ver. 7), it marks the miserable state of the country in the times of Israel's apostasy from the Lord. THEN, war was in their gates ! In ver. 10, at the close of Strophe I., it preludes, and repeated at the commencement of Strophe II. (ver. 12) it emphatically marks, the striking change now effected by the stirring appeals and ex- hortations of Deborah. Next, in ver. 18, it brings vividly before us the first furious charge of the confederate kings rushing upon their long-oppressed and despised foes : On came the kings they fought : THEN fought the kings of Canaan. Lastly, at the commencement of Strophe III. (ver. 21), it points 1 See this passage finely illustrated in Lowth's Lectures on Hebrew Poetry, Lect. XIII. 2 So "|X ach, " only" is the characteristic word of Psalm Ixxiii. ; F'1 netzach, " for ever," of Psalm Ixxiv. ; H^ri haireem, " exalt," of Psalm Ixxv. ; ^ yawrai, " fear," of Psalm Ixxvi. &c. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 281 to the critical turn of the fight, when the enemy was broken and fled in headlong haste from the field. Placed thus graphically, with fine pictorial effect, at the pro- minent points of action in the Song, this particle has at the same time been skilfully employed by the poetess to subserve another purpose to indicate the division of the strophes. It stands at the beginning of a verse only where it is intended to distinguish the commencement of Strophe II. and Strophe III. We are thus furnished with a strong confirmation of the correctness of Ber- theau's arrangement. Bat a still more decisive proof of its correctness is at once made apparent to the eye, by restoring, as we have done, the whole poem to its original symmetrical form, and numbering aright its verses. While the lines (ver. 1,11, the last line of ver. 20, and ver. 30) intended to point out the divisions of the strophes stand in one view out of the rhythmical order, they are, by a nice adjustment, made consistent with another arrangement, which runs side by side without interference with the first. The whole song, it will be observed, contains three Tens or 30 verses, each strophe con- sisting of exactly 10 verses. The necessity of preserving this arrangement intact, at once explains the reason why the transi- tion from Strophe II. to Strophe III. is distinguished only by a single line, attached to verse 20, and not by a whole verse. SECTION XXII. The examples next to be adduced exhibit so remarkable evi- dence of artificial arrangement, that it will be difficult even for the most incredulous to resist the force of it. They are taken from Hengstenberg's Commentary on the Psalms, in which the symmetry of the strophical arrangements, and numerical divisions noted, does not strike the reader so forcibly as it would otherwise do, if it had been represented in a visible form to the eye. some slight deviations from his arrangements which I have per- mitted to myself, in order to render the symmetry still more com- 282 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. plete, the reader may compare his Commentary, a work which is, or ought to be, in the hands of every Biblical Scholar. Hengstenberg has shewn that Psalms civ., cv., and cvi. form a connected series, or trilogy of Psalms, composed towards the end of the Babylonish captivity, when the Lord was beginning to shew some tokens of returning favour towards His people perhaps immediately after the capture of Babylon by Cyrus the Great. They are evidently designed to comfort the Jews in their present weak and distressed condition, and to encourage them to look for- ward with confiding trust to the promised deliverance, by argu- ments deduced from God's works of Creation, of Providence, and of Kedemption. The structure of these Psalms is most symme- trical, and the similarity in all three so remarkable, that it seems impossible we can be mistaken in attributing it to studied design on the part of the composer. Each Psalm is divided into seven parts or strophes : in each the central division is a single verse, round which the other six are grouped, and which forms the cardinal point on which the whole subject of each Psalm turns. In the two last Psalms this central verse is the same, ver. 23 ; the first three strophes, or first half of the Psalm, end- ing with the alphabetical number, 22. The connexion of the three Psalms is further indicated by their being the first in the whole collection that end with Hallelujah, and the last Psalms of the Middle or Fourth Book. PSALM civ. The subject of this Psalm evidently is the praise of God from the works of creation, and from the careful provision which He has made for the welfare of His creatures. The praise of God, however, from nature is here, as Hengstenberg says, not the end, but the means to an end. The great object of the Psalmist is thereby to awaken in the people of the Lord, now suffering under oppression from the heathen, the assurance that much less can He be unmindful of the moral world, but that there shall be a final triumph of the godly over the wicked. The first and last verses of the Psalm evidently separate them- selves from the rest, being both triplets, both containing the same expression. " Bless the Lord, my soul," and by their including SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 283 between them the substance or quintessence of the Psalm. When we look at them in connexion, we see that the Psalmist's object is to shew that the " greatness, honour, and majesty" of the Lord, v. 1, which are so conspicuous in all His works of nature, as de- veloped in the intermediate verses, shall be consummated (v. 35) in the wicked " being no more." God made the earth to be inha- bited by creatures who would shew forth His praise : whoever, therefore, obstructs His glory, shall " be consumed out of the earth." Verse 18 as evidently stands apart by itself. It does not con- nect immediately with the preceding verses which treat of the watering of the earth for the support of its plants and animals much less with those that follow. It stands in the middle be- tween both, being the point of transition from the one to the other. It forms the central verse of the Psalm (there being 17 verses on either side of it), around which the whole turns, it being expressive of the idea, that no part of God's creation is deprived of His providential care. Even the hunted wild goats find a re- fuge from their pursuers in the bare mountain summits, and that " feeble folk," the conies, take shelter in their rocks. " If God then so care for the meanest of His creatures, will He not much more care for you, ye of little faith ! " is the inference which the Psalmist would have the Church to draw from the whole Psalm. Though hunted as the wild goats, and feeble as the conies, the Lord is to them a high rock and refuge. This central verse has on either side of it one strophe of 4 verses, and another of 12. " The signature of the world, and of the people of God (see pp. 159, 160) are appropriately conjoined to- gether in a Psalm, the object of which is to deduce from what God has clone for the former, what He will do for the latter. The first strophe of 12 verses (Strophe III.) is subdivided into 7 (resolving itself into 4 and 3), and 5 : in the other (Strophe V.) the 12 is subdivided into 5 and 7 (resolving itself into 3 and 4)." The strophical arrangement may be thus represented : Verses in St replies, . 1.4.12.1. Or subdivided, . 1.4. 4+15 + 5.1.5 + 8 + 4.4 . 1 These figures read the same either way, backwards or forwards. 284 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. PSALM CIV. A meditation on God's wondrous care for all his creatures manifested in Hix works of nature, as a pledge that he will never forget His Church, and suffering people. Bless the Lord for His greatness and glory, as displayed in His works: 1. Bless the LORD, O my soul! O LORD my God, thou art very great ; Thou art clothed with honour and majesty. II. Days of in the glorious light, and the formation of tlie heavens and the CREATION. earth ; 1st Day. 2. Who coverest thyself with light as with a garment : Who stretchest out the heavens like a curtain : lid Day. 3. Who layeth the beams of his chambers in the waters : Who maketh the clouds his chariot : Who walketh upon the wings of the wind : 4. Who maketh his angels spirits ; His ministers a flaming fire : 5. Who laid the foundations of the earth, That it should not be removed for ever. III. in the exclusion of the overwhelming floods of waters from the dry land; Illd Day. [ 6. Thou coveredst it with the deep as with a garment : The waters stood above the mountains. 7. At thy rebuke they fled ; At the voice of thy thunder they hasted away. 8. They go up by the mountains ; they go down by the valleys, Unto the place which thou hast founded for them. 9. Thou hast set a bound that they may not pass over ; That they turn not again to cover the earth. which yet He waters by sending streams into its valleys / 10. He sendeth the springs into the valleys, Which run among the hills. 11. They give drink to every beast of the field : The wild asses quench their thirst. 12. By them shall the fowls of the heaven have their habitation, Which sing among the branches. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 285 and rain, wliere those could not avail, for the nourishment of man and beast, 13. He watereth the hills from his chambers : The earth is satisfied with the fruit of thy works. 14. He causeth the grass to grow for the cattle, And herb for the service of man ; That he may bring forth food out of the earth ; 15. And wine that muketh glad the heart of man, And oil to make his face to shine, And bread which strengtheneth man's heart. 1 6. The trees of the LORD are full of sap ; The cedars of Lebanon which he hath planted ; 17. Where the birds make their nests : As for the stork, the fir-trees are her house. IV. Even the mountain summits are fitted for a refuge to living creatures. 18. The high hills are a refuge for the wild goats ; And the rocks for the conies. V. Thence let us ascend to the contemplation of the sun and moon, and the blessings which they confer on God's creatures on earth : IVth Day. 19. He appointed the moon for seasons : The sun knoweth his going down. 20. Thou makest darkness, and it is night : Wherein all the beasts of the forest do creep forth. 21. The young lions do roar after their prey, And seek their meat from God. 22. The sun ariseth, they gather themselves together, And lay them down in their dens. 23. Man goeth forth unto his work And to his labour until the evening, 286 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. Vth Dav. and returning again to the earth and to the depths Mow, ice find them teeming with living creatures. 24. O LORD, bow manifest are thy works! In wisdom hast thou made them all : The earth is full of thy riches. 25. So is this great and wide sea, Wherein are things creeping innumerable, Both small and great beasts. 26. There go the ships : There is that leviathan, whom thou has made to play therein. All depend on God for support, for life and death ; as after the Flood, He can make all again new, 27. These wait all upon thee, That thou mayest give them their meat in due season. 28. That thou givest them they gather : Thou openest thine hand, they are filled with good. 29. Thou hidest thy face, they are troubled : Thou takest away their breath, they die, and return to their dust. 30. Thou sendest forth thy Spirit, they are created : And thou renewest the face of the earth. VI. All, even the mightiest, shall conduce to God's praise. Vlth Day. 31. The glory of the LORD shall endure for ever: The LORD shall rejoice in his works, 32. He looketh on the earth and it trembleth : He toucheth the hills, and they smoke. 33. I will sing unto the LORD as long as I live ; I will sing praise to my God while I have my being. 34. My meditation of him shall be sweet : I will be glad in the LORD. VII. The wicked, therefore, cannot continue to oppose His glory and His Church. 35. Let the sinners be consumed out of the earth, And let the wicked be no more. Bless thou the LORD, O my soul. Praise ye the LORD. Hengstenberg draws attention to the fact that the name Jeho- vah, or the LORD, occurs in this Psalm 10 times in all (including Hallelujah), 3 times in the first half, and 7 times in the second. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 287 The order of the days of creation is in general followed in the description of the Psalmist. Thus we have the work of the first and second days in v. 2-5, of the third in v. 6-18, of the fourth in v. 19-23, of the fifth in v. 24-26, and an allusion to th seventh in v. 31. " The differences are occasioned not merely by the distinction between the poet and the historian, and by the circumstance that, whilst the historian regarded the creation in itself, the Psalmist re- gards it here only as it is still continued in the preservation of nature, but also by the Psalmist's object being not to represent the greatness of God in nature generally, but specially in His providential care of living creatures. The subject of the Psalm is the praise of God from His works, all of which He has wisely ordered so that his living creatures are fully cared for. This ex- plains why in the series of days the sixth day, on which He gave life to these creatures, is entirely omitted. His careful provision for this life was the single object which the Psalmist had in view to enforce in all the topics which he has handled," and hence there is no stanza specially devoted to it. The student may compare, with these remarks of Hengsten- berg's, on the omission of the work of the sixth day, the reasons which have been assigned above, pp. 230, 231, for the omission of the Tenth Commandment in our Saviour's renewal of the Second Table of the Law in the Sermon on the Mount. PSALM cv. God's care for His people, as evinced in the works of nature, was the subject of Psalm civ. His care for them even in their distress and bondage, as evinced in history, is the subject of Ps. cv. The middle verse is the 23d (with 22 verses on either side). Israel also came into Egypt ; And Jacob sojourned in the land. This being the central verse round which the whole subject turns, it is evident that the Psalm was written during the Baby- lonish captivity, of which the former bondage in Egypt is here regarded as a counterpart and emblem. The reason for the Psalmist's enlarging so fully on the history of Joseph (17-22) 288 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. becomes strikingly apparent, the moment we perceive that he sees in Daniel a second Joseph, sent in like manner before the great body of his people to the land of captivity, and raised, by his in- terpretation of the dreams of the monarch, from a state of servi- tude, to hold the second place in the kingdom, that he might be a protector for his people. The history of the past is here presented as a mirror in which to view the present ; and the argument is : As in the earlier part of the history of our forefathers, we see a counterpart of that superintending care and providence which have watched over us hitherto (1-22) previously to our sojourning in this land of our captivity, which answers to the Egypt of those days (v. 23) ; so let us feel assured, from the sequel of that his- tory, that the same power and faithfulness will deliver us now which effected our previous redemption from the bondage of Egypt (v. 24r-45). This Psalm, like the preceding, is divided into seven strophes, the first and last of which consist of 7 verses, subdivided, ac- cording to Hengstenberg, into 4 and 3, or rather, as it appears to me, into 3, 1, 3. The 3 decads that remain are grouped round v. 23 as their middle point, forming two strophes on either side of it ; the first of these in both cases (Strophes II. and V.) con- sisting of 5 verses, and the second (Strophes III. and VI.) consist- ing of 10 verses, resolving themselves into subdivisions of 3, 4, 3- or 3 and 7, this last again subdividing into 4 and 3. This will be rendered still more apparent, when stated thus : Verses in strophes, .7.5. 10 1 5 ~ ^ 10 . 7 Or subdivided, . 7-5-3 + 4 + 3 1 5 3 + 4 + 3 . 7 PSALM CV. I. The judgments and wonders of (he Lord in the past history of His people, as ground of joyful hope for the future, if (central ver.) they " seek His face evermore" and " remember His marvellous works" (v. 5). 1. O give thanks unto the LORD ; call upon his name ; Make known his deeds among the people. , 2. Sing unto him, sing psalms unto him : | Talk ye of all his wondrous works. 2. Glory ye in his holy name : Let the heart of them rejoice that seek the LORH. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM . 289 4. Seek the LOKD and bis strength : Seek his face evermore. 5. Remember his marvellous works that he hath done ; His wonders, and the judgments of his mouth ; 6. O ye seed of Abraham his servant, Ye children of Jacob his chosen. 7. He is the LORD our God : His judgments are in all the earth. II. For the Lord remembers for ever His covenant made with their fathers, of the permanent possession of Canaan. 8. He hath remembered his covenant for ever, The word which he commanded to a thousand generations. 9. Which covenant he made with Abraham, And his oath unto Isaac ; 10. And confirmed the same unto Jacob for a law, And to Israel for an everlasting covenant : 1 1 . Saying, Unto thee will I give the land of Canaan, The lot of your inheritance : 12. When they were but a few men in number; Yea, very few, and strangers in it. III. True to it, He protected them in every danger. 13. When they went from one nation to another, From one kingdom to another people ; 14. He suffered no man to do them wrong: Yea, he reproved kings for their sakes ; 15. [Saying], Touch not mine anointed, And do my prophets no harm. When for a time He sent them to a strange land, yet He sent before them one of their ovm brethren (as Daniel now) for their protection. 16. Moreover he called for a famine upon the land : He brake the whole staff of bread. 17. He sent a man before them, even Joseph, Who was sold for a servant : 18. Whose feet they hurt with fetters : He was laid in iron : 19. Until the time that his word came : The word of the LORD tried him. T 290 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. Whom, for interpreting his dreams, the Icing of the land set to be over his princes. 20. The king sent and loosed him ; Even the ruler of the people, and let him go free. 21. He made him lord of his house, And ruler of all his substance , 22. To bind his princes at pleasure ; And teach his senators wisdom. IV. 23. Israel also came into Egypt ; And Jacob sojourned in the land. V. But God redeemed them thence by great signs : 24. And he increased his people greatly ; And made them stronger than their enemies. 25. He turned their heart to hate his people, To deal subtilly with his servants. 26. He %ent Moses his servant ; And Aaron whom he had chosen. 27. They shewed his signs among them, And wonders in the land of Ham. 28. He sent darkness, and made it dark ; And they rebelled not against his word. VI. by plagues inflicted on their enemies, first alarming and disgusting ; Plague 1. 29. He turned their waters into blood, And slew their fish. Plague 2. 30. Their land brought forth frogs in abundance, In the chambers of their kings. Plague 3. 31. He spake, and there came divers sorts of flies, Plague 4. And lice in all their coasts. SCKll'TUKE PARAI.I.K1.I-M. 291 2 . then destrudice to the food of man and beaut : Plague 5. 32. He gave them hail for rain, And flaming fire in their land. 33. He smote their vines also and their fig trees ; And brake the trees of their coasts, Plague G. 34. He spake, and the locusts came, And caterpillars, and that without number ; 35. And did eat up all the herbs in their land, And devoured the fruit of their ground. 3. touching at last the life of man, so that their enemies pressed gifts upon them to depart. Plague 7. 36. He smote also all the firstborn in their land, The chief of all their strength. 37. He brought them forth also with silver and gold : And there was not one feeble person among their tribes. 38. Egypt was glad when they departed : For the fear of them fell upon them. VII. By His care for His People in the Wilderness, and giving them the Promised Land, God has demonstrated (central v.) His remembrance of His Covenant. 39. He spread a cloud for a covering ; And fire to give light in the night. 40. The people asked, and he brought quails, And satisfied them with the bread of heaven. 41. He opened the rock, and the waters gushed out; They ran in the dry places like a river'. 42. For heVemembered his holy promise, And Abraham his servant. 43. And he brought forth his people with joy, And his chosen with gladness : 44. And gave them the lands of the heathen : And they inherited the labour of the people ; 45. That they might observe his statutes, And keep his laws. Praise ye the LORD. In the first and last strophes, which each consist of seven verses, I have said that I consider the threefold division to be more correct than that given by Hengstenberg. By adopting this division in Strophe I., the central thought (v. 4), to which the minds of the people would be directed as the great means of has- tening the fulfilment of their hopes of deliverance would be, 292 SCTJPTUUE PAUALLELtfcjM. Seek tho LORD, and his strength : Seek his face evermore : and, according to the usual connexion in the threefold division, this idea is carried on and unfolded in the third member of the arrangement (v. 5-7) : Remember his marvellous works that he hath done, &c. This would give a more pointed significance to the beginning of Strophe II., which commences the great subject of the Psalm to which Strophe I. was introductory. " Kemember," ye, " the Lord's marvellous works" (v. 5), for (v. 8) " He hath remembered his covenant for evermore." In the closing Strophe (VII.) accordingly, which consists, like the first, of seven verses, after the long intermediate details given, the whole would be most appropriately summed up in what be- comes the central verse (v. 42), if we adopt the threefold division. For he remembered his holy promise, And Abraham his servant : while at the same time, by the closing verse (45), the hearers were brought back again to the central thought of Strophe I., re- minding them of the condition necessary on their part for obtain- ing their desired return, and of the purpose for which God settled their fathers in the land of promise : That they might observe his statutes, And keep his laws. Here, however, a formidable objection presented itself, which threatened to wrest from them all the hopes which the arguments of these two Psalms had awakened. Are not the sins of the people greater than can be forgiven ? To this the answer is PSALM cvi. True, is still the central thought of its 1st Strophe, Blessed are they that keep judgment, And he that doeth righteousness at all times. This is the great end, and the distinguishing character of God's SCRIPTURE PARALLEL 1 -J;r', people,, at which they must ever aim : still, our sins part not be- t \veeii us and the Lord : " for he is good : For his mercy endureth for ever." (v. 1). We call to mind the sins of our fathers (6-43), manifold and aggravated as they were, and confess that ours have been equally heinous : still when they cried unto Him (v. 45), He remembered for them his covenant, And repented according to the multitude of his mercies. Now, therefore, that (central verse of Strophe VII. v. 46) He has begun to shew signs of returning favour to His people, we are encouraged to hope and pray for the forgiveness of our sins, and that " the Lord our God" will turn and " save us, and gather us from among the heathen" (v. 47). The circumstances of the people are here defined precisely. A change for the better is preparing for Israel, since God has turned the minds of their heathen masters towards them (v. 46). Still, however, they are in captivity (v. 47). The time, consequently, is towards the end of the Babylonish captivity, probably imme- diately after the conquest of Babylon by the Medo-Persian power, and answers exactly to the circumstances under which Daniel of- fered up the prayer contained in his ninth chapter, with which this Psalm presents some remarkable correspondences. Both use the expressions, " We have sinned, and have committed iniquity, and have done wickedly" (Dan. ix. 5, Ps. cvi. 6), taken from Solo- mon's prayer at the dedication of the Temple, 1 Kings viii. 47. As the Psalmist first connects God's remembering his covenant to His people, with their remembering His works (cv. 5 and 8), ob- serving His statutes (cv. 42 and 45) and keeping His judgments (cvi. 3 and 4), and then goes on to confession of sins, (cvi. 6, . f To receive the instruction of wisdom, ! Justice, and judgment, and equity 4. j To give subtilty to the simple, [_ To the young man knowledge and discretion : 5. I" A wise man will hear, and will increase learning ; , j And a man of understanding shall attain unto wise couiiM/ls ; 6. j To understand a proverb, and the interpretation ; [ The words of the wise, and their dark sayings. Requisites on the part of the Learner. 7. The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge ; But fools despise wisdom and instruction. 1 8. My son, hear the instruction^ 1 thy father, And forsake not the law of thjKmother ; 0. For they shall be an ornament oi^race unto thy head, And chains about thy neck. The young must early make their choice. 1. Sinners present their allurements. The allurements offered. 10. My son, if sinners entice thee, Consent thou not. 1 1 . If they say, Come with us, Let us lay wait for blood, Let us watch privily for the innocent without cause ; 12. Let us swallow them up alive as the grave ; And whole as those that go down into the pit ; 13. We shall find all precious substance, We shall fill our houses with spoil : 1-4. Cast in thy lot among us ; Let us all have one purse : The consequences of compliance. 1 5. My son, walk not thou in the way with them ; Refrain thy foot from their path : 1 I have taken the liberty here of altering Bertheau's arrangement, by joining Terse 7 not with the first six verses, as he has done, but with verses 8 and 9. 302 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 16. For their feet run to evil, And make haste to shed blood. 17. Surely in vain the net is spread In the sight of any bird. 18. And they lay wait for their own blood ; They lurk privily for their own lives. 19. So are the ways of every one that is greedy of gain ; Which taketh away the life of the owners thereof. 2. Wisdom presents her invitations. Her earnest cries and exhortations. 20. Wisdom crieth without ; She uttereth her voice in the streets : 21. She crieth in the chief places of concourse, In the openings of the gates : In the city she uttereth her words, [saying], 22. How long, ye simple ones, will ye love simplicity ? And the scorners delight in their scorning, And fools hate knowledge ? 23. Turn you at my reproof: Behold I will pour out my Spirit unto you, I will make known my words unto you. Warnings against neglecting them. 24. Because I have called and ye refused ; I have stretched out my hand and no man regarded ; 25. But ye have set at nought all my counsel, And would none of my reproof: 26. I also will laugh at 'your calamity ; I will mock when your fear cometh ; 27. When your fear cometh as desolation, And your destruction cometh as a whirlwind ; When distress and anguish cometh upon you. The fearful consequences of obstinate neglect. 28. Then shall they call upon me but I will not answer ; They shall seek me early but they shall not find me. 29. For that they hated knowledge, And did not choose the fear of the LORD : 30. They would none of my counsel : They despised all my reproof. 31. Therefore shall they eat of the fruit of their own way, And be filled with their own devices. 32. For the turning away of the simple shall slay them, And the prosperity of fools shall destroy them. 33. But whoso hearkeneth unto me shall dwell safely, And shall be quiet from fear of evil. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 303 CHAP. II. But the cry of Wisdom must be met with corresponding earnestneu. 1. My son, if thou wilt receive my words, And hide my commandments with thee ; 2. So that thou incline thine ear unto wisdom, And apply thine heart to understanding ; 3. Yea, if thou criest after knowledge, And liftest up thy voice for understanding ; 4 . If thou seekest her as silver, And searchest for her, as for hid treasures ; Resulting Benefits. 1. Wisdom, as regards God, and divine duties : 5. Then shalt thou understand the fear of the LORD, And find the knowledge of God. 6. For the LORD giveth wisdom : Out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding, 7. He layeth up sound wisdom for the righteous : He is a buckler to them that walk uprightly. 8. He keepeth the paths of judgment, And preserveth the way of his saints. 2. Wisdom, as regards Man, and social duties : 9. Then shalt thou understand righteousness, and judgment, And equity ; yea, every good path. 10. When wisdom entereth into thine heart, And knowledge is pleasant unto thy soul ; 11. Discretion shall preserve thee, Understanding shall keep thee : Preserving thus the young from the seductions 1. of wicked Men : 12. To deliver thee from the way of the evil man, From the man that speaketh froward things ; 13. Who leave the paths of uprightness, To walk in the ways of darkness ; 14. Who rejoice to do evil, And delight in the frowardncss of the wicked ; 15. Whose ways are crooked, And they froward in their paths : 304 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 2. of wicked Women : 16. To deliver thee from the strange woman, Even from the stranger which flattereth with her words ; 17. Which forsaketh the guide of her youth, And forgetteth the covenant of her God. ] 8. For her house inclineth unto death, And her paths unto the dead. 19. None that go unto her return again, Neither take they hold of the paths of life. and ending in a nappy issue. 20. That thou mayest walk in the way of good men, And keep the paths of the righteous. 21 . For the upright shall dwell in the land, And the perfect shall remain in it. 22. But the wicked shall be cut off from the earth, And the transgressors shall be rooted out of it. The introductory six verses (i. 1-6) form in reality a long title in the style. of ancient works. Ver. 1 states what, according to modern usage, would be counted the proper Title of the Book ; ver. 2 states its twofold object : a, to impart practical wisdom and instruction to the young ; b, to increase the contem- plative knowledge even of the experienced : a, being expanded in a (ver. 3, 4) ; b in b (ver. 5, 6). The rest of Chap. I. is addressed to the young, and is divided into three sections. 1. The first three verses (7-9) prescribe the indispensable requisites on the part of the learner for reading the Book with profit and attaining to true wisdom. First and above all (ver. 7) there must be " the fear of the Lord," and a desire to learn of Him, without which even the first step to the attainment of wisdom cannot be taken ; and secondly, (ver 8, 9) as the proof and invariable accompaniment of this disposition, let there be that greatest ornament to the character of the young, a reveren- tial regard to the instructions of their parents, as being the representatives of Crod upon earth. (See p. 143) In the next two sections, consisting, the first of ten verses, and the second of fourteen (twice seven), the young are reminded of the momentous choice which they are called upon to make. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. '2. On the one hand (10-1'J), sinners will solicit them to join in their evil practices. This section consists of ten verses, dis- tinctly subdivided into five and five, the beginning of each stanza being marked by the address " My son." The first five verses de- scribe the allurements offered by the wicked ; the last five, the ruinous consequences of listening to their enticements. 3. On the other hand, (20-33), Wisdom presents her invita- tions. This section consists of fourteen verses, subdivided into three times four verses, with two concluding verses. In the first four verses (20-23), Wisdom is represented as addressing loud and earnest calls to the young, both of warning and of encouragement. In the next four (24-27), she deters from neglect of her invi- tations from fear of the consequences, lest she requite their ne- glect when calamity begins to overtake them. Finally, in the last four (28-31), she describes in full the irre- mediable consequences of this neglect if obstinately persisted in : the whole being summed up and enforced in two closing verses (32, 33) pronouncing the inevitable certainty of a coming judgment fraught with destruction to the despisers of her words, but with safety and peace to the obedient. CHAFFER II carries on the subject begun in Chap. I, and exhorts to earnest search after wisdom, by describing the beneficial effects which will flow from its attainment. Its alphabetical number of verses (22) divides into two halves containing eleven verses each, which again are subdivided into 4 -f- 4 + 3. First division of eleven verses, 1-11. First four verses (1-4). We have heard in the former chapter, how earnestly Wisdom seeks to gain the young : but her invi- tations must be met with a corresponding earnestness on their part, " Wisdom crieth without," i. 20 : but thou must " cry after knowledge," ii. 3. " She uttereth her voice in the street*," i. 2 but thou must " lift up thy voice for understanding," ii. 3. If these conditions are fulfilled (these first four verses import) 30() SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. " Then" the two benefits recounted in the next two stanzas of four and three verses will result, the beginning of each of these stanzas being distinguished by the words : Ver. 5. Then shalt them understand Ver. 9. Then shalt thou understand First benefit (ver. 5-8) : Then shall be vouchsafed to thee by the Lord, who alone can give it, the " fear of the Lord' (i. 7), and the spiritual " wisdom" of which it " is the beginning." Second benefit (ver. 9-11) : Then also shalt thou attain unto that " discretion and understanding" which lead to the discharge of the social duties of man to man to " understand righteousness, and judgment, and equity ; yea, every good path." The first four verses constitute the protasis, or antecedent term of a proposition ; the next two groups of four and three verses form the apodosis, or consequent term. Second division of eleven verses, 12-22. The second division is subdivided with equal distinctness as the first in 10 groups of 4, 4, and 3. The first two groups specify the two great dangers from which the young will be preserved by listening to the instructions of wisdom. 1. (v. 12-15) from the seductions of wicked men ; 2. (v. 16-19) from the seductions of wicked women ; who would entice the unwary to forbidden gains and pleasures. 3. (v. 20-22) In the last group of three verses, the choice of this "better part" is enforced, as in the end of Chap. I., by a reference to the blessings promised to the righteous, and the de- struction denounced against the wicked. The two first groups begin each with the words, " To deliver thee," and the seducers in both are characterized first by their speech, ver. 12 and ver. 16, and then by their paths, ver. 13-15 and ver. 17-19. BCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 3Q7 SECTION XXIV. Isaiah has also followed the strophical arrangement in the com- position of his prophecies. Let us take as examples chap. i. in the earlier prophecies, and chap. liii. in the later. Chap. I. comprises a single prophecy complete in itself, the design of which evidently is " to shew the connexion between the sins and sufferings of God's people, and the necessity of further judgments, as means of purification and deliverance." 1 It is divided into three strophes, of which the first and last, consisting each of eight verses, subdivided into 3 + 2 + 3, are antithetically parallel. ** Strophe I. (2-9) describes the present state of corruption of God's people (2-4), incurable by any ordinary discipline (5, 6), which had already been carried so far, that their country was in desolation, and all but utter ruin. (7-9). Strophe III. (24-31) predicts, in contrast, a future state of purity and prosperity, which, however, can only be brought about by passing them through a fiery discipline which will purge out every impurity (24-26), redeem them unto righteousness, but destroy impenitent transgressors (27, 28), whose vain confidence shall utterly fail them, and prove the means of their destruction. (29-31). The intermediate Strophe II. of 14 verses (10-23), rejects as ineffectual the only two methods that might seem capable of avert- ing the necessity of this fiery discipline ; the 1st, which the peo- ple would be ready to urge as a plea for suspension of judgment, their punctilious observance of religious worship (10-12), which, however, the Lord declares only aggravated their guilt by its hypocrisy (13-15) ; and the 2d, the method of genuine repent- ance and reformation proposed by the Lord himself (16, 17) ; which indeed, however great their past tranegressions, would be accepted (18-20) ; but which, alas ! is now hopeless from their total corruption (21-23) : and therefore cannot be effected by any means less severe than the thorough purgation, to which in Strophe III. the Lord declares himself obliged to resort. ! Prophecies of Isaiah, Earlier and Later, by Joseph Addison Alexander. 308 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. The subdivisions of the strophes are : Strophe I. and III. resolve themselves into . 3 + 2 + 3 ; Strophe II. resolves itself into 6 + 2+6; in which the sixes are still farther subdivided into 3 + 3. The beginnings of each of the strophes (and also of the princi- pal subdivision of Strophe II. ver. 18), are marked by the Lord being introduced in each as speaking. ISAIAH, CHAP. I. 1. THE VISION OP ISAIAH, THE SON OF AMOZ, WHICH HE SAW CON- CERNING JUDAH AND JERUSALEM IN THE DAYS OF UZZIAH, JOTHAM, AHAZ, AND HEZEKIAH, KINGS OF JuDAH. I. ' 2. Hear, O heavens, and give ear, O earth ! For the LORD hath spoken. I have nourished and brought up children, And they have rebelled against me. 3. The ox knoweth his owner, And the ass his master's crib ; But Israel doth not know, My people doth not consider. 4. Ah sinful nation ! a people laden with iniquity ! A seed of evil-doers ! children that are corrupters ! They have forsaken the LORD ; They have provoked the Holy One of Israel unto anger ; They are gone away backward. Why should ye be stricken any more? Ye will revolt more and more : The whole head is sick, and the whole heart faint. From the sole of the foot even unto the head the re is no soundness in it But wounds, and bruises, and putrifying sores ; They have not been closed, neither bound up, Neither mollified with ointment. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 309 f 7. Your country is desolate, Your cities are burned with fire : Your land, strangers devour it in your presence, And it is desolate, as overthrown by strangers. 8. And the daughter of Zion is left as a cottage in a vineyard, As a lodge in a garden of cucumbers, As a besieged city. 9. Except the LOUD of hosts had left unto us a very small remnant, We should have been as Sodotn, And we should have been like unto Gomorrah. II. [10. Hear the word of the LOUD, ye rulers of Sodom 1 Give ear unto the law of our God, ye people of Gomorrah ! [LoRD ; 1 1 . To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto me, saith the I am full of the burnt-offerings of rams, and the fat of fed beasts ; And I delight not in the blood of bullocks, or of lambs, or of he goats. 12. When ye come to appear before me, Who hath required this at your hand, to tread my courts ? 13. Bring no more vain oblations ; Incense is an abomination unto me ; [with ; The new moons and sabbaths, the calling of assemblies, I cannot away It is iniquity, even the solemn meeting, 14. Your new moons, and your appointed feasts my soul hateth : They are a trouble unto me ; I am weary to hear them. 1 5. And when ye spread forth your hands, I will hide mine eyes from you ; Yea, when ye make many prayers, I will not hear ; Your hands are full of blood. 16. Wash you, make you clean ; Put away the evil of your doings from before mine eyes : 17. Cease to do evil ; learn to do well ; Seek judgment, relieve the oppressed ; Judge the fatherless, plead for the widow. 310 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. ("18. Come now. an 1 let us reason together, saith the LORD : Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow ; Though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool, 19. If ye be willing and obedient, Ye shall eat the good of the land : 20. But if ye refuse and rebel, Ye shall be devoured with the sword : For the mouth of the LORD hath spoken it. 21. How is the faithful city become an harlot! It was full of judgment ; Righteousness lodged in it ; but now murderers. 22. Thy silver is become dross, Thy wine mixed with water : 23. Thy princes are rebellious, and companions of thieves ; Every one loveth gifts, and followeth after rewards ; They judge not the fatherless ; Neither doth the cause of the widow come unto them. III. 24. Therefore saith the LORD, The LORD of hosts, the Mighty One of Israel ; Ah, I will ease me of mine adversaries, And avenge me of my enemies : 25. And I will turn my hand upon thee, And purely purge away thy dross, And take away all thy tin : ! 26. And I will restore thy judges as at the first, And thy counsellors as at the beginning : Afterwards thou shalt be called, The city of righteousness, the faithful city. 27. Zion shall be redeemed with judgment, And her converts with righteousness. [gether, 28. And the destruction of the transgressors and of the sinners shall be to- And they that forsake the LORD shall be consumed. 29. For they shall be ashamed of the oaks which ye have desired, And ye shall be confounded for the gardens that ye have chosen. 30. For ye shall be as an oak whose leaf fadeth ; And as a garden that hath no water. 31. And the strong shall be as tow, And the maker of it as a spark, And they shall both burn together, And none shall quench them. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. .Ill Let us next examiue, in the Later Prophecies, Chap. liii. of Isaiah. This remarkable passage, as we might expect, bears the marks of being most carefully considered and systematically arranged. The 3 last verses of Chap. Hi. evidently constitute p-irt of the same context and subject ; and the whole is divided into three strophes, the 1st and Illd consisting of 3 verses each, and the central strophe, of 9 verses. They form an Epanodos, in which the exaltation and success of the Messiah, consequent upon his humiliation, are made the most prominent objects, by being placed first and last, in strophes of 3 verses each ; while yet Messiah's sufferings constitute the central subject, which is dwelt upon with greater fulness in 3 times 3 verses, the very centre of which, and of the whole arrangement, is the ATONEMENT (liii. 46, and especially the central verse of these three, v. 5). 1 The train of thought may perhaps be more clearly perceived by a short analysis according to the strophical arrangement. I. LII. 13. Messiah's success and exaltation 14. Shall be proportionate to his humiliation. As his sufferings shocked his countrymen, 15. So the Gentiles shall regard him with profound reverence. 1 For the observation of this arrangement, I may say that I am indebted to Hengtt- enberg ; for though his proposed division in the Dissertations appended to his Com- mentary on the Psalms (IVter Band, p. 242) is erroneous, it first drew my attention to the fact that the numbers of the verses in the Prophets might be equally significant, and indicative of the internal connexion, as in the so-called Poetical Books. I have just met, however, with a striking confirmation of the correctness of the di- vision here given. Stier, in a note to p. 409 of his " Jesaias, nicht Pseudo-Jesaias," gives the identical arrangement here proposed into "five times three verses, of which liii. 4-6 forms the cardinal point," with the additional remark that Chap. liii. forms the very centre of the Later Prophecies of Isaiah, which consist of 27 chapters (>I-l*vi). 312 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. IT. LIU. 1. We, Jews, though prepared by previous revelations, believed him not. 2. His mean condition offended our worldly expectations. 3. We despised and rejected him for his sufferings. 4. But these sufferings were ours, though we knew it not. 5. To make ATONEMENT for us, he endured them ; 6. By the appointment of the LORD. 7. Hence he was a meek, obedient, unresisting sufferer. 8. " My people [the LORD speaks] oppressed and judged him, never reflecting that theirs was the guilt." 9. Therefore, though " numbered with transgressors" in his death, his innocence was recognised in the grave allotted him after death. III. 1 0. He shall reap the fruits of his sufferings, by the seed and ever- lasting kingdom given to him. 11. The travail of his soul shall bring salvation to many. 12. Power shall be given him for universal conquest, as the reward of bis humiliation and continued work of intercession. It is worthy of remark that the sufferings of the Messiah are distinctly brought forward in the central verse of each of the stanzas, even of the two which describe his exaltation and triumph. I. LII. 13. Behold my servant shall deal prudently, He shall be exalted and extolled, and be very high. 14. As many were astonished at thee ; His visage was so marred more than any man, And his form more than the sons of men : 15. So shall he sprinkle many nations ; Kings shall shut their mouths at him : For that which had not been told them, they have seen ; And that which they had not heard, they have considered. SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. 313 II. 1 Who fof us] hath believed that which we had heard V And to whom hath the arm of the LORD been revealed ? 2 For he shall grow up before Him as a tender plant, And as a root out of a dry ground ; He hath no form nor comeliness ; And when we shall see him, there is no beauty that we should desire him. 3. He is despised and rejected of men ; A man of sorrows and acquainted with grief : And we hid as it were our faces from him ; He was despised, and we esteemed him not. 4. Surely ours were the griefs which he bore, And our sorrows he carried : Yet we did esteem him stricken, Smitten of God, and afflicted. 5. But he was wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities : The chastisement of our peace was upon him ; And with his stripes we are healed. 6. All we like sheep have gone astray ; \Ve have turned every one to his way ; And the LORD hath laid on him the iniquity of us :ill. 7. He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, Yet he opened not his mouth; He is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, And as a sheep before her shearers is dumb, So he openeth not his mouth. 8. From oppression and judgment he was taken away ; And in his generation who regarded it ? For he was cut off out of the land of the living, For the transgression of my people theirs was the stroke. 9. And they had assigned him his grave with the wicked, But he was with the rich after his death : Because he had done no violence, Neither was any deceit in his mouth. 314 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. III. 10. Yet it pleased the LOUD to bruise him ; He hath put him to giief : When his soul shall make an offering for sin, He shall see his seed, he shall prolong his days, And the pleasure of the LORD shall prosper in his hand. 11. He shall see of the travail of his soul, and shall be satisfied ; By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justify many ; For he shall bear their iniquities. 1 2. Therefore will I divide him a portion with the great, And he shall divide the spoil with the strong ; Because he hath poured out his soul unto death ; And was numbered with transgressors ; And bare the sin of many, And maketh intercession for the transgressors. It will be observed that I have ventured to alter the transla- tion of the 1st verse of Chap. liii. from that usually adopted. By the common rendering, " Who hath believed our report ? " the prophet is represented, rather incongruously, first as speaking in the name of the prophets who had forewarned the Jews of " the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow/' and then in the immediately subsequent verses, as classifying himself with his unbelieving countrymen who rejected the Messiah, ver. 3. " He was despised, and we esteemed him not," &c. A transition so sudden should not be assumed without pressing necessity. By the rendering here proposed, " Who [of us] hath believed that which we had heard ? " this harshness is avoided, and the words becotn^ not the complaint of the prophets on account of the un- belief of their countrymen, but the lamentation of the Jews them- selves over their long-continued blindness and infidelity, when they shall come at length with deep mourning to " look upon Him whom they have pierced." But it was the observation of the pa- rallelism that led me principally to tliis interpretation. The word in the original which is rendered " our report" O^?*;? sh'mooa- thainoo), is evidently chosen with a distinct reference to the verb in the previous verse * yn % sham'oo. " they had heard," of which it is the verbal noun, and points attention to a striking antithesis between the last two lines of Hi. 15 and the two lines of liii. 1. SCRIPTURE PARALLELI-M. 315 LIT. 15. So shall he sprinkle many nations ; Kings shall shut their mouths at him : a For that which had not been told them they have seen ; b And that which they had not heard they have considered. Lin. 1. b Who [of us] hath believed that which we had heard? a And to whom hath the arm of the LORD been revealed ? Here a and a correspond, and the two central lines b and b. The Gentiles (a) have had their eyes opened, and " have seen" the marvellous salvation wrought by God through His Messiah, though they were prepared by no previous prophecies and dispen- sations of God ; while (a) " the arm of the Lord," so evidently manifest in it, has not been revealed to the Jews, though accus- tomed to the previous revelations and interpositions of Divine power. Again (b), what the Gentiles " had not heard" before, they at once " have considered" and believed : but (6) what " we had heard" 1 so often announced to us Jews by the word of God, " who hatli believed ?" 1 When we examine accurately the use of the word ~;"" : ? sh'mooah, rendered in the authorised version "report," it appears rather extraordinary that a meaning should have been so generally attached to it, for which, so far as I can find, there is no autho- rity in Scripture. It is a derivative from the verb *?> shama " to hear ;" and the literal [signification of the word as here used is, as in the margin of the Bible, our ' hearing" or hearsay. Now, as every hearer presupposes, as a correlative, a speaker or reporter, and every hearsay implies a report, it is evident that in many cases the word which really signifies " hearsay" may, without impropriety or confusion, be translated " report." But this does not authorise us in all cases to regard them as identical, and to maintain that when we add a possessive pronoun for instance to the noun, " our hearsay" and " our report" are equivalent. " Our hearsay" is the news which we hear (this indeed is frequently added, as 1 Sara. ii. 24, " it is no good report [or hearsay] that I hear ; 1 Kings x. 7, " the fame which I heard,' &c.): " our re- port" is the news which we report. In the former case we are the hearers : in the lat- ter, the reporters. If we apply this to the instance before us, it is evident that in the words, " Who hath believed our hearsay," the prophet speaks not in the name of the reporters or prophets, but of the repentant Jews who had heard the word of (Sod, but did not believe. To justify this causative or Hiphil meaning attributed to ^.*?$ ( " what we have caused others to hear"), appeal is made to an alleged similar signification of its Greek equivalent **'. This assertion seems to be equally groundless, and founded on the same mistake. The instances to which Hengstenberg appeals (Christologie, i^322, 1st edition), are three. The first is Rom. x. 16, in which Paul has quoted the Septiu- gint translation of the passage before us, r'n Ir'irrtvti T? ? /"*. Now it is rather remarkable that the context refutes the meaning of " report,* here attributed to ***'. The point of the succeeding words, *f* * vims i , is in great measure lost by our not possessing a proper equivalent in our language for *. The literal tranala- 316 SCRIPTURE PARALLELISM. This view is in beautiful accordance with the representations of all the previous chapters. In these the prophet had insisted much on the privileges which Israel enjoyed, as being instructed beforehand by God himself of the salvation to come, while the Gentiles were left to the worship of dumb idols, which could neither speak nor profit. Thus in chap. xli. 22-27 the Lord challenges the idols and idol-worshippers : 22. Let them bring them forth, and shew us what shall happen : Let them shew the former things, what they be, That we may consider them, and know the latter end of them ; Or declare us things for to come. 23. Shew the things that are to come hereafter, That we may know that ye are gods : 26. Yea there is none that sheweth, yea, there is none that declareth, Yea there is none that heareth your words. 27. I first say to Zion, Behold, behold them : And I give to Jerusalem one that bringeth good tidings. 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