YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY C- LECTURES ON THEOLOGY BY THE LATE REV. JOHN DICK, D.D. MINISTER OF THE UNITED ASSOCIATE CONGBEGATKIN, GREYFBIARS, GLASGOW; AND PROFESSOR OF THEOMGY TO THE UNITED SESSION CHURCH. PUBLISHED UNDER THE SUPERINTENDENCE OF HIS SON A. PREFACE, MEMOIR, &c BY THE AMERICAN EDITOR. IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. I. NEW YORK: BOBERT CARTER & BROTHERS, No. 285 BROADWAY. 1851. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1836, by Edward 0. Biedle, in the Clerk's Office cf the Dlatnct Court of the Eastern District of Pennsyivauia. PREFACE TO THE AMERICAN EDITION. In presenting this work to the American public, the publishers believe that they are rendering an important service to the religious community at large, and to theological students in particular. The first edition was published at Edinburgh in 1834, and has already obtained a very exten sive circulation in Britain. An estimate may be formed of the value of these Lectures, from the fact of their having received the highest praise of some of the most distinguished theological scholars in Scotland and England ; and though expressing in the most decided manner the views of the particular denomination with which their author was connected, (the Presbyterian,) the catholic spirit with which these opinions are main tained, the candour with which others are stated, and the ability with which the common Christianity is illustrated and defended, may be learned from the fact of their being warmly recommended by the leading periodicals of nearly all the Protestant denominations of Britain. The Lectures of which this work is composed were read by their author to the students attending the Theological Seminary of the United Associate Church, in which he was Professor of Systematic Divinity. They were not prepared for the press ; nor is it known that he ever entertained any design of publishing them. The following extract from one of the author's unpublished introductory addresses to his students will give a correct idea of his aim in drawing them up. " You come to this place to hear such an explanation of the doctrines of religion as will furnish you with materials of reflection, and assistance in your private inquiries. Of one thing it may be proper to admonish you ; that you are not to expect to be entertained with things which may be properly called new. To some of you, indeed, many things may be new in this sense, that you have not heard them before ; but in general, the subjects 4 PREFACE TO THE AMERICAN EDITION. to which your attention is directed, are truths as old as the Bible, which have been topics of discussion from chairs and pulpits from the first ages of our religion. It cannot be supposed that, in a field which has been so often and so carefully surveyed, there is any thing left to be gathered by the per sons who shall walk over it again. Our purpose is gained if we are able to impart to the rising race the knowledge which was imparted to ourselves Dy our predecessors: and the utmost at which we could reasonably aim is to suggest some small matter which has been overlooked; to propose a new argument, or a better statement of an old argument ; or, it may be, to throw some light upon a portion of the Scriptures not yet fully under stood. In human sciences, discoveries may be made by superior pene tration, and more patient inquiry ; and their advanced state in the present age is a proof of the success of modern philosophers in the investigation of the secrets of nature. Discoveries might have been made in religion while revelation was in progress, and its light was increasing like that of the morning ; but as seventeen centuries have elapsed since it was completed, and during this long interval it has engaged the attention of the wise, the learned, and the pious, there is every probability that we have been anticipated in all our views." The Edinburgh edition was published Under the superintendence of a son of the author, Andrew Coventry Dick, Esq. The present edition is an exact reprint of the former, and in the course of publication has been under the supervision of one who was formerly a pupil of Dr. Dick, and heard a considerable portion of them read. The appendix, containing observations on the atonement of Christ, belongs properly to the fifty-eighth lecture; and it was the Original design of the American editor to have inserted them in their proper place in the body of the work ; but as he was at a loss, upon examina tion, to determine the precise place in which their author would have wished them to come, he has judged it best to allow them to be pub lished in their present shape. In the preparation of the memoir prefixed to the first volume, the editor has made much use of the Life of Dr. Dick by his son A. C. Dick« Esq., and of a short sketch of his life and writings of his son-in-law Rev. W. Peddie, of Edinburgh. J. F. Philadelphia, 1835. CONTENTS OF-TH'E FIRST VOLUME. Mctuhb . ... Pagg I. On Theology, -„..•. ; • ., • • . « . .11 , . II. The Sources of, Theology: Reason, . . . . 15 III. Revelation, 23 IV. Evidences of Christianity : Genuineness of the Scriptures, . 33 V. The same subject, .... 43 VI. The same subject, . . 53 VII. Authenticity of the Scriptures; Miracles, 64 VIII. Prophecy, 75 IX. Success of the Gospel; Internal Evidences, 87 X. ; Objections considered, ... 98 XI. Inspiration of the Sacred writers, 110 XII. State of the Sacred Text 122 XIII. The Study and Interpretation of the Scriptures, .... 128 XIV. The Dispensation of Religion : Under the Old Testament, . . 138 XV. Under the New Testament, . 147 XVI. On God : His Existence, 158 XVII. The same subject ; Eternity and Spirituality, . .167 XVIU. His Unity, 177 XIX. His Immensity, 187 XX. His Immutability, 197 XXI. His Knowledge, ' . . .208 XXII. His Wisdom 219 XXIII. His Power, 230 XXIV. His Goodness; 240 XXV. His Justice, 251 XXVI. His Truth and Faithfulness, 264 XXVII. ' His Holiness ; and General Reflections, .... 273 XXVm. The Trinity, 285 XXIX. The same subject 295 XXX. The Divinity of Christ 306 XXXI. The same subject, 317 XXXII. The same subject, 329 XXXIII. The Divinity of the Holy Spirit 341 (A*) T VI CONTENTS. LBCTUEK P«g* XXXIV. The Decrees of God 350 XXXV. Predestination; Election, . • • .359 XXXVI. Reprobation, ... 367 XXXVII. Creation, . . 376 XXXVffl. Angels: The Holy Angels 386 XXXIX. The Fallen Angels, 396 XL. Man in his State of Innocence, • 406 XLI. Providence, 416 XLII. The same subject 426 XLIIT. The same subject, 436 XLIV. The Fall of Man, and its Consequences, ... • 446 XLV. The same subject .. 455 XLVI. The same subject 465 XLVII. The same subject 476 XLVni. The Covenant of Grace 188 XLIX. The same subject, 499 L. The same subject, 510 LI. The mediatorial Office of Christ, .... . 520 MEMOIR REV. JOHN DICK, D.D. The subject of the following memoir was the son of the Rev. Alexander Dick, of Aberdeen, Scotland. His father was descended from a very respectable family in the county of Kinross, and connected with the church of Scotland. He pur sued his literary course at the University of St. Andrew's, and prepared for the ministry at the Theological Seminary of the Secession Church at Glasgow, then under the care of the Rev. James Fisher. Shortly after his licensure he was in stalled pastor of a church in Aberdeen. At the time of his settlement in that city, the spiritual condition of the north of Scotland generally, and of this city in particular, was lament able indeed. Beside himself, there was not known to be another minister who preached the gospel in its purity in that place or the immediate neighbourhood. Mr. Dick was not dis tinguished for his extraordinary talents nor his extensive literary attainments; but he was eminent for what is far better — holi ness, and devotion to the cause of Christ, for primitive simpli city of character, and unwearied diligence in the duties of his office. " His life," according to the inscription on his monu ment, "was a perpetual commentary on. the purity of his doctrine." After labouring in that city successfully for thirty- four years, he died in 1793, universally lamented. His memory, as the writer of this memoir can testify, is still' precious in Aberdeen. His eldest son, John Dick, was born in Aberdeen, on the 10th of October, 1764. Mrs. Dick, who possessed a remark ably vigorous and well-cultivated mind, and who seems to have been fully aware of the extent of maternal, influence and responsibility, watched with much anxiety the progress of his early education. And if the excellence of the scholar is any proof of the qualifications of the teacher, We may be certain that his education could not have been committed to better vii Vlll MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. hands. Dr. Dick always dwelt with peculiar delight on her memory, and never spoke of her but" with enthusiasm. It is but proper to add, that she was permitted to reap the reward of her labours, as she lived to' witness the distinction and the eminent usefulness of her son. Dr. Dick received his early education in the grammar- school of Aberdeen ; and there, at a very early age, gave proof of those abilities by which he afterwards rose to eminence. There is an incident connected with his entering the univer sity of Aberdeen, and in proof of this, which is worthy of being i elated. At the commencement of the session he presented himself, without the knowledge of his father, as a candidate for a scholarship, which was to be determined by open compe tition. The exercise prescribed to the candidates was to trans late two passages, the one from a Latin and the other from an English author, into the opposite languages respectively: and to preclude the possibility of unequal aid, each candidate was sent to a room by himself, without books or any other: assistance ; and though by much the junior competitor, he' carried off the prize. He was then only in his twelfth year. While at the university, the late Rev. Robert Hall of Bristol, Sir James Macintosh, and the eminent Greek scholar, Dr. Charles Burney, were among his fellow students. With the former he at that time became but slightly acquainted ; the two latter gentlemen were among his intimate associates and- friends. It is rather an uncommon coincidence, that three such men as Robert Hall, Sir James Macintosh, and Dr. Dick should have been brought together to the same college at the same time; and still more, that they should have been all spared to a good old age, and cease from their labours within little more than a year of each other. Dr. Dick was a particular favourite with all the professors whose classes he attended. Professor Ogilvy, under whom he studied Latin, entertained a very special attachment for him and was very desirous, knowing that his pupil was designed for the ministry, that he should enter the Established church. As he could not conscientiously unite with the Establishment, he resolved to connect himself with the Secession church, of which his father was a minister, although strongly urged also by family relatives belonging partly to the church ot MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. ix Scotland and partly to the Episcopal church, to join one or the other of these denominations. To the professor's credit it deserves to be related, that the independence of his pupil was not allowed to terminate their friendship. He completed his course at the University in 1780, when only sixteen years old, and immediately afterwards entered the Theological Seminary of the Secession Church, then under the care of the celebrated Rev. John Brown of Haddington. - In 1785, he was licensed to preach by the Presbytery of Perth and Dunfermline. His talents, which had hitherto been known only among his particular friends, now began to attract very general attention. Soon after his licensure, he received invitations from a number of congregations to become their pastor. His first settlement was in Slateford, a village in the neighbourhood of Edinburgh. Here he was ordained, in 1786, to the high gratification of the people of his charge, and much to his own satisfaction, as the rural charms of the spot, one of the most beautiful in Scotland, delighted his imagination; and the retirement of the village afforded him the best opportunity for study. While at Slateford, though burdened with the cares, and subject to the many interrup tions of the pastoral life, he formed a plan of study to which he ever afterward most scrupulously adhered, and by which he was doubtless enabled to gather those rich literary and theological stores, of which we have an example in these volumes. It will be interesting to all, and may be of service to some, to know what was the plan of study of such a man, who, while most diligent in the discharge of all his ministerial duties, was still enabled to make those attainments which gave him a place among the first theological scholars of Great Britain. " His plan," says his son, " was to rise in the morn ing before six o'clock, and immediately to begin the study which it may be said formed the business of the day. It was of course interrupted by his duties as a parent and head of a family ; and in addition to such intervals, he regularly allowed himself two or three hours about midday, which he spent in visits of duty or friendship. His afternoon and evening studies were commonly suspended, or intermingled by con versation with his family or friends. At least one day of each week was devoted to the pastoral visitation of the families of Vol. I.— b MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. his congregation. His morning studies were employed in the first place in making some progress in his preparations for the ensuing Sabbath. His discourses on that day were indeed begun on the Sabbath evening previous, sometimes even before it; and in general they were fully prepared by a day or two before the week,ended. It may here be noticed that he seldom spoke in the pulpit or out of it, without having previously written what he meant to say : not that he wanted the ability to speak extempore, but because he disliked the inaccurate sen timents and unfinished phraseology incidental to that mode of speaking, and because he wished to offer in the sanctuary only the richest fruits. Of the quality of his expository lectures, which occupied the morning, and the sermons which occupied the afternoon of the Sabbath, a judgment may be farmed from the printed specimens; there being between them and those of every Sabbath no perceptible difference. Whatever time allotted for study was not taken up in preparing for the pulpit, was devoted to various branches of learning, with the excep tion of part of the forenoon and the whole of the afternoon of Saturday, which he usually spent with his family. We con clude with stating what'is necessary to complete the picture, that his studies were pursued apparently without toil, were resumed or laid aside with ease, and never seemed to be -engrossing his mind while in the company of his family or friends; that, although a hard student, he did not leave undone any one of the more active duties of his profession; and that while his labours in the closet and out of doors, when put •together, exceeded, perhaps, those of the most of men, he over took them all without bustle and without hurry, and never performed them in a superficial manner, but left on every thing he touched the marks of careful finishing." In 1788, Dr. Dick first appeared before the public as an author, in a sermon, entitled "The Conduct and Doom of false Teachers of Religion." This was occasioned by the appear ance of a work, entitled, "A practical Essay on the Death of Christ," by Dr. M'Gill of Ayr, in which that author, though a Presbyterian minister, boldly advanced Socinian sentiments. This -sermon, though not possessing the high polish nor the condensation of sentiment which characterize most of his sub sequent productions, contains a large body of scriptural truth MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. XI' and deep moral reflection, and everywhere breathes a truly apostolic spirit against those who would corrupt the funda mental doctrines of the gospel. His next publication appeared in 1796, " On the Necessity of Confessions of Faith." A large number of the members of the Synod to which he belonged, and among them Dr. Dick him self, wished to have a change made in their ordination-service, in regard to a few points of a purely speculative kind. The proposal awakened considerable controversy, in the course of which, those who pleaded for the change were charged with acting inconsistently with their subscription to the standards of the church. The sermon is entitled, " Confessions of Faith necessary, and the Duty of the Church in regard to them ex plained." In this sermon he of course defends the moderate use of confessions : the substance of his defence will be found in its proper place among his Lectures, and need not, there fore, be here repeated. It is proper, however, here to state, that he considered, and in this discourse endeavours to show, that one capital error on this subject has been committed by the great majority of Protestant churches, and one which has perhaps been a more prolific source of angry debate and schis matic division than almost any other: the error consists in their practically considering their various " Articles," " Con fessions," and " Constitutions," as perfect and infallible. He does most pointedly and justly condemn that undue reverence for them which forms an almost impassable obstacle in the way of any subsequent revision when once they have been adopted, and which elevates them to a place in the estimation of a large portion of the religious public, to which, as the works of im perfect and fallible men, they can have no sort of claim — a place which belongs, in fact, only to the perfect word of God- He held, that they should be frequently revised, and that the contrary but most common practice is inconsistent with our profession as Protestants, and unworthy of those who are daily students of the Bible. As these views have not been very commonly expressed by the defenders of " Confessions," or, to say the least, have not been held up very prominently to view, and as the opposite and hitherto almost universal practice has, given occasion to those who are hostile to " Creeds and Con fessions" to " speak reproachfully" of them, we regret that this 12 MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. sermon has not been more generally known in this country, particularly of late years. His next work, " On Inspiration," which, prior to the pub lication of his " Lectures on Theology," formed the chief basis of his reputation as a theological writer, is said to have been occasioned by the same controversy that gave birth to the former. In the course of the discussion about the power of the civil magistrate in ecclesiastical matters, and on the bind ing obligation of those " covenants" entered into by the church and parliament of Scotland in the seventeenth century, which agitated a considerable portion of the Scottish church about forty years since, frequent reference was made to those events in the history of the Jews supposed by some of the disputants to be analogous to those events in Scottish history which were the matters of debate. They who denied these covenants to be any longer binding, it was affirmed, virtually questioned the inspiration of such portions of the Old Testament as had been referred to in the course of the controversy. The charge, being made in the heat of debate, was too contemptible to receive serious notice; it, however, induced Dr. Dick to direct his attention fo the general subject of inspiration. He pre pared and preached to his people a series of discourses on the subject. His mother, who heard them, and who was well qualified to judge of their merit, united with his people in asking their publication. With this request Dr, Dick did not then see fit to comply; but after a careful revision, he threw them into the form of an essay, and published it some, years afterwards to aid in stemming the torrent of infidelity which was then setting in upon Great Britain with fearful power owing to the popularity of French philosophy and politics. It is ohe of the best works upon the subject, and has already passed through a large number of editions in Great Britain, and through several in the United States. The substance of this work will also be found in. its, proper place among the Lectures on Theology. [? These writings, and his occasional labours in various parts of the church, gained for him a very high reputation, and pre pared the way for his being called to a more prominent position, and his entering on a? more enlarged sphere of labour than he had previously occupied.' He was twice called by the church MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. xiii: in Aberdeen, over, Which his father had presided, but did; not! see his way clear to accept their invitation. In 1801, he was called to be one of the ministers of Greyfriars church, Glas gow, one of the oldest in the Secession body, and by its extent,; its wealth, and its situation in the midst of a populous and enterprising city, is one of its most prominent and important stations. Among this people he laboured faithfully and dili gently, growing every year in their affection and veneration. A short time after his settlement in Glasgow he published his "Lectures on select Portions of the Acts of the Apostles," which have obtained, a very extensive circulation, and which are declared by the best judges to be, "for soundness of viewy richness of sentiment, lucid arrangement, and clear, forcible, and elegant diction, models "for the exposition of the holy Scriptures." In 1815, he received the degree of Doctor of Divinity from the college of Princeton, New Jersey. The professorship of Systematic Divinity in the Seminary of the Secession Church having become vacant by the death of the venerable Dr. Lawson, in 1819, Dr. Dick was chosen to fill it. He at first would not consent to perform the duties of the professorship for a longer time than a single session; at the close of it, he yielded to the joint and urgent request of his pupils and his brethren in the ministry, to remain perma nently in the office. Into this new office he entered, possessed of every qualification necessary to the discharge of its impor tant duties, in a manner honourable to himself and useful to the church. He had a very humble opinion of his own attain ments; and this, together with his extreme aversion to all parade, prevented strangers from becoming acquainted with their extent, except as it was discovered in the precision; soundness, and comprehensiveness of his general opinions and reflections. Of his acquaintance with theology, to teach which was the peculiar duty of his new office, this much can be said, that he had left no means untried to render his knowledge of it complete. To the study of that science he was devoted by love of its truths, by a sense of duty, and by an opinion which he carefully impressed on all around him, that it is peculiarly disgraceful in any man to be ignorant o*f his own profession. The holy Scriptures occupied every day a large share of his (b) Xiv MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. attention; and to illuminate their pages he employed all the light he drew from other departments of knowledge. The following character of him as a theologian is from the pen of one who knew him 16ng and intimately well. " He was distinguished by the strictness with which he adhered to the great Protestant rule of making the Bible, in its plain meaning, the source of his religious creed, and the basis of his theological system. His distrust of reason, as a guide in reli gion, was deeply sincere, and never wavered ; and so was his confidence in revelation ; both were the result of inquiry : and the perfect reasonableness of his faith was in nothing more evident than in the limits which he set to it; for he had taken pains to ascertain the bounds of revelation, and within these he was as teachable as a child; to every thing beyond them, where we are left to our own resources, no one could apply the test of reason with more uncompromising boldness. When elected to the professorship, his powers of mind were in full vigour. Long and intense study, instead of impairing the strength of his intellect, or deranging its balance by an over- constant use of some one faculty to the neglect of the rest, had been a course of improving discipline to his whole mind. He retained the original force of his reasoning powers; even his imagination, which time might have been expected to cool or extinguish, seemed to be growing to the last in warmth, and acquiring new graces; and while he was in his closet, a singu larly patient and laborious investigator, he elsewhere exhibited the playfulness, quickness, and occasional impetuosity in thinking and in speaking, which he had inherited from na ture. The intellectual excellence for which he was chiefly remarkable was that of conceiving clearly ; and when united, as in him, with acuteness and a sound judgment, must be peculiarly useful in theological investigation. Instinctively rejecting all obscure and dubious ideas, he either shunned entirely some departments of human research, in which the profoundest investigations can seldom reach clearness and certainty; or when he entered upon them, employed him self in ascertaining where inquiry ceased to satisfy, and in pointing out to otherstthe limits of the human faculties. In this difficult task he was reckoned to have been eminently successful. MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. XV " Correspondent to the quality of his thoughts was the cha racter of his language. By few words put together without effort, he could render thoughts luminous which many would have deemed worthy of pages of elaborate explanation: and perhaps his reputation was not so great with some, for reasons that ought to have increased it; for, as in the exposition of his ideas, he allowed to each its due space, and no more, those among them which were new or unusually valuable, having no undue prominences, did not catch the attention of some minds ; and the transparency of his language made abstruse speculations so easily apprehensible, that frequently his hearers were not aware that he had brought them into the depths of divinity. To this we may add, that he had a peculiarly deli cate perception of the want of clearness in the language of others; that though far from averse to the ornaments or the music of a fine style, he felt no pleasure in either if gained by the least sacrifice of that favourite quality ; and that his taste in these matters having been early formed after the best models, continued steadfast through life to its first predilections, never for one moment permitting him to attempt in his own writings, or to admire in those of others, those novelties which gain from fashion a transient applause." Such is the portrait of Dr. Dick as a theologian, drawn by one who knew him well ; and having enjoyed the privilege of his acquaintance, and having listened to his instructions as a theological professor, we can testify that it is entirely correct. As the plan of theological instruction in Great Britain, and particularly in the seminaries of Scotland, is not very gene rally known in this country, we here insert an account of the mode pursued by Dr. Dick in conducting his class. The whole course of study directly preparatory to the ministry, extends through a period of five years: Dr. Dick's instructions were confined to the students of the last three years. The class met twice every day, except on Saturday, when it met only in the morning; and on Wednesday, when the students met in the character of a theological society. The usual business of the morning meeting was the hearing and criticising of discourses. Two of these were delivered by dif ferent individuals, which were criticised by the professor, after the students generally had expressed their opinions. This XVI MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. opportunity which was afforded the students to criticise, was, it is said, at one time very eagerly embraced by them; but for '•¦ several years before the death of Dr. Dick, though regularly > offered, was uniformly rejected, on the ground that they had; other opportunities of exercising more unrestrainedly their powers of criticism, and also because the opinion of the profes* sor was felt to be the only one which the person whose produc tion was criticised was concerned to know* and by which the' character of the discourse was finally determined. > Those only who enjoyed the privilege of Dr. Dick's instruc tions can form any idea of the deference with which his: remarks on such occasions were received. This was owing' not only to the high estimation in which he was held by his) students as a person of great taste and judgment, but also to< the sterling honesty that characterized all his criticisms. He1 seemed to feel that he had a most solemn duty to perform, on: the faithful and important discharge of which might depend' much of the future usefulness of his pupils. The second hour of meeting was occupied with the delivery of his theological lectures. Regularly once a week, and some times oftener, the students were examined on these lectures,' and on the general subject of which they treated. Of the cha-i racter of these lectures it is unnecessary here to speak, as the public is in possession of them; yet this much we may say,' that though there was nothing in the manner of the professor '¦ at all striking, his lectures were listened to with the most pro-f found attention. We never can forget the feelings with which we ourselves listened to parts of the nineteenth and twenty fourth, and the impression produced upon the audience by their delivery. j On Wednesday, as has been already noticed, the students met without the presence of the professors, and engaged in the discussion of some topic connected with their studies, and in the criticism of essays that were then read. The evenings of Friday were spent in social religious exercises, especially de signed to cherish a spirit of brotherly affection and devotion to the missionary cause. Dr. Dick was not more venerated by his students as a teacher, than loved as a man. He was in the habit of inviting all of them to his house, in separate parties, twice during each MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. XVU session, and by this means, though the number of students was very large, cultivated an intimate personal acquaintance with them all. On these occasions he entered familiarly into con versation, and proved himself to be a most edifying and enter taining companion. Though he could not but have his par tialities, he was never chargeable with favouritism; on the contrary, he endeavoured to become more or less acquainted with the history of all of them; and continued, after their removal from his superintendence, to watch their movements and rejoice in their success. It may be proper here to state, that since his death very material alterations have been made in the plan of the theo logical seminary with which he was connected ; the term of study has been somewhat increased, and there are now four distinct professorships established, instead of two as formerly. He was a man of peace, and loved to promote it, especially in the church of Christ, where it ought eminently to dwell; and he therefore delighted to advance any measure calculated to remove the divisions that exist among Christians, and per manently to unite them into one happy family. Those who are familiar with the ecclesiastical history of Scotland are aware that the Secession body was at an early period divided into two hostile branches, and continued in that unhappy state until 1820, when a proposal was made for their reunion, which was very happily carried into execution. This measure met with Dr. Dick's most cordial approbation, and he was appointed a member of the committee that framed the " Basis of Union." This event appears to have exerted a most happy influence on the Scottish churches; for it not only has made two bodies who once opposed each other with no little bitterness, one, but has evidently created a desire and prepared the way for a still more extensive union of Christians in that country. At the present time, while the tendency of things in some portions of the American church seems to be to still greater division than what even now exists ; in Scotland the tendency is quite of an opposite character. In the controversy which arose a few years since in Britain in consequence of the circulation of the Apocrypha by the British and Foreign Bible Society, Dr. Dick took a somewhat prominent part. With many more, he was startled by the first Vol. I.— c ( b* ) Xviii MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. disclosure of it, and joined in the remonstrance which effected its discontinuance; but his confidence in the honesty and the good intentions of the eminent Christians who were the leaders of the religious public in that great and noble institution, was never for a moment shaken. He was satisfied with the expe dients which they adopted to correct the evil and prevent its recurrence; and he thenceforward adhered to them with a zeal which was not a little increased by the virulence of invective with which their opponents pursued them. After the resigna tion of the earl of Glasgow of the presidentship of the Glasgow auxiliary, in consequence of the dispute among the subscribers, Dr. Dick was chosen to fill the office, and continued in it until his death. We come now to consider the closing scene in the life of this excellent man. On the 23d of January, 1833, a very large meeting was held in Glasgow for the purpose of petitioning the legislature to pass some enactments then proposed for the sanctification of the Sabbath. Having been intrusted with one of the resolutions, he spoke in support of it for some time, and with great animation. He had officiated as president at meeting of the Baptist Missionary Society, held a week or two before : a week or two later, it would have been his duty to preside at the anniversary of the Auxiliary in Glasgow to the British and Foreign Bible Society ; and his friends were there fore congratulating him that in his old age he should be grow ing in public spirit. This, however, was his last public act, and was indeed a graceful and becoming close to his very useful career. On the evening of the same day (Wednesday) on which he made the address to which we have referred, he met with the Session of Greyfriars to make arrangements for the communion which was to be observed on the ensuing Sabbath. On his return home, he complained of ear-ache ; but as he was subject to this complaint, it now excited no alarm. He spent a rest less night, and did not rise until the unusually late hour of ten o'clock on Thursday morning. On this day he had resolved to call on a poor member of his church with some money for her use, but finding this impossible, he sent it to her by one of his elders, and then devoted himself to committing to memory the discourse he had written for the next Sabbath MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. Xix The sermon has been published since his death; the text is John iii. 35. " The Father loveth the Son, and hath committed all things into his hands." It is an interesting proof that he was well prepared for the duties which he was not permitted to discharge; and the topics and the spirit of his latest medi tations were happily in unison with the event which awaited him. While thus employed he was seized with a shivering, about noon, and found it necessary to retire to bed, although no danger, was apprehended. Medical aid being immediately procured, he was twice bled, and from each operation experi enced relief, conversing cheerfully with those around him ; but about five o'clock in the afternoon he sunk unexpectedly into a stupor, out of which he never awoke. The cause was at that time unknown, but from the examination subsequently made, it appeared that his ear had suppurated internal^, and that the matter flowing in upon his brain, produced inflammation and effusion, which caused the fatal issue. All hope of his recovery was now gone, and the rapid approach of death be came every moment more evident to his surprised and sorrow ing family. His death took place on the afternoon of Friday., 25th of January, 1833, and without much apparent suffering. There were present at the closing scene, besides those mem bers of his own family who then were in Glasgow, only a few friends, who, learning accidentally of his illness, had come to inquire for him, and obeying the impulse of affection and sor row, had entered his chamber. When he had ceased to breathe, an old friend and member of his church stepped beside his now lifeless remains, and exclaimed, weeping, "Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joy of thy Lord." From the circumstances attending his death, it was not pos sible that his friends should receive any of those testimonies to the reality and power of religion which so often illustrate, as with a supernatural radiance, the last moments of Christians. To his family and friends, who believed that he needed no warning, it is a consolation that death was not preceded by prolonged feebleness or sickness, and that he was Spared the pain, which to him would have been inexpressibly severe, of being conscious of parting from those whom he loved, and that the closing struggle was quickly over. To the deep sorrow of a very extensive circle, his death was XX MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. announced before even the fact of his illness had become gene rally known. In the public prints, and from the pulpits of ministers of all denominations, it was noticed as a loss to the community at large ; and strong testimonies were borne to the worth and merits of the deceased. His death took place in the sixty-ninth year of his age, the forty-seventh of his ministry, and the thirteenth of his profes sorship. The solemn event was improved to his congregation by his colleague in the seminary, the Rev. Dr. Mitchell, in the forenoon, and by his venerable friend, the Rev. Dr. Peddie, of Edinburgh, in the afternoon,', and by a large number of the ministers of his own communion in different parts of Scotland and England. We conclude this brief sketch of the life and labours of Dr. Dick with an extract from the sermon of his excellent friend and colleague, Rev. Dr. Mitchell, which presents us with what is believed to be a just description of his character. " He seemed to possess in a high degree what may be called harmony and strength of character. The elements of which it was composed were of a high order, intellectual and moral, as well as of rare excellence. Its features were all in unison, and all admirable. A dignified plainness, simplicity — a noble sim plicity — seemed to constitute the most prominent trait. Never spirit was moie unsophisticated : he scorned to appear, or rather he could not appear that which he was not; what he seemed, that he was; what he spoke, that he thought and felt. Intimately connected with this was his inflexible integrity. This quality lies at the foundation of all excellence, of what ever is estimable in character, or noble in spirit, or confidential in friendship, or honourable in the intercourse of life ; and this quality he possessed in an eminent degree. Being human, it would be too much to suppose that he never erred in judgment or in feeling; yet this we may say, that he might be mistaken, but he could not be dishonest; he might be misinformed, or act under a wrong impression, but he could not be disingenu ous : and his integrity was not mere sincerity and honesty, such as an honourable man of the world may possess and exercise ; no, his was associated inseparably with moral pro bity; it was the integrity of a hallowed mind, and of 'truth in the inward parts;' of high principle; of straight-forward MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. XXI rectitude ; of unbending resolution ; of fearless faithfulness ; and, when necessary, of noble daring. In some others, this principle is cold and repulsive in its spirit and workings ; but in him it was firm and stern, united with affectionate feeling, with social sympathy, with the domestic virtues, with the Christian charities and graces. " Of his abilities and attainments I need not speak particu larly; the proofs are before the world, and the public have appreciated, them.: 'his praise is in all the churches.' These talents, we may be allowed to say, were of the first eminence. Seldom has such a combination of faculties, in respect of variety and energy, been conferred on one human being. He was highly gifted by the God of nature and of grace. Few have possessed such power, and penetration, and perspicacity of mind ; such capaciousness, correctness, and retentiveness of memory. Few have made such proficiency in extensive, and accurate, and varied learning ; and few have acquired such treasures of knowledge, sacred and literary. His taste was chaste ; his imagination was well regulated ; and he wrote the English language with a purity and an elegance which have, we apprehend, been seldom equalled. ' Like a scribe who is instructed unto the kingdom of God, he brought forth out of his treasury things new and old.' His delivery, partaking of his constitutional simplicity, was natural, correct, and digni fied. The judicious hearer, though, it may be, not highly excited, was yet informed, interested, elevated : and the sub jects on which he loved to dwell were solemn, interesting, and of the highest class. His was truly a gospel ministry; he delighted to ' preach the unsearchable riches of Christ,' and to unfold the plan of redemption in its sublime doctrines and practical bearings. Nor could any one be more faithful and diligent in discharging the private duties of the pastoral office; in visiting the sick, teaching from house to house, ' caring for the poor,' ruling well the spiritual affairs of the church, and, if need be, in ' rebuking, exhorting, reproving, with all long suffering and doctrine.' Much, truly, did he love 'to spend and be spent' for the Saviour and for souls ; and sometimes, when infirmity would have afforded a satisfactory apology for the suspension of his labours. And with regard to his profes sorial functions, those who were so happy as to be placed XXU MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. under his care, will all, we are assured, with one accord bear witness to the punctuality and assiduity of his labours, the abilities and excellency of his instructions, the impartiality of his administrations, the judiciousness of his criticisms and counsels, and the condescending kindness of his attentions. Long will his 'work praise him in the gates,' and long will his pupils speak of him with affectionate veneration. His was sterling worth : no one ever owed less to assumption or osten tation. No one knew him folly who did not also know him intimately; and the excellency of his character rose in propor tion as it was inspected and understood. He was, through the gifts and graces given to him of God, an ornament to our church ; and I do not know the church to which he would not have been an honour. In short, we may say of him what was testified of an esteemed friend and brother concerning another venerable man of God who had been his colleague for a consi derable period, that ' his was a character than which none could gain more or suffer less by a just delineation.' " J. F. LECTURES ON THEOLOGY. LECTURE I. ON THEOLOGY. Introductory Observations — Theology defined: Its Object and Importance — Natural Theology — Supernatural Theology : Its Divisions into didactic, polemic, and practical — Qualifications of a Student of Theology : Piety, a competent Share of natural Talents and Learning, and a Love of Truth. Theology embraces a great variety of topics, some of which are abstruse and difficult, and all have been perplexed by controversies, which commenced as soon as our religion was promulgated, and have been carried on from age to age, with all the arguments which ingenuity and learning could supply, it is like an immense field, thickly covered with briers and thorns, which impede our progress, and through which we must force our way with toil and pain, in the pursuit of truth. The private Christian, ignorant of the subtle disputes which have arisen concerning almost every article of faith, humbly takes up the Bible as the Word of God, and by a short and easy process, acquires that measure of knowledge which, through the teaching of the Divine Spkit, makes him wise unto salvation. But the minister of religion proceeds more slowly, encounters obstacles at every step, and often is compelled to assume the character of a polemic, because he must study theology as a science, and be able not only to instruct the simple and illiterate, but also to contend with the wise and learned, whether as infidels they oppose revelation in general, or as heretics they impugn any of its doctrines. To superintend and assist your studies in a subject so extensive, so complicated, and so embarrassed with diffi culties, is a task which I should not have willingly undertaken ; but as it has been imposed upon me for a time, I must attempt to perform it, although I know beforehand, that I shall neither do justice to you, nor give satisfaction to myself. I commit myself and you to the Father of lights, from whom comes down every good and perfect gift,— earnestly beseeching him to prevent me ' from handling his word deceitfully, or in any instance misleading your minds, and to bless such instructions as you may receive, for advancing your progress in divine knowledge and in personal religion. There are various departments of human knowledge, to each of which a de gree of value ought to be attached, according to its intrinsic worth, or its nearer or more remote connexion with our business and our interests. The objects of knowledge are, mind and matter ; the sciences and the arts ; man himself under his different aspects, as an animated being, as the subject of moral obligation, and as a member of civil society ; the history of human opinions, inventions, and transactions ; and many other particulars which it would be tedious to men tion. To these, individuals are led to direct their attention, in some instances it would seem, by a natural predilection or an original disposition of mind, by accidental circumstances, by imitation, by a regard to interest, by the love of 7 8 ON THEOLOGY. glory, or by the principle of curiosity, which prompts us to inquire into wha» is unknown, and is gratified by the' enlargement of our views. As man has been endowed by his Creator with intellectual powers, he acts conformably to his will when he exerts them in the acquisition of useful knowledge ; and the know ledge which is thus acquired must be considered as a divine communication, not immediate, indeed, like the revelations which were made to the prophets, but proceeding as certainly from the Father of lights. Whatever blessing is ob tained by the use of means with which Providence has furnished us, is as truly a gift of our Maker as was the manna which, being prepared by his own hand without, as far as we know, the intervention of any natural cause, fell every night around the camp of the Israelites. I do not therefore mean to undervalue those parts of knowledge to which I have referred, and which in their place are as necessary as revelation, when I add, that however worthy they are of atten tion, and however great are the advantages which they are calculated to impart, they yield in importance to the subject which alone will constitute the business of this course. Theology literally signifies, a discourse concerning God. By the ancients, the term was used in a more restricted, and a more extended sense. In the writings of the Fathers, mention is made of the Theology of the Sacred Trinity, and of the Theology of the Son of God, or of the Divinity of our Saviour ; while the word, at other times, denotes the general system of truth contained in the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament, or these Scriptures themselves. It may be defined to be the science which treats of God, his nature, his attri butes, his counsels, his works, and his dispensations towards the human race. I call it a science, because it is equally worthy of that designation with any of those departments of knowledge to which it is applied by common consent ; for, although its authentic records do not deliver theology in a scientific form, it is founded on first principles, from which its subordinate parts are deducible ; and, throughout all its ramifications, there is a connexion, a mutual dependence, constituting a harmonious whole. Reflection upon the subject of theology will convince us that it claims the preference to all other studies. In God, we behold an assemblage of all conceivable excellencies, existing in the highest degree, and in the most perfect accordance ; the union of grandeur and loveli ness, of every thing fitted to awaken solemn and pleasing emotions, to impress us with veneration, to gain our confidence, to inspire us with hope. He is in visible to mortal eyes, but this is not a reason for suspending our inquiries, because we are furnished not only with external senses, by which we communi cate with the material creation, but also with mental faculties, which qua lify us for holding intercourse with the intellectual or spiritual world. The mystery which envelopes his nature might discourage us, if we entertained a presumptuous wish to comprehend his infinite essence ; but it presents no ob stacle to the attainment of that degree' of knowledge which will serve as the . foundation of religion, since he has been pleased to grant such manifestations of himself as are suitable to our limited capacity and our present state of exist ence. His remoteness from us, who are separated from him by an interval of infinite extent, has been urged by some men as an argument for dismissing him from our thoughts, and confining them to subjects more nearly allied to us ; but it will have no weight in the estimation of those who consider, that independent and self-existent as he is, he stands in the closest relations to us, as our Maker, our Lawgiver, and our Judge. To know this mighty Being, as far as he may be known, is the noblest aim of the human understanding ; to love him, the most worthy exercise of our affections ; and to serve him the most honourable and delightful purpose to which we can devote our time and talents. To ascer tain the character of God in its aspect towards us ; to contemplate the display of his attributes in his works and dispensations ; to discover his designs towards man in his original and his present state ; to learn our duty to him, the means ON THEOLOGY. g of enjoying- hisfavour, the hopes which we are authorized to entertain, and the wonderful expedient by which our fallen race is restored to purity and happiness ; these are the objects of theology, and entitle it to be pronounced the first of all the sciences in dignity and importance, ignorant of the other sciences, and of the arts-which minister to the ornament and amusement -of ¦ life, a man who can sustain himself by mechanical labour, may spend the short time of his earthly pilgrimage, not without comfort, nor without the honour which honesty and integrity may procure, especially if religion has shed some rays of its celestial light upon him ; but he who has stored his mind with every kind of knowledge except the knowledge of God and divine things, lives like a fool, and shall die without hope. Theology may be distinguished into natural and supernatural. By natu ral theology, is understood that knowledge of God which the light of na ture teaches, or which is acquired by our unassisted powers, by the exercise of reason, and the suggestions of conscience. It is not meant, that there is in the human mind an innate idea of God, a supposition manifestly absurd, and contradicted by experience, for individuals have been found in a savage state, in whom there was no such idea; but that man, by contemplating the objects around him, is led to infer the existence of an invisible Being by whom they were created, possessed of certain perfections, the signatures of which are perceived upon his works ; and from this first principle deduces other doc trines of religion, as that this God governs the world ; that it is our duty to honour and please him, by the practice of piety, and justice, and benevolence ; that the soul is immortal ; and that there is a future state, in which the right eous will be rewarded, and the wicked will be punished. These are the great articles of natural theology ; and much reason and eloquence have been em ployed in illustrating them, and demonstrating their truth in opposition to the objections of atheists. Upon this subject, however, there is a diversity of sentiment. It has been disputed, not only whether these are the only articles, but also whether there is such a thing as natural theology ; or, in other words, whether the system, which bears that name, is discoverable by unas sisted reason. There is no doubt that its truths, when proposed, are approved by reason, which supplies the most convincing arguments in support of them ; but the question is, whether men, left to themselves, could arrive, by the ob servation of external things and the reflections of their own minds, at the con clusion that there is one living and eternal Being who created and governs the world, and would connect with it the other doctrines in a regular series. The discussion of this controversy does not belong to this introductory lecture. Supernatural theology is the system of religion which is contained in the Holy Scriptures ; and it is called supernatural, because the knowledge of it is not derived from reason, but from divine revelation. It incorporates the truths which have been enumerated as the articles of natural theology ; but it com prehends many other truths, which it could not have entered into the mind ol man to conceive, and which exhibit new manifestations of the divine charac ter, suitable to the new situation into which we have been brought by the fall. lt is the religion of sinners, and consequently the only religion with which we are concerned. What is called natural religion, is not adapted to our cir cumstances. It holds out no hope to the guilty ; and, in the present enfeebled and corrupt state of our moral powers, its duties are absolutely impracticable. Christianity has been said to be a republication of the law of nature. The assertion is true, if it only mean that it teaches the doctrines which are sup posed to be discoverable by reason, and teaches them more clearly, and fully, and authoritatively; but it is obviously false to affirm, that this is the whole design of Christianity, the distinguishing character of which arises from its superadding to those doctrines the discovery of the remedial or mediatorial dispensation. . Vol. I.— 2 10 ON THEOLOGY. Christian theology may be arranged under three divisions, distinguished by the titles of dogmatic or didactic, polemic, and practical. It is the province of didactic theology to state and explain the several doctrines of religion, and to point out the proofs. In treating this part of the subject, the theologian proceeds in the same manner as a teacher of any other science, who lays before his pupils its constituent principles, and the conclu sions which have been drawn from them, together with the train of reasoning upon which they are founded. Having examined the subject with attention and patience, and, as he trusts, with success, he imparts to others the result of his inquiries, to facilitate their progress, and to lead them to the same views which he has adopted from conviction. I will add, that it is his business, not only to bring forward the several doctrines of religion, and the proofs, but also to exhibit them in their order and connexion. It is granted, that the Scrip tures do not deliver religion to us in that artificial form which we find in the writings of the schoolmen, and of those modern divines who have trodden in their steps, although there is certainly an approach to it in some parts of the Bible, particularly in the Epistle to the Romans ; but no man, I think, who (is in possession of his senses, and) understands what he is saying, will deny that religion is systematic. The word of God is not an assemblage of writings which have no other relation to each other but juxtaposition, or collocation in the same volume, but a continued revelation of his eternal counsels, " in which he has abounded towards us in all wisdom and prudence." There is arrangement here, as well as in his other works, although it may require time and patience to discover it. Religion, if I may speak so, has a beginning, a middle, and an end. It has first principles, and secondary truths derived from these principles, and precepts founded upon both. The study of the Scrip tures is not recommended to us, that we may load our memories with a mul titude of unconnected ideas, but that we may bring together and combine the truths which are scattered up and down in them, and thus " understand what the will of the Lord is." In the mind of every intelligent reader of the Scrip tures, a, system is formed, the parts of which, by their union, reflect a new light upon one another ; and certainly, the utility of this system is not de stroyed or diminished by its being committed to writing, or being communi cated to others by oral instruction. I am at a loss to understand the declama tions which are so common against systematic theology ; and am disposed to think, that they are often as little understood by their authors, unless it be their design, as, in some instances, we have reason to suspect, to expose to contempt a particular set of opinions, to cry down, for example, not the sys tem of Socinus, or Arminius, but the system of Calvin. Were their objec tions pointed against a particular system, as improperly arranged, as too tech nical in its form, or as encumbered with a multiplicity of useless distinctions, we might concur with them, on finding the charge to be true. But to admit, as they must do, that religion is not a mass of incoherent opinions, but a series of truths harmonized by the wisdom of God, and, at the same time, to exclaim against its exhibition in a regular form, as an atttempt to subject the oracles of Heaven to the rules of human wisdom, is conduct which ill befits men of judgment and learning, and is worthy of those, alone, who " know neither what they say, nor whereof they affirm." In the department of polemic theology, the controversies are considered which have been agitated in the church, with respect to the. doctrines, and precepts, and institutions of religion. The term is derived from a Greek word, which signifies warlike. A polemic divine is a warrior ; he goes forth into the field to encounter the adversaries of the truth. The word has an odious sound, and seems to accord ill with the character of a teacher of religion who ought to be a minister of peace. On this ground, polemic theology is often held up as the object of scorn and detestation, and it is loudly demanded, ON THEOLOGY. 11 hat the voice of controversy should be heard no more within the walls of the ihurch, that the disciples of Christ should bury all their disputes in oblivion, and, without minding differences of opinion, should dwell together as brethren in unity. There is much simplicity and wantof discernment in this proposal, when sincerely made. It is the suggestion of inconsiderate zeal for one object, overlooking another of at' least-equal importance, accounting truth nothing and peace every thing, and imagining that there may be solid peace, although it does not rest upon the foundation of truth. Often, however, it is intended to conceal a sinister design, under the appearance of great liberality ; a design to prevail upon one party to be quiet, while the other goes on to propagate its opinions without opposition. Every man who has observed from what quarter these cries for peace most frequently come, must have noticed that they are as insidious as the salutation of Joab to Amasa, whom he stabbed under the fifth rib when he took him by the beard, and said,— " Art thou in health, brother?"* Nothing is more obvious, than that when the truth is attacked it ought to be defended ; and as it would be base pusillanimity to yield it with out a struggle to its adversaries, so it would be disgraceful, as well as criminal, in one of its professed guardians, not to be qualified to sustain the dignity of his office, and to uphold the sacred interests of religion, by his arguments and his eloquence. He should be " able, by sound doctrine, both to exhort, and to convince the gainsayers." If controversial theology be accounted an evil, it is a necessary one ; and let the blame be imputed to the men who have laboured, and are still labouring, to pervert the oracles of God, not to those whom a sense of duty has compelled to come forward, and defend them against the rude assaults of presumption and impiety. Practical theology states and explains the duties which are enforced upon us in divine revelation. The way is prepared for it by the two preceding departments of the science, under which the doctrines are illustrated and vin dicated, upon which these duties are founded, and which supply the only motives that will lead to the proper and acceptable performance of them. Some consider this as the only part of theology which is worthy of attention, speaking slightingly of faith, and pronouncing high panegyrics upon virtue as the one thing needful ; and in doing so, they display much the same wisdom as a husbandman would show, who should think only of the produce of his fields, without concerning himself with the quality of the soil, and the means of calling forth its vegetative powers. By others, it is looked upon as of infe rior importance ; and they are apt to suspect those who are of a different opinion, of being perverted in their taste, and corrupted in their principles, and to accuse them of bestowing that admiration upon a cold and uninteresting morality, which should be reserved for the sublime mysteries of faith. Both are chargeable with mistaking a part for the whole, and disjoining what God has united ; with forgetting that religion, in all its parts, is an emanation from the Fountain of wisdom and purity ; and that it is alike necessary that its doctrines should be believed, and its duties should be practised* Religion is a barren speculation when it is treated merely as a theory. It should uni formly be represented as a practical system ; the tendency of its doctrines to promote holiness of heart and life should be pointed out, and the nature of holiness explained, that men may know what are the good works which it is incumbent upon them, as the professed disciples of Christ, to maintain. " A scribe well instructed unto the kingdom of heaven," a minister who would declare all the counsel of God to the people under his charge, must be an able expounder of the law, as well as a zealous preacher of the gospel. Theology is not one of those recondite subjects, which it is left to the curious to investigate, and in the contemplation of which, speculative and * 2 Sam. xx. 9. j 2 ON THEOLOGY reflecting men may spend their hours of leisure and solitude. Its claim to uni versal attention is manifest from the succinct account which has now been given of its nature. Its instructions are addressed to persons of every description, to the learned, and-to the unlearned, to the jcetired student, and him who is engaged in the bustling scenes of life. It is interesting to all, as furnishing the knowledge of God and his Son, which is the source of eternal life.- -But ill your case, there is a particular reason, besides a regard to your personal welfare, why it should not only engage a share of your thoughts, but be made the principal object of your inquiries. Theology is your profession, as medicine is that of a physician, and law of a barrister. It should be your ambition to excel in it, riot, however, from the same motives which stimulate the diligence of the men of other professions, the desire of fame, or the pros pect of gain, but with a view to the faithful and honourable discharge of the duties of the office with which you expect one day to be intrusted. " These men are the servants of the most High God, who shew unto us the way of salvation." In the sequel of this lecture, I shall briefly point out the qualifications which are indispensably necessary to a student of theology. The first which I shall mention is piety. I have called theology a science, but I did not mean to insinuate, that like the other sciences, it should be regarded merely as a subject of cold speculation and philosophical inquiry. As the conscience should be deeply impressed with the authority of God in this revelation of his will, so the heart should be affected by the views which it gives of Him and ourselves, and all its movements should be iii unison with the manifestations of his character and attributes. While the student of theology is assiduously labouring to store his mind with knowledge which is to be communicated to others, it should be his first care to convert it by faith and prayer to his own use, that he may be nourished with the heavenly food which he is preparing for the household of God. If we are destitute of piety, we cannot enjoy the divine blessing on our studies ; and although, by the exercise of our natural faculties, and the common assistance of Providence, we may acquire the knowledge of the Scriptures as well as of any other book, what will it avail ? It will minister no consolation to our minds, and will serve to aggravate our guilt and condemnation ; for " the servant who knew his master's will and did it not, shall be beaten with many stripes." The knowledge which we do attain will be superficial and only literal, the unre newed mind being incapable of discerning spiritual truths, and supernatural illumination being necessary to clear and impressive conceptions of doctrines, which reason is too dim-sighted to discover. We may think and speak of the wisdom and love of God in redemption, but we shall feel no holy admira tion of the one, no animating and melting sense of the other. The want of piety may even prove an obstacle to the fairness and success of our specula tive inquiries ; for if our hearts remain under the influence of their innate enmity to God, we cannot cordially assent to those parts of the system which exalt him so highly, and degrade us so low ; and we may be tempted, as others before us have been, to accommodate them to our prejudices, to mould them into a shape more pleasing to our taste, more accordant with our feel ings. Those who indulge in perverse disputes, and resist the truth, are re presented as " men of corrupt minds."* You ought therefore to begin, and to carry on your studies, with fervent prayer for the Spirit of wisdom and reve lation in the knowledge of Christ, who will lead you into all the truth, and fill you with joy and peace in believing. He who mingles humble and devout supplications with his studies, cannot fail to succeed. But piety, although indispensably necessary, is not the only qualification * 2 Sam. hi. 8. ON THEOLOGY. 13 The study of theology demands, if not the powers of genius, yet certainly a competent portion of intellectual ability, a mind capable of attention and patient investigation, of distinguishing and combining, and of communicating the result of its inquiries by accurate arrangement, and perspicuous exposi tion. It is a strange and unfounded notion, that theology is an inferior study, and that t^iose may succeed in it who are disqualified for any other profession. Irreligious men may think that the lame and the blind are offerings good enough for the altar of God, but his service is worthy of the noblest talents ; and although the ministrations of weak men have been frequently blessed, while those of some others far superior to them have not been attended with equal success, yet there is no doubt, that upon the whole it has been by the labours of persons properly furnished for the work by nature and education, that the edification of the church and the general interests of religion have been chiefly promoted. The mention of education leads me to remark, that as a competent portion of natural talents is requisite to success in the study ol theology, it is farther requisite that these should be improved by previous discipline. You know what are the preparatory studies which our church prescribes to those who are looking forward to the office of the ministry. Whether their time is employed in acquiring the knowledge of languages, or in cultivating the sciences, the object is not only to enlarge their stock of ideas, or to open the sources from which ideas may be derived, but to exer cise and invigorate their faculties, and to form their minds to habits of reflec tion and inquiry. Individuals may sometimes be found, who have not enjoyed the advantages of a regular education, but are so eminently gifted by nature as to be able to perform, in a creditable manner, the duties of public teachers of religion. But such instances are rare ; and nothing is more absurd, than upon the authority of a few extraordinary cases to establish a general rule. In general, an unlearned ministry will be neither respectable nor useful. The experiment was made some years ago in this country, but its success was not such as to encourage its patrons to persist in it long. They soon discovered the incompetency of illiterate preachers, and found it expedient, for the credit of their party, to furnish them with a portion of human learning, which was once represented as useless and pernicious. It has been sagely asked, what need is there of Greek and Latin and philosophy, to qualify a man for pro claiming the good news of salvation 1 Why should he waste his time in schools and universities, where nothing is to be learned but the vain wisdom of the world ? Let him take the Scriptures into his hand, and then declare to his fellow-sinners what he has read and believed. To these reasoners, or rather declaimers, for of the crime of reasoning they are on this occasion guiltless, I would reply in the words of the prophet, " What is the chaff to the wheat?" Bring forth your self-taught haranguers, and place, in oppo sition to them, an equal number of preachers of man's making, as you some times call them, that we may judge of the utility or worthlessness of human learning, by the self-sufficient dogmatism, the enthusiastic rhapsodies, and the perpetual recurrence of a few favourite topics, on the one hand ; and by the good sense, the lucid arrangement, and the varied illustration of truth, on the other. Learning, then, is necessary to the study of theology ; and without its aid, our knowledge must be very incomplete. Can he be called a divine, whose accomplishments are little superior, if they be superior, to those of many pious mechanics ; or can he expound the Scriptures, who is unable to consult them in the original languages, and is unacquainted with the histories, and laws, and manners, and opinions, to which they so often refer ? In this view, it may be justly said, philosophia theologise ahcillatur, — philosophy is the handmaid, although not the mistress, of theology. I conclude this topic. with a familiar scriptural allusion, for which we are probably indebted to Origen, the father of allegorical interpretation, who, recommending to his friend B 14 ON THEOLOGY. Gregory of Nazianzum the study of the Grecian philosophy as a means of freparing him for the study of the Christian religion, adds, that as the sraelites employed the spoils of Egypt in the construction of the tabernacle and its furniture, so we should consecrate our learning to the service of God. I shall take notice only of another qualification, the love of truth, which it to be found in every mind imbued with piety. Whatever is the subject of inquiry, men are always desirous to discover the truth, unless it happen thai error will be more soothing, or more conducive to their immediate interests ; but here, it should be sought with greater diligence and care than in any oi the sciences, on account of its superior value. The constant aim of a student of theology, must be to ascertain the mind of God in the Scriptures, by read ing and reflecting upon them. He should come to the study, not with a view to find out arguments in favour of the system which he may have been pre viously led to adopt, but to learn what is the system which has proceeded from the Father of lights by the ministry of his inspired messengers. I do not mean to concur with some (declaimers,) who would dissuade the student from having any recourse to human aid, and call upon him to make his own under standing his only resource, and to commence his inquiries as unprovided and as helpless as if not an individual had gone before him to point out the way. I do not so undervalue the labours of pious and learned men, who shine as lights in the firmament of the church ; and I have little doubt, that nothing would be more mortifying to those declaimers, than our adopting their advice in its full extent, and treating their own writings with as little regard as they wish us to express for the writings of others. But I mean, that while we con sult the opinions of others, we should remember that they are fallible, and in themselves of no authority ; and that our ultimate appeal should be to the Scriptures, by which alone the question of truth and error can be decided ir religion. Follow them whithersoever they shall lead you. Refuse not to fol low them, although it should be necessary to part from those, whose dictates you have been hitherto accustomed to reverence as oracles. He who holds the office which I have undertaken must deliver a particular system, because it is the system of the church which has appointed him, and because he be lieves it to be true. He must say also, that if you will be ministers of that church, you must adopt her creed, because she allows no other to be taught to the people. But farther he has no right to proceed. He is not the lord of your faith. He does not claim to teach authoritatively, and, like Pythagoras, to substitute his own affirmations for wisdom. He calls upon you to inquire for yourselves, with earnest prayer for divine illumination, and to embrace the truth wherever you may find it. " Prove all things ; hold fast that which is good." SOURCES OF THEOLOGi' ¦ REASON. ,-5 LECTURE II. SOURCES OF THEOLOGY : REASON. Sources of Theology, Reason and Revelation — Reason defined : Extent of its Discoveries re specting the Being and Attributes of God ; Man's Relation to God ; Creation ; Providence ; Morality ; and the Immortality of the Soul — Reason insufficient to establish the Doctrines of natural Religion : totally silent respecting those of supernatural Religion — The just Office of Reason in Theology. In the preceding lecture, I endeavoured to give you a general view of the nature of theology, and pointed out its superiority to every other subject of study. As it treats of God and divine things, of our duty and our hopes, it is equally interesting to the learned and the unlearned. I showed you that it is distinguished into natural, and supernatural or revealed theology ; and that of the latter there are three divisions,' — didactic, polemic, and practical theology. Didactic theology explains the doctrines of religion, and states the proofs, or the arguments by which their truth is evinced. Polemic theology considers the controversies respecting those doctrines, and replies to the objections of adversaries. It is the business of practical theology to point out the improve ment which should be made of the doctrines, by detailing the duties incumbent upon those who profess to receive them as true, and the motives which they supply to the faithful performance of these duties. I concluded by laying be fore you some of the qualifications for the study of theology ; and I mentioned piety, without which the study, if not unsuccessful, will certainly be unpro fitable ; a competent share of human learning, which is indispensably neces sary to eminence in your profession ; and the love of truth, or a sincere desire to know the will of God, leading to candour and diligence in your inquiries. Let us now proceed to inquire what are the sources of theology ; or, in other words, what are the sources from which our knowledge of it is derived. These are reason and revelation. Here our attention is demanded to such questions as these — Whether reason and revelation are both necessary ? If only one, whether is it reason or revelation ? and, lastly, if reason alone is in sufficient, how far its discoveries extend, and what are its defects, which are supplied by revelation ? Reason signifies, in this place, the intellectual and moral faculties of man, exercised without any supernatural assistance in the investigation of religion. Whether under its guidance he can attain all the knowledge which is necessary to conduct him to virtue and happiness, is the great subject of controversy between infidels' and Christians. There is another dispute, among Christians themselves, with respect to the degree of its ability ; while some maintain that it can discover the doctrines of what is called natural religion, others affirm that these could not be known without the aid of revelation. Nothing is more unphilosophical, and a more certain source of error, than to indulge in vague speculations and barren generalities upon any subject, when it is in our power to enter into a close investigation of it, and to bring it to the test of experience. It is easy to present to us a system of religion, contain ing a variety of articles supported by a train of arguments, which seem to amount to demonstration ; and to tell us, that reason, being the gift of God, must be perfectly sufficient to direct men in all the parts of their duty ; that religion being a general concern, they would not be responsible, unless they were all furnished with the means of acquiring the knowledge of It-, that the supposition of supplementary means is a reflection upon the wisdom of God, IB SOURCES OF THEOLOGY : as if he had not originally adapted man to his situation, and was hence com pelled to devise a new expedient for correcting the error. Without examining these assertions one by one, and showing, which we might do, that they are mere gratuitous assumptions, it may suffice to observe, that not a single fact in the history of mankind can be adduced in confirmation of them. They are an Utopian description of an imaginary state, not a sober relation of things which really exist. They are a pribri arguments, or arguments deduced from our own previous conceptions, not arguments, a posteriori, or founded on observation and experience. The question is not, what should be, according to our ideas of justice and fitness, but what actually is; not what purposes reason, abstractly considered, may be presumed to accomplish, but what purposes reason, as existing in men, is found to have actually accom plished. It is preposterous, first to give an arbitrary definition of reason, and then to conclude that it is capable of exerting all the power which we have jeen pleased to ascribe to it ; it is more consonant to sound philosophy, to judge of the power of reason by its effects. In a word, we must not waste our time, and impose upon ourselves, by endeavouring to show beforehand what reason can do ; we ought to proceed according to a different and a safer plan, and inquire what it has actually done. It may be proper to remark, that there are two senses in which reason may be understood, and consequently, that what is true of it in one sense, may not be true in another. First, reason may signify the high intellectual ability with which man was endowed at his creation ; and which we may conceive to have been as sufficient to direct him in his original state, as instinct is to direct the lower animals, both being perfect in their kind. I would not affirm, however, that even then reason was his only guide, because it appears from the sacred hislory that he lived in familiar intercourse with his Maker, and was favoured with occasional communications of his will. Secondly, reason may signify the intellectual powers of man in his present state, when he feels the effects of the fall in all his faculties, and both his mind and conscience are defiled. It is with reason in this sense alone that we have at present to do. It is no more an impeachment of the wisdom and goodness of God to affirm the incompetence of corrupt reason in matters of religion, than it is to say, that an eye, which in consequence of disease does not see at all, or sees im perfectly, is unfit for the purpose which it was originally intended to serve. From the preceding observations, we perceive that it is not from theory but from experiment, not from conjecture but from fact, that we can ascertain what assistance may be expected from reason in the study of theology. Let us, then, review some of the doctrines of what is called natural religion, and is supposed properly to lie within the province of reason, that we may see what has been the result of its researches. The first principle of religion is the existence of God, who made us, and to whom we owe homage and obedience. No doubt seems to be entertained that this fundamental truth is demonstrable by reason; and, accordingly, there are many books in which it is evinced by arguments so strong and conclusive, that it is not easy to conceive how any man who has attended tot hem can continue an atheist. The metaphysician, we should think, would be over powered by the profound reasonings of Clarke ; and the man of a plainer understanding, by the more obvious proofs collected in the writings of Ray, and Derham, and Paley. There is one thing which ought not to be over looked, that this triumphant demonstration, as it may be justly called, is found only in the writings of Christians ; for although a similar train was pursued by some of the heathen philosophers, — as Cicero in his work concerning the nature of the gods, and Socrates in the dialogues of Xenophon, — the illustra tion was not so ample as it is now made by the discoveries of modern philo REASON. 17 sophy, nor was the conclusion to which it naturally led, drawn with equal clearness and confidence. The cause of this difference we are at no loss to divine. To the Gentiles, the existence of God was a point involved in doubt, an inference to be deduced from premises ; and they who saw some steps of the process, were not always able to see with equal distinctness the result. When Christians sit down to discuss the subject, they are fully convinced of the fact ; and how different it is to discover an unknown truth, by a slow induction of particulars, and to find out proofs of a truth already admitted ; how much easier the one process is than the other, you will perceive upon the slightest reflection. The former is like the voyage of Columbus, who did not know whether there was such a country as America, and had nothing but probability to support him amidst the difficulties and perils of the enter prise ; the latter is like the same voyage now, when the place being known, the sailor can shape his course to it by his chart and his compass. Nature, it is acknowledged, cries aloud in all her works that there is a God ; " but she spoke in vain," as a late writer observes, " to the sages of antiquity, who either altogether failed to interpret her language, or suffered the still whisper of 'divine philosophy' to be lost amidst the various bustle of the world." " The ancients, imperfect as their sciences were, knew more than enough of the harmony and design of the universe, to draw out an unanswerable argument from final causes ; and in point of fact, they did draw out both that and other arguments so far as to leave us indisputable proof, that the God of natural theology will never be any thing more than the dumb idol of philosophy; neglected by the philosopher himself, and unknown to the mul titude, acknowledged in the closet, and forgotten in the world." * This truth made no impression upon their minds, and it is not surprising that it did not, as their notions of it were exceedingly imperfect and erroneous. " The idea of what has been called the personality of the Deity, or his distinct subsist ence, was in a great measure unknown to them. The Deity was considered not so much an intelligent being, as an animating power diffused throughout the world ; and was introduced into their speculative system to account for the motion of that passive mass of matter, which was supposed coeval and co-existing with himself." In practice, they adopted the polytheism of their country, and paid religious honours to the endless train of gods and goddesses, who were acknowledged by the vulgar. There was not a nation upon earth but the Jews, in which the living and true God was adored. Every object was mistaken for him; every part of the universe was deified, and fancy exerted its creative power in superadding a multitude of imaginary beings ; insomuch, that the gods of Greece, that seat of refinement and philosophy, amounted to thirty thousand. In modern India, where science has been long cultivated, the number is still greater, and we are astonished at the information that its gods are estimated by millions, t Such are the achievements of reason with respect to the first principle of religion. In the second place, it is the office of religion to inform us of our relation to God, because this is the foundation of our duty to him. Although we should conceive tbe existence of an all-perfect being, if there subsisted no connexion between him and us, how much soever his excellencies might excite our admiration, he would have no claim to our homage and obe dience. By us, God is regarded in the characters of our Creator and Go vernor ; and these ideas are so familiar to our minds, so interwoven with our sentiments and feelings from our infancy, that they appear to us almost self- evident, and we can scarcely think it possible that they should not occur to * Sumner's Records of the Creation, preface. 1 330,000,000. Vol. I.— 3 b 2 18 SOURCES OF THEOLOGY : every person of reflection. We believe that all things were created by the almighty power of God; and, although the production of the universe out of nothing is an event of which we can form no conception, because experience has not made us acquainted with any thing similar, yet we consider the cause as adequate, omnipotence being able to do every thing which does not imply a contradiction. But men, having the light of nature alone as their guide, entertained different sentiments. Unassisted reason never arrived at this conclusion, that the universe had a beginning ; nor when it was suggested, did it obtain its assent. Ex nihilo nihil fit, nothing is made out of nothing, was a maxim received without dispute by all the sages of antiquity. In the detail of their systems, they differed from each other ; but they all concurred in rejecting as absurd the idea of a proper creation. Some of them believed, that the universe was eternal both in matter and form ; that the sun, moon, and stars in the heavens ; plants, animals, and minerals on the earth, had always been ; and that the human race had no beginning, and would have no end. Others maintained, that the present order of things had a beginning ; Dut they attributed it to accident, to the fortuitous concourse of atoms, which, dancing up and down in infinite space, united themselves at last in the present regular system. Of those who acknowledged a deity, some, instead of con sidering him as the Creator, confounded him with his works ; and imagined him to be a soul or vital principle diffused throughout the universe, and giving life and motion to its various parts, as the soul of man animates his body ; while others, although they distinguished him from the universe, did not be lieve that he made it, but only that he reduced the wild chaotic mass into order. According to all of them, matter was co-eternal with the deity, and only thus far dependent upon him, that his power was exerted in moving and arranging it. Their notion, therefore, of the relation of man to God must have been very different from ours, who believe that he made us, and the earth on which we dwell, and the heavens which shed their influences upon us, and that " in him we live, and move, and have our being." We could not expect those who were so much mistaken, or so imperfectly informed with respect to the character of God as the Creator of the world, to entertain just ideas of his government of it. It was natural for such philoso phers as attributed the present system to chance, to deny a providence ; and accordingly, the followers of Epicurus represented the gods as indolently reposing in their own region of undisturbed felicity, and beholding with indif ference the concerns of mortals. The sentiments of some other philosophers were different ; and we are delighted to hear them expressing themselves in a manner approaching, in accuracy and sublimity, to the discourses of those who have derived their knowledge from the high source of revelation. " Of religion towards the gods," says Epictetus, " this is the principal thing, to form right conceptions of them as existing, and administering all things well and justly ; to obey them, and acquiesce in all things that happen, and to follow willingly as being under the conduct of the most excellent mind." But the elevated language of the Stoics loses much of its value, when we reflect upon their doctrine of fate, which meant some inexplicable necessity by which all things were controlled, and to which gods as well as men were compelled to yield. The world, then, was not properly governed by the gods ; but they, as well as their nominal subjects, were governed by fate, and bound by the eternal and inviolable chain of causes and effects. The opinion of the vulgar was more simple. The dominion of the gods was acknowledged by their prayers and thanksgivings, and other religious services ; but even in their creed, the power of the gods was circumscribed by stern irresistible necessity, or was exercised with all the wantonness of caprice, and, as they did not hesitate to say, in some instances with injustice. The idea of a Providence REASON. 19 floated in the minds of the heathens, but they were not able to give it a distinct and consistent shape. All that reason could do, was to point out the general truth ; it failed in its attempts to illustrate it, and to erect upon this foundation the superstructure of rational piety. Let us, in the next place, inquire what have been the discoveries of reason in morality. Here it must be acknowledged that its success has been greater. There are admirable treatises upon morality, which were composed by heathen philosophers, and may be perused with pleasure and advantage ; but he is very ignorant indeed, who imagines that he shall find in them a perfect system of duty. Lactantius, indeed, has somewhere affirmed, that every thing deli vered in the Scriptures on this subject, is contained in the writings of one or other of the philosophers; but Lactantius, although a fine reasoner, and an elegant writer, is not entitled to much deference in questions of theology, of which he has shown himself to be an incompetent judge. What he has affirmed is not true ; for in the moral systems of the philosophers, some duties of great importance are omitted, and some things which they call virtues, when brought to the Christian standard, turn out to be vices. According to Cicero, " virtue proposes glory as its end, and looks for no other reward." Zeno maintained, " that all crimes are equal, and that a person who has offended or injured us should never be forgiven." It was his opinion, as well as that of other philo sophers, " that the crime against nature is a matter of indifference." The Cynics held, " that there was nothing shameful in committing acts of lewdness in public." Aristippus affirmed, " that as pleasure was the summum bonum, a man might practise theft, sacrilege, or adultery, as he had opportunity." Humility, which is the first of Christian virtues, was despised as an indication of a mean, dastardly spirit ; and the tendency of their moral lessons was to inspire a notion of personal dignity, a feeling of self-approbation, a conscious ness of worth, which of all tempers the Scriptures pronounce to be the most offensive to our Maker. Besides the morality of the heathens, imperfect as it was, wanted authority. Being rather a deduction of reason, than a law ema nating from the Author of our being, of the communications of whose will they were ignorant, it had little or no power over conscience ; and the motives with which it was enforced, were not of sufficient efficacy to counteract the innate propensity to evil, and to overcome the strong temptations to which men are daily exposed. Hence a general depravity of manners prevailed among the ancient Gentiles, and still prevails among modern heathens to a degree, of which, corrupt as Christian countries are, we can hardly form a conception : a depravity which extended not only to the lower and uneducated classes, but to the higher and better informed, and even to the very men who professed to be teachers of wisdom. We are apt to impose upon ourselves, or to be imposed upon by others, when we are thinking of the heathen philoso phers. We look upon them as a set of sages, who spent their days in the study and practice of virtue. But the particulars of their history which have come down to us, and the testimony of some of their own order, will correct this mistake, and show us that they were unprincipled deelaimers, whose ' infamous conduct daily gave the lie to their eloquent harangues. Suspicion rests upon the most celebrated names ; and with respect even to Socrates, the visit which he paid to an Athenian courtezan to see her beauty, and to teach her more perfectly the arts of seduction, and the profane oaths with which his conversation was interlarded, with some other particulars in his history, place him at an immense distance from the lowest member of a Christian church. Were this wisest of men according to the oracle, this pattern of every excel lence according to the nonsensical panegyrics of pedants and fools, now to appear among us, no man with correct ideas of piety and morality would choose to be seen in his company. 20 SOURCES OF THEOLOGY: Lastly, what was the result of the inquiries of reason with respect to the immortality of the soul? a doctrine of primary importance in religion. The common people generally believed, that the soul survived the death of the body, and that there was a future state of rewards and punishments ; but they could assign no reason for the belief, but the authority of their ancestors and popular writers, especially the poets, the theologians of the vulgar. The doctrine had not been adopted by their ancestors in consequence of a process of reasoning from which it was the legitimate inference, but they also had received it without examination, upon the testimony of others. When thus traced back from age to age, it appears that it was a tradition, or a fragment of revelation, preserved amidst the general wreck; and consequently, that it is unfair to produce this article as a proof of the sagacity of reason in the investi gation of truth. The philosophers, not content with implicit faith, endeavoured to prove the immortality of the soul by argument; but although they enjoyed this advantage, that the fact was known, and it was left to them only to bring evidence in support of it, they had no great cause to congratulate themselves on their success. Some of their arguments may be admitted to be good ; but this praise is not due to them all. In the Phaedo of Plato, the reasoning is often exceedingly obscure, and arguments are employed so fanciful, and so manifestly false, that while we cannot avoid pitying those who groped their way by the dubious twilight of nature, we are not surprised that they should have produced no permanent conviction in the mind. " I know not how it happens," says Cicero, " that, when I read, I assent, but when I have laid down the book, all that assent vanishes." After all the arguments which the philosophers could muster up, suspicion haunted their minds, that there was some step in the process which weakened the force of the conclusion. Socrates himself died in doubt, as we learn from the close of his Apology, as given by Plato. " It is time," he says to his judges, " for us to depart, that I may die, and you may live ; to which of us shall it be better, is unknown to all but God." This uncertainty, this hesitation, we should take into the account, when we light upon some passage, in which the confidence of hop» is expressed, and death seems to be longed for as a dismission " ad illud divi num animorum concilium csetumque, ex hac turba et colluvione,"* from this vile and worthless crowd into the divine council and assembly of souls. Their thoughts were as changeable as some of our days, which are alternately darkened by clouds and rain, and cheered by gleams of sunshine. This induction of particulars will serve to prove the insufficiency of reason to acquire the knowledge of the principles of natural theology. Let no man presume to tell us that it is sufficient, till he can point out an instance, in which, without any assistance, it has discovered and established, by satisfac tory arguments, the great truths of religion. And here I may observe, that littie as reason has done, we have no evidence that it could have done so much, if all aid had been withheld, and it had been left to work out its discoveries alone. But its solitary strength has not been fairly tried ; for man has never been without revelation, and, although it was in a great measure lost among the nations of the world, yet some fragments of it remained, with which they contrived to make up their various systems of religion. From this source, they derived the general idea of the existence of a God, and their notions of providence, of morality, and of a future state, and still more plainly, their oracles and prophets, their sacrifices, and the opinion of the placability of the divine nature upon which they were founded. Tradition was supple mentary to reason. Its light, indeed, was faint ; but still it served to show dimly some objects, which the eye of reason could not have discovered amidst • Cic. de Senectute, xxiii. REASON. 21 the surrounding darkness. " Though the ancients," says Shuckford, refer ring to their theories concerning the origin of things, but his observations are applicable to other parts of theology, » have hinted many of the positions laid down by Moses, yet we do not find that they ever made use of any true and solid reasoning, or were masters of any clear and well-grounded learning, which might lead them to the knowledge of these truths. All the knowledge which the ancients had on these points lay at first in a narrow compass ; they were in possession of a few truths which they had received from their fore fathers ; they transmitted these to their children, only telling them that such and such things were so, but not giving them reasons for, or demonstrations of the truth of them. Philosophy was not disputative until it came into Greece ; the ancient professors had no controversies about it ; they received what was handed down to them, and out of the treasure of their traditions imparted to others ; and the principles they went upon to teach or to learn by, were not to search into the nature of things, or to consider what they could find by philosophical examinations, but, ask and it shall be told you ; search the records of antiquity, and you shall find what you inquire after; these were the maxims and directions of their studies." * We have now seen how defective reason is in what may be considered to be its proper province, natural theology. If we proceed to supernatural theology, we shall find, that here it is altogether useless. It cannot make a single discovery. It is like the eye, which is capable of perceiving objects upon earth that are not placed at too great a distance from it, but cannot discern those parts of creation which lie in the profound abysses of space, unless it be assisted by art. The line which separates natural and supernatural theology is impassable. On the one side of it, there are some gleams of light ; on the other, there is impenetrable darkness. Supernatural theology is founded on that mysterious distinction in the Divine essence, which we call the Trinity : a distinction not altogether unknown to the heathen philosophers, as is evi dent from the writings of Plato and his followers, but which every person acknowledges they had learned from tradition. Although reason could demonstrate the existence of God, and his unity, it possesses no premises from which it could infer a plurality in his nature. It is a secret which he alone could disclose. Supernatural theology is also founded on the divine counsels respecting our fallen race, of which no trace can be looked for in creation, as they relate to a state of things posterior to it, and different from the state in which mankind was originally placed. We may investigate the design of our Maker in the formation of the universe, by observing the apparent tendency of his works, and say, that in subordination to the display of his perfections, it is the diffusion of happiness : but how shall we ascer tain, except by information from himself, what is his design with respect to his revolted subjects, if he has any other design than to punish them ? Some Christians have asserted, that in the works of God, there is an obscure revela tion of grace ; and the celebrated infidel writer, Lord Herbert, has laid it down as one of his five articles of natural religion, that if men repent of their sins, they will be forgiven ; and this, I apprehend, is the meaning of the former, when they speak of a revelation of grace. But nature teaches no such thing; for, first, there is nothing in creation, or even in the dispensations of Provi dence, which, when fairly interpreted, indicates an intention on the part of God to pardon his disobedient creatures ; and, secondly, the principle assumed as the dictate of nature, is false, it being the express doctrine of Scripture, that God does not pardon sinners upon repentance, without an atonement, of whicli nature knows nothing. But it is unnecessary to waste time upon a point so * Vol. i. preface, 47, 48. 22 SOURCES' OF THEOLOGY : plain, as that the scheme of redemption, being founded in the sovereign will of God, and the purpose which he formed before the foundation of the world, could be known only by divine communication, and by its actual execution. Whether Job speaks of it or not, the following words will admit of an easy application to it. " Where shall wisdom be found ? and where is the place of understanding? Man knoweth not the price thereof; neither is it found in the land of the living. The depth saith, it is not in me ; and the sea saith, it is not with me." " Whence then cometh wisdom ? and where is the place of understanding ? seeing it is hidden from the eyes of all living, and kept close from the fowls of the air. Destruction and death say, We have heard the fame thereof, with our ears. God understandeth the way thereof, and he knoweth the place thereof. When he made a decree for the rain, and a way for the lightning of the thunder ; then did he see it, and declare it ; he prepared it, yea, and searched it out. And unto men he said, Behold the fear of the Lord, that is wisdom, and to depart from evil is understanding." * It is ndt my intention, in these observations upon the insufficiency of rea son, to insinuate that it ought to be entirely discarded from religion. You will ask then, what purpose does it serve ? and to this question I shall endeavour to return an answer in the remaining part of this lecture. Its first office is to judge of the evidence of religion ; and while thus em ployed, it not only collects proofs from observation and experience in favour of the doctrines of natural theology, but examines the grounds upon which any new doctrine is said to be a divine communication. As various systems of religion have claimed to proceed from this high source, it brings them to the test. There are two ways in which this inquiry may be conducted. We may compare the system which demands our assent with our prior concep tions of the divine character and will, in order to ascertain whether it harmo nizes with them, because it is certain that sound reason and a genuine reve lation cannot contradict each other : Or, we may consider certain circum stances, extrinsic to the revelation itself, by which its pretensions to a super natural origin may be determined. As I have not yet spoken directly of reve lation, I am rather anticipating what would have been introduced more pro perly afterwards ; but its connexion with the preceding part of the lecture is my apology for bringing it forward at present. The external circumstances to which I allude, are the character of the publishers of the system, the nature of their testimony, and the works to which they appeal in attestation of their mission ; of all which, reason is competent to judge. The doctrines of the system may be so far beyond its range, that it shall be altogether incapable of deciding upon their truth or falsehood by an abstract contemplation of them ; while the marks of truth with which they are accompanied may be of easy apprehension, and carry conviction to any ordinary understanding. He who is not able, by his own researches, to discover a truth, may find no difficulty in estimating the force of the proofs by which it is supported. We do not, then, retract what has been formerly said concerning the weakness of reason in matters of religion, when we constitute it judge of its evidence, in which there is nothing mysterious, nothing which is not as plain to a common understanding, as the subjects which the mind is called upon to consider in the common course of affairs. The second office of reason is to examine the contents of revelation, to ascertain the sense of the words and phrases in which it is expressed, to bring to the illustration of it our previous knowledge of subjects connected with it, to trace the relation of its parts, and to draw out in regular order the system of doctrines and duties which it teaches. Our intellectual powers * Job xxviii. 12. et seq. REVELATION. 23 must be exercised with a view to obtain a distinct idea of the import of any communication which our Creator has condescended to make of his will. If we had no more understanding than the irrational animals, we should be equally incapable as they of religion ; and if we did not employ our under standing in the study of it, it would be addressed to us in vain. God, having given us rational powers, requires us to exert them in the search of truth; and they are never so worthily employed as in endeavouring to acquire just notions of his character, and our relation to him ; of the duty which he has enjoined upon us, and the hopes which his goodness authorizes us to entertain. You will perceive, that the province which we have assigned to reason does not constitute it a judge of religion. It is not the doctrines of religion which we submit to its test, but the evidence. Let it canvass the evidence, and proceed to settle by the laws of criticism and common sense the genuine import of revelation ; but here it should stop. " Hitherto shalt thou come, and no farther." The wisdom of God must not be tried by the foolishness of men. In the former case, reason acts as a servant : in the latter, it assumes the authority of a master. Man exchanges the character of a scholar for that of a teacher, and presumes to dictate to his Maker. I will not receive such doctrines, because I cannot conceive how they can be true ; the ideas which they associate, appear to me to be contradictory. " Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge?" Presumptuous mortal! the range of thy thoughts extends only to a small portion of the universe ; and of the ob jects which lie within this limited space, there is not one of which thou hast a perfect comprehension. And yet thou speakest as if thy mind grasped all possibilities. How eanst thou tell what may, or what may not be, in the infi nite essence of the Creator, or what counsels are worthy of that understanding which comprehends time and eternity by one act of intuition ? " Who can, by searching, find out God ? who can find out the Almighty unto perfection ?"* He dwells in thick darkness ; and the proper posture for thee is to fall down with humility and reverence before Him, whose judgments are unsearchable, and whose ways are past finding out. LECTURE III. SOURCES -OF THEOLOGY • REVELATION. Revelation, the second Source of Theology — A Revelation is possible ; Objections stated and lefuted : That it is desirable, asserted and proved from the natural Ignorance and Guilt of Mankind Probable Character of a Divine Revelation : it should be fitted to dispel moral ¦Ionorance ; it should be authoritative ; but not free from Mysteries and Difficulties. In the preceding lecture, I stated that there are two sources from which we may derive our knowledge of theology, reason and revelation. Reason signifies the intellectual powers of man, exercised without supernatural assist ance in the investigation of religious truth. I have endeavoured to ascertain' what is the amount of its discoveries ; and it has appeared, that the streams which flow from this source are neither clear nor copious. I shall not now recapitulate what was said, as there will be an opportunity to revert to it in a subsequent part of the lecture. Let us proceed to speak of the other source of theology, namely, divine * Job xi. 7. 24 SOURCES OF THEOLOGY: revelation. I begin with a definition of the term : — revelation signifies infor mation supernaturally communicated ; and according to this general definition, it comprehends not only the discovery of truths which lay beyond the range of reason, but the publication, with new evidence and lustre, of such truths as are within its reach, but of which, in its present corrupt state, it had not been able to form distinc conceptions. The first remark which I make is, that a revelation is possible. There is no reason to doubt, that he who had imparted to man a certain degree of light, by endowing him with intellectual powers, might impart to him a higher degree by some other means. In doing so, he would only act the same part with a person of superior talents and acquirements, who should make known to his pupils, by oral instruction, certain recondite truths which their utmost efforts could not have discovered. The subject may be illustrated by another comparison. Revelation is to the mind what a glass is to the eye, whether it be intended to correct some accidental defect in its structure, or to extend its power of vision beyond its natural limits. God, when he gave understanding to man, did not exert himself to the utmost of his power ; nor did he come under an obligation never to enlarge this faculty, or to furnish it with extra ordinary assistance. If man should sustain any injury in the intellectual part of his nature, there was nothing to hinder his benevolent Creator from repair ing it ; nor, if he should be brought into such circumstances that new know ledge was needed, was there any physical or moral cause which could prevent him from affording it. Revelation does not imply a reflection upon the original work of God, as if he had made man an intelligent creature, but after wards found that the degree of intelligence was not adequate to the purposes of his being. The most zealous advocates for revelation maintain that reason, in its pure state, was perfectly sufficient for all the ends which it was intended to accomplish, and that the necessity of revelation arises from a new state of things, superinduced by man himself. He now needs more light, and it is the business of revelation to impart that light. All reasoning, the object of which is to establish the prior impossibility of a revelation, is manifestly absurd. But attempts have been made to prove this point by arguments of a differ ent kind. Doubts have been raised, whether a revelation could be made, be cause it does not appear how a person could be certain that it was a genuine revelation, and not a dream or an illusion of fancy. "Enthusiasts," it has been said, " who are prompted only by a wild imagination, and persons in a phrensy, or the raving fit of a fever, are as fully satisfied of the reality of the things represented to them, and convinced of the truth and soundness of their own notions, as those are whose senses are clear and perfect, and whose reason is in its full vigour." On this ground, it has been represented as not easy to conceive how the prophets and apostles, as we call them, could have been so confident as they were that God had in reality made any revelation to them. But this argument is so foolish, that it may seem equally foolish to give a serious answer to it. What is the amount of it? It is this, that there is much imposture in the world, and therefore there is no truth; that many persons are deceived, and therefore no man can know that he is in the right. To what purpose tell us of the dreams of enthusiasts, or of men labouring under fever or lunacy ? We are speaking of persons in the full possession of their senses ; for those to whom divine communications were made, although powerfully impressed, and strongly excited to act under their impulse, were not agitated like the priests of Baal, or the Pythoness of Delphi, but retained the calm exercise of their faculties, and were able to dis tinguish among their thoughts those which could be traced to a natural cause, and those which proceeded from a higher source. Besides the objection is REVELATION. 25 founded on a supposition, than which one more absurd cannot be conceived, that although God might make a communication to the mind of an individual, he could not convince that individual that it was a communication from himself. He could infuse ideas into his mind, but he could not enable him to discern whether they were true or false, whether there was any thing real in them, or they were the shadowy creations of fancy. A man can assure his correspond ent, that the message which he receives, comes fr,om him, and not from another ; but God, it seems, possesses no means of authenticating his declarations. It must for ever remain uncertain, whether they are the dictates of infinite wis dom, or the offspring of a disordered brain. The man who should think that there is any force or even any degree of plausibility in this argument against the possibility of a revelation, may be justly considered as destitute of common sense. I can hardly believe that any infidel was ever so stupid as to lay any stress upon it.; and am disposed to suspect that it may be referred rather to the malice, than to the cool judgment of those by whom it has been retailed. We, indeed, cannot tell how inspired men distinguished divine communica tions from the suggestions of their own minds, for this obvious reason, that they have not informed us, and we have not experienced such communications. But our ignorance ought not to be opposed to their knowledge, and to the unquestionable fact, that God could stamp upon his communications infallible signatures of truth. But although a person, to whom a divine communication was made, might be fully assured of the source from which it came, it has been objected, thai the assurance must remain with himself, as there are no means by which he can produce a similar conviction in others. To this argument it has been replied, that God might enable him to give such signs as should satisfy others that he is his messenger. But this answer, which seems to be perfectly rational, infidels are not disposed to admit, and they endeavour to evade it by various pretexts. Some of them argue as if miracles were impossible. If they mean, that there is no power by which a miracle could be performed, we may close this controversy with them, because it is manifest, that they are atheists in their hearts, whatever hypocritical professions they may make of their belief of a Deity ; if they mean, that God, having established the laws of nature, will never alter them, they assume a principle which they cannot sup port by a shadow of proof, and which we are at perfect liberty to deny. Is he bound by fate, like the gods of heathenism ? or has he bound himself by an immutable decree? What should hinder him from occasionally changing his ordinary mode of operation, when some great purpose of his moral govern ment will be accomplished by the change ? Whether would wisdom be more displayed by pursuing a uniform course, without any regard to new combina tions of circumstances, or by deviating from it, to meet the emergencies which might arise in the progress of events ? It is not worth while to spend time in refuting a gratuitous assumption. If it can be shown, that a single alteration or suspension of the laws of nature ever took place, these profound speculations vanish into smoke. But some, who admit that miracles are possible, maintain that they are not sufficient to prove a revelation, upon this ground, that there is no necessary connexion between truth and power. We acknowledge that the power of man may be, and often has been, exerted in favour of falsehood ; but what has this to do with the dispensations of an all-perfect Being, in whose eyes truth is sacred, and of whom it would be blasphemous to suppose that he would interpose to lead his creatures into error ? But the infidel will perhaps tell us, that this is not what he means. He suspects no intention in the Deity to deceive ; but he cannot place confidence in the fidelity of his messengers; or, at least, he has no assurance that they would honestly deliver their message Vol. I.— 4 C 26 SOURCES OF THEOLOGY: and religiously abstain from adding to it, or taking from it. They may alter it to serve a particular purpose, and may employ the miraculous power with which they are invested, to give authority and currency to imposture. But, surely, as God is thoroughly acquainted with the characters of men, and fore sees their future actions, we might assume it as certain, that he would not commit a trust so important, so intimately connected with his own glory, and the happiness of his creatures, to any person by whom he foresaw that it would be abused. The supposition of its abuse is a direct impeachment of the knowledge or the wisdom of God in the arrangement of his plan. Besides, no man who believes that God has power over his creatures, over their minds as well as their bodies, can doubt that he is able to exert, and would exert, a controlling influence upon his servants, which would prevent them from cor rupting, and suppress all desire to corrupt, the revelation which they were appointed to deliver to the world. They would be thus far passive in his hands, that they could not frustrate his design in selecting them. It is vain to tell us that men are voluntary agents; for while we admit this truth, we know that their freedom does not render them independent of their Maker ; that by some mysterious link, it is connected with the immutability of his counsel ; and that their liberty is unimpaired at the moment when they are fulfilling what he had determined before to be done. But there is another con sideration, which will still more clearly demonstrate the absurdity of the suppo sition, that men may apply to a different purpose the miraculous powers with which they are endowed in order to attest revelation. Infidels seem to suppose, that a man may possess the power of working miracles, in the same manner as he possesses the power of moving his arm ; that, by the gift of God, it becomes inherent in him, and is as much subject to his will as any of his natu ral powers. But their ideas are totally erroneous. Even among Christians, there is perhaps an indistinctness of conception upon the subject; and they speak of the power of working miracles as if it were some divine virtue, resid ing in the person by whom it is exercised. But in this sense, the power of working miracles was never vested in any mere man. In every case, God was the worker of the miracles ; and all that belong to the prophet or apostle was to give the sign, or to pronounce the words, which the miracle immedi ately followed. No person ever dreamed, that, when Moses stretched out his rod over the Red Sea, he exerted a power by which its waters were divided ; the account given by himself accords with the suggestions of reason on the subject: "And Moses stretched out his hand over the sea; and the Lord caused the sea to go back by a strong east wind all that night, and made the sea dry land, and the waters were divided."* The same remark may be made upon all other miracles, which were equally beyond the sphere of human ability. If this statement be correct, it follows that the case supposed is altogether imaginary. No man could abuse the power of working miracles, because, to speak strictly, no man ever possessed it. The power was in God, and not in his servant; and could the servant wield the omnipotence of his Lord at his pleasure ? No ; he might give the usual sign, or pronounce the usual words, but, if it was his intention to deceive, no effect would have fol lowed. This argument, therefore, against the possibility of a revelation, is as destitute of force as the others. It is founded in a confusion of ideas, in a gross misapprehension of the subject, and will cause no difficulty to those who consider that men were merely the instruments of the miracles which God was pleased to work by his immediate power. Having shown that a revelation is possible, and pointed out the futility of the pretexts, by which a proposition so simple and obvious has been perplexed, • Exod. xiv. 21. REVELATION. 27 I remark, in the next place, that it is desirable. In this sentiment, all will con cur but those who account religious truth a matter of absolute indifference, or who believe that reason is sufficient for all the discoveries which are necessary to guide men to virtue and happiness. Infidels adopt the latter principle, but at the same time give abundant evidence that they are influenced by the former. In no part of their conduct is there any indication of reverence for religious truth, and of a sincere desire to discover it ; but they continually betray symptoms of levity and impiety, a contempt for seriousness, a disposi tion to cavil rather than to inquire, to muster up objections, to perplex evidence, to involve every thing in doubt, and to turn the most solemn of all subjects into ridicule ; so that, it should seem, that there is nothing which they are less eager to discover than truth, and that nothing would be so unwelcome as a clear and convincing manifestation of it. But, whatever are the thoughts of men devoted to pleasure, and living without God in the world, every person, who feels that he is an accountable being, must be desirous to know by what means he may fulfil the design of his existence, and obtain the happiness of which his nature is capable. That a revelation is desirable is evident from what you heard in the preced ing lecture. I there considered reason as a source of theology, and proved its insufficiency to give us satisfactory information respecting the doctrines of natural religion. It is proper, in this place, to take a short review of the observations which were made upon this 'subject. It appeared, that the exist ence of one God, which is the fundamental principle of religion, is not discoverable by reason, or, at least, cannot be discovered by it with such clear ness as to produce a firm, permanent, and practical conviction of it in the mind. Hence we find, that not only did the people in all heathen nations fall into polytheism and the grossest superstition, but the philosophers patronised, by their example, the errors of the vulgar ; ' and if they sometimes spoke of one -God in their writings, there was nothing like certainty and consistency in their opinions. Amidst their speculations, the idea occurred to them, but obscurity hung upon it, and to the wisest of them he remained an unknown God. It appeared also, that their notions of his relation to man were exceed ingly imperfect. None of them believed a proper creation, all holding the eternity of matter ; and their views of providence, even when they approached nearest to the truth, were very different from those which we have learned from revelation, as they maintained the doctrine of fate, to whose irresistible decrees the gods, as well as men, were compelled to bow. It appeared further, that, although they had made greater progress in the science of morality, the general precepts of which are suggested by conscience, by the relations sub sisting among men, and by means of private and public utility, they were not able to deliver a perfect code of duty. In their best systems, there were great defects ; virtue was mistaken for vice, and vice for virtue ; there were omis sions which ought to have been supplied, and redundancies which ought to have been retrenched. Besides, their moral precepts wanted authority ; in proportion as the sanctions of religion were imperfectly understood, their power over the heart was feeble ; they were rather themes of declamation than rules of practice, and proved utterly insufficient to render the teachers them selves virtuous, and, as might be naturally expected, to restrain the torrent of licentiousness among the people. Lastly, it appeared, that with respect to the immortality of the soul, the wisest men lived and died in doubt. In the popular creed, future rewards and punishments had a place ; but they were treated with derision by those who boasted of superior wisdom, partly on account of the ridiculous manner in which they were described by the poets, and partly because they rested upon no solid ground. They were reputed 28 SOURCES OF THEOLOGY: tales of the nursery, or the fictions of poets. The light of nature was too feeble to dispel the darkness which enveloped the world beyond the grave. A revelation was desirable, although had it gone no further than to solve those doubts, and to shed light upon the doctrines of natural religion. These were interesting to all, and engaged the particular attention of men of reflection ; but the success of their inquiries by no means corresponded with the earnestness of their wishes. In these circumstances, would not revelation be acceptable, as is the rising of the sun to the bewildered traveller, who is anxiously seeking the road to the place of his destination, but cannot find it amidst the darkness of the night? There are several passages in the writings of the heathens which show, that while they were, sensible of their ignorance, they were persuaded that there was no remedy for it but in a divine interposition. " The truth is," says Plato, speaking of future rewards and punishments, "to determine or establish any thing certain about these matters, in the midst of so many doubts and disputations, is the work of God only." Again, one of the speakers, in his Phaedo, says to Socrates concerning the immortality of the soul, " I am of the same opinion with you, that, in this life, it is either absolutely impossible, or extremely difficult, to arrive at a clear knowledge in this matter." In his apology for Socrates, he puts these words into his mouth, on the subject of the reformation of manners : " You may pass the remainder of your days in sleep, or despair of finding out a sufficient expedient for this purpose, if God, in his providence, do not send you some other instruction.' But the most remarkable passage is in the dialogue between Socrates and Alcibiades, on the duties of religious worship. The design of the dialogue is to convince Alcibiades that men labour under so much ignorance, that they should be exceedingly cautious in their addresses to the gods, and should content themselves with very general prayers, or what is better, not pray at all. " To me," he says, " it seems best to be quiet; it is necessary to wait till you learn how you ought to behave towards the gods, and towards men." " When," exclaims Alcibiades, " when, 0 Socrates ! shall that time be, and who will instruct me, for most willingly would I see this man who he Is ?" " He is one," replies Socrates, "who cares for you; but, as Homer represents Minerva as taking away darkness from the eyes of Diomedes, that he might distinguish a god from a man, so it is necessary that he should first take away the darkness from your mind, and then bring near those things by which you shall know good and evil." " Let him take away," rejoins Alcibiades, " if he will, the darkness or any other thing, for I am prepared to decline none of those things which are commanded by him, whoever this man is, if I shall be made better."* The passage is truly curious, and deserves particular attention from us at this time, as a proof of the longings of nature for such a revelation as has been since given to the world. The wisest philosopher of antiquity acknowledged it to be necessary, and ventures to anticipate it, without, however, knowing what he said. His disciple was transported at the thought, and professed his readiness to submit to the lessons of his teacher. It is only among the present race of unbelievers, the Socrateses and Platos of modern times, as they would have us to account them, that the idea of a revelation is held up to ridicule, and the self-sufficiency of reason is maintained. What were the ideas of the heathens in general with respect to a revelation, we may infer from some parts of their religion. Their prayers were applica tions to the gods for direction and assistance in the conduct of affairs ; then priests and priestesses, whom they believed to be inspired, their omens and auguries, and their oracles which they consulted in cases of difficulty, were so many testimonies to the general conviction, that the ignorance and infirmity * Platonis Alcibiad. ii. REVELATION 29 of man rendered intercourse with beings of superior wisdom and power necessary to his welfare. It was thus that the defects of reason would be supplied. What man knew not, the gods could teach him ; and it was chiefly to the temple of Apollo, the god of wisdom, that the Greeks, and persons from other nations, repaired, to obtain the responses of the oracle in matters of public and private interest. Revelation would be desirable, even although reason were capable of dis covering all the truths of natural religion. It would not follow, upon that supposition, that they were so obvious as to be discovered without any labour. The exercise of our mental powers would be necessary to collect the proofs of the existence and government of God, and to trace our duty in its manifold ramifications. There are no innate ideas in the human mind, no ideas with which we are born, and which we perceive intuitively as soon as reason begins to dawn ; all our knowledge is derived from observation and experience. Hence it is evident, that a revelation would facilitate the acquisition of know ledge to all, and particularly to those whose intellectual faculties were originally not strong, and had not been improved by education, and whose daily occupa tions afforded them little leisure for inquiry and reflection. It cannot be denied, that a great part of mankind labour under disadvantages for the discovery of truth ; that they are apt to be misled by false opinions, and distracted by worldly cares, and to neglect those objects which require abstraction of mind and patient investigation. The infidel himself is compelled, by indisputable facts, to acknowledge, that, whatever power he ascribes to reason, it has generally failed to lead men to a rational system of religion ; nay, that such a system was never established by its aid, in any nation, or even in any school of phi losophy. It is- manifest, therefore, that if a revelation had been granted to point out at once the conclusions at which reason could have arrived only by a tedious process, it would have been an invaluable gift to the world. Upon this subject, we can entertain no doubt. A revelation has been granted, and what is the consequence ? The doctrines of natural religion are better under stood than they were at any former period ; they are known not only to men of studious and contemplative minds, but to the illiterate; we become acquainted with them at the outset of life; and there are thousands of young persons in a Christian country, whose knowledge far exceeds that of the most distinguished heathen philosopher. They have learned by a few lessons more than he could acquire by the painful researches of a long life. We have proved, however, that reason is not sufficient to discover the truths of natural religion; and, consequently, that revelation was not only desirable, but necessary, to deliver men from a state of ignorance at once shameful and perilous. And this necessity will be more apparent, if we con sider that they were not only ignorant but guilty, fallen from innocence and happiness, condemned by the law of nature, a clearer discovery of which would have served only to impress more strongly on their minds a conviction of demerit, and to heighten the dread of their offended Creator. The republi cation of the law of nature would have done nothing to quiet their apprehen sions and revive their hopes ; on the contrary, it would have had the same effect as would take place in the case of a criminal, who, suspecting that he was doomed to punishment, should have the sentence of death put into his hands, distinctly written, and authenticated by the signature of the judge. Still he knows that his prince can reprieve him ; but whether he will extend mercy to him, he cannot learn from the law which has condemned him, but by a new communication, transmitted in a different channel. The situation of men, in consequence of sin, is like that of the criminal. The law under which they were made has pronounced sentence upon them ; the lawgiver, according to the best conceptions which they can form of his character, is just, and able c2 30 SOURCES OF THEOLOGY : to maintain the authority of his law. There is, indeed, a display of goodness and patience in his administration, but it is so intermixed with tokens of his wrath, that the hope to which it may give rise is faint and fluctuating ; and unbiassed reason must come to this" conclusion, that the guilty have every thing to fear. If the lawgiver has any merciful design towards his rebellious subjects, it is a secret in his own breast, and all our speculations on the subject are conjectural and presumptuous. In the commencement of our course, while we have not yet proved that a revelation has been given, I cannot quote any parts of it as posse'ssing more authority than belongs to the sayings of an ordinary man, which are agreeable to the dictates of reason and common sense. The following words of the apostle of the Gentiles are brought for ward merely as a just representation of the state of the case : — " Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him. But God hath revealed them to us by his Spirit; for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God. For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him ? Even so, the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God."* As the thoughts of a man are known to none but himself; as he alone is conscious of them, and they remain concealed from others, unless he disclose them by external signs ; so the counsels of God with respect to his fallen creatures are a mystery, hidden from every eye but his own, a secret which no sagacity could explore. And those counsels are so much above our conceptions, so different from any thing which appears in crea tion and providence, that no idea of them would have ever occurred to the human mind in its loftiest excursions. It is evident, therefore, that a revelation is necessary for the information of man, in the new circumstances in which he was placed. He wanted to know whether the Deity was placable ; whether he was disposed to exercise clemency to offenders ; upon what terms he would receive them into favour, and by what expedient he would adjust the claims of mercy and justice. Who does not see, that in reference to points so interesting, but so obscure, none could give him satisfaction but God himself? If a revelation had not been granted, there would not have been any religion in the world. What natural religion actually is, you will learn, not from the factitious systems of Christian writers, but from its state among heathen nations ; and although it is hardly worthy to be accounted religion, yet if you are disposed to give it this name, remember that any portion of truth which it contains is not derived from unassisted reason, but from tradi tion, and that it is probably owing to this cause that it has not become utterly extinct. Revelation is indisputably the sole origin of the religion which we profess. Without it, we should have been profoundly ignorant of the Saviour in whom we believe, and of the promises which are the ground of our hope. I have endeavoured to show that a revelation is possible and desirable, and proceeding a step farther, have affirmed that it is necessary. This necessity arises from the ignorance of mankind respecting points of the greatest import ance, which could be remedied by no other means. It was necessary that light should be thrown upon those primary truths, in which we conceive man to have been at first instructed by his Maker, but which his dim-sighted reason could no longer discern in their original purity and beauty ; and that new discoveries should be made to him, adapted to the exigencies of the new situa tion in which he had been placed by his apostacy from God. This general view of the design of revelation leads me to inquire what, upon a calm and unbiassed view of the subject, we might previously expect to be its nature and character. * lCor. ii. 9— 11. REVELATION. 31 First, — we might expect it to contain all the information which man wants, as a moral and accountable being. We cannot conceive any design with which it should be given, but to communicate to us the knowledge of God, and of our duty to him, and to point out the means of regaining his favour, and rising to perfection and felicity. Proceeding as it does, according to the hypothesis, from the Fountain of wisdom and goodness, it must be perfect, like his other works ; that is, it must be fitted to answer its end. Neither defect nor redundance would be consistent with the character of its author. But remember that its end is religion; and that if it accomplish this end, it is worthy of God, although there should be many other ends, and these, too, of importance to mankind, to which it is not adapted. There is much know ledge which is useful and necessary to us in the present life, but which it would be unreasonable to expect that a divine revelation should teach us. There is the knowledge of the arts, by which human life is sustained, and cheered, and adorned, and the knowledge of the sciences, which not only gratify curiosity, but lend their aid to improve the arts, and promote in various ways our temporal interests. But revelation says nothing about them, because they are not connected with its main design, and here reason is perfectly sufficient. There are also many questions, relative to the nature of God and our own, the constitution of the universe, the phenomena of the moral world, and a future state of existence, of which it would gratify us much to obtain a satisfactory solution ; and to some idle speculatists, information concerning them would be more acceptable than communications of unspeakably greater importance. But these questions have nothing to do with our duty, and although they were all answered to our complete satisfaction, they would make us neither wiser nor better ; they would not relieve a guilty conscience, or console an afflicted heart. It is for purposes of greater moment that the God of heaven will deviate from his usual course ; it is to send down some rays of celestial light to our benighted world, to show us the path to glory and immortality. Secondly, — we might expect a revelation to deliver its instructions rather in an authoritative than in an argumentative manner. The argumentative manner is proper, when we are addressed by men who have no title to be heard, unless they give reasofis for what they say, or content themselves with the idle labour of repeating self-evident propositions. The authoritative manner has been sometimes adopted by certain professed teachers of wisdom, but they had to deal with a very credulous audience, or they had contrived previously to establish a belief of their superior attainments. Pythagoras enjoined silence upon his disciples for a certain number of years, during which they were to give an implicit assent ; and own *p», he said it, passed current among them as sufficient authority. But, whatever blind submission there may be among mankind to the dictates of others, it is generally reprobated as unworthy of our rational nature. It is demanded of him who pretends to teach others, that he should prove what he affirms, because it is evidence only which can produce rational conviction, and no man has a right to call upon others to follow him, unless he can show them that the way is safe. But a different procedure is suitable to a divine revelation. It comes from the Source of wisdom, who is not liable to err, and can have no intention to deceive us ; from the Author of our being, who has a right to require that we should serve him with the submission of our understandings, as well as with the love of our hearts. Revelation is not a counsel, but a law. It is not proposed as a subject of deliberation, which may be accepted or rejected according to the result; but it is a declaration of the will of the supreme Lord, which all, to whom it is published, are bound to obey. Nothing would be more unjust than to object against a revelation, because it was propounded in a tone of authority. The 32 SOURCES OF THEOLOGY: objection, however, was made when the Christian revelation was promulgated ; and we find Celsus, who expressed the sentiments %of other philosophers, exclaiming against our religion and its ministers, because, instead of reason ing with men, they required them to .believe. The objection would have been well founded, if, without producing any proof of the divine origin of the gospel, they had insisted that men should believe it ; but aftei the evidence had been exhibited they acted in character when, speaking in the name of God, they commanded their hearers to acquiesce in the dictates of his wisdom, without murmuring and disputing. If in this stage of the business I may be allowed to appeal to the revelation which has been given to the world, it will be found that although reasoning is employed onparticulai occasions, upon the whole it is delivered in an authoritative form. There is a striking example at the beginning of it, for the account of the creation is not supported by a single argument, but is delivered in a simple narrative, to be received upon the authority of the writer or rather of God, by whom he was inspired. Lastly, — we might expect that there would be some difficulties in a divine revelation. At first it might seem that difficulties would be inconsistent with its design, which is, as the word imports, to discover what is unknown, and to illuminate what is obscure. But a little reflection would convince us that even here perfect light is not to be looked for. Such a degree might be reason ably expected, as should fully assure us of the great doctrines and duties of religion, but not so much as to give us complete satisfaction respecting all the points of which we might wish to be informed. Revelation speaks of the things of God; and how could they be made plain to our understandings? Language, being the vehicle of human thought, could not convey a distinct account of subjects which the human faculties are unable to comprehend. There are facts relative to the essence and the dispensations of the Almighty which it may be necessary that we should know, because our duty may be intimately connected with them, but which it may be impossible to explain to to us. Revelation demands faith ; and pure faith is an act of the mind, by which it assents to certain facts, or propositions upon the authority of testi mony, without having any other evidence of their truth. Faith is therefore more perfect, in proportion as the thing to be believed possesses less credibility in itself, and rests solely upon the veracity of the testifier. Hence we may conceive a great moral purpose to be served by the difficulties which are found in revelation. Whether in some cases they might not have been avoided, is a question which we are not competent to discuss; but they are so far from counteracting, that they promote the design of revelation, which is to make us not only wise, but good, to exercise our moral as well as our intellectual powers. Difficulties are a trial of man's dispositions, like our Lord himself in the state of humiliation and suffering, who to some was precious, but to others a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence. They call for docility and humble submission to divine authority ; and wherever these tempers are, revelation will be cordially received. But the men who are elated by the pride of science will not stoop to authority, and refuse to believe what they cannot comprehend. They must do as they have a mind. If, notwithstanding the luminous evidence with which revelation is attended, they will reject it because every part is not adjusted by the square and compass of reason, they only betray their own folly and presumption, and they must abide the conse quences. EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY. 33 LECTURE IV. EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY. Has a Revelation been given 1 — Inquiry confined to Christianity — On the genuineness of the Christian Scriptures: Account of the Books of the Old Testament ; The Pentateuch; Historical and circumstantial Evidence of its Genuineness stated ; General Observations respecting the other Books — Apocryphal Books. In the preceding lecture, I showed that a revelation is possible ; that it is desirable ; and that it is necessary. I concluded by stating the general expecta tions which might be previously entertained respecting its contents. Let us now proceed to inquire whether a revelation has been actually given ; whether there is ground to believe that what reason could not teach us, has been made known to us by supernatural means. Pretensions to revelation have been. common, of which we have examples in the Sybilline Oracles of the Romans, and the sacred books of the Persians and Hindoos ; but it is not necessary to examine their claims, since, with one consent, they are acknowledged to be impostures. Nor shall we spend" our time in considering the pretended revelation of Mahomet, which has been received by a large portion of the human face in Asia, Africa, and Europe. 'Its author was able to produce no evidence of its divine origin, but his own affirmation that it was communicated to him by the angel Gabriel. If he talked of miracles, they were such as had been witnessed by himself alone, and consequently were no ground of belief to others. He appealed, indeed, to the intrinsic excellence of the Koran, as an evidence that it had emanated from a higher source than human ingenuity, and has thus subjected it to the test of criticism. The beauty of the style has been extolled by competent judges, but this amounts only to a proof of the taste of the composer, and, at the most, entitles it to be ranked with the elegant productions of other ages and countries. But it is the language only which has a claim to admiration ; an acquaintance with the matter is sufficient to convince us that it is the work of a man, and of a man by no means pre-eminent in intellectual attainments. It is a farrago of inco herent rhapsodies ; it abounds in silly and puerile remarks ; and, had it appeared: among a people whose taste and judgment were disciplined by literature and science, it would have excited universal disgust and contempt. A few pas sages have been often quoted as specimens of the true sublime, but they have obtained praise much beyond their merit, in consequence of the wretched stuff amidst which they appear, as a green spot planted with trees and abounding in. springs, seems a paradise to the traveller who has been journeying for man}' days'' in the parched and sandy desert. After all, the passages which have been so1 much extolled are not original, but have evidently been borrowed from our Scriptures, and have suffered injury in passing through the clumsy hands of the impostor. Posterior to the Jewish and Christian revelations, the Koran is indebted to them for any portion of truth, for any noble sentiments which it contains ; and these are neutralized by its falsehoods and immoralities. It does not exhibit a single character of divinity ; it is fraught with ridiculous stories and superstitious precepts ; while, without any reason, it inculcates total abstinence from wine, it grants almost unbounded license to the sexual appe tite ; the punishments which it denounces in the future state, although terrible to our animal nature, have been conceived by a low and childish imagination ; and the paradise which it promises to his followers is a brothel. We presume, Vol. I.— 5 34 EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY : that if a revelation come from God, it will be distinguished by the signatures of his moral perfections, as a work of man discovers the powers and disposi tions of the mind which contrived it. The Koran is stamped with the express image and superscription of the profligate in whose brain it was concocted ; and in the absence of all internal and external evidence of its truth, it was first propagated and is still supported by the sword. Its success proves only that Mahomet was a conqueror, and that his followers, stimulated to frenzy by enthusiasm, were too strong for the nations whose dominions they invaded under the standard of the crescent. There is not an instance of a nation which embraced the religion of Mahomet from a calm, unbiassed investigation of its claims. No alleged revelation has any semblance of truth but that which is con tained in our Scriptures, as infidels themselves will acknowledge. They reject, indeed, every revelation ; but they cannot deny that there are arguments in its favour, to meet which, they have been compelled to call forth all the resources of their ingenuity. Mahomet was evidently a favourite with Gibbon, and he has employed all the force of his eloquence to depict the heroism of his followers, and the success of his arms ; hut he did not for a moment sup pose him to he a prophet, or attribute his procedure to any higher cause than enthusiasm or imposture. Other infidels content themselves with laughing at his religion; but besides ridicule, they find it necessary to bring the most powerful arguments which their cause can furnish, to bear against Christianity. It is on this account, and because it is the religion which we have adopted, that our attention shall be exclusively directed to it; and, if we succeed in establishing its divine origin, we virtually disprove all other revelations, because it is obvious, that contradictory systems cannot all proceed from a Being of whom truth is an essential attribute. Before we can establish the truth of revelation, we must ascertain what it is, and where it is to be found. There are certain books in which it is said to be contained, commonly called the Scriptures of the Old and New Testa ment ; and that these are faithful records can be known only by ascertaining that they are genuine, that they are the writings of the persons whose names they bear, or to whom they are ascribed. This is the first step, and it leads to a proof of their authenticity. Let me request your attention to the difference between these two words, which are sometimes confounded. When we call a writing genuine, we mean that it is really the composition of the person whom it claims as its author ; when we call it authentic, we mean that its contents are true, that it possesses authority to command belief. These qualities are by no means inseparable. A book may be genuine which is not authentic, because it is a mere assemblage of fictions and falsehoods. On the other hand, a book may be authentic, that is, may contain information on which dependence should be placed, although it was written by a different person from its reputed author. But genuineness and authenticity are insepa rably connected in the case of the sacred writings ; for if we can show that they were written by the persons whose names they bear, it follows that they are worthy of credit; because, had their contents not been true, they would not have- been received, as in fact they were, by those to whom they were addressed. The necessity of ascertaining the genuineness of the Scriptures will be mani- :? fest upon reflection. They relate miracles ; but how do we know that the miracles were actually performed ? This is one argument in favour of them, that the books were published at the time of the miracles, and were then received ; for it is evident, that, if the miracles had not been really wrought, the narrative would have been rejected as fabulous. It is only on the suppo sition of their genuineness, that we can believe their report of supernatural fact* to be true. They contain prophecies ; but, whether these are to be GENUINENESS OF THE SCRIPTURES. 35 considered as true predictions, can be determined only by the fact, that tne books were written prior to the events which they profes's to foretell. You see, then, the reason why, in endeavouring to demonstrate the truth of our religion, we begin with an examination of its records. I shall consider them in the order of publication. I begin with those of the Old Testament. That they existed in the state in which we now find them, in the days of our Saviour and his immediate followers, is evident from his references to them under the titles of the Law, the Prophets, and the Psalms ; and from the numerous quotations from them by the evangelists and apostles. Among the Jews, the Law signified the five books of Moses ; and the Prophets and Holy Writings, or, as they were sometimes called, the Psalms, because this was the first or principal book in this division, comprehended all the rest. We have also the testimony of Josephus,* who wrote in the first century, and informs us, that the Jews had twenty-two sacred books ; five of Moses, thirteen of the Prophets, and four containing hymns and moral precepts. You might think, in counting the books, that Josephus has omitted some of-them, because you find that there are actually thirty-nine : it is therefore proper to inform you, that the Jews made an arrangement corresponding to their alphabet, which contained only twenty- two letters, and reduced the Sacred Writings to the same number, by making a single book of the twlslve minor Prophets, a single book of the Prophecies and Lamentations of Jeremiah ; and by joining in one the two books of Samuel, the two books of Kings, the two books of Chronicles, the books of Ezra and Nehemiah, and the books of Judges and Ruth. By a small change in the classification, the modern Jews have made the number twenty-four. Having found the Jewish Scriptures in the days of our Saviour, we can trace them two or three hundred years back to the time when they were trans lated into Greek. The version is known by the name of the Septuagint, because it has been supposed to be the work of seventy or seventy-two inter preters, who came for this purpose from Judea to Egypt at the request of Ptolemy Philadelphus. Many strange stories have been circulated about it; and in particular, Justin Martyr relates that they were shut up in separate cells, where each made a translation ; that when the translations were com pared, they were found to agree to a tittle, and that Ptolemy being convinced, as well he might, that they were supernaturally assisted, held them in high honour, and having bountifully rewarded them, sent them back to their own country. The story is now exploded as fabulous ; and it is wonderful that it was ever believed. No man who has read the translation can suppose that the authors were inspired. It is full of mistakes and errors, deviates widely from the original in many instances, and sometimes presents passages which it would require an oracle to explain. Its true history is obscure. It is not certain that even the Pentateuch was translated by the order of Ptolemy. It is probable that it was undertaken by the Jews in Egypt, who, not understand ing Hebrew, were anxious to have the Scriptures in the vernacular tongue ; and that the five books of Moses having been turned into Greek, to be used in the synagogues, where the law was read once a year, the other books were added at different times. , The purpose for which I have referred to this translation is, to show that at the time when it was made, the Jews possessed the same books which they still acknowledge as divine. I am not aware that any information respecting them can be derived from any foreign source, at a period more remote. I presume, however, that it will not be denied that they existed in the days of Ezra, about whose time the canon was completed by the writings of flaggai, Zechariah, and Malachi. * Joseph, cont. Apion. lib. i. 36 EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY: If we will not believe the Jews, when they tell us that the books are inspired, we surely may believe them when they affirm, on the faith of unin terrupted tradition, that they were in being at the termination of the Babylonian captivity. As we are certain that their religion was then observed with all its forms and institutions, we cannot doubt that they possessed the law upon which the whole ritual is founded. We may rest in this conclusion with the more confidence, as no person has ventured to suggest that the books were forged after that period. I have said that they then possessed the Law ; and in what follows, I shall direct your attention to the books of Moses. If we may give credit to the historical books of the Old Testament, merely as a narrative of facts, as con taining the annals of the nation, — and there is no more reason for calling in question their credibility than those of other national records, — we shall be able to trace back the law of Moses within a few years after his death. In the books of Ezra and Nehemiah, there are numerous references to it, and it was publicly read in their days in an assembly of the people. During the time of the captivity, express mention is made of it by Daniel in his solemn prayer and confession, recorded in the ninth chapter of his prophecies ;* and such mention, as being incidental, carries irresistible evidence of its existence. During the reign of Josiah, not long before the captivity, a copy was found in the temple ;t and from the attention which it excited, add the impression made by its contents, it is probable that it was the autograph of Moses, the identical copy written with his own hands, which was deposited in the tabernacle. We can trace it in the reign of Hezekiah, when all things were done " accord ing to the law of Moses the man of God:"J in the reign of Jehosaphat, who sent judges through the land, who had " the book of the law of the Lord with them," and " taught the people ;"|| in the reigns of David and Solomon, for we find the former before his death charging the latter " to keep the statutes and commandments, the judgments and testimonies of the Lord, as it is written in the law of Moses. "§ During the succession of judges, this law was the rule according to which they governed the people ; and this was the charge of Joshua to the Israelites, " Be ye very courageous to keep and do all that is written in the book of the law of Moses, that ye turn not aside therefrom to the right hand or to the left."1f Unless the whole history of the Israelites be rejected as a forgery, — and on better ground we might reject the history of the Greeks and Romans, — the repeated references which are made to the law of Moses, plainly with no design but to appeal to it as the law of the land, furnish sufficient evidence that it existed, not as a tradition, but in writing, from his own time down to the close of the Old Testament Scriptures. Let not the evidence be deemed defective because we cannot produce testi monies that Moses was the author of the Pentateuch from contemporary writers. If there were any at that remote period, their works and their memory have perished. " The Jews, as a nation," says Sumner, in his Treatise on the Records of the Creation, " were always in obscurity, the certain consequence, not only of their situation, but of the peculiar constitution and jealous nature of their government. Can it then reasonably be expected that we should obtain positive testimony concerning this small and insulated nation from foreign historians, when the most ancient of these, whose works remain, lived more than a thousand years posterior to Moses ? Can we look for it from the Greeks, when Thucydides has declared that even respecting his own countrymen he could procure no authentic record prior to the Trojan war ? or from the Romans, who had scarcely begun to be a people when the * Verses 11 and 13. f 2 Kings xxii. 8. +2 Chron. xxx. 16. 1 2 Chron. xvii. 9. § 1 Kings ii. 3. \ Joshua xxiii. 6 GENUINENESS OF THE SCRIPTURES. '37 empire of Jerusalem was destroyed and the whole nation reduced to captivity ?"* Such profane testimony as be can produced serves only to show what was the prevailing opinion among heathens ; and when we find them not only recording many of the facts in the narrative of Moses, but speaking of him by name, and referring to his law, we conclude that no doubt was entertained that he was the lawgiver of the Jews, or that his writings were genuine. Diodorus Siculus, Strabo, Tacitus, Juvenal, and Longinus make mention of him and his writings, in the same manner as we appeal to Cicero and his works. It is the interest of infidels to bring into doubt the genuineness of the Penta teuch : but, having no solid argument to advance, they endeavour to gain their end by assertions, conjectures, and cavils. We can easily see the design with which such men as Hobbes and Spinoza have maintained that the books commonly ascribed to Moses are called his, not because they were written by him, but because they treat of him and his actions. But this opinion has been adopted by some professed Christians, and particularly by two persons well known to theological scholars, the celebrated critic Father Simon, and the not less celebrated Le Clerc. But while they agree in deny ing that the Pentateuch is the genuine work of Moses, they differ in the grounds of their opinion, and Le Clerc labours to prove that the arguments of Simon are false. His own views of the subject were truly singular. He supposed that the Pentateuch was drawn up by the priest who was sent from Babylon to instruct, in the manner of the god of the land, the new inhabitants whom the king of Assyria had planted in the room of the Israelites ; and that with a view to reclaim these from idolatry, he undertook to give them a history of the creation and of the Jews to the giving of the law ; from which it would appear that there was only one God, and that it was he whom the Israelites wor shipped. The priests in Jerusalem, he adds, would approve of the work, finding nothing in it but what was pious and true ; and the Samaritans would receive it, because it came from a person whom they did not suspect. This hypothesis has the character of boldness, but I do not see that there is any- other quality to recommend it. It is conjectural, improbable, and contrary, not only to the uniform belief of the whole Jewish nation, but also to the testimony of inspiration. He endeavours to support it by an induction of particulars collected from the books which he pretends to be of such a nature that they could not have been written by Moses himself, and therefore prove that the books are falsely ascribed to him. To this objection a satisfactory answer has been returned by different authors, and particularly by Witsius, in the fourteenth chapter of the first book of his Dissertation de Prophetis et Prophetia. It is easy to show that some of the particulars might have been written by Moses, and that others which betray a later hand might have been added for illustration when places had changed their names, and certain facts had ceased to be known. " A small addition to a book," it has been observed, " does not destroy either the genuineness or the authenticity of the whole book."t It is probable that Clericus hastily adopted this opinion ; it is certain that on mature reflection* he renounced it,J and acquiesced in the common belief of Jews and Christians, which is confirmed by the testimony of our Lord and his apostles, that the first five books of the Bible were written by Moses. In corroboration of the historical evidence, we may establish the point by reasoning founded on the circumstances of the case. When we affirm that the writings of Moses are genuine, he who denies the assertion is bound to assign his reasons for dissenting from the common opinion. If, however, he shall devolve on us the burden of proof, we would ask him, Since you allege • yol. i. p. 32. f Bishop Watson's Apol. for the Bible, Letter iii. $ Cleric! Prolegom. in Pentateuch. Dissert, iii. de Scripture Pentateuchi. D 38 EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY: that they were of a more recent date, at what time were they composed and published? Did they appear immediately after the death of Moses? Their contents were true or false. Suppose that they were true, — by which sup position only can we account for their having been received by men who were contemporaries of Moses and witnesses of many of the facts which are related, — in this case, the argument in favour of the Jewish religion is precisely the same as if they had been written by Moses himself. But let us suppose them to be false, — and it is solely with a design to create a suspicion of this kind, that any infidel is anxious to prove them not to be genuine, — it was impossible, if they were false, that they could have obtained any credit; because, in this case, every person was a competent judge whether the things related to have taken place within his own memory had really happened. The Israelites would not have believed that the Red Sea was divided to afford them a passage ; that they had journeyed for forty years in the wilderness ; that during all that time a miraculous cloud had covered them by day, and a fire had illuminated their dwellings by night; that they had been supplied with food which daily fell around their camp ; that God had published his law with an audible voice, and punished the violation of it with terrible plagues ; — they would not have believed these things if the whole narrative had been a fiction. It would have excited their ridicule as a clumsy and monstrous romance ; or their indig nation, as an audacious attempt to wreathe a yoke about their necks which they were not able to bear. It is morally impossible that the books of Moses could have been received in the age immediately after his death, if their contents had been false ; and highly improbable, that although true, they would have been considered as his writings if they had been set forth by some other person in his name, and had not appeared till he was lying in his grave. In either case, but particularly in the first, they would have been rejected by universal consent, and would have long since disappeared ; and it is probable that at this distance of time it would not have been known that such an imposition had ever been attempted. Butthe objector may pretend that the Pentateuch was published as the genuine work of Moses at a later period, when there were none to contradict its state ments from personal experience. Let us assume this hypothesis. It is acknowledged that forged writings have been repeatedly palmed upon the world, and in some cases with temporary success. It is obviously impossible to say positively that in no case the design has completely succeeded ; but there have been so many instances of detection as to render it probable that no imposition of this kind has ultimately eluded discovery. Forged writings have usually been of such a nature as not materially to affect the interests of mankind at large ; literary productions, for example, under the venerable name of some ancient author. We have no example of a forged code of laws brought to light after a long interval, and passed upon a nation as the work of their ancient legislators, which they were bound to adopt as the rule of their civil and poli tical institutions. It is certain that any attempt of the kind would fail. The man would be laughed at who should come forwafd and say, " These are the laws of this country, enacted many ages ago, which have hitherto lain in obscurity. I call upon you to abolish your present institutions, and henceforth to regulate your affairs by this new system." The well-known saying of the English barons, Nolumus leges Anglix. mutari, is expressive of the com mon feeling of men, who are attached to the existing laws by habit as well as by the experience of the benefit resulting from them ; and are averse to hazard a change, when property, liberty, and personal safety are concerned. The Israelites would have received with astonishment the proposal to submit to a new code of laws stamped with the venerated name of Moses, their ancient deliverer. If they had listened to it with patience, they would have GENUINENESS OF THE SCRIPTURES. 39 demanded proof that the laws had emanated from him, or from God b^ his ministry ; we cannot conceive that they would have implicitly acqui* esced, unless we should suppose them to have been first deprived of reason and common sense. " How does it appear," they would have said, " that these are the genuine laws of the man with whose name they are sanctioned ? If they are really his laws, ihow came it to pass that our fathers did not observe them, and knew nothing about them? In what archives were they deposited ? In what secret place have they so long lain concealed ? How came you to discover them ? And what evidence do you produce to convince us that they were not fabricated by yourself?" To these questions the impostor could have returned no answer, — none, at least, which would have persuaded the. people that they were bound to comply with his request. There is a manifest impossibility that the writings of Moses could have been imposed on the Israelites as his genuine productions in any posterior age. Men were not simpletons then, any more than they are at present. They had their senses as well as we ; they were as much alive to their interests ; they were as much the creatures of habit, as tenacious of their rights, as unwilling to be deceived. The argument becomes stronger when we attend to the nature of the laws, which, according to the hypothesis, were imposed upon the Israelites. They enjoined a cumbersome and expensive ritual ; they prescribed usages which separated them from all other nations and exposed them to reproach ; they required them not to till their ground once in seven years, and every fiftieth year to give liberty to their slaves and restore mortgaged lands to the original proprietors; they commanded all the males thrice a year to repair to the place of solemn worship, and thus leave the country open to the invasion of their enemies. These laws, so contrary to human policy, so fraught with danger upon the principles of common pru dence, no nation would have received on the ground of a mere pretence that they were delivered by a legislator who had, many years before, been laid in the grave. Upon the whole, it is evident, to the satisfaction of every, candid mind, that the laws of Moses, and the books in which they are contained, could never have obtained credit among his countrymen if they had not been pub* lished in his own lifetime, and supported by those proofs of his divine mission which this is not the proper time to consider. I have dwelt so long upon the books of Moses, because it is of the greatest importance to ascertain their genuineness. In them the foundation was laid of the ancient dispensation, as they contain the laws and ordinances which, we believe, were significant of a better economy, and by the observance of which the Jews were distinguished as the peculiar people of God. They are intro ductory to the other books of the Old Testament; and if the former are admitted, there will be little difficulty in acknowledging the latter. The book of Joshua is understood to have been written by himself, with the exception of a few verses in the end, giving an aecount of his death, and it is afterwards quoted under his name. It gives an account of the invasion of Canaan, the conquest of its inhabitants, and the division of the land. The book of Judges is attributed to Samuel, who most probably wrote also the book of Ruth, which may be considered as a supplement to it, although others have ascribed it, on what grounds I know not, to Hezekiah or to Ezra. Samuel is also supposed to have written the first twenty-four chapters of the book which bears his name, and by us is divided into two ; the test being added by the prophets Gad and Nathan. This opinion is founded upon the following words in the first book of Chronicles: — "Now the acta of David the king, first and last, behold they are written in the book of Samuel the seer, and in the book of Nathan the prophet, and in the book of 40 EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY. Gad the seer."* With regard to the two books of Kings, they are supposed to have been made up from annals or histories composed by different persons, of which mention is made in the Chronicles ; as the acts of Solomon by Nathan, Ahijah, and Iddo ; the acts of Rehoboam by Iddo and Shemaiah ; the acts of Jehoshaphatby Jehu ; and the acts of Hezekiah by Isaiah. Perhaps the com pilation was the work of Ezra ; by whom, too, it is probable that the materials of the two books of Chronicles were collected and arranged. There is little doubt that the two books which follow in order were written by the persons after whom they are called ; the one by Ezra, and the other by Nehemiah. The book of Esther is so designated, not because she was the author of it, but because it relates the history of that singular woman, and the deliverance which, through her means, the Jews obtained from the power of their enemies. It has been ascribed to Ezra, to Mordecai, or to the" distinguished persons who lived at that time, and are known by the title of the Great Synagogue. The truth of the facts which it relates is established by the feast of Purim, which was instituted in commemoration of them, and has been ever since celebrated by the Jews. Some consider the book of Job as a fiction of the parabolical kind, as a dramatic work founded on tradition,. as an allegory, representing the sufferings and deliverance of the Jews ; and assign to it a comparatively recent date. It is manifestly a true history ; but by whom it was drawn up, is not certainly known. There are endless disputes upon this subject ; and while some attri bute it to one author and some to another, the most common opinion is, that it was the work of Job himself, or of Moses. The book of Psalms bears the name of David, solely, however, because a considerable part of it was composed by him. It contains the poetical com positions of different persons, some of which were written before and others after his time. We do not know by whom they were collected; but the pro bability is in favour of Ezra, who, according to the tradition of the Jews, revised and corrected the text of the Sacred Writings. The books attributed to Solomon are three, the Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and the Song of Songs ; and they are generally admitted to be genuine. Grotius, indeed, is of opinion, that Ecclesiastes is a pious and moral composition of more recent times, published in the name of Solomon, and on the subject of his repentance :t but his skepticism is of no value in opposition to uninterrupted tradition. Gibbon has adopted his opinion, and affirmed that " Ecclesiastes and the Proverbs display a larger compass of thought and experience than seem to belong either to a Jew or a king.";}: But this is an assumption without proof. Gibbon has assigned no reason why a Jew, without supposing him to be inspired, might not have known as much of human nature as a man of any other nation ; nor shown how it was impossible that a king endowed with talents of the first order, and devoted to study, should have acquired an inti mate and extensive acquaintance with life and manners. The criticism is unworthy of attention. It is an arbitrary decision founded upon an arbitrary standard. Next in order are the prophetical books, about the writers of whieh there is no uncertainty, as their names are prefixed to their respective works. Their genuineness, like that of any other books, is ascertained by competent testimony, namely, the testimony of those among whom they appeared, and who were particularly interested in them. They have always been assigned to the persons whose names they bear. It has been represented or affirmed that they were written after the events which they pretend to foretell. This • 1 Chron. xxix. 29. j Annot. ad Vet. Test, * Gibbon's Hist ch. xli note 33 GENUINENESS OF THE SCRIPTURES. 4 charge was brought by Porphyry, the noted adversary of Christianity in the third century, against the prophecies of Daniel, which relate so particularly he transactions of the successors of Alexander the Great in Syria and Egypt, that the whole seems to be rather a narrative than a prediction. But, besides that the date is ascertained by unquestionable testimony, the charge .is repelled by the fact that the books contain prophecies which, without all doubt, were not fulfilled till after the time when they are known to have existed. There are predictions in the book of Daniel respecting the Roman empire which have been accomplished since the days of Porphyry. You must have remarked, that nothing certain is known concerning the writers of some parts of the Old Testament : but our ignorance in this point does not impair their credit, because they have been received by the Jews as authentic records of the transactions related in them; and their testimony will appear to be of great weight, if we attend to the circumstances in which it was delivered. Whether the books of Moses were human or divine composi tions, we know that they believed them to be inspired; and, under this im pression they would be very careful what other books they admitted to complete the standard of their faith and practice. Every composition would not obtain ihis honour; not even every composition which could claim as its author a person of distinguished wisdom and piety. It is altogether incredible that, while they looked upon the first books as a revelation of the will of God, and were warned in them against hastily recognising new claims to a divine mission, they would make up their canon in a careless manner, and give a place in it to writings of a doubtful origin, or coming from persons without authority. Although some of the writers are unknown to us, they were known to them. A few of the books are anonymous, but not supposititious. Their contempo raries were acquainted with the authors, and fully assured that the works ascribed to them were genuine. They would not have ranked them with the books of Moses and the prophets, or those whom they considered as prophets, unless they had been satisfied that the authors had a similar commission and similar qualifications. We have all the evidence which the case admits, that the Scriptures of the Old Testament are genuine. This reasoning is corroborated by the fact that the Jews did not admit books into their canon indiscriminately, but received some and rejected others ; thus showing that there were certain principles upon which they proceeded in judging of their claims. We have a proof, that in order to the reception of :i book, it was deemed necessary that its genuineness should be ascertained. At a later period of their history, books appeared which were dignified with the names of some of the most celebrated persons of their country, as Solomon, Daniel, Ezra, and Baruch. But they were not imposed upon by the titles. It was understood that these were not the real authors ; and hence, although they might be read, they never obtained any authority among the Jews. I shall conclude with a few remarks upon the Apocryphal books, which are the following : — two books of Esdras, Tobit, Judith, Esther, the Wisdom of Solomon, Ecclesiasticus, Baruch, the Song of the Three Children, the History of Susannah, Bel and the Dragon, the Prayer of Manasses, and four books of the Maccabees. — Of these the church of Rome acknowledges as canonical only Tobit, Judith, the Wisdom of Solomon, Ecclesiasticus, the first and second book of the Maccabees, Baruch, with the additions to Esther and Daniel. It is certain, as I have already stated, that they were not acknow ledged by the Jews, so as to be classed with the books which they held sacred. For this we have the express testimony of Josephus, who, having enumerated the canonical Scriptures, informs us that there were other books containing an account of the transactions of the nation, which were not reputed of equal Vol. I.— 6 d2 42 EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY! authority, because they were written after the succession of prophets haa ceased ; and that it was a proof of the reverence of the Jews for the canonical books, that, during the long interval which had elapsed since their publication, no person had dared to add to them, or to take from them, or to make any altera tion in them.* In this stage of the inquiry, we are not at liberty to quote the New Testament as any thing higher than human authority ; but as it was writ ten by Jews, it may be fairly considered as expressive of the sentiments of the nation respecting the records of their religion. Now it is remarkable, that the Apocryphal books are never cited by Christ or his apostles. We cannot, indeed, produce quotations from all the acknowledged books of the Old Testa ment : but while there are references to the greater part of them, they are all recognised under the general division into the law, the prophets, and the holy writings. It is impossible to account for the total silence respecting the Apocryphal books, but upon the principle that the writers of the gospels and epistles did not regard them as possessed of sufficient authority to be appealed to in matters of religion. Some of them were originally written in Greek, and consequently not in Judea, where a different language was spoken after as well as before the captivity ; and others are said to have been written in Chaldaic, but about this point learned men are not agreed. We need not be surprised that they were rejected by the Jews, when we consider their con tents. They contain fabulous accounts, and are chargeable with contradic tions, which render them unworthy of a place among the records of their faith. It is unnecessary to say any thing farther about them. Their exclusion from the canon by the Jews places them on a level with other human compositions. I have only to add, that it is a proof of the stupidity as well as the impiety of the church of Rome, that she has presumed to elevate them to equal honour with the writings of Moses and the prophets, in defiance of the judgment of the Jewish, and I may add, of the ancient Christian church. They were not admitted into the catalogues drawn up by individuals, or by councils, for several centuries ; and were regarded as inferior to the writings which are accounted inspired till the meeting of the council of Trent, which established error, idolatry, and superstition, by law. In what esteem they were held in the days of Jerome, we learn when he says, "As the church reads Judith, Tobit, and the books of the Maccabees, but does not receive them among the canonical Scriptures, so let us read Ecclesiasticus and the Wisdom of Solomon, for the edification of the people, but not for the confirmation of doctrines."! * Joseph, cont. Apion. Lib. i. -j- Prsef. in Lib. Salomi. GENUINENESS OF THE SCRIPTURES. 43 LECTURE V. EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY. Genuineness of Books of the New Testament : Account of the Gospels ; The Epistles of Paul; The Epistle to the Hebrews; The Catholic Epistles; The Revelation of John — Apocryphal Writings — Lost Writings — Importance of the Inquiry into the Genuineness of the Holy Scriptures — Ground on which we believe them to be genuine. I proceed to inquire into the genuineness of the books of the New Testa ment. I have already pointed out, in general, the importance of this inquiry in reference to the sacred writings. There are many books of which it does not concern us at all to know the authors, and every purpose of information and amusement may be gained, although we should remain in ignorance of their origin. When we read a romance, or fictitious story, we are pleased with the scenes and characters which it describes, and feel a wish to know by whom it was composed, only that our curiosity may be gratified, or that we may fix our admiration and gratitude upon the person to whom they are due. A treatise upon science which is distinguished by the accuracy of its observa tions, the exactness of its arrangements, and the clearness of its demonstrations, stands in need of no name to recommend it, but rests upon its own intrinsic merits. Even an anonymous narrative of facts may be authentic, because it is understood from collateral evidence to be a faithful record of transactions, and has always been received as such by competent judges. But in the case of laws which are obligatory only because they emanated from a particular source, and of facts which could not be ascertained but by contemporary testi mony, and with which our highest interests are inseparably connected, the question of genuineness is of primary importance, and can alone decide whether we shall give credit to the facts, and submit to the laws. The truth of this observation will be more evident, if the facts are of a supernatural order ; for, being out of the usual course of nature, they require more particular proof, and refusing to listen to vague reports, we call for the testimony of eyewitnesses. An account drawn up in a subsequent age is liable to the suspicion of imposture. I shall give you, as an example, the story of the miracles of Apollonius of Tyana, a famous magician, who flou rished towards the end of the first century, and was pronounced to be not so properly a philosopher, as an intermediate being between the gods and men. The design of the heathens was to confront his miracles with those of our Saviour, and to prove that Apollonius was equal or superior to him. He was represented as understanding all languages, although he had not learned them ; as knowing the language of beasts, and the speech of the gods. Wonderful works were ascribed to him, which appear to us perfectly ridiculous ; as that he discovered at Ephesus the pestilence in the form of an old and tattered beggar, and commanded the people to stone him ; and, being present at a marriage, delected the bride to be one of those malevolent spirits who were called Lamiae, Larva;, or Lemures : but they were considered by his admirers as undoubted proofs of divine power. It is true that such a man existed, and imposed upon the credulity of the vulgar by juggling tricks ; but the credit of his miracles is destroyed by the fact, that the record was not drawn up by any person who witnessed them, or lived at the time when the account might have been subjected to a strict examination, but by Philostratus and Hierocles, of '44 EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY: whom the one flourished in the third, and the other in the fourth century. The first account did not appear till near two hundred years after his death, when the author was at liberty to say what he pleased. Hence you perceive, that the question respecting the genuineness of the writings of the New Testa ment is connected with their authenticity. The subject of inquiry is, whether they were written in the age when Jesus Christ is said to have appeared, and to have performed the miracles which are ascribed to him, or were com posed and published at a subsequent period. I shall proceed to give you an account of the books. I begin with the gospel of Matthew. That he was the writer of this book, and that it was the first which appeared, are facts supported by the uniform testimony of antiquity. With respect to the time of its publication, there has been a considerable diversity of opinion. It has been assigned by some to the year 61, 62, 63, or 64 ; by others, to the year 41, 43, or 48 ; and by others, to the year 37, or 38. As there is nothing in the book itself, or in the writings of the early Christians, by which the date can be settled, we must content ourselves with probability ; and there appears to be considerable force in the reasoning of Bishop Tomline, who prefers the year 38. " It appears very improbable that the Christians should be left any considerable number of years without a written history of our Saviour's ministry. It is certain that the apostles, immediately after the descent of the Holy Ghost, which took place only ten days after the ascension of our Saviour into heaven, preached the Gospel to the Jews with great success ; and surely it is reasonable to suppose that an authentic account of our Saviour's doctrines and miracles would very soon be committed to writing for the confirmation of those who believed in his divine mission, and for the conversion of others." "We may conceive that the apostles would be desirous of losing no time in writing an account of the miracles which Jesus performed, and of the discourses which he delivered, because the sooner such an account was published, the easier it would be to inquire into its truth and accuracy; and, consequently, when these points were satisfactorily ascertained, the greater would be its weight and authority."* There has been much controversy, in modern times, concerning the language in which this gospel was written. By the ancients, Papias, Irenseus, and Origen, and by others who followed them, it was said to have been written in Hebrew ; but many learned men contend that the original was Greek. Much credit is not due to the testimony of Papias, who was a weak and credulous man. The works of Irenaeus have been understood to import, that besides the Greek, Matthew published also a Hebrew gospel. Origen, in some passages, seems to proceed upon the supposition, that if Matthew wrote in Hebrew, he wrote also in Greek. To reconcile the opposite opinions, we may say, that Matthew published his gospel both in Hebrew, or the mixed dialect which then bore that name, and in Greek : in Hebrew, for the use of the Jews living in Judea, to whom that language was vernacular; and in Greek, for the use of Jews and Gentiles in other countries. Or we may reconcile them by supposing that his gospel was translated into Hebrew, and, as it was generally believed to have been designed for the inhabitants of Judea, in process of time the translation was mistaken for the original. It is altogether improbable that this single book should have been written in Hebrew, or in Hebrew alone, while all the rest are in Greek ; and if it be inspired, as Christians believe, that there should exist only a version by an unknown hand, of whose competence and fidelity we have no assurance. If it were a mere translation, I do not see that any dependence could be placed upon it, except so far as it agrees with the other decounts. * Introduct. to the Study of the Bible, part ii. chap. ii. GENUINENESS OF THE SCRIPTURES. 45 The next gospel was written by Mark, who is commonly supposed to be the sister's son of Barnabas, and was called first John, and afterwards Mark ; but some have entertained doubts whether this was the person. He was not an apostle, but is said to have been the constant attendant of Peter, and to have composed his narrative with his approbation. The following account is given by Eusebius. He tells us, that Peter having preached at Rome, the people were so pleased with his instructions, that they anxiously desired to have them in writing ; that by their earnest entreaties they prevailed upon Mark to draw up a memoir of them ; and that Peter approved of what was done, and authorized the writing to be introduced into the churches.* lt was even sometimes called the gospel of Peter, because it was believed that he had revised it and given it his sanction. These traditions are not absolutely certain ; but there is universal consent respecting the publication of the book at an early period, and the name of the author. According to Eusebius and others, it appeared at Rome ; but others assign to it a different place, Alexandria in Egypt. It is not so certain as is commonly supposed, that the apostle Peter was ever in Rome; but if we admit, upon the authority of antiquity, that he did preach in that city, and that the occasion of writing this gospel was such as has been related, it is probable that the date should be fixed somewhere about the year 60. It is the voice of antiquity that it was written in Greek ; but some authors in the Romish church have maintained that the original was Latin ; and give this reason for their opinion, that, as it was drawn up for the use of the Romans, it must have been presented to them in their own language. But the argument proves too much, and therefore proves nothing; for it is acknowledged by all, that the epistle sent by Paul to the Romans was not written in Latin, but in Greek. It was long asserted that the original in Latin was preserved in Venice; but it has been discovered that it is the fragment of a manuscript, which has no pretension to be the autograph of the evange list. It has been affirmed that the gospel of Mark is a mere abridgment of the gospel of Matthew, and consequently is not an independent testimomy to the facts of the evangelical history. But although this notion has obtained currency, it has been proved by different persons, and particularly by Mr. Jones in his work on the canon, to be without foundation. There is a resem blance between the two gospels, but at the same time, there is such a differ ence as shows that they are both original compositions. " For the most part the accounts by Mark are much more large and full, and related with many more particular circumstances than the same accounts are by Matthew." " The disagreement which seems to be between the two evangelists in relating several circumstances of their history, is a clear and demonstrative evidence that the one did not abridge or copy the other." " Lastly, Mark's gospel is not an epitome of Matthew's, because he has related several very considerable histories of which there is, not the least mention made by Matthew. "t The writer of the third gospel was Luke, who is supposed to have been a native of Antioch, descended from Jewish parents, and by profession a physi cian. What is most certain is, that he was the companion of Paul in his travels, and a witness of many of the things which he relates concerning that apostle in the. Acts. The time when he published his gospel is not ascertained, some referring it to the year 53, and others to the year 63, or 64 ; and so also is the place, there- being no evidence to determine whether it was written in Achaia, or Syria, or Palestine. All antiquity agrees in ascribing it to Luke. The superiority of the style, which approaches nearer to the classical standard, has given rise to the idea that he had been better educated than the other evan gelists. The occasion of waiting his gospel is. thus stated by himself. "For- * Eusefe Hist. lib. ii. c. 14* 15. f Jones on the Canon, vol. iii. pp. 56. 70. 76. 46 EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY: asmuch as many have taken in hand to set in order a declaration of those things which are most surely believed among us, even as they delivered them unto us, which from the beginning were eyewitnesses, and ministers of the word; it seemed good to me also, having had perfect understanding of all things from the very first, to write unto thee in order, most excellent Theophilus, that thou mightestknow the certainty of those things wherein thou hast been instructed."* These words might almost lead us to think that the gospel of Luke was the first, were it not for the unanimous testimony of antiquity to the contrary. It was natural that the Christians should be desirous to have an accredited account of the actions and sayings of our Lord : and this would be an induce ment to different individuals to come forward with their narratives. It is true that the gospels of Matthew and Mark were already in circulation ; but some of the accounts might have appeared before them ; and even after those gospels were published, the curiosity or the wishes of the public would not be immediately satisfied, as copies could not be so rapidly multiplied as they now are by the press, and there was still room for the labours of others. But, as it happens in cases of this kind, their narratives would be imperfect, and, it may be, inaccurate. Luke, indeed, does not directly charge them with unfaithfufness or mistake, but speaks of them merely as " declarations of the things whieh were believed among Christians," founded on the report of eye witnesses. It is evident, however, that he considered his new narrative as called for; and he seems to intimate, when he says that he " had a perfect understanding," or had accurately' traced "all things from the first," that his information was more extensive and correct. The last gospel, it is acknowledged by all the ancients, was written by John. He was one of the sons of Zebedee, is frequently mentioned in the evangelical history, and is distinguished from the other apostles as " the dis ciple whom Jesus loved." We may conceive him, therefore, while employed in compiling this book, not only to have obeyed the impulse of inspiration, but to have experienced the melting tenderness of heart with which a person records the actions and sayings of a friend. While his thoughts were elevated to Jesus Christ reigning on the throne of heaven, he could not but remember that this was he with whom he had lived on familiar terms, and on whose bosom he was once permitted to lean. It is peculiar to this gospel that it gives us the name of the writer, or what is equivalent, refers to the well-known affection which subsisted between him and our Saviour ; while the names of the other evangelists are known only by tradition. " This is the disciple which testifieth of these things, and wrote these things."! The date of it is as uncertain as that of the other gospels. Some have assigned the year 68, 69, or 70 ; and as a proof that it was prior to the destruction of Jerusalem, these words have been appealed to: "Now there is at Jerusalem, by the sheep-market, a pool, which is called in the Hebrew tongue, Bethesda, having five porches. "J He does not say there was, but there is such a pool. There are some authorities in favour of m instead of errt ; but not to lay any stress upon these, we may remark that, although the walls and houses of Jerusalem were demolished, the pool might remain, and the porches might have been left stand ing to afford accommodation to the Roman garrison, and to others who occa sionally visited the ruins ; so that the mention of it, as in existence, determines nothing respecting the date of the gospel. Notwithstanding this passage, it is by many considered as posterior to the fall of the holy city, and supposed to have been written about the year 97, after John had returned from Patmos, to which he was banished by the emperor Domitian. If this be the true date, the apostle must have been very old. It is probable * Luke i. 1 — 4. j John xxi. 24. $ John v. 2 GENUINENESS OF THE SCRIPTURES. 47 that he was about the same age with our Lord ; and since his ascension, be tween sixty and seventy years had elapsed. In other words, the year 97 marks both his age and the date of his book. I add, that if we adopt this date, the gospel is the last book of the New Testament, and not the Revelation, as is commonly thought. John is reported to have spent much of his time during the latter part of his life in Asia Minor, and it is the general opinion that his gospel was published there. The narrative is in a great measure new : he omits most of the facts which are mentioned by the other evangelists, and relates particulars which they have left out ; and hence it would seem that his narra tive appeared after theirs, and was intended to be supplementary to them. We are informed, too, by Irenaeus, Jerome, and others, that one important design which he had in view, was to confute the erroneous dogmas of various heretics, the Ebionites, the Cerinthians, and the Nicolaitans, concerning the person of Christ. Accordingly, while Matthew, Mark, and Luke begin with an account of his human birth, the gospel of John opens with a solemn testimony to his pre-existence and divinity. " In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God."* The subject is repeatedly brought forward more fully and explicitly than by the other evangelists. Eusebius quotes the words of Clement of Alexandria to the following effect, " that John, the last of the evangelists, observing that corporeal things had been explained in the other gospels, and being impelled by his acquaintances, and moved by the Spirit, composed a spiritual gospel."! With respect to the composition in general, Dr. Campbell says, that it bears marks more sign a. than any of the gospels, that it is the work of an illiterate Jew;J and other critics have remarked upon the homeliness and inaccuracy of the style. Or the other hand, Michaelis has pronounced the style to be better than that of the other gospels, and ascribes this superiority to the skill in the Greek lan guage, which the apostle had acquired by a long residence in Ephesus."§ In such uncertainty are we left, when we depend upon the opinions of others. It is somewhat strange that so distinguished a scholar should prefer the style of' John to that of Luke. Irenaeus, in his work Jldversus Hxreses, has assigned reasons why there are four gospels, and there could not be more. You will readily anticipate that they are fanciful, and will be convinced that they deserve this character when you hear that these are two of them ; — there are four regions of the world in which the gospel was to be preached, and the cherubims between whom Jesus Christ sits had each four faces. We cannot tell why four were published, and not three only; but we may safely suppose the reason for more than one to have been, that at the mouth of two or three witnesses, the history of our Lord might be established. If the gospel of Luke is acknowledged to be genuine, it follows that he was the writer of the Acts of the Apostles. This appears from the introduction to the latter book. "The former treatise have I made, O Theophilus, of all that Jesus began both to do and teach, until the day in which he was taken up."|| As the two treatises were composed by the same author, and addressed to the same person, it has been supposed that they were drawn up and published at the same time. At any rate, if the date which we have assigned to his gospel be correct, the interval between its appearance and the publication of the Acts could not be long. The history in the Acts comes down to the end of the two years of Paul's imprisonment at Rome ; soon after which, he was set at liberty in the year 63. It is probable, that about this time, this second * John LI. t Hist. &>• ¦"• u- ***• i Campbell on the Gospels, Preface to John. § Marshe's Michaelis, vol. iii. p. 16. I Acts i. 1. 48 EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY: treatise was senttoTheophilus. You will observe that Luke gives no account of the martyrdom of Paul ; undoubtedly because he composed this narrative before it ; and it is understood, that after having enjoyed his liberty for a short period, the apostle was again brought before the tribunal of Nero, and condemned. The design of Luke was not to give a complete account of th6 propagation of the gospel, but to show that in obedience to the command of our Saviour, it was published first to the Jews, and then to the Gentiles. Accordingly, having recorded the events of the day of Pentecost, and some subsequent proceedings of the apostles in Jerusalem and Samaria, he enters upon the history of Paul, and sets before us a summary of the labours of that zealous and indefatigable servant of Christ among the Gentiles. With the exception of Peter and John, we hear little or nothing of the other apostles, although there can be no doubt that they were equally faithful and diligent in publishing the religion of their divine Master. I proceed to speak of the epistles which have been divided into two classes, the epistles of Paul, and the Catholic epistles. Those of Paul are fourteen in number, but are not placed in our Bibles in the order in which they were written. The epistle to the Romans stands first, because it was addressed to the inhabitants of the capital ; and then follow two epistles to the Christians of Corinth, a large and flourishing city of Greece. If they had been arranged according to their respective dates, the two epistles to the Thessalonians would have stood first, because they preceded all the rest. The epistles of James and Jude, the two epistles of Peter, and the three of John, were called Catholic, because they are not addressed to particular churches and individuals, but to Christians in every part of the world. But there is an obvious error in this statement ; the second and third epistles of John ought to have been ex cluded from the number, since the former is addressed to a person whom he calls the elect Lady, or, as some think, the Lady Eclecta, and the latter to Gaius. Even then, the classification would have been inaccurate. The first epistle of Peter is addressed to the strangers scattered throughout Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia ; not to the whole society of Chris tians in the world, but to that part of them which resided in those countries ; and the epistle of James was sent to the twelve tribes scattered abroad, and consequently, is not more catholic than the epistle to the Hebrews. Thus you see, that this ancient division of the epistles is destitute of any foundation. There is no difficulty in ascertaining the writer of the epistles which are ascribed to Paul, because he gives his name in the superscription, and some times introduces it towards the end. Thus, he says, in the second epistle to the-Thessalpnians, " The salutation of Paul, with mine own hand, which is the token in every epistle : so I write."* It appears, that for some cause not mentioned, perhaps because his handwriting was not good, he commonly employed an amanuensis ; not always, however, for he says to the Galatians, "Ye see how large a letter I have written to you with mine own hand."t But when he did use the pen of another, he wrote the salutation himself to authenticate the epistle, or that those to whom it was sent might be satisfied that it was genuine.' It is not my business at present to give a summary of the contents of the epistles ; and I shall satisfy myself with a brief notice of the time when each is supposed to have been written. The most probable date of the Epistle to the Romans is the year 57 or 58. The first Epistle to the Corinthians was written in the year 56 or 57, and the second in the following year. It has been made a question, whether Paul wrote any other epistle to the Corinthians, and it is founded upon these words in his first epistle, " I wrote to you in an *2 Thess. iii. 17. \ Gal. vi. 11. GENUINENESS OF THE SCRIPTURES. 49 epistle, not to keep company with fornicators."* Learned men are divided in opinion, some contending that there was an epistle which has not been pre served, and others that he refers to the epistle which he was at that moment writing. There is no doubt that the apostles wrote many letters which are not in existence, and might not be intended for the general use of the church ; but tradition makes mention of only two epistles to the Corinthians, although the words naturally suggest that there was another which has not come down to us. The date of the Epistle to the Galatians is very uncertain, and it has been assigned almost to every year between 48 and 52. The Epistle to the Ephe- sians was written during his imprisonment in Rome, probably in the year 61. Some learned men have contended that this epistle was sent, not to the Ephe- sians, but to the Laodiceans. The reasons which they give are so insufficient, that we cannot conceive how any person of discernment should have been satisfied with them. Paul says to the Colossians, " When this epistle is read among you, cause that it be read also in the church of the Laodiceans, and that ye likewise read the epistle from Laodicea."t But how this passage- proves the point, it is not very easy to see. It is not a clear inference, that an epistle/rom Laodicea is an epistle which Paul had sent to Laodicea. We do not know what it was ; it may have been a letter from the Laodiceans to Paul, about matters in which the Colossians were concerned, and of which, therefore, he transmitted a copy to them. There is certainly not the slightest evidence that it was the epistle to the Ephesians. It is not so called in a single manuscript, and Ephesus is named as the place to which it was sent, in all manuscripts now extant, except one in which it is omitted. The Epistle to the Philippians was written while Paul was a prisoner in the year 62 or 63 ; and the same date may be assigned to the Epistle to the Colossians. The two epistles to the Thessalonians were earlier, and were written about the year 52. There is much dispute about the date of the first Epistle to Timothy, which has been fixed to the years 57 and 64. The second was written while Paul was in bonds, but whether during his first or second imprisonment, is doubtful. It has been referred to the year 65. It is not known when, or where, the Epistle to Titus was composed; and several years have been mentioned from 52 to 65. Paul was in Rome when he sent his letter to Philemon, and probably wrote it in the year 62. Of the epistles of Paul, there remains only to be considered that which is addressed to the Hebrews. But, although its antiquity is acknowledged, its genuineness has been disputed, on account, not only of the omission of the name, but of the difference of the style. Jerome says, in his catalogue of ecclesiastical writers, that it was believed not to be Paul's, because the style was different ; and that it was attributed to Barnabas, to Luke, or to Clement, bishop of Rome, who arranged and expressed, in his own words, the senti ments of Paul. Some thought that Paul wrote in Hebrew, and that another person translated it into Greek. Origen affirms, that the epistle does not exhibit the simple and humble form of speech which is usual to Paiul, but is composed in purer Greek ; that the sentiments, however, are admirable, and not inferior to those of his acknowledged epistles. " I would say," he adds, "that the sentiments are Paul's; but that the language is that of another person, who committed them to writing ; but who wrote the epistle, God only knows. "% At the same time, he admits that it may be received as an epistle of Paul. It is attributed to him, at an earlier period, by Clemens Alexan- drinus, and finally was acknowledged as his production by the Catholic church. Some learned men have denied that there is such a difference of * 1 Cor. v. 9. t CoI> iT- 16- i Quoted by Euseb. Eccl. Hist. lib. vi. c. 25. Vol. I.— 7 E 50 EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY: style as warrants the supposition of a different author. There are also inter nal proofs that it was written by him, consisting in its similarity to his other epistles, in expressions, allusions, and modes of interpreting and applying passages of the Old Testament. It was sent from Italy ; and, as he proposed soon to visit the Hebrews, in company with Timothy, then restored to liberty, it must have been written after his own release from prison, in the year 62 or 63. There remain to be considered the Catholic epistles. The genuineness of them all, with the exception of the first epistle of Peter, and the first of John, was, for a time, called in question by some ; but, upon accurate examination, they were finally received as the productions of those to whom they were ascribed. The first, according to the order in our Bibles, is the Epistle of James, who has prefixed his name to it, and addressed it to the twelve tribes scattered abroad. There was another person of this name, who was the brother of John, and was iput to death by Herod ; but this James was the son of Alpheus, or Cleophas, and is called the brother of our Lord, because he was nearly related to him. He is sometimes called James the Just; this honourable title having been given to him, for the distinguished holiness of his life. He is said to have resided much in Jerusalem, where he wrote this epistle, it is supposed, in the year 61, and suffered martyrdom in the year 62. The first epistle of Peter was sent from Babylon; but learned men are not agreed what city is meant ; some of the ancients supposed, and several of the moderns concur with them in thinking, that it is the mystical Babylon, or the city of Rome. Their reasons I consider as by no means satisfactory. Rome is, indeed, called Babylon in the Revelation of John, but we have no evidence that it had received that name in Peter's time, and still less that it was so common as, without any danger of mistake, to suggest the proper sense to the .Christian reader. It is impossible to conceive any reason why, in a plain epistle and a common salutation, Rome should be called Babylon. In whatever place it was written, the epistle is assigned to the year 64. The second epistle seems to have been written not long after, for the apostle signifies that his death was near, which is said to have taken place in the year 65. Although mo name is prefixed to the first epistle of John, it was received by the ancient church as genuine, and contains internal evidence that it was written by him, in its striking similarity to his gospel, both in sentiment and in language. Various dates have been assigned to it, from the year 68 to 92. From the expression, "It is the last time,"* it has been inferred, that it was written when the Jewish state was drawing to an end, or shortly before the destruc tion of Jerusalem ; but the expression has been understood of the close of the apostolic age. The second and third epistles have been referred to the year £9. It was some time before they were acknowledged as genuine ; and as they were addressed to individuals, it is probable that some time elapsed before they were generally known. Jude, who is also called Lebbaeus and Thaddeus, was a son of Alpheus, and like James the Less, the brother or near relative of our Lord. His short epistle, which was addressed to the saints in general, has been assigned to the year 70. The quotation of a prophecy of Enoch, which is not found in the Scriptures, is no argument against the genuineness or the authenticity of the epistle, because it was a true prophecy, in whatever way he came to the knowledge of it. We have no reason to believe that the Apocryphal book, called the prophecy of Enoch, from which some have supposed it to be taken, was then in existence ; and we may pre sume that the forgery was suggested by the passage in Jude. The last book of the New Testament is the Revelation of John. Its • 1 John ii. 18. GENUINENESS OF THE SCRIPTURES. 51 genuineness was called in question by some in the third and the fourth cen turies, but it was received at an early period as the work of the apostle. Poly- carp, who was his disciple, has cited it once. Justin Martyr, in a. d. 140, acknowledges it as his ; and Irenaeus, who was the disciple of Polycarp, repeatedly quotes it as the production of John the disciple of the Lord. To these may be added, in the second century, Athenagoras, Theophilus, Apol lonius, Clement of Alexandria, and Tertullian, who defends the book against Marcion and his followers. Several objections against the genuineness of the Revelation were advanced by Dionysius, bishop of Alexandria, about the mid dle of the third century, who ascribed it to another John, an elder of the church of Ephesus ; b'ut most of them are trifling, and none of them is suffi cient to invalidate the testimony in its favour. The suspicions of some were founded on a fancied resemblance between the prediction of the reign of Christ with his saints for a thousand years, and the doctrine of Cerinthus, that our Saviour would establish a kingdom upon earth, in which his subjects would be admitted to the unrestrained enjoyment of carnal delights. We can only wonder at the stupidity of those who confounded things totally different. The Revelation was omitted in several of the catalogues of the canonical books ; but the reason seems to have been, that on account of its obscurity, it was not deemed proper to be publicly read. The prophetic visions recorded in it, were seen in Patmos, to which John had been banished by Domitian, and from which he was permitted to return after the death of that emperor. This happened in the year 96, and about that time the book may be dated. There were many books in former times which pretended to be the pro ductions of the persons to whom the acknowledged books are ascribed. They are so numerous, that it would be a waste of time to go over them all. A few of them remain, but the greater part have perished. I may mention the Gospel according to the Hebrews, the Gospel of Peter, the Gospel accord ing to the Egyptians, the Gospel of Thomas, the Revelation of Paul, the Revelation of Peter, and some books under the name of Christ. Of all these, nothing is left but the names and a few fragments. But we have still the Gospel of Mary, the Protevangeleum of James, the Gospel of our Saviour's infancy, the Gospel of Nicodemus or the Acts of Pilate, the Acts of Paul and Thecla, a Letter of our Lord to Abgarus, king of Edessa, and letters of Paul to Seneca. All these books have been rejected as spurious, because they contain histories and doctrines contrary to those which were known to be true ; because the matter is silly, and evidently fabulous ; because things are re lated in them which were posterior to the times in which those lived under whose names they were published ; because the style is different from that of the authors to whom they are ascribed ; and because they breathe a dif ferent spirit from that of the persons by whom they claim to have been written. No mention is made of them by the Christian authors of the first century, Barnabas, Hermas, and Clemens ; or by Ignatius and Polycarp, of the second ; succeeding writers rarely refer to them, and then speak of them in terms expressive of disrespect; they were forbidden to be read in the churches, and were not appealed to as authorities in matters of doctrine and controversy. They were treated as human compositions, and as forgeries • and those which have survived the wreck, are such wretched compositions, that only the most stupid of mankind could deem them worthy of a place among the books of the New Testament. The question, Whether any books have been lost ? will admit of different answers, according as the question is stated. We have no reason to think that any book which the evangelists or apostles wrote for the permanent use of the church, has disappeared, because no hint of this kind is given by those 52 EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY : who, living near their time, had the best opportunities of knowing. Much that was spoken by inspiration was never recorded, for the apostles, we believe, were assisted by the Spirit in preaching as well as in writing ; and it is not to be doubted, that they sent letters to individuals and to societies, which did not long survive the occasions which they were intended to serve. There were many prophets under the Jewish dispensation, of whom we have no memorial but their names, although it may be presumed that their predic tions were sometimes committed to writing. It is said of Jeroboam, son of Joash, king of Israel, " he that restored the coast of Israel, from the entering of Hamath unto the sea of the plain, according to the word of the Lord God of Israel, which he spake by the hand of his servant Jonah, the son of Amittai the prophet, which was of Gath-hepher."* Now, here is a prediction which was preserved, but of which there is not a vestige in the Old Testament, till it is incidentally mentioned at the time of its fulfilment. There may have been, and there must have been, many other prophecies written down and fulfilled, of which no trace remains. The gospels contain only a small specimen of the miracles and discourses of our Saviour; the greater part is irrecoverably gone—" The world itself could not contain the books which might have been written. "t What we contend for is, not that all the writings of the apostles have been transmitted to us, but that those have been preserved which were designed to convey the religion of Christ to succeeding genera tions. And hence it follows, that although the inference were true, which some have drawn from a passage in the first Epistle to the Corinthians, formerly quoted, that there was another epistle addressed by Paul to that church, which has perished, there would be nothing in the idea to startle us and to disturb our faith, because we have no reason to suppose that all that inspired men wrote was to be preserved, any more than all that they spoke. It is enough that we possess all the books which were considered by the Christians in the early ages, as constituting the perpetual rule of faith and manners to the church. This historical account of the books of the New Testament is intended to assist us in the inquiry whether they are genuine ; an inquiry which may appear to some, but I trust to none of you, to be superfluous, or perhaps impious, because it may be understood to imply a state of mind approaching to infidelity. ' What !' it may be said, ' shall we dare to doubt that the New Testament is the work of the evangelists and apostles?' To this question we would answer, that the inquiry does not proceed from any suspicion, but is instituted for the purpose of satisfying ourselves, or, if we are already satis fied, of convincing others, who are not so well informed, that the books really possess the authority which is commonly ascribed to them. We are bound to give a reason of our faith ; and it is particularly incumbent upon those to be able to do so, who are the appointed guardians of religion, and are officially called to defend it against the attacks of its adversaries. The subject, however- does not meet with all the attention which it deserves. There may be minis ters of the gospel who are very slightly acquainted with it ; and among the private members of the church, it is rare to find any who have thought of it at all. It was long ago observed by Mr. Baxter, that " few Christians among us have any better than the popish implicit faith on this point, nor any better arguments than the papists have, to prove the Scriptures the word of God. They have received it by tradition ; godly ministers and Christians tell them so ; it is impious to doubt of it ; therefore they believe it. Though we could persuade people never so confidently, that Scripture is the very word of God, and yet teach them no more reason why they should believe this than any * 2 Kings xiv. 25. f John xxi. 25. GENUINENESS OF THE SCRIPTURES. 53 other book to be that word ; as it will prove in them no right way of believ ing, so it is in us no right way of teaching." " Many ministers never give their people better ground than their own authority, or that of the church, but tell them that it is damnable to deny it, but help them not to the necessary antecedents of faith."* It has been said, that " we receive the Scriptures of the Old and New Tes tament as the only sacred and canonical books, not because the church receives them as such, but because the Holy Ghost witnesses to our consciences that they proceed from God, and themselves testify their authority." Similar assertions have been made by other learned and pious individuals, but they require to be explained. We do not deny that a man may be convinced of the truth of the gospel by internal evidence. He may have the witness in himself, because it has come to him with such power and demonstration, that he could no more doubt that it was the word of God, than if it had been pro claimed by a voice from heaven. Many have firmly believed the truth, and led a holy life, and submitted to death for Christ, who had no other evidence. But observe, that this evidence could go no farther than to satisfy them that those doctrines and promises were from God, by which they were enlightened, sanctified, comforted, and inspired with more than human courage, and with the triumphant hope of immortality. How could it convince them that all the books of the Bible are divine ? How could it enable them to distinguish, as the French church pretends, between the canonical and the apocryphal books ? There is more reason and truth in the words of Baxter : — " For my part, I confess, I could never boast of any such testimony or light of the Spirit, which, without human testimony, would have made me believe that the book of Canticles is canonical, and written by Solomon, and the book oi Wisdom apocryphal, and written by Philo. Nor could I have known all or any historical books, such as Joshua, Judges, Ruth, Samuel, Kings, Chro nicies, Ezra, and Nehemiah, to be written by divine inspiration, but by tradition." LECTURE VI. EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY. General Evidence of the Genuineness of the New Testament— Testimony of early Writers; Of early Heretics, and Infidels : The Syriac Version — Force of these Testimonies — Inter nal Marks of Genuineness ; The -Style ; The Nature of the Composition, and Narrative : Discrepancies and Coincidences — Paley's Horse Paulinae. Having given an account of the books of the New Testament, I proceed to lay before you the evidence by which it is proved that they were written by the persons whose names they bear. This work has been already per formed with great diligence and learning by different authors, among whom I refer you, in particular, to Jones, in his new and full method of settling the canonical authority of the New Testament ; and to Lardner, in the second part of his Credibility of the Gospel History. The subject may be said to have been exhausted by them ; and nothing is left to others, but to verify their references by consulting the original authors, or now and then, perhaps, to add a passage which had escaped their observation. • Baxter's Saints' Rest, part ii. chap. ii. § 1. E 2 54 EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY: The persons, in the early ages, to whom we are chiefly indebted for infor mation, are Eusebius, Jerome, and Origen, of whom the two former flourished in the fourth century, and the latter in the third. They were all men of great learning, and had devoted their time and talents to the study of the Scriptures. Eusebius has divided the writings, which claimed to be received as a rule of faith and practice to Christians, into three classes.* Those of the first class are the ypcupu i/uMyaiitoat, which are the four gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, the epistles of Paul, the first epistle of John, and the first epistle of Peter ; and to these, he says, may be added, if it should seem proper, the Revelation of John. Those of the second class, are the ytwxi cariKsyt/iina, writings, the genuineness of which was doubted by some. These are the epistle of James, the epistle of Jude, the second epistle of Peter, and the second and third of John, because it was uncertain whether they were written by him, or by another person of the same name. It appears, however, that these books were acknowledged by the majority of Christians. Those of the third class are the yf*f*i n%m, spurious writings, as the acts of Paul, Andrew, John, and other apostles, and gospels under the names of Peter, Thomas, and Mathias, the epistle of Barnabas, and the Shepherd of Hermas. Eusebius distinguishes the spurious from the canonical books by two internal marks. The first arises from the style, which is quite different from that of the apostles o Tut pfixo-ltv; Trap*, to »flof to cirro