The Project Gutenberg EBook of Companion to the Bible, by E. P. Barrows This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net Title: Companion to the Bible Author: E. P. Barrows Release Date: December 9, 2005 [EBook #17265] Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMPANION TO THE BIBLE *** Produced by John Hagerson, Juliet Sutherland, David King, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team COMPANION TO THE BIBLE. BY REV. E.P. BARROWS, D.D., PROFESSOR OF BIBLICAL LITERATURE. GENERAL PREFACE. The design of the present work, as its title indicates, is to assist in the study of God's word. The author has had special reference to teachers of Bible classes and Sabbath-schools; ministers of the gospel who wish to have ready at hand the results of biblical investigation in a convenient and condensed form; and, in general, the large body of intelligent laymen and women in our land who desire to pursue the study of Scripture in a thorough and systematic way. The First Part contains a concise view of the Evidences of Revealed Religion. Here, since Christianity rests on a basis of historic facts, special prominence has been given to the historic side of these evidences; those, namely, which relate to the genuineness, integrity, authenticity, and inspiration of the several books of the Bible. A brief view is added of the evidences which are of an internal and experimental character. In the Introductions to the Old and New Testament which follow in the Second and Third Parts, the general facts are first given; then an account of the several divisions of each, with their office and mutual relations, and such a notice of each particular book as will prepare the reader to study it intelligently and profitably. The Fourth Part is devoted to the Principles of Biblical Interpretation. Here the plan is to consider the Scriptures, first, on the human side, as addressed to men in human language and according to human modes of thinking and speaking; then, on the divine side, as containing a true revelation from God, and differing in this respect from all other writings. To this twofold view the author attaches great importance. To the human side belong the ordinary principles of interpretation, which apply alike to all writings; to the divine side, the question of the unity of revelation, and the interpretation of types and prophecies. In each of the abovenamed divisions the author has endeavored to keep prominently in view the unity of revelation and the inseparable connection of all its parts. It is only when we thus contemplate it as a glorious whole, having beginning, progress, and consummation, that we can truly understand it. Most of the popular objections to the Old Testament have their foundation in an isolated and fragmentary way of viewing its facts and doctrines; and they can be fairly met only by showing the relation which these hold to the entire plan of redemption. The plan of the present work required brevity and condensation. The constant endeavor has been to state the several facts and principles as concisely as could be done consistently with a true presentation of them in an intelligible form. It may be objected that some topics, those particularly which relate to the Pentateuch, are handled in too cursory a way. The author feels the difficulty; but to go into details on this subject would require a volume. He has endeavored to do the best that was consistent with the general plan of the work. The point of primary importance to be maintained is the divine authority and inspiration of the Pentateuch--the whole Pentateuch as it existed in our Saviour's day and exists now. There are difficult questions connected with both its form and the interpretation of certain parts of it in respect to which devout believers may honestly differ. For the discussion of these the reader must be referred to the works professedly devoted to the subject. The present volume is complete in itself; yet it does not exhaust the circle of topics immediately connected with the study of the Bible. It is the author's purpose to add another volume on Biblical Geography and Antiquities, with a brief survey of the historic relations of the covenant people to the Gentile world. CONTENTS. PART I. A CONCISE VIEW OF THE EVIDENCES OF REVEALED RELIGION. CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. 1. Christianity rests on a Basis of Historic Facts inseparably connected from First to Last--2. This Basis to be maintained against Unbelievers--3. General Plan of Inquiry--Christ's Advent the Central Point--From this We look forward and backward to the Beginning--4. Importance of viewing Revelation as a Whole--5. Fragmentary Method of Objectors--Particular Order of the Parts in this Investigation CHAPTER II. GENUINENESS OF THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES. 1. Terms defined--Necessity of knowing the Authors of the Gospels--2. Remarks on their Origin--They were not written immediately, but successively at Intervals--Earlier Documents noticed by Luke--3. Manner of Quotation by the Early Church Fathers--4. _External Evidences_ traced upward from the Close of the Second Century--Testimony of Irenæus--Of Tertullian--Of Clement of Alexandria--Letter of the Churches of Lyons and Vienne--5. Comprehensiveness and Force of these Testimonies--Freedom of Judgment in the Primitive Churches--This shown by the History of the Disputed Books--6. Public Character and Use of the Gospels--7. Earlier Testimonies--Justin Martyr--His Designation of the Gospels--They are Our Canonical Gospels--Explanation of his Variations and Additions--His References to the Gospel of John--8. Testimony of Papias--9. Epistle to Diognetus--10. The Apostolic Fathers--Clement of Rome--Ignatius Polycarp--The So-called Epistle of Barnabas--11. The Ancient Versions and Muratorian Canon--Syriac Peshito--Old Latin--12. Testimony of the Heretical Sects--Marcion--Valentinus--Tatian--13. Conclusiveness of the above External Testimony--14. _Internal Evidences_--Relation of the First Three Gospels to the Last--They differ in Time--The First Three written before the Destruction of Jerusalem; the Fourth after that Event--They differ in Character and Contents--Yet were all alike received by the Churches--15. Relation of the First Three Gospels to Each Other--They have Remarkable Agreements and Differences--These and their General Reception explained by their Genuineness--16. The Gospels contain no Trace of Later Events--17. Or Later Modes of Thought. 18. From the Character of the Language CHAPTER III. UNCORRUPT PRESERVATION OF THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES. 1. What is meant by an Uncorrupt Text--2. Ancient Materials for Writing--Palimpsests--Uncial and Cursive Manuscripts--3. The Apostolic Autographs have perished, but We have their Contents--This shown from the Agreement of Manuscripts--From the Quotations of the Fathers--From Ancient Versions--Character of the "Various Readings"--They do not affect the Substance of the Gospel--4. The Ancient Versions made from a Pure Text--This shown from the Public Reading of the Gospels from the Beginning--From the Multiplication of Copies--From the High Value attached to the Gospels--From the Want of Time for Essential Corruptions--From the Absence of all Proof of such Corruptions--5. The Above Remarks apply essentially to the other New Testament Books CHAPTER IV. AUTHENTICITY AND CREDIBILITY OF THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES. 1. General Remarks--2. Their Authors Sincere and Truthful--3. Competent as Men--4. And as Witnesses--5. Character of the Works which they record-- Supernatural Character of our Lord's Miracles--They were very Numerous and Diversified, and performed openly--6. And in the Presence of His Enemies--7. The Resurrection of Jesus--Its Vital Importance--8. The Character of Jesus proves the Truth of the Record--Its Originality and Symmetry--It unites Tranquillity with Fervor--Wisdom with Freedom from Guile--Prudence with Boldness--Tenderness with Severity--Humility with the Loftiest Claims--He is Heavenly-minded without Asceticism--His Perfect Purity--His Virtues Imitable for All alike--Our Lord's Character as a Teacher--His Freedom from the Errors of His Age and Nation--His Religion One for All Men and Ages--This explained by its Divine Origin--Our Lord's Manner of Teaching--His Divine Mission--Divinity of His Person--Originality of its Manifestations--God His Father in a Peculiar Sense--He is the Source of Light and Life--He has Inward Dominion over the Soul--He dwells in Believers, and they in Him--The Inference--His Power over the Human Heart--Supernatural Character of the Gospel--A Word on Objections CHAPTER V. THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES AND THE ACKNOWLEDGED EPISTLES. 1. These Books a Natural Sequel to the Gospels--2. _The Acts of the Apostles_--External Testimonies--3. Internal Evidence--4. Credibility--5. Date of Composition--6. _The Acknowledged Epistles_--Distinction of Acknowledged and Disputed Books--7. First Group of Pauline Epistles--Second Group, or the Pastoral Epistles--Their Date--Their Peculiar Character--8. First Epistles of Peter and First of John--9. Mutual Relation between the Gospels and Later Books--10. Argument from Undesigned Coincidences CHAPTER VI. THE DISPUTED BOOKS. 1. The Question here simply concerning the Extent of the Canon--2. The Primitive Age One of Free Inquiry--3. Its Diversity of Judgment no Decisive Argument against a Given Book--4. The Caution of the Early Churches gives Weight to their Judgment--This Judgment Negative as well as Positive CHAPTER VII. INSPIRATION AND THE CANON. General Remarks--1. Rule of Judgment determined--It is the Writer's Relation to Christ--2. Christ Himself Infallible--3. _The Apostles_--They held the nearest Relation to Him--Their Infallibility as Teachers shown--From the Necessity of the Case--From Christ's Express Promises--From their Own Declarations-- Summary of the Argument in Respect to the Apostles--4. Inspiration of the _Apostolic Men_--5. Argument from the Character of the Books of the New Testament--6. The Inspiration of the Sacred Writers Plenary-- 7. Principles on which the Canon is formed CHAPTER VIII. INSEPARABLE CONNECTION BETWEEN THE OLD AND THE NEW TESTAMENT. General Remarks--1. Previous Revelations implied in Christ's Advent--2. In the Character of the Jewish People--3. Proved from the New Testament-- Christ's Explicit Declarations--4. The New Testament based on the Facts of the Old--The Fall of Man--The Abrahamic Covenant, which was conditioned on Faith alone, and fulfilled in Christ--Christ the End of the Mosaic Economy--In its Prophetical Order--In its Kingly Office--In its Priestly Office--5. The New Testament Writers the Interpreters of the Old CHAPTER IX. AUTHORSHIP OF THE PENTATEUCH. Meaning of the Term--1. It existed in its Present Form from Ezra's Day--2. "The Law" ascribed to Moses in the New Testament--How Much is included in this Term--3. Force of the New Testament Testimony--4. The Law of Moses at the Restoration--5. Jewish Tradition that Ezra settled the Canon of the Old Testament--He left the Pentateuch essentially as he found it--References to the Law in the Books of Kings and Chronicles--6. The Book of Deuteronomy--Its Mosaic Authorship Certain--7. The Inference Certain that he wrote the Preceding Laws--8. This corroborated by their Form--9. By References in the New Testament--And the Old also--10. Relation of Deuteronomy to the Earlier Precepts--In Respect to Time--And Design--Change in Moses' Personal Relation to the People--Peculiarities of Deuteronomy explained from the Above Considerations--Meaning of "the Words of this Law" in Deuteronomy--11. Mosaic Authorship of Genesis shown--From Antecedent Probability--From its Connection with the Following Books--Objections considered--Supposed Marks of a Later Age--And of Different Authors--12. Unity of the Pentateuch CHAPTER X. AUTHENTICITY AND CREDIBILITY OF THE PENTATEUCH. 1. Its Historic Truth assumed in the New Testament--This shown by Examples--2. It was the Foundation of the Whole Jewish Polity--And could not have been imposed upon the People by Fraud--Contrast between Mohammed and Moses--3. Scientific Difficulties connected with the Pentateuch--4. Alleged Moral Difficulties--Exclusiveness of the Mosaic Economy--Its Restrictions on Intercourse with Other Nations--5. Its Numerous Ordinances--The Mosaic Laws required Spiritual Obedience--6. Objections from the Toleration of Certain Usages--7. Extirpation of the Canaanites--8. The Mosaic Economy a Blessing to the Whole World CHAPTER XI. REMAINING BOOKS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. 1. General Remarks--2. The New Testament assumes their Divine Authority--Historical Books--3. Books not strictly Historical or Prophetical--4. Prophetical Books--Argument from Prophecy for the Divine Origin of the Old Testament--5. Christ the Fulfilment of Prophecy--In his Office as a Prophet--as a King--as a Priest--6. The Jewish Institutions and History a Perpetual Adumbration of Christ preparatory to His Advent--7. Remarks on the Canon of the Old Testament--8. Principle of its Formation--9. Inspiration of the Old Testament CHAPTER XII. EVIDENCES INTERNAL AND EXPERIMENTAL. 1. External Evidences Important, but not Indispensable to True Faith--2. Internal Evidences--View which the Bible gives of God's Character--3. Code of Morals in the Bible--It is Spiritual, Reasonable, and Comprehensive--Obedience to It the Sum of all Goodness--4. All Parts of the Bible in Harmony with Each Other--5. Power of the Bible over the Conscience--6. Argument from Personal Experience--7. From the Character of Jesus--8. From General Experience--The Love of Jesus the Mightiest Principle of Action--Persecution first winnows, then strengthens the Church--The Church corrupted and weakened by Worldly Alliances--9. The Gospel gives an Inward Victory over Sin--It purifies and elevates Society--10. Its Self-purifying Power--11. The Argument summed up * * * * * PART II. AN INTRODUCTION TO THE OLD TESTAMENT. FIRST DIVISION--GENERAL INTRODUCTION. CHAPTER XIII. NAMES AND EXTERNAL FORM OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. 1. Origin and Meaning of the Word Bible--Jewish Designations of the Old Testament--2. Origin of the Terms Old and New Testament--Earlier Latin Term--2. The Unity--Scripture has its Ground in Divine Inspiration--Its Great Diversity in Respect to Human Composition--4. Classification and Arrangement of the Old Testament Books--Classification of the Hebrew: of the Greek Version of the Seventy; of the Latin Vulgate--No One of these follows entirely the Order of Time--5. Original Mode of Writing called Continuous--6. Ancient Sections--Open and Closed; Larger Sections called Parshiyoth and Haphtaroth--7. Chapters and Verses--Caution in Respect to our Modern Chapters CHAPTER XIV. THE ORIGINAL TEXT AND ITS HISTORY. 1. Chaldee Passages in the Hebrew Scriptures--Divisions of the Hebrew and Cognate Languages--2. The Assyrian or Square Character not Primitive--Jewish Tradition respecting its Origin--3. The Hebrew Alphabet and its Character--4. Change in the Language of the Hebrew Nation--5. Introduction of the Vowel-Points and Accents--The Question of their Antiquity--6. Jewish Rules for the Guidance of Copyists--Their Deep Reverence for the Sacred Text--Its Uncorrupt Transmission to Us--7. Age and Character of Hebrew Manuscripts--8. Form of Hebrew Manuscripts--the Public in Rolls, the Private in the Book Form, Poetical Passages, Columns, Pen and Ink Accompaniments--9. The Samaritan Pentateuch CHAPTER XV. FORMATION AND HISTORY OF THE HEBREW CANON. I. Meaning of the Word "Canon"--Gradual Formation of the Hebrew Canon--Its Main Divisions--1. _The Pentateuch_--2. General Remark on its Hebrew Name--3. The Pentateuch forms the Nucleus of the Old Testament Canon--It was given by Divine Authority, committed to the Charge of the Priests, kept by the Side of the Ark, and to be publicly read at Stated Times--II. _The Historical Books_--4. The Authors and Exact Date of Many of them Unknown--Important Historical Documents were deposited in the Sanctuary--5. The Authors of the Books of Joshua and Judges made Use of such Documents--6. The Author of the Books of Samuel also--7. Original Sources for the Books of Kings and Chronicles--8. These Two Works refer not to Each Other, but to a Larger Collection of Original Documents--9. Character of these Documents--They were written, in Part at Least, by Prophets, and they all come to us with the Stamp of Prophetic Authority.--10. The Books of Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther--III. _The Prophetical Books_--11. The Books enumerated--Paucity of Prophets before Samuel--Schools of the Prophets established by him--The Prophets a Distinct Order of Men in the Theocracy from his Day onward--12. The Era of Written Prophecy--IV. _The Poetical Books_--13. Their General Character--The Book of Job--14. The Book of Psalms--15. Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Canticles--_Completion of the Canon_--16. Preservation of the Sacred Books to the Time of Ezra--The Law; the Prophetical Books; the Psalms and other Canonical Writings--17. The Completion of the Canon ascribed by the Jews to Ezra and his Coadjutors--This Tradition True for Substance.--No Psalms written in the Maccabean Age--18. Contents of the Hebrew Canon--as given by Jesus the Son of Sirach, by Josephus, by Origen and Eusebius, by Jerome--19. The Apocryphal Books CHAPTER XVI. ANCIENT VERSIONS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. I. _The Greek Version called the Septuagint_--1. Its Antiquity; its Great Influence on the Language of the New Testament--2. Jewish Account of its Origin--3. Judgment of Biblical Scholars on this Account--4. Time occupied in the Completion of the Work--5. Inequalities of this Version--Its Importance to the Biblical Student--6. Its Close Connection with the New Testament-- Quotations from it by New Testament Writers--Their Manner and Spirit-- 7. Hebrew Text from which this Version was made--II. _Other Greek Versions_--8. The Septuagint originally in High Esteem among the Jews--Change in their Feelings in Regard to it, and Rise of New Versions--9. Aquila's Version--10. Theodotion--11. Symniachus--12. Origen's Labors on the Text of the Septuagint--the Tetrapla and Hexapla--III. _The Chaldee Targums_--13. General Remarks on these--14. The Targum of Onkelos--Its General Fidelity and Excellence--Its Peculiarities--Jewish Tradition respecting Onkelos--15. The Targum of Jonathan Ben Uzziel--16. Of Pseudo-Jonathan and Jerusalem--17. Other Targums--The Samaritan Version of the Samaritan Pentateuch--IV. 18. _The Syriac Peshito_--Its Age and Character CHAPTER XVII. CRITICISM OF THE SACRED TEXT. 1. The Object to ascertain its Primitive Form--2. Means at Our Disposal--Ancient Hebrew Manuscripts--Remarks on their Quality and Age--3. Ancient Versions--4. Primary Printed Editions--5. Parallel Passages--6. Quotations from the Old Testament in the New--7. Quotations in the Talmud and by Rabbinical Writers--8. Critical Conjecture SECOND DIVISION--PARTICULAR INTRODUCTION. CHAPTER XVIII. THE BOOKS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT AS A WHOLE. 1. Province of Particular Introduction--The Necessity of Understanding the Unity of Divine Revelation--2. Relation of the Old Testament as a Whole to the System of Revelation--It is a Preparatory, Introductory to a Final Revelation, of which the Gospel everywhere avails itself--the Unity of God; Vicarious Sacrifice; General Principles; Well-developed State of Civilization-- Connection of the Hebrews with the Great World Powers--Their Dispersion through the Nations at our Lord's Advent--Relation of the Gospel to Civilization--3. A Knowledge of the Preparatory Character of the Old Testament Revelations enables us to judge correctly concerning them-- Severity of the Mosaic Laws; Their Burdensome Multiplicity; Objection from their Exclusive Character answered--4. Office of each Division of the Old Testament Revelations--the Pentateuch; the Historical Books; the Prophetical Books--Character and Officers of the Hebrew Prophets-- Era of Written Prophecy--The Poetical Books--5. Each Particular Book has its Office--6. The Old Testament was a Revelation for the Men of its Own Age, as well as for those of Future Ages--the Promise made to Abraham; the Deliverance from Egypt; the Mosaic Law; the Words of the Prophets; the Psalms of David: the Wisdom of Solomon--7. Value of the Old Testament Revelations to us--the System of Divine Revelation can be understood only as a Whole; Constant Reference of the New Testament to the Old; the Old Testament a Record of God's Dealings with Men; the Principles embodied in the Theocracy Eternal; the Manifold Wisdom of God seen only when the Whole System of Revelation is studied CHAPTER XIX. THE PENTATEUCH. I. Its Unity--Its Fivefold Division--1. _Genesis_--2. Its Hebrew Name--Its Greek Name--3. Its Office--It is the Introductory Book of the Pentateuch--Its Connection with the Following Books--4. Divisions of the Book of Genesis--First Part and its Contents; Second Part and its Contents--5. Its Mosaic Authorship--Supposed Traces of a Later Hand--6. Difficulties connected with the Pentateuch--Scientific Difficulties: the Six Days of Creation; the Age of the Antediluvian Patriarchs; the Unity of the Human Race; the Deluge--Historical Difficulties: the Two Accounts of the Creation; Cain's Wife-- Chronological Difficulties: Discrepancies between the Masoretic Hebrew, the Samaritan Hebrew, and the Septuagint, in Respect to (1) the Antediluvian Genealogy; (2) the Genealogy from Noah to Abraham--Remarks on these Discrepancies--II. _Exodus_--7. Hebrew Name of this Book--Its Unity--Its Two Chief Divisions--Contents of the First Division; of the Second Division--8. Time of the Sojourn in Egypt--Sojourn in the Wilderness--III. _Leviticus_--9. Its Character and Contents--10. The Priestly Office and Sacrifices the Central Part of the Mosaic Law--IV. _Numbers_--11. Office and Contents of this Book--The Three Epochs of its History: the Departure from Sinai, the Rebellion of the People upon the Report of the Twelve Spies, the Second Arrival of Israel at Kadesh with the Events that followed--V. _Deuteronomy_--12. Its Peculiar Character, Divisions, and Contents--13. It brings the Whole Pentateuch to a Suitable Close CHAPTER XX. THE HISTORICAL BOOKS. 1 and 2. Their Office to Unfold the History of God's Dealings with the Covenant People--General Remarks on the Character of this History--I. _Joshua_--3. Contents of this Book. Its Immediate Connection with the Pentateuch--Its Two Divisions with their Contents--4. Its Authorship--5. Its Authenticity and Credibility--The Miracle of the Arrest of the Sun and Moon in their Course--II. _Judges and Ruth_--6. Name of this Book--Office of the Judges whose History it records--Condition of the Hebrew Nation during the Administration of the Judges--Office of this Book in the General Plan of Redemption--7. Arrangement of its Materials--its Twofold Introduction; the Body of its History; its Two Appendixes--8. Its Date and Authorship--9. Uncertainty of its Chronology--10. The Book of Ruth. Its Place in the History of Redemption--III. _The Books of Samuel_--11. The Two Books of Samuel originally One Work--Their Name--12. Their Office in the History of Redemption--Eventful Character of the Period whose History they record--Change to the Kingly Form of Government--God's Design in this--The Kingly Office Typical of Christ--13. Contents of the Books of Samuel--Introductory Division; Second Division; Third Division--14. Authorship and Date of their Composition--IV. _The Books of Kings_--15. They Originally constituted a Single Book--Their Names and Office--Their Manner of Execution--Their Main Divisions--16. The First Period--17. The Second Period--18. The Third Period--19. Chronology of the Books of Kings. Their Date and Authorship--V. _The Books of Chronicles_--20. They originally constituted One Work--Their Various Names--They constitute an Independent Work--Their Office different from that of the Books of Kings--Peculiarities which distinguish them from these Books--Particular Attention to the Matter of Genealogy; Fullness of Detail in Respect to the Temple Service; Omission of the History of the Kingdom of Israel; other Omissions--21. Position of the Chronicles in the Hebrew Canon--Their Authorship and Date--Their Relation to the Books of Kings--22. Difficulties connected with these Books--VI. _Ezra and Nehemiah_--23. General Remarks on these Books--Change in the Relation of the Hebrews to the Gentile Nations--Gradual Withdrawal of Supernatural Manifestations--24. While the Theocracy went steadily forward to the Accomplishment of its End--The Jews reclaimed from Idolatry in Connection with the Captivity--Establishment of the Synagogue Service and its Great Influence--25. The Book of Ezra--Its Authorship--Parts written in Chaldee--Persian Monarchs mentioned by Ezra and Nehemiah--26. The Book of Nehemiah--Its Contents and Divisions--First Division; Second Division; Third Division--27. Authorship and Date of the Book--VII. _Esther_--28. Contents of this Book--Feast of Purim--29. The Ahasuerus of this Book--Remarks on its History CHAPTER XXI. THE POETICAL BOOKS (INCLUDING ALSO ECCLESIASTES AND CANTICLES). 1. Books reckoned as Poetical by the Hebrews--Hebrew System of Accentuation--A. _Characteristics of Hebrew Poetry_--_Its Spirit_--Harmony with the Spirit of the Theocracy; Vivid Consciousness of God's Presence; Originality; Freshness and Simplicity of Thought; Variety--Job and Isaiah. David, Solomon; Diversity of Themes; Oriental Imagery; Theocratic Imagery--_Form of Hebrew Poetry_--3. Its Rhythm that of Clauses--Antithetic Parallelism; Synonymous Parallelism; Synthetic Parallelism--Combinations of the above Forms--Freedom of Hebrew Poetry--Peculiarities of Diction--_Office of Hebrew Poetry_--4. The Celebration of God's Interpositions in Behalf of the Covenant People; Song for the Sanctuary Service; Didactic Poetry; Prophetic Poetry--B. _The Several Poetical Books_--I. _Job_--1. Survey of its Plan--6. Its Design to Show the Nature of God's Providential Government over Men--7. Age to which Job belonged--Age and Authorship of the Book--8. Its Historic Character--II. _The Book of Psalms_--9. Its Office--Authors of the Psalms--Date of their Composition--10. External Division of the Psalms into five Books--First Book; Second Book; Third Book; Fourth Book; Fifth Book--Subscription appended to the Second Book--Principle of Arrangement--Attempted Classification of the Psalms--Frequent Quotation of the Psalms in the New Testament--11. Titles of the Psalms--the Dedicatory Title; Titles relating to the Character of the Composition to the Musical Instruments, or the Mode of Musical Performance--These Titles very Ancient, but not in all Cases Original--III. _The Proverbs of Solomon_--12. Place of this Book in the System of Divine Revelation--13. Its Outward Form--First Part; Second Part; Third Part; Fourth Part--14. Arrangement of the Book in its Present Form--IV. _Ecclesiastes_--15. Authorship of this Book and its View of Life--16. Summary of its Contents--V. _The Song of Solomon_--17. Meaning of the Title. Ancient Jewish and Christian View of this Song--18. It is not a Drama, but a Series of Descripture Pictures--Its Great Theme--Caution in Respect to the Spiritual Interpretation of it CHAPTER XXII. The Greater Prophets. 1. General Remarks on the Prophetical Writings--2. Different Offices of the Prophets under the Theocracy--Their Office as Reprovers--3. As Expounders of the Mosaic Law in its Spirituality--4. And of its End, which was Salvation through the Future Redeemer--They wrote in the Decline of the Theocracy--Their Promises fulfilled only in Christ--I. _Isaiah_--5. He is the First in Order, but not the Earliest of the Prophets--His Private History almost wholly Unknown--Jewish Tradition Concerning him--Period of his Prophetic Activity--6. Two Great Divisions of his Prophecies--Plans for Classifying the Contents of the First Part--Analysis of these Contents--General Character of the Second Part, and View of its Contents--7. Objections to the Genuineness of the Last Part of Isaiah and Certain Other Parts--General Principle on which these Objections are to be met--Previous Preparation for the Revelations contained in this Part--True Significance of the Promises which it contains--Form of these Promises--Mention of Cyrus by Name--Objection from the Character of the Style considered--8. Direct Arguments for the Genuineness of this Part--External Testimony; Internal Evidences--9. Genuineness of the Disputed Passages of the First Part--II. _Jeremiah_--10. Contrast between Isaiah and Jeremiah in Personal Character and Circumstances--Our Full Knowledge of his Outward Personal History and Inward Conflicts--11. His Priestly Descent--His Native Place--Period of his Prophetic Activity--Degeneracy of the Age--Persecutions to which his Fidelity subjected him--He is more occupied than Isaiah with the Present--His Mission is emphatically to unfold the Connection between National Profligacy and National Ruin; yet he sometimes describes the Glory of the Latter Days--12. The Chronological Order not always followed in his Prophecies--General Divisions of them--First Division; Second Division; Appendix--Attempts to disprove the Genuineness of Certain Parts of Jeremiah--_The Book of Lamentations_--13. Its Hebrew Name--Its Authorship and the Time of its Composition--14. Structure of its Poetry--III. _Ezekiel_--15. His Priestly Descent and Residence--Notices of his Personal History--Period of his Prophetic Activity--16. Peculiarities of his Style--17. His Allegoric and Symbolic Representations--General Remarks on the Nature of Allegories and Symbols--18. The Two Divisions of the Book--Contents of the First Part; of the Second Part--Prophecies against Foreign Nations--Promises relating to the Glory of the Latter Days--Ezekiel's Vision of a New Jerusalem with its Temple--Meaning of this Vision and Principles according to which it is to be interpreted--IV. _Daniel_--19. Its Place in the Hebrew Canon--Notices of Daniel's Personal History--20. Arrangement and Contents of the Book--First Series of Prophecies; Second Series--Intimate Connection between the Book of Daniel and the Apocalypse--21. Assaults made upon the Book of Daniel in Respect to its Genuineness and Credibility--Grounds on which it is received as a Part of the Sacred Canon--Its Unity; Uniform Tradition of the Jews and its Reliability; Testimony of Josephus; of the Saviour; Language and Style; Intimate Acquaintance with the Historical Relations and Manners and Customs of the Age--22. Insufficiency of the Various Objections urged against the Book--Chronological and Historical Difficulties; Difficulties connected with the Identification of Belshazzar and Darius the Mede; Silence of Jesus the Son of Sirach respecting Daniel; Alleged Linguistic Difficulties; Commendations bestowed upon Daniel--The Real Objection to the Book on the Part of its Opponents lies in the Supernatural Character of the Events which it records--Remarks on this Objection CHAPTER XXIII. THE TWELVE MINOR PROPHETS--1. Jewish Arrangement of these Books--Their Order in the Masoretic Text and in the Alexandrine Version--2. General Remarks on their Character I. _Hosea_--3. Period of his Prophecying and its Character--4. Peculiarly of his Style--Contents of the Book II. _Joel_--5. Place and Date of his Prophecies--6. Character and Contents of his Book--III. _Amos_--7. Date of his Prophecies--Notices of his Person--He was a Jew, not trained in any Prophetical School, and sent to prophesy against Israel--Character and Contents of his Writings--IV. _Obadiah_--8. Date and Contents of his Prophecy--V. _Jonah_--9. His Age--10. Remarks on the History of the Book--11. Authorship and Historic Truth of the Book--VI. _Micah_--12. His Residence and the Time of his Prophetic Activity--His Prophecies directed against both Israel and Judah--13. Divisions of the Book with the Contents of Each--Passages Common to Micah and Isaiah--General Agreement between the Two Prophets--VII. _Nahum_--14. His Prophecy directed against Nineveh--Its Probable Date--15. Contents of the Book--VIII. _Habakkuk_--16. Date of the Book and its Contents--Remarks on the Ode contained in the Third Chapter--IX. _Zephaniah_--17. Date and Contents of his Book--X. _Haggai_--18. Date and Scope of the Book--19. Its Different Messages--XI. _Zechariah_--20. His Priestly Descent--Date of his Prophecies--21. The Three Divisions of the Book--First Division; Second Division; Third Division--22. Remarks on the Character of Zechariah's Prophecies--XII. _Malachi_--23. Name of this Prophet--Date of his Prophecies, and Condition of the Jewish People--24 Contents of the Book APPENDIX TO PART II. THE APOCRYPHAL BOOKS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT--1. The Term _Apocrypha_ and its Origin--2. Remarks on the Date of the Apocryphal Books--Their Reception by the Alexandrine Jews--3. History of these Books in the Christian Church--4. Their Uses--I. _The Two Books of Esdras_--5. Name of this Book--Its Contents--Its Date--6. The Second Book of Esdras found only in Versions--Remarks on these Versions--7. Its Contents and Date--II. _Tobit_--8. Accounts of the Contents of this Book--9. Various Texts in which this Book is Extant--Its General Scope--III. _Judith_--10. Contents of the Book--11. Remarks on its Character, Date, and Design--IV. _Additions to the Book of Esther_--12. Account of these--V. _The Wisdom of Solomon_--13. Its Divisions and their Contents--14. Authorship of the Book--Its Merits and Defects--VI. _Ecclesiasticus_--15. Its Titles and Contents--16. Date of the Book and of its Translation--VII. _Baruch and the Epistle of Jeremiah_--17. Character and Contents of the Book of Baruch--18. Second, or Syriac Book of Baruch--19. So-called Epistle of Jeremiah--VIII. _Additions to the Book of Daniel_--20. Enumeration of these--Their Authorship and Date--IX. _The Prayer of Manasses_--21. Remarks on this Composition--X. _The Books of the Maccabees_--22. Number of these Books--Remarks on their Historic Order--Origin of the Name Maccabee--23. First Book--Its Genuineness and Credibility--Its Authorship and Date--Original Language--24. Second Book--Its Character and Contents--25. Third Book--Its Contents and Character--Fourth Book--Its Stoical Character--Its Contents--Fifth Book--Its Original Language and Contents * * * * * PART III. AN INTRODUCTION TO THE NEW TESTAMENT. FIRST DIVISION--GENERAL INTRODUCTION. CHAPTER XXIV. Language of the New Testament--1. God's Providence as seen in the Languages of the Old and New Testaments--Fitness of the Hebrew for its Office in History, Poetry, and Prophecy--2. Adaptation of the Greek to the Wants of the New Testament Writers--3. Providential Preparation for a Change in the Language of the Inspired Writings--Cessation of the Hebrew as the Vernacular of the Jews, and Withdrawal of the Spirit of Prophecy Contemporaneous--4. Introduction of the Greek Language into Asia and Egypt--Its Use among the Jews, especially in Egypt--Its General Use in our Lord's Day--5. Character of the New Testament Greek--Its Basis the Common Hellenic Dialect, with an Hebraic Coloring received from the Septuagint, and an Aramaic Tinge also--The Writers of the New Testament Jews using the Language of Greece for the Expression of Christian Ideas--Technical Terms in the New Testament--6. Adaptation of the New Testament Greek to its Office CHAPTER XXV. External Form of the New Testament--1. The Three Main Divisions of the New Testament Writings: Historical, Epistolary, Prophetical--2. Natural Order of these Divisions--3. Subdivisions--In the Historic Part--In the Epistolary Part--Diversity of Arrangement in Manuscripts--4. Arrangement of the New Testament Writings not Chronological--Importance of Knowing this--5. Continuous Writing of the Ancient Uncial Manuscripts-- Stichometrical Mode of Writing--This led gradually to the Present System of Interpunction Cursive Manuscripts--7. Ancient Divisions in the Contents of the Sacred Text--Ammonian Sections and Eusebian Canons-- 8. Divisions called Titles--9. Divisions of the Other New Testament Books--10. Chapters and Verses--Church Lessons--11. Remarks on the above Divisions--Paragraph Bibles--12. Titles and Subscriptions CHAPTER XXVI. THE NEW TESTAMENT TEXT AND ITS HISTORY--I. _The Manuscript Text_--1 and 2. General Remarks--3. Origin of Various Readings and their Classification--Substitutions, Insertions, Omissions--Arising from Inadvertence, or Unskilful Criticism--Wilful Falsifications cannot be imputed to the Copyists--4. Materials for Textual Criticism--General Results--5. Notice of some Manuscripts--The Vatican, Sinai, Alexandrine, Ephraem, Palimpsest, Dublin Palimpsest, Beza or Cambridge (Bilingual), Purple. Cursive Manuscripts--II. _The Printed Text_--6. Primary Editions and their Sources--Complutensian Polyglott, Erasmian, Stephens', Beza's, Elzevir Editions--7. Remarks on the Received Text--III. _Principles of Textual Criticism_--8. Its End--Sources of Evidence--Greek Manuscripts--Their varying Value--9. Ancient Versions and their Value--10. Citations of the Church Fathers--11. Canons of Criticism CHAPTER XXVII. FORMATION AND HISTORY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT CANON--1. General Remarks--2. Different Periods to be noticed--3. Apostolic Age--4. Age of the Apostolic Fathers--Remarks on their Quotations--5. Age of Transition--Events of this Age which awakened the Christian Church to a Full Consciousness of the Divine Authority of the Apostolic Writings--Execution of Versions--6. Age of the Early Church Fathers--They recognized a Canon, though not yet Complete--Canon of the Syriac Peshito, Muratorian Canon--Canon of the Councils of Laodicea and Carthage--7. Closing Remarks CHAPTER XXVIII. ANCIENT VERSIONS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT--I. _Latin Versions_--1. Interest attaching to these Versions--2. The Ante-Hieronymian or Old Latin Version--3. Its Canon--Remarks on its Text--Manuscripts containing it--4. Jerome's Revision of the Old Latin Version--5. Jerome's New Version of the Old Testament--Books left untranslated--The Vulgate and its Diversified Character--Remarks on the History of the Vulgate--II. _Syriac Versions_--6. The Peshito--It comprises the Old and New Testaments--Its Date--Its Name--7. Character of the Peshito--The Curetonian Syriac--Its Relation to the Peshito--Its high Critical Value--8. The Philoxenian Syriac--Its extremely Literal Character--Hexaplar Syriac--Remarks on these Versions--Jerusalem Syriac Lectionary--III. _Egyptian and Ethiopic Versions_--Memphitic Version, Thebaic, Bashmuric--10. Ethiopic Version--IV. _Gothic and other Versions_--11. Gothic Version of Ulphilas--12. Palimpsest Manuscripts of this Version--13. Ancient Armenian Version SECOND DIVISION--PARTICULAR INTRODUCTION. CHAPTER XXIX. THE HISTORICAL BOOKS--1. The New Testament a Necessary Sequel to the Old--The Two Testaments interpret Each Other, and can be truly understood only as an Organic Whole--2. Remarks on the Use Made of the Old Testament by the Writers of the New--Fundamental Character of the Gospel Narratives--I. _The Gospel as a Whole_--3. Signification of the Word "Gospel"--Its Primary and Secondary Application--4. General Remarks on the Relation of the Gospels to Each Other--5. Agreements of the Synoptic Gospels--6. Differences--7. Theories of the Origin of these Three Gospels: That of Mutual Dependence; That of Original Documents; That of Oral Apostolic Tradition--Remarks on this Tradition--Its Distinction from Tradition in the Modern Sense--8. No One of the Gospels gives the Entire History of our Lord, nor always observes the Strict Chronological Order of Events--Remarks on our Lord's Life before his Baptism--9. Remarks on the Peculiar Character of the Fourth Gospel--This and the other Three mutually Supplementary to Each Other--10. Harmonies of the Gospels--Relative Size of the Gospels--II. _Matthew_--11. Personal Notices of Matthew--12. Original Language of his Gospel--The Problem stated--13. Testimony of the Ancients on this Point--14. Various Hypotheses considered--15. Primary Design of this Gospel to show that Jesus of Nazareth was the Promised Messiah--16. He is also exhibited as the Saviour of the World--17. Fulness of Matthew's Record in Respect to our Lord's Discourses--18. He does not always follow the Exact Order of Time--19. Place and Date--20. Integrity--Genuineness of the First Two Chapters--III. _Mark_--21. Personal Notices of Mark--Intimate Relation of Mark to Peter and Paul--22. Place--Date--Language--23. Design of this Gospel to exhibit Jesus as the Son of God--He makes the Works of Jesus more Prominent than his Discourses--24. Characteristics of Mark as a Historian--25. Closing Passage in Mark's Gospel--IV. _Luke_--26. Notices of Luke in the New Testament--27. Sources of his Gospel--His Relation to Paul--28. Date and Place of Writing--29. Universal Aspect of Luke's Gospel--30. Its Character and Plan--Comparison of the Gospels in Respect to Peculiar Matter and Concordances--31. Integrity of Luke's Gospel--The Two Genealogies of Matthew and Luke--V. _John_--32. John's Manner of indicating himself--33. Personal Notices of him--34. Late Composition of his Gospel and Place of Writing--35. Peculiarity of this Gospel in Respect to Subject-Matter--Its Relation to the First Three Gospels--36. General Design of this Gospel--It is peculiarly the Gospel of Christ's Person--VI. _Acts of the Apostles_--37. Author of this Book--38. Plan of the Book--Its First Division; Second Division--Notices of Antioch--39. Office of this Book--Portraiture of the Apostolic Age of Christianity; Cursory View of the Inauguration of the Christian Church; Various Steps by which the Abolition of the Middle Wall of Partition between Jews and Gentiles was effected--40. Concluding Remarks CHAPTER XXX. THE EPISTLES OF PAUL--1. General Remarks on the Epistles--2. Paul's Epistles all written in the Prosecution of his Work as the Apostle to the Gentiles--Nature of this Work--3. Paul's Peculiar Qualifications for this Work--His Mode of Procedure--Union in him of Firmness and Flexibility--4. Character of the Apostle's Style--5. Points to be noticed in the Separate Epistles--Notices of Paul's Labors in the Acts of the Apostles--6. Present Arrangement of Paul's Epistles and of the Epistles generally--Chronological Order of Paul's Epistles--Four Groups of these Epistles--I. _Epistle to the Romans_--7. Date and Place of this Epistle--8. Composition of the Roman Church--9. Occasion and Design of the Epistle--Its General Outlines--10. Special Office of this Epistle--II. _Epistles to the Corinthians_--_First Epistle_--11. Place and Time of its Composition--12. Notices of the Corinthian Church--Occasion of the Apostle's Writing--13. General Tone of the Epistle as contrasted with that to the Galatians--_Second Epistle_--14. Place and Time of its Composition--15. Its Occasion--Prominence of the Apostle's Personality in this Epistle and its Ground--Peculiarities of its Diction--Its Office in the Economy of Revelation--III. _Epistle to the Galatians_--16. Historical Notice of Galatia--Missionary Visits of the Apostle to that Province--Date of the Present Epistle and Place of Composition--17. Occasion and Design--18. Outlines of the Epistle--The Historic Part, the Argumentative, the Practical--IV. _Epistles to the Ephesians, Colossians, and Philemon_--19. Contemporaneousness of these Epistles--20. Place and Date--21. Chronological Order of the First Two--_Epistle to the Colossians_--22. Notices of Colosse and the Church there--Occasion of this Epistle--Character of the False Teachers at Colosse--23. Outlines of the Epistle--Its Argumentative Part, its Practical--The Epistle from Laodicca--_Epistle to the Ephesians_--24. Notices of Ephesus--Labors of Paul at Ephesus--Occasion of the Present Epistle--Its General Character--Various Hypotheses respecting it--25. Its Outlines--Its Argumentative Part, its Practical--_Epistle to Philemon_--26. Its Occasion and Design--V. _Epistle to the Philippians_--27. Notices of Philippi and the Formation of the Church there--28. Occasion of this Epistle--Place and Date of its Composition--29. Its Character--General View of its Contents--VI. _Epistles to the Thessalonians_--30. Notices of Thessalonica and the Apostle's Labors there--_First Epistle to the Thessalonians_--31. Date and Place of its Composition--32. Its Occasion and Design--Outlines of the Epistle--_Second Epistle_--33. Place of Writing and Date--Its Design--Its General Outlines--34. Comparison between the Epistles to the Thessalonians and that to the Philippians--VII. _The Pastoral Epistles_--35. The Date of these Epistles and Related Questions--36. Character of the False Teachers referred to in these Epistles--37. Genuineness of the Pastoral Epistles--38. Their Office--_First Epistle to Timothy_--39. Its Date and Place of Composition--Its Occasion and Design--Its Contents--Scriptural Notices of Timothy--_Epistle to Titus_--40. Its Agreement with the Preceding Epistle--The Cretan Church and Titus--_Second Epistle, to Timothy_--41. Its Occasion and Character in Contrast with the Two Preceding Epistles--Its Office--_Epistle to the Hebrews_--42. Question of its Authorship--How it was regarded in the Eastern Church--How in the Western--General Remark--43. Persons addressed in this Epistle--Time and Place of its Composition--Manner of Reference to the Levitical Priesthood and Temple Services--44. Central Theme of this Epistle--Dignity of Christ's Person in Contrast with the Ancient Prophets, with Angels, and with Moses--Divine Efficacy of his Priesthood in Contrast with that of the Sons of Aaron--Design of the Epistle--Its Office in the System of Revelation CHAPTER XXXI. THE CATHOLIC EPISTLES--1. Origin of the Name "Catholic"--1. _Epistle of James_--2. Question respecting the Person of James--3. Place of Writing this Epistle--Persons addressed--4. Question of its Date--5. Its Genuineness and Canonical Authority--6. Its Practical Character--Alleged Disagreement between Paul and James without Foundation--II. _Epistles of Peter_--_First Epistle_--7. Its Canonical Authority always acknowledged--8. Persons addressed--9. Place of its Composition--Its Occasion and Date--Traditions respecting Peter--10. Outline of the Epistle--_Second Epistle_--11. Persons addressed--Time of Writing--12. Question respecting the Genuineness of this Epistle--External Testimonies--Internal Evidence--General Result--13. Object of the Present Epistle--Peculiar Character of the Second Chapter--Its Agreement with the Epistle of Jude--III. _Epistles of John_--_First Epistle of John_--14. Its Acknowledged Canonicity--Time and Place of its Composition--Persons addressed--15. General View of its Contents--_Second and Third Epistles_--16. Their Common Authorship--Their Genuineness--17. The Occasion and Office of Each--IV. _Epistle of Jude_--18. Question respecting Jude's Person--Time of the Epistle, and Persons addressed--19. Its Canonical Authority--Its Design CHAPTER XXXII. THE APOCALYPSE--1. Meaning of the Word "Apocalypse"--Abundance of External Testimonies to this Book--2. Internal Arguments considered--Use of the Apostle's Name, Devotional Views, Spirit of the Writer, Style and Diction--Here must be taken into Account the Difference between this Book and John's other Writings in Subject-Matter, in the Mode of Divine Revelation, in the Writer's Mental State and Circumstances; also its Poetic Diction--General Results--3. Date of the Apocalypse and Place of Writing--4. Different Schemes of Interpretation--The Generic--The Historic--5. Symbolic Import of the Numbers in this Book--The number Seven, Half of Seven, Six; The Number Four, a Third and Fourth Part; the Number Twelve; the Number Ten--6. Office of the Apocalypse in the System of Revelation APPENDIX TO PART III. WRITINGS OF THE APOSTOLIC FATHERS, WITH SOME NOTICES OF THE APOCRYPHAL NEW TESTAMENT WRITINGS--1. The Writings of the Apostolic Fathers distinguished from the Proper New Testament Apocrypha--Some Remarks on the Character of these Writings I. _Writings of Clement of Rome_--2. His Epistle to the Romans--Its Genuineness Character, and Age--3. Its Occasion, with a Notice of its Contents--4. The so-called Second Epistle of Clement to the Corinthians--Its Genuineness not admitted--Vague and General Character of its Contents--5. Notice of some Other Writings falsely ascribed to Clement--Recognitions of Clement, and the Clementines, with their Plan and Contents; Constitutions of Clement, and their Contents; Apostolic Canons II. _Epistles of Ignatius_--6. Notices of Ignatius--The Seven Genuine Epistles that bear his Name--Unsatisfactory State of the Text--Syriac and Armenian Versions--Enumeration of these Epistles--Their Character--Strong Ecclesiastical Spirit that pervades them--His Letter to the Romans--The Undue Desire of Martyrdom which it manifests--His Letter to Polycarp--7. Spurious Epistles ascribed to Ignatius, and their Character III. _Epistle of Polycarp_--8. Notices of Polycarp--His Epistle to the Philippians--Its Character and Contents--Time and Occasion of its Composition IV. _Writings of Barnabas and Hermas_--9. Their Doubtful Authority--10. The So-called Epistle of Barnabas--Tischendorf's Discovery of the Original Greek Text--The Author and Date of the Work--Notice of its Contents--Its Fanciful Method of Interpretation--11. The Shepherd of Hernias--Outward Form of the Work--Its Internal Character--Its Author and Age V. _The Apostle's Creed_--12. In what Sense it belongs to the Apostolic Fathers--Apostolic Character of its Contents VI. _Apocryphal Gospels and Acts--13._ Their Number--Their Worthless Character in Contrast with that of the Canonical Gospels and Acts * * * * * PART IV. A DISCUSSION OF THE PRINCIPLES OF BIBLICAL INTERPRETATION. CHAPTER XXXIII. INTRODUCTORY REMARKS--1. Definition of Certain Terms--Hermeneutics, Exegesis, Epexegesis--2. The Expositor's Office--Parallel between his Work and that of the Textual Critic--3. Qualifications of the Biblical Interpreter--A Supreme Regard for Truth--4. A Sound Judgment with the Power of Vivid Conception--Office of Each of these Qualities and their Relation to Each Other--5. Sympathy with Divine Truth--6. Extensive and Varied Acquirements--The Original Languages of the Bible; Sacred Geography and Natural History; Biblical Antiquities; Ancient History and Chronology--7. General Remarks on the above Qualifications--8. The Human and Divine Side to Biblical Interpretation--The Importance of observing Both FIRST DIVISION--INTERPRETATION VIEWED ON THE HUMAN SIDE. CHAPTER XXXIV. GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF INTERPRETATION--1. Signification of the Terms employed how ascertained, with some Superadded Remarks--2. On Ascertaining the Sense of Scripture--3. The Scope General and Special--Its Supreme Importance illustrated--How the Scope is to be ascertained--The Author's Statements; Inferential Remarks; Historical Circumstances--Important Help derived from the Repeated and Careful Perusal of a Work--4. The Context defined and distinguished from the Scope--Indispensable Necessity of attending to it--This illustrated by Examples--Question respecting the Limits of the Context--In some Cases no Context exists--On the Use of Biblical Texts as Mottoes--Various Applications of the Principle contained in a Given Passage a Legitimate Mode of Exposition--5. Parallelisms Verbal and Real--Help derived from the Former--Subdivision of Real Parallelisms into Doctrinal and Historic--Importance of Doctrinal Parallelisms with Illustrations--Value of Historic Parallelisms illustrated--Difficulties arising from them, and the Principle of their Adjustment--Illustration--6. External Acquirements--Various Illustrations of the Importance of these--7. Sound Judgment--Office of this Quality illustrated--Inept Interpretations: Interpretations Contrary to the Nature of the Subject; Necessary Limitations of an Author's Meaning; Reconciliation of Apparent Contradictions; Forced and Unnatural Explanations and the Rejection of Well-established Facts--8. Remarks on the Proper Office of Reason in Interpretation CHAPTER XXXV. FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE OF SCRIPTURE--1. Figurative Language defined and illustrated--General Remarks respecting it--2. Rules for the Ascertaining of Figurative Language--Nature of the Subject; Scope, Context, and Analogy of Scripture--Error of understanding Literal Language figuratively--Remark on the Interpretation of Prophecy--3. Different Kinds of Figures--The Trope in its Varieties of Metonymy, Synecdoche, and Metaphor--Remarks on Comparisons--The Allegory--Its Definition and Distinction from the Metaphor--Distinction between True Allegory and the Allegorical Interpretation of History--The Parable--How distinguished from the Allegory--The Fable--The Symbol--Its Various Forms--The Proverb--It always embodies a General Truth--Its Various Forms--Signification of the Word "Myth"--It does not come within the Sphere of Scriptural Interpretation--4. General Remarks on the Interpretation of the Figurative Language of Scripture--5. Its Certainty and Truthfulness--6. Key to the Interpretation of the Allegory-- Examples: The Vine Transplanted from Egypt, Psa. 80; the two Eagles and the Cedar Bough, Ezek. 17:3-10; The Song of Solomon; the Two Allegories of Ezekiel, chaps., 16 and 23-7. The Interpretation of the Parable--How it differs from that of the Allegory--Point of Primary Importance--How far the Details are significant--Examples: The Sower, Matt. 13:3-8, 19-23; the Tares in the Field Matt. 13:24-30, 37-43; the Ten Virgins, Matt, 25:1-13--Remark respecting the Personages introduced in Parables with Illustrations--The Unforgiving Servant, Matt. 18: 23-35; the Importunate Friend, Luke 11:5-8; the Unjust Judge, Luke 18:1-8; the Unfaithful Steward, Luke 16:1-9--8. Scriptural Symbols-How to determine whether they are Real or Seen in Prophetic Vision--Principles on which they are to be interpreted--Examples--9. Remarks on the Interpretation of Numerical Symbols SECOND DIVISION--INTERPRETATION VIEWED ON THE DIVINE SIDE. CHAPTER XXXVI. UNITY OF REVELATION--1. Essential Unity between the Old and the New Testament--2. This Unity one that coexists with Great Diversity-- Illustrations from the Analogy of God's Works--3. Unity in Diversity in Respect to the Form of God's Kingdom--4. The Forms of Public Worship--5. Forms of Religious Labor--6. Spirit of Revelation--7. Way of Salvation--8. Sternness of the Mosaic Dispensation explained from its Preparatory Character--9. Inferences from the Unity of Revelation--9. Each Particular Revelation Perfect in its Measure--10. The Later Revelations the Exponents of the Earlier; Christ and his Apostles in a Special Sense the Expositors of the New Testament--11. The Extent of Meaning in a Given Revelation that which the Holy Spirit intended--12. The Obscure Declarations of Scripture to be interpreted from the Clear, with Illustrations--13. Remarks on the Analogy of Faith--The Term Defined--Rules for its Use CHAPTER XXXVII. SCRIPTURAL TYPES--1. Types distinguished from Analogy--2. And from the Foreshadowing of Future Events by the Present--3. The Type defined in its Three Essential Characters I. _Historical Types_--4. In Respect to these Two Extremes to be avoided--Typical History has a Proper Significance of its Own--This illustrated by Examples: The Kingly Office; the Prophetical Office; Typical Transactions--Remarks on the Inadequacy of All Types II. _Ritual Types_--5. The Sacrifices the Essential Part of the Mosaic Ritual--What is implied in them--The Sanctuary God's Visible Dwelling-place where alone they could be offered--6. The Mosaic Tabernacle described--7. Its General Typical Import--8. Significance of its Different Parts and Appointments--Preciousness of the Materials; Gradation in this Respect--9. The Inner Sanctuary with its Appointments--10. The Outer Sanctuary with its Appointments--11. The Brazen Altar with its Laver--The Levitical Priests typified Christ--12. The Levitical Sacrifices typified Christ's Offering of Himself for the Sins of the World--This shown from Scripture--General Remark respecting Christ's Propitiatory Sacrifice--13. Characteristics of the Types Themselves--The Levitical Priests had a Common Human Nature with those for whom they officiated; were appointed to their Office by God; were Mediators between God and the People; and Mediators through Propitiatory Sacrifices--Points of Dissimilarity between the Type and the Antitype--Remarks on the Central Idea of Priesthood--14. Scriptural Idea of Sacrifice the Offering of One Life in Behalf of Another-- Classification of the Levitical Sacrifices with the Ideas belonging to Each: Sin and Trespass Offerings; Burnt Offerings; Peace-Offerings--Sacrificial Nature of the Passover--Other Sacrifices of a Special Character--All Sacrificial Victims to be without Blemish--The Unbloody Offerings and their Signification--15. Typical Transactions connected with the Sacrifices and Oblations: The Laying of the Offerer's Hands on the Head of the Victim; the Waving and Heaving of Offerings; the Sprinkling of the Victim's Blood; the Burning of the Offering--16. Typical Meaning of the Tabernacle as a Whole--The Several Points of Adumbration considered: Adumbration of God's Presence with Men; Impossibility of approaching God without a Mediator; Adumbration of Christ's Expiatory Sacrifice and Heavenly Intercession on the Great Day of Atonement; Burning of the Victim without the Camp--17. Distinctions between Clean and Unclean--Levitical View of Bodily Infirmities CHAPTER XXXVIII. INTERPRETATION OF PROPHECY--1. General Remarks I. _Prophecies relating to the Near Future_--2. Their Specific Character--Examples II. _Prophecies relating to the Last Days_--3. Meaning of the Term "Last Days," and its Equivalents--General Character of this Class of Prophecies--4. Prophecies in which the Order of Events is indicated--Daniel's Fourth Monarchy; the Great Red Dragon of Revelation, the Two Beasts that succeeded to his Power, and the Woman riding a Scarlet-Colored Beast--5. Prophecies which give General Views of the Future--Examples--6. The Prophets give an Inward View of the Vital Forces which sustain and extend God's Kingdom--Unity of the Plan of Redemption; its Continual Progress; Indications of the End towards which it is tending; the End Itself the Chief Object of Interest--Great Crisis in the Church's History--Spirit that should actuate the Interpreter of Prophecy III. _Question of Double Sense_--7. The Term defined--8. Examples of Literal and Typical Sense--Melchizedek's Priesthood; the Rest of Canaan--9. The Messianic Psalms--Different Principles on which they are interpreted: Exclusive Application to Christ; Reference to an Ideal Personage; Christ the Head and his Body the Church; Typical View--10. The Principle of Progressive Fulfilment IV. _Question of Literal and Figurative Meaning_--11. General Remarks--12. Representative Use in Prophecy of Past Events--13. Of the Institutions of the Mosaic Economy--14. The Principle of Figurative Interpretation not to be pressed as Exclusive--15. Question of the Literal Restoration of the Jews to the Land of Canaan--16. Question of our Lord's Personal Reign on Earth during the Millennium CHAPTER XXXIX. QUOTATIONS FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT IN THE NEW--1. General Remarks on the Authority of the New Testament Writers--2. Outward Form of their Quotations--Its very Free Spirit--This illustrated by Example--3. Contents of the New Testament Quotations--The So-called Principle of Accommodation; in what Sense True, and in what Sense to be rejected--4. Quotations by Way of Argument--5. Quotations as Prophecies of Christ and his Kingdom--Remarks on the Formula: "That it might be fulfilled"--6. Prophecies referring immediately to Christ--7. Prophecies referring to Christ under a Type--Closing Remark PART I. EVIDENCES OF REVEALED RELIGION. PREFATORY REMARKS. Many thousands of persons have a full and joyous conviction of the truth of Christianity from their own experience, who yet feel a reasonable desire to examine the _historic evidence_ by which it is confirmed, if not for the strengthening of their own faith, yet for the purpose of silencing gainsayers, and guarding the young against the cavils of infidelity. It is our duty to give to those who ask us a reason of the hope that is in us; and although our own personal experience may be to ourselves a satisfactory ground of assurance, we cannot ask others to take the gospel on our testimony alone. It is highly desirable that we understand and be able to set forth with clearness and convincing power the proofs that this plan of salvation has God for its author. Then there is a class of earnest inquirers who find themselves perplexed with the difficulties which they hear urged against the gospel, and which they find themselves unable to solve in a satisfactory way. It is of the highest importance that such persons be met in a candid spirit; that the immense mass of evidence by which the Christian religion is sustained be clearly set before them; and that they understand that a religion thus supported is not to be rejected on the ground that there are difficulties connected with it which have not yet been solved--perhaps never can be solved here below. Are you, reader, such an earnest inquirer after truth? We present to you in the following pages a brief summary of the historic evidence by which the Bible, with the plan of salvation which it reveals, is shown to be the word of God; and we wish, here at the outset, to suggest to you some cautions respecting the state of mind with which this great inquiry is to be pursued. First of all, we remind you that, whatever else may be uncertain, you know that you must soon die, and try for yourself the realities of the unseen world. The question now before you is, Whether God has spoken from heaven, and made any revelations concerning that world. If so, they are more precious than gold; for in the decisive hour of death you will wish to know not what man, the sinner, has reasoned and conjectured concerning a future judgment, forgiveness of sin, and the life to come; but what God, the Judge, has declared. Now the Bible claims to contain such a message from God. If its claims are valid, it will not flatter you and speak to you smooth things, but will tell you the truth. And you must be prepared to receive the truth, though it condemn you. Sooner or later you must meet the truth face to face: be ready to do so now; you have no interest in error; falsehood and delusion cannot help you, but will destroy you. Do not come to the examination of this great question with the idea that you must clear away all mysteries connected with the gospel before you believe it. The world in which you live is full of mysteries. One would think that if any thing could be fully comprehended, it must be the acts of which we are ourselves the authors. By a volition you raise your hand to your head; but _how_ is the act performed? True, there is in your body an apparatus of nerves, muscles, joints, and the like; but in what way does the human will have power over this apparatus? No man can answer this question: it is wrapped in deep mystery. Why be offended, then, because the way of salvation revealed in the Bible has like mysteries--mysteries concerning not your duty, but God's secret and inscrutable methods of acting? And since the question now before you is not one of mere speculation, but one that concerns your immediate duty, be on your guard against the seductive influence of sinful passion and sinful habit. There is a deep and solemn meaning in the words of Jesus: "Every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved." Corrupt feeling in the heart and corrupt practice in the life have a terrible power to blind the mind. The man who comes to the examination of the Bible with a determination to persist in doing what he knows to be wrong, or in omitting what he knows to be right, will certainly err from the truth; for he is not in a proper state of mind to love it and welcome it to his soul. Remember also that it is not the grosser passions and forms of vice alone that darken the understanding and alienate the heart from the truth. Pride, vanity, ambition, avarice--in a word, the spirit of self-seeking and self-exaltation in every form--will effectually hinder the man in whose bosom they bear sway from coming to the knowledge of the truth; for they will incline him to seek a religion which flatters him and promises him impunity in sin, and will fatally prejudice him against a system of doctrines and duties so holy and humbling as that contained in the Bible. Take, as a comprehensive rule for the investigation of this weighty question, the words of the Saviour: "If any man will do his will"--the will of God--"he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether I speak of myself." So far as you already know the will of God, do it; do it sincerely, earnestly, and prayerfully, and God will give you more light. He loves the truth, and sympathizes with all earnest and sincere inquirers after it. He never leaves to fatal error and delusion any but those who love falsehood rather than truth, because they have pleasure in unrighteousness. Open your heart to the light of heaven, and God will shine into it from above; so that, in the beautiful words of our Saviour, "the whole shall be full of light, as when the bright shining of a candle doth give thee light." COMPANION TO THE BIBLE. * * * * * EVIDENCES OF REVEALED RELIGION. * * * * * CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. I. The Christian religion is not a mere system of ideas, like the philosophy of Plato or Aristotle. It rests on a _basis of historic facts_. The great central fact of the gospel is thus expressed by Jesus himself: "God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life," John 3:16; and by the apostle Paul thus: "This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners." 1 Tim. 1:15. With the appearance of God's Son in human nature were connected a series of mighty works, a body of divine teachings, the appointment of apostles and the establishment of the visible Christian church; all which are matters of historic record. Nor is this all. It is the constant doctrine of Christ and his apostles that he came in accordance with the scriptures of the Old Testament, and that his religion is the fulfilment of the types and prophecies therein contained: "Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil." Matt. 5:17. "All things must be fulfilled which were written in the law of Moses, and in the prophets, and in the psalms concerning me." Luke 24:44. The facts of the New Testament connect themselves, therefore, immediately with those of the Old, so that the whole series constitutes an indivisible whole. The Bible is, from beginning to end, the record of a supernatural revelation made by God to men. As such, it embraces not only supernatural teachings, but supernatural facts also; and the teachings rest on the facts in such a way that both must stand or fall together. II. This basis of supernatural facts, then, must be firmly maintained against unbelievers whose grand aim is to _destroy the historic foundation_ of the gospel, at least so far as it contains supernatural manifestations of God to men. Thus they would rob it of its divine authority, and reduce it to a mere system of human doctrines, like the teachings of Socrates or Confucius, which men are at liberty to receive or reject as they think best. Could they accomplish this, they would be very willing to eulogize the character of Jesus, and extol the purity and excellence of his precepts. Indeed, it is the fashion of modern unbelievers, after doing what lies in their power to make the gospel a mass of "cunningly-devised fables" of human origin, to expatiate on the majesty and beauty of the Saviour's character, the excellence of his moral precepts, and the benign influence of his religion. But the transcendent glory of our Lord's character is inseparable from his being what he claimed to be--the Son of God, coming from God to men with supreme authority; and all the power of his gospel lies in its being received as a message from God. To make the gospel human, is to annihilate it, and with it the hope of the world. III. When the inquiry is concerning a long series of events intimately connected together so as to constitute one inseparable whole, two methods of investigation are open to us. We may look at the train of events in the order of time from beginning to end; or we may select some one great event of especial prominence and importance as the _central point_ of inquiry, and from that position look forward and backward. The latter of these two methods has some peculiar advantages, and will be followed in the present brief treatise. We begin with the great central fact of revelation already referred to, that "the Father sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world." 1 John 4:14. When this is shown to rest on a foundation that cannot be shaken, the remainder of the work is comparatively easy. From the supernatural appearance and works of the Son of God, as recorded in the four gospels, the supernatural endowment and works of his apostles, as recorded in the Acts of the Apostles, and their authoritative teachings, as contained in their epistles, follow as a natural and even necessary sequel. Since, moreover, the universal rule of God's government and works is, "first the blade, then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear," (Mark 4:28,) it is most reasonable to suppose that such a full and perfect revelation as that which God has made to us by his Son, which is certainly "the full corn in the ear," must have been preceded by exactly such preparatory revelations as we find recorded in the Old Testament. Now Jesus of Nazareth appeared among the Jews, the very people that had the scriptures of the Old Testament, and had been prepared for his advent by the events recorded in them as no other nation was prepared. He came, too, as he and his apostles ever taught, to carry out the plan of redemption begun in them. From the position, then, of Christ's advent, as the grand central fact of redemption, we look backward and forward with great advantage upon the whole line of revelation. IV. We cannot too earnestly inculcate upon the youthful inquirer the necessity of thus looking at _revelation as a whole_. Strong as are the evidences for the truth of the gospel narratives considered separately, they gain new strength, on the one side, from the mighty revelations that preceded them and prepared the way for the advent of the Son of God; and on the other, from the mighty events that followed his advent in the apostolic age, and have been following ever since in the history of the Christian church. The divine origin of the Mosaic institutions can be shown on solid grounds, independently of the New Testament; but on how much broader and deeper a foundation are they seen to rest, when we find (as will be shown hereafter, chap. 8) that they were preparatory to the incarnation of Jesus Christ. As in a burning mass, the heat and flame of each separate piece of fuel are increased by the surrounding fire, so in the plan of redemption, each separate revelation receives new light and glory from the revelations which precede and follow it. It is only when we view the revelations of the Bible as thus progressing "from glory to glory," that we can estimate aright the proofs of their divine origin. If it were even possible to impose upon men as miraculous a particular event, as, for example, the giving of the Mosaic law on Sinai, or the stones of the day of Pentecost, the idea that there could have been imposed on the world a series of such events, extending through many ages, and yet so connected together as to constitute a harmonious and consistent whole, is a simple absurdity. There is no explanation of the unity that pervades the supernatural facts of revelation, but that of their divine origin. V. In strong contrast with this rational way of viewing the facts of revelation as a grand whole, is the fragmentary method of objectors. A doubt here, a cavil there, an insinuation yonder; a difficulty with this statement, an objection to that, a discrepancy here--this is their favorite way of assailing the gospel. If one chooses to treat the Bible in this narrow and uncandid way, he will soon plunge himself into the mire of unbelief. Difficulties and objections should be candidly considered, and allowed their due weight; but they must not be suffered to override irrefragable proof, else we shall soon land in universal skepticism: for difficulties, and some of them too insoluble, can be urged against the great facts of nature and natural religion, as well as of revelation. To reject a series of events supported by an overwhelming weight of evidence, on the ground of unexplained difficulties connected with them, involves the absurdity of running into a hundred difficulties for the sake of avoiding five. If we are willing to examine the claims of revelation as a whole, its divine origin will shine forth upon us like the sun in the firmament. Our difficulties we can then calmly reserve for further investigation here, or for solution in the world to come. VI. When we institute an examination concerning the facts of revelation, the first question is that of the genuineness and uncorrupt preservation of the books in which they are recorded; the next, that of their authenticity and credibility. We may then conveniently consider the question of their inspiration. In accordance with the plan marked out above, (No. III.,) the gospel narratives will be considered first of all; then the remaining books of the New Testament. After this will be shown the inseparable connection between the facts of revelation recorded in the Old Testament and those of the New; and finally, the genuineness of the books which constitute the canon of the Old Testament, with their authenticity and inspiration. The whole treatise will be closed by a brief view of the internal and experimental evidences which commend the Bible to the human understanding and conscience as the word of God. CHAPTER II. GENUINENESS OF THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES. I. _Preliminary Remarks._ 1. A book is _genuine_ if written by the man whose name it bears, or to whom it is ascribed; or when, as in the case of several books of the Old Testament, the author is unknown, it is genuine if written in the age and country to which it is ascribed. A book is _authentic_ which is a record of facts as opposed to what is false or fictitious; and we call it _credible_ when the record of facts which it professes to give is worthy of belief. Authenticity and credibility are, therefore, only different views of the same quality. In the case of a book that deals mainly with _principles_, the question of authorship is of subordinate importance. Thus the book of Job, with the exception of the brief narratives with which it opens and closes, and which may belong to any one of several centuries, is occupied with the question of Divine providence. It is not necessary that we know what particular man was its author, or at what precise period he wrote. We only need reasonable evidence (as will be shown hereafter) that he was a prophetical man, writing under the guidance of the Holy Spirit. But the case of the gospel narratives is wholly different. They contain a record of the supernatural appearance and works of the Son of God, on the truth of which rests our faith in the gospel. So the apostle Paul reasons: "If Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain." 1 Cor. 15:14. It is, then, of vital importance that we know the relation which the authors of these narratives held to Christ. If they were not _apostles_ or _apostolic men_, that is, associates of the apostles, laboring with them, enjoying their full confidence, and in circumstances to obtain their information directly from them--but, instead of this, wrote after the apostolic age--their testimony is not worthy of the unlimited faith which the church in all ages has reposed in it. The question, then, of the genuineness of the gospel narratives and that of their authenticity and credibility must stand or fall together. 2. In respect to the _origin_ of the gospels, as also of the other books of the New Testament, the following things should be carefully remembered: _First._ There was a period, extending, perhaps, through some years from the day of Pentecost, when there were no written gospels, their place being supplied by the living presence and teachings of the apostles and other disciples of our Lord. _Secondly._ When the need of written documents began to be felt, they were produced, one after another, as occasion suggested them. Thus the composition of the books of the New Testament extended through a considerable period of years. _Thirdly._ Besides the gospels universally received by the churches, other narratives of our Lord's life were attempted, as we learn from the evangelist Luke (1:1); but those never obtained general currency. The churches everywhere received the four gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, because of the clear evidence which they had of their apostolic origin and trustworthiness; and because, also, these gospels, though not professing to give a complete account of our Lord's life and teachings, were nevertheless sufficiently full to answer the end for which they were composed, being not fragmentary sketches, but orderly narratives, each of them extending over the whole course of our Lord's ministry. The other narratives meanwhile gradually passed into oblivion. The general reception of these four gospels did not, however, come from any formal concert of action on the part of the churches, (as, for example, from the authoritative decision of a general council, since no such thing as a general council of the churches was known till long after this period;) but simply from the common perception everywhere of the unimpeachable evidence by which their apostolic authority was sustained. The narratives referred to by Luke were earlier than his gospel. They were not spurious, nor, so far as we know, unauthentic; but rather imperfect. They must not be confounded with the apocryphal gospels of a later age. 3. In respect to the quotations of Scripture by the early fathers of the church, it is important to notice their habit of quoting anonymously, and often in a loose and general way. They frequently cite from memory, blending together the words of different authors, and sometimes intermingling with them their own words. In citing the prophecies of the Old Testament in an argumentative way, they are, as might have been expected, more exact, particularly when addressing Jews; yet even here they often content themselves with the scope of the passages referred to, without being particular as to the exact words. With the above preliminary remarks, we proceed to consider the evidences, external and internal, for the genuineness of the gospel narratives. II. _External Evidences._ 4. Here we need not begin at a later date than the last quarter of the second century. This is the age of Irenæus in Gaul, of Tertullian in North Africa, of Clement of Alexandria in Egypt, and of some other writers. Their testimony to the apostolic origin and universal reception of our four canonical gospels is as full as can be desired. They give the names of the authors, two of them--Matthew and John--apostles, and the other two--Mark and Luke--companions of apostles and fellow-laborers with them, always associating Mark with Peter, and Luke with Paul; they affirm the universal and undisputed reception of these four gospels from the beginning by all the churches; and deny the apostolic authority of other pretended gospels. In all this, they give not their individual opinions, but the common belief of the churches. It is conceded on all hands that in their day these four gospels were universally received by the churches as genuine and authoritative records of our Lord's life and works, to the exclusion of all others. _Irenæus_ was a native of Asia Minor, of Greek descent; but the seat of his labors was Lyons and Vienne in Gaul, of the former of which places he became bishop after the martyrdom of Pothinus, about A.D. 177. He was born about A.D. 140, and suffered martyrdom under Septimius Severus A.D. 202. In his youth he was a disciple of Polycarp, who was in turn a disciple of the apostle John. In a letter to one Florinus, which Eusebius has preserved, (Hist. Eccl., 5. 20,) he gives, in glowing language, his recollections of the person and teachings of Polycarp, and tells with what interest he listened as this man related his intercourse with the apostle John and the others who had seen the Lord, "how he recounted their words, and the things which he had heard from them concerning the Lord, and concerning his miracles and teaching." And he adds that these things which Polycarp had received from eye-witnesses he related "all in agreement with the Scriptures;" that is, obviously, with the gospel narratives. Pothinus, the predecessor of Irenæus at Lyons, was ninety years old at the time of his martyrdom, and must have been acquainted with many who belonged to the latter part of the apostolic age. Under such circumstances, it is inconceivable that Irenæus, who knew the Christian traditions of both the East and the West, should not have known the truth respecting the reception of the gospels by the churches, and the grounds on which this reception rested, more especially in the case of the gospel of John. Tischendorf, after mentioning the relation of Irenæus to Polycarp the disciple of John, asks, with reason: "Are we, nevertheless, to cherish the supposition that Irenæus never heard a word from Polycarp respecting the gospel of John, and yet gave it his unconditional confidence--this man Irenæus, who in his controversies with heretics, the men of falsification and apocryphal works, employs against them, before all other things, the pure Scripture as a holy weapon?" (Essay, When were Our Gospels Written, p. 8.) The testimony of Irenæus is justly regarded as of the most weighty character. The fact that he gives several fanciful reasons why there should be only four gospels, (Against Heresies, 3. 11,) does not invalidate his statement of the fact that the churches had always received four, and no more. We always distinguish between men's testimony to facts of which they are competent witnesses, and their philosophical explanations of these facts. _Tertullian_ was born in Carthage about A.D. 160, and died between A.D. 220 and 240. About A.D. 202 he joined the sect of the Montanists; but this does not affect his testimony respecting the origin and universal reception of the four canonical gospels. His works are very numerous, and in them all he insists with great earnestness that the gospel narratives, as also the other apostolic writings, have been received without corruption, as a sacred inheritance, from the apostolic churches. His work against Marcion, whom he accuses of employing a mutilated gospel of Luke, is particularly instructive as showing how deep and settled was the conviction of the early Christians that nothing could be a gospel which did not proceed from apostles or apostolic men; and how watchful they were against all attempts to mutilate or corrupt the primitive apostolic records. In defending the true gospel of Luke against the mutilated form of it employed by Marcion, he says: "I affirm that not in the apostolic churches alone, but in all which are joined with them in the bond of fellowship, that gospel of Luke which we most firmly maintain, has been valid from its first publication; but Marcion's gospel is unknown to most of them, and known to none, except to be condemned." This testimony of Tertullian is very important, as showing his full conviction that Marcion could not deny the universal reception, from the beginning, of the genuine gospel of Luke. And a little afterwards he adds: "The same authority of the apostolic churches will defend the other gospels also, which we have in like manner through them, and according to them," (Against Marcion, 4. 5.) Many more quotations of like purport might be added. _Clement of Alexandria_ was a pupil of Pantænus, and his successor as head of the catechetical school at Alexandria in Egypt. He was of heathen origin, born probably about the middle of the second century, and died about A.D. 220. He had a philosophical turn of mind, and after his conversion to Christianity made extensive researches under various teachers, as he himself tells us, in Greece, in Italy, in Palestine, and other parts of the East. At last he met with Pantænus in Egypt, whom he preferred to all his other guides, and in whose instructions he rested. The testimony of Clement to the universal and undisputed reception by the churches of the four canonical gospels as the writings of apostles or apostolic men, agrees with that of Tertullian. And it has the more weight, not only on account of his wide investigations, but because, also, it virtually contains the testimony of his several teachers, some of whom must have known, if not the apostles themselves, those who had listened to their teachings. In connection with the testimony of the above-named writers, we may consider that of the _churches of Lyons and Vienne_ in Gaul, in a letter addressed by them to "the churches of Asia and Phrygia," which Eusebius has preserved for us, (Hist. Eccl., 5. 1,) and which describes a severe persecution through which they passed in the reign of Antoninus Verus, about A.D. 177. In this they say: "So was fulfilled that which was spoken by our Lord, 'The time shall come in which whosoever killeth you shall think that he doeth God service.'" In speaking again of a certain youthful martyr, they first compare him to Zacharias, the father of John the Baptist, affirming, in the very words of Luke, that he "had walked in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless," (Luke 1:6;) and then go on to describe him as "having the Comforter in himself, the Spirit, more abundantly than Zacharias," where they apply to the Holy Spirit a term peculiar to the apostle John. Here, then, we have indubitable testimony to the fact that the gospel of John, as well as of Luke, was known to the churches of Gaul in the west and Asia Minor in the east in the days of Pothinus, bishop of these churches, who suffered martyrdom in this persecution. But Pothinus was ninety years old, so that his knowledge of these gospels must have reached back to the first quarter of the second century, when many who had known the apostles were yet living. 5. These testimonies, let it be carefully remembered, apply not to one part of Christendom alone, but to all its different and distant divisions; and that, too, long before there was any attempt to bring the judgment of the churches into harmony by means of general councils. The orthodox churches planted in the different provinces of the Roman empire, though in substantial harmony with each other, had nevertheless their minor differences, which were sometimes discussed with much warmth. In their relation to each other, they were jealous of their freedom and independence. The history of the so-called _Antilegomena_ (Disputed Books of the New Testament, chap. 6) shows that the reception of a writing as apostolic in one division of Christendom, did not insure its reception elsewhere. Had it been possible that a spurious book should be imposed as genuine on the churches of one region, it would certainly have met with opposition in other regions; but our four canonical gospels were everywhere received without dispute as the writings of apostles or apostolic men. This fact admits of but one explanation: the churches had from their first appearance indubitable evidence of their genuineness. 6. Let it be further remembered that this testimony relates not to books of a private character, that might have lain for years hidden in some corner; but to the _public writings_ of the churches, on which their faith was founded, of which they all had copies, and which it was the custom, from the apostolic age, to read in their assemblies along with the law and the prophets. (Justin Martyr Apol., 1. 67.) Earnestness and sincerity are traits which will not be denied to the primitive Christians, and they were certainly not wanting in common discernment. Let any man show, if he can, how a spurious gospel, suddenly appearing somewhere after the apostolic days, could have been imposed upon the churches as genuine, not only where it originated, but everywhere else in Christendom. The difficulty with which some of the genuine books of the New Testament gained universal currency sufficiently refutes such an absurd supposition. 7. We are now prepared to consider the testimonies of an earlier period. Here _Justin Martyr_ is a very weighty witness, since he lived so near the apostolic age, and had every facility for investigating the history of the gospel narratives. He was born near the beginning of the second century, and his extant works date from about the middle of the same century. Before his conversion to Christianity he was a heathen philosopher earnestly seeking for the truth among the different systems of the age. Of his undoubtedly genuine works, there remain to us two Apologies (defences of Christianity) and a Dialogue with Trypho a Jew, designed to defend the Christian religion against its Jewish opponents. In these he quotes the gospel of Matthew very abundantly; next in number are his quotations from Luke. His references to Mark and John are much fewer, but enough to show his acquaintance with them. He never quotes the evangelists by name, but designates their writings as "The Memoirs of the Apostles;" and more fully, "The memoirs which I affirm to have been composed by his"--our Lord's--"apostles and their followers," Dialog., ch. 103, "which," he elsewhere says, "are called gospels," Apol. 1. 66, and in a collective sense, "the gospel," Dialog., ch. 10. It should be carefully noticed that he speaks in the plural number both of the apostles who composed the gospels and their followers. This description applies exactly to our canonical gospels--two written by apostles, and two by their followers. The attempt has been made in modern times to set aside Justin's testimony, on the alleged ground that he quotes not from our canonical gospels, but from some other writings. The groundlessness of this supposition is manifest at first sight. Justin had visited the three principal churches of Rome, Alexandria, and Ephesus. It is certain that he knew what gospels were received by them in his day as authentic, and that these are the very gospels which he quotes, affirming that they were the writings of apostles and their followers. Now, that the gospels which Justin used should have been wholly supplanted by others in the days of Irenæus, who was of full age at the time of Justin's death, is incredible. But Irenæus, in common with Clement, Tertullian, and others, quotes our four canonical gospels as alone possessing apostolic authority, and as having been always received by the churches. It follows that the "Memoirs" of Justin must be the same gospels. We cannot conceive that in this brief period an entire change of gospels should have been made throughout all the different and distant provinces of the Roman empire, at a time when concerted action through general councils was unknown; and that, too, in so silent a manner that no record of it remains in the history of the church. The supposition that the gospels known to Justin were different from those received by Irenæus ought not to be entertained without irrefragable proof. But no such proof exists. "An accurate examination in detail of his citations," says Semisch, Life of Justin Martyr, 4. 1, "has led to the result that this title"--the Memoirs of the Apostles--"designates the canonical gospels--a result in no way less certain because again called in question in modern days." The agreement of his quotations with our present gospels is of such a character and extent as can be explained only from his use of them. The variations are mainly due to his habit of quoting loosely from memory. "Many of these citations," says Kirchhofer, "agree, word for word, with the gospels; others with the substance, but with alterations and additions of words, with transpositions and omissions; others give the thought only in a general way; others still condense together the contents of several passages and different sayings, in which case the historic quotations are yet more free, and blend together, in part, the accounts of Matthew and Luke. But some quotations are not found at all in our canonical gospels," (see immediately below;) "some, on the contrary, occur twice or thrice." Quellensammlung, p. 89. note. Two or three more important variations are, perhaps, due to the readings in the manuscripts employed by Justin, since the later church fathers, who, as we know, employed the canonical gospels, give the same variations. Finally, Justin gives a few incidents and sayings not recorded in our present gospels. As he lived so near the apostolic times he may well have received these from tradition; but if in any case he took them from written documents, there is no proof that he ascribed to such documents apostolic authority. In one passage, he accurately distinguishes between what he gives from tradition or other written sources, and what from the apostolic records. "When Jesus came," he says, "to the river Jordan, where John was baptizing, as he descended to the water, both was a fire kindled in the Jordan, and as he ascended from the water, the apostles of this very Christ of ours have written that the Holy Spirit as a dove lighted upon him." Dial., ch. 88. It has been doubted whether certain references to the _gospel of John_ can be found in Justin's writings; but it seems plain that the following is a free quotation from chapter 3:3-5: "For Christ said, Except ye be born again, ye shall by no means enter into the kingdom of heaven. But that it is impossible that they who have once been born should enter into the wombs of those who bare them is manifest to all." Apol. 1. 61. To affirm that a passage so peculiar as this was borrowed by both the evangelist John and Justin from a common tradition, is to substitute a very improbable for a very natural explanation. Besides, Justin uses phraseology peculiar to John, repeatedly calling our Saviour "the Word of God," and "the Word made flesh;" affirming that he "was in a peculiar sense begotten the only Son of God," "an only begotten One to the Father of all things, being in a peculiar sense begotten of him as Word and Power, and afterwards made man through the Virgin;" and calling him "the good Rock that sends forth (literally, causes to _bubble forth_--compare John 4:14) living waters into the hearts of those who through him have loved the Father of all things, and that gives to all who will the water of life to drink." These and other references to John may be seen in Kirchhofer's Quellensammlung, pp. 146, 147. 8. Another early witness is _Papias_, who was bishop of Hierapolis, in Phrygia, in the first half of the second century. He wrote "An Exposition of the Oracles of the Lord," in five books. This work has perished; but fragments of it, with notices of its contents, are preserved to us by Eusebius and other writers. As Papias, according to his own express testimony, gathered his materials, if not from apostles themselves, yet from their immediate disciples, his statements are invested with great interest. Of Matthew he says, Eusebius Hist. Eccl., 5. 39, that he "wrote the oracles in the Hebrew dialect, and every one interpreted them as he could." He speaks of this interpretation by each one as he could as something past, implying that in his day our present Greek gospel of Matthew (of the apostolic authority of which there was never any doubt in the early churches) was in circulation, whether it was or was not originally composed in Hebrew, a question on which learned men are not agreed. Of Mark he affirms that, "having become Peter's interpreter, he wrote down accurately as many things as he remembered; not recording in order the things that were said or done by Christ, since he was not a hearer or follower of the Lord, but afterwards"--after our Lord's ascension--"of Peter, who imparted his teachings as occasion required, but not as making an orderly narrative of the Lord's discourses." Hist. Eccl., 3. 39. The fact that Eusebius gives no statement of Papias respecting the other two gospels is of little account, since his notices of the authors to whom he refers, and of their works, are confessedly imperfect. Eusebius notices, for example, Hist. Eccl. 4. 14, the fact that Polycarp, in his letter to the Philippians, "has used certain testimonies from the First Epistle of Peter;" but says nothing of his many references, in the same letter, to the epistles of Paul, in some of which he quotes the apostle by name. We have, nevertheless, through Eusebius, an indirect but valid testimony from Papias to the authorship of the fourth gospel, resting upon the admitted identity of the author of this gospel with the author of the first of the epistles ascribed to John. Speaking of Papias, Eusebius says: "But the same man used testimonies from the First Epistle of John." Hist. Eccl., 3. 39, end. The ascription to John of this epistle, is virtually the ascription to him of the fourth gospel also. Eusebius speaks of Papias as a man "of very small mind." The correctness of this judgment is manifest from the specimens which he gives of his writings; but it cannot invalidate the evidence we have from the above passages of the existence, in Papias' day, of the gospels to which he refers. As to the question whether these were our present canonical gospels of Matthew and Mark, it is sufficient to say that neither Eusebius nor any of the church fathers understood them differently. 9. A very interesting relic of antiquity is the _Epistle to Diognetus_, of which the authorship is uncertain. Its date cannot be later than the age of Justin Martyr, to whom it is ascribed by some. It is, notwithstanding some erroneous views, a noble defence of Christianity, in which the author shows his acquaintance with the gospel of John by the use of terms and phrases peculiar to him. Thus he calls Christ "the Word," and "the only begotten Son," whom God sent to men. In the words, "not to take thought about raiment and food," section 9, there is an apparent reference to Matt. 6:25, 31. In addition to the above testimonies might be adduced some fragments of early Christian writers which have been preserved to us by those of a later day; but for brevity's sake they are omitted. 10. Following up the stream of testimony, we come now to that of the so-called _apostolic fathers_; that is, of men who were disciples of apostles, and wrote in the age next following them. Holding, as they do, such a near relation to the apostles, and familiar with the oral traditions of the apostolic age, we cannot expect to find in them such frequent and formal references to the books of the New Testament as characterize the works of later writers. They quote, for the most part, anonymously, interweaving with their own words those of the sacred writers. One of the earliest among the apostolic fathers is _Clement of Rome_, who died about A.D. 100. Of the numerous writings anciently ascribed to him, his First Epistle to the Corinthians is admitted, upon good evidence, to be genuine. In this we find words which imply a knowledge of the first three gospels. Citing evidently from memory, in a loose way, he says: "For thus he"--the Lord Jesus--"spake, 'Be merciful, that ye may obtain mercy; forgive, that ye may be forgiven; as ye do, so shall it be done to you; as ye give, so shall it be given to you; as ye judge, so shall ye receive judgment; as ye are kind, so shall ye receive kindness; with what measure ye measure, with that it shall be measured to you.'" And again: "For he said, 'Woe unto that man; it were better for him that he had not been born, than that he should offend one of my elect.'" _Ignatius_ was bishop of the church at Antioch, and suffered martyrdom A.D. 107, or according to some accounts, 116. In his epistles, which are received as genuine, are manifest quotations from the gospel of Matthew, and some apparent though not entirely certain allusions to the gospel of John. _Polycarp_, bishop of Smyrna, was a disciple of the apostle John. He suffered martyrdom about the year 166. Of his writings, only one short epistle, addressed to the Philippians, remains to us; but this abounds in references to the books of the New Testament, especially the epistles of Paul. Of quotations from the gospel of Matthew, the following are examples: "Judge not, that ye be not judged; forgive, and ye shall be forgiven; be merciful, that ye may obtain mercy; with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again." "Blessed are the poor in spirit, and those that suffer persecution for righteousness' sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." "The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak." For the gospel of John, Polycarp's testimony, though indirect, is decisive. In his letter to the Philippians, he quotes from the First Epistle of John, "For every one who does not confess that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh, is antichrist." 1 John 4:3. But that the gospel of John and this first epistle both proceeded from the same author, is a conceded fact. The recently discovered Sinai Codex, the oldest known codex in the world, contains the entire _Epistle of Barnabas_ in the original Greek. In this we find, among other references to the first three gospels, one to the _written_ gospel of Matthew of the most decisive character: "Let us be mindful, therefore, lest perchance we be found as it is written, 'Many are called, but few are chosen.'" Matt. 20:16; 22:14. The form of quotation, "as it is written," is employed by the writers of the New Testament only of citations from Scripture. In these words the writer places the gospel of Matthew in the same rank as the Scriptures of the Old Testament. That he was the Barnabas mentioned in the New Testament as the companion of Paul cannot be maintained; but the composition of the epistle is assigned, with probability, to the beginning of the second century, though some place it as late as its close. The testimony of other apocryphal writings of early date might be adduced, but for the sake of brevity it is here omitted. It may be seen in the essay of Tischendorf, already referred to. 11. A different class of witnesses will next be considered--the ancient Syriac version, the old Latin version, and the Muratorian fragment on the canon of the New Testament--all of which bear testimony to our canonical gospels. The ancient _Syriac_ version, commonly called the Peshito--_simple_, that is, expressing simply the meaning of the original, without allegorical additions and explanations, after the manner of the Jewish Targums--is admitted by all to be of very high antiquity. Learned men are agreed that this version cannot well be referred to a later date than the close of the second century, and some assign it to the middle of the second century, at which time the Syrian churches were in a very flourishing condition, and cannot well be supposed to have been without a version of the Holy Scriptures. The Peshito contains all the books of the New Testament, except the Second Epistle of Peter, the Second and Third Epistles of John, the Epistle of Jude, and the Apocalypse. It testifies to the existence of our four gospels, not only when it was made, but at an earlier date; since we must, in all probability, assume that some considerable time elapsed after the composition, one by one, of the books of the New Testament, before they were collected into a volume, as in this Syriac version. Respecting the _Old Latin_ version, (in distinction from Jerome's revision, commonly called the _Vulgate_, which belongs to the fourth century,) various opinions have been maintained. Some have assumed the existence of several independent Latin versions of the New Testament, or of some of its books; but the preferable opinion is that there were various recensions, all having for their foundation a single version, namely, the Old Latin; which, says Westcott, Canon of the New Testament, ch. 3, "can be traced back as far as the earliest records of Latin Christianity. Every circumstance connected with it indicates the most remote antiquity." It was current in north Africa, at least soon after the middle of the second century. Though it has not come down to us in a perfect form, it contains, along with most of the other books of the New Testament, our four canonical gospels; and its testimony is of the greatest weight. The _Muratorian_ Fragment on the _Canon_ is the name given to a Latin fragment discovered by the Italian scholar, Muratori, in the Ambrosian Library at Milan, in a manuscript bearing the marks of great antiquity. Its date is determined by its reference to the shepherd of Hermas, which, says the Fragment, Hermas "wrote very recently in our times, while the bishop Pius, his brother, occupied the chair of the church at Rome." The later of the two dates given for the death of Pius is A.D. 157. The composition of the Fragment must have followed soon afterwards. Though mutilated at the beginning, as well as the end, its testimony to the existence of the _four_ canonical gospels is decisive. In its present form, it opens with the end of a sentence, the beginning of which is lost. It then goes on to say, "_The third gospel according to Luke_." After mentioning various particulars concerning Luke, as that he was a physician whom Paul had taken with him, that he did not himself see the Lord in the flesh, etc., it adds, "_The fourth of the gospels, that of John, of the number of the disciples_," to which it appends a traditional account of the circumstances of its composition. With the truth or falsehood of this account we have at present no concern; the important fact is that this very ancient canon recognizes the existence of our four canonical gospels. 12. The heretical sects of the second century furnish testimony to the genuineness of our canonical gospels which is of the most weighty and decisive character. Though some of them rejected certain books of the New Testament and mutilated others, it was on doctrinal, not on critical grounds. Had they attempted to disprove on historic grounds the genuineness of the rejected portions of Scripture, it is certain that the church fathers, who wrote against them at such length, would have noticed their arguments. The fact that they did not, is conclusive proof that no such attempt was made; but from the position which the leaders of these heretical sects occupied, it is certain that, could the genuineness of the canonical gospels, or any one of them, have been denied on historic grounds, the denial would have been made. _Marcion_, one of the most distinguished leaders of those who separated themselves from the orthodox church, came to Rome in the second quarter of the second century. He separated Christianity from all connection with Judaism, making the Jehovah of the Old Testament a different being from the God of the New Testament. His gospel, called by the ancients the gospel of Marcion, is admitted to have been a mutilated copy of Luke's gospel. Of course it became necessary that he should reject the first two chapters of this gospel, (which alone he received,) since they contain our Lord's genealogy in the line of Abraham and David, and should otherwise alter it to suit his views. On the same grounds, he altered the epistles of Paul also. That Marcion was not ignorant of the other three gospels, but rejected them, is plain from the words of Tertullian, who accuses him, Against Marcion, 4. 3, of attempting "to destroy the credit of those gospels which are properly such, and are published under the name of apostles, or also of apostolic men; that he may invest his own gospel with the confidence which he withdraws from them." His real ground for rejecting some books of the New Testament and mutilating others was that _he_ could judge better of the truth than the writers themselves, whom he represented to have been misled by the influences of Jewish prejudices. Accordingly Irenæus well says of the liberties taken by Marcion, Against Heresies, 1. 27: "He persuaded his disciples that he was himself more trustworthy than the apostles who have delivered to us the gospel; while he gave to them not the gospel, but a fragment of the gospel." A distinguished leader of the Gnostics was _Valentinus_, who came to Rome about A.D. 140, and continued there till the time of Anicetus. His testimony and that of his followers is, if possible, more weighty than even that of Marcion. His method, according to the testimony of Tertullian, was not to reject and mutilate the Scriptures, but to pervert their meaning by false interpretations. Tertullian says, Against Heretics, ch. 38: "For though Valentinus seems to use the entire instrument, he has done violence to the truth with a more artful mind than Marcion." "The entire instrument"--Latin, _integro instrumento_--includes our four canonical gospels. Clement of Alexandria and Hippolytus have preserved quotations from Valentinus in which he refers to the gospels of Matthew, Luke, and John. See Westcott, Canon of the New Testament, 4. 5. Respecting the gospel of John in particular, Irenæus says, Against Heresies, 3. 11, that "the Valentinians make the most abundant use of it." Heracleon, whom Origen represents as having been a familiar friend of Valentinus, wrote a commentary on John, from which Origen frequently quotes; but if Valentinus and his followers, in the second quarter of the second century, used "the entire instrument," they must have found its apostolic authority established upon a firm foundation before their day. This carries us back to the age immediately succeeding that of the apostles, when Polycarp and others who had known them personally were yet living. The testimony of the Valentinians, then, is of the most decisive character. Another prominent man among the heretical writers was _Tatian_, a contemporary and pupil of Justin Martyr, who, according to the testimony of Eusebius, Epiphanius, and Theodoret, composed a _Diatessaron_, that is, a _four-fold gospel_; which can be understood only as a harmony of the four gospels which, as has been shown, were used by Justin; or of such parts of these gospels as suited his purpose; for Tatian, like Marcion, omitted all that relates to our Lord's human descent. With this Diatessaron, Theodoret was well acquainted; for he found among his churches more than two hundred copies, which he caused to be removed, and their places supplied by the four canonical gospels. As to other gospels of the second century, which are occasionally mentioned by later writers, as "The Gospel of Truth," "The Gospel of Basilides," etc., there is no evidence that they professed to be connected histories of our Lord's life and teachings. They were rather, as Norton has shown, Genuineness of the Gospels, vol. 3, chap. 4, doctrinal works embodying the views of the sectaries that used them. 13. We have seen how full and satisfactory is the external evidence for our four canonical gospels. Considering how scanty are the remains of Christian writings that have come down to us from the first half of the same century, we have all the external evidence for that period also that could be reasonably demanded, and it is met by no rebutting testimony that rests on historic grounds. The authorship of no ancient classical work is sustained by a mass of evidence so great and varied, and the candid mind can rest in it with entire satisfaction. III. _Internal Evidences._ 14. Here we may begin with considering the relation of the first three gospels to the last, in respect to both time of composition and character. And first, with respect to _time_. The first three gospels--frequently called the _synoptical_ gospels, or the _synoptics_, because from the general similarity of their plan and materials their contents are capable of being summed up in a synopsis--record our Lord's prophecy of the overthrow of Jerusalem. The three records of this prediction wear throughout the costume of a true prophecy, not of a prophecy written after the event. They are occupied, almost exclusively, with the various _signs_ by which the approach of that great catastrophe might be known, and with admonitions to the disciples to hold themselves in readiness for it. Matthew, for example, devotes fifty verses to the account of the prophecy and the admonitions connected with it. Of these, only four, chap. 24:19-22, describe the calamities of the scene, and that in the most general terms. Now, upon the supposition that the evangelist wrote before the event, all this is natural. Our Lord's design in uttering the prophecy was not to gratify the idle curiosity of the disciples, but to warn them beforehand in such a way that they might escape the horrors of the impending catastrophe. He dwelt, therefore, mainly on the signs of its approach; and with these, as having a chief interest for the readers, the record of the prediction is mostly occupied. It is impossible, on the other hand, to conceive that one who wrote years after the destruction of the city and temple should not have dwelt in more detail on the bloody scenes connected with their overthrow, and have given in other ways also a historic coloring to his account. We may safely say that to write a prophecy after the event in such a form as that which we have in either of the first three gospels, transcends the power of any uninspired man; and as to inspired narratives, the objectors with whom we are now dealing deny them altogether. But there are, in the record of this prophecy, some special indications of the time when the evangelists wrote. According to Matthew, the disciples asked, ver. 3: "When shall these things"--the destruction of the buildings of the temple--"be? and what shall be the sign of thy coming and of the end of the world?" These questions our Lord proceeded to answer in such a way that the impression on the minds of the hearers (to be rectified only by the course of future events) must have been that the overthrow of the temple and city would be connected with his second coming and the end of the world. "Immediately after the tribulation of those days," says Matthew, "shall the sun be darkened," etc. The probable explanation of this peculiar form of the prophecy is that it does actually include all three events; the fulfilment which it had in the destruction of the city and temple by the Romans being only an earnest of a higher fulfilment hereafter. But however this may be, it is important to notice that the evangelists, in their record of the prophecy, are evidently unconscious of any discrepancy, real or apparent, that needs explanation; which could not have been the case had they written years after the event predicted. "It may be safely held," says Professor Fisher, Supernatural Origin of Christianity, p. 172, "that had the evangelist been writing at a later time, some explanation would have been thrown in to remove the _seeming_ discrepancy between prophecy and fulfilment." It should be further noticed that the evangelists Matthew and Mark, in reference to "the abomination of desolation" standing in the holy place, throw in the admonitory words, "Let him that readeth understand." These are not the Saviour's words, but those of the narrators calling the attention of believers to a most important sign requiring their immediate flight to the mountains. Before the overthrow of the city these words had a weighty office; after its overthrow they would have been utterly superfluous. Their presence in such a connection is proof that the record was written before the event to which it refers. Admitting the genuineness and authenticity of the book of Acts, (which will be considered hereafter,) we have a special proof of the early composition of the gospel according to Luke. The book of Acts ends abruptly with Paul's two years residence at Rome, which brings us down to A.D. 65, five years before the destruction of Jerusalem. The only natural explanation of this fact is that here the composition of the book of Acts was brought to a close. The date of the gospel which preceded, Acts 1:1, must therefore be placed still earlier. If, now, we examine the gospel of John, we find its internal character agreeing with the ancient tradition that it was written at Ephesus late in the apostle's life. That it was composed at a distance from Judea, in a Gentile region, is manifest from his careful explanation of Jewish terms and usages, which among his countrymen would have needed no explanation. No man writing in Judea, or among the Galileans who habitually attended the national feasts at Jerusalem, would have said, "And the passover, a feast of the Jews, was nigh," 6:4; "Now the Jews' feast of tabernacles was at hand," 7:2, etc. The absence of all reference to the overthrow of the Jewish polity, civil and ecclesiastical, may be naturally explained upon the supposition that the apostle wrote some years after that event, when his mind had now become familiar with the great truth that the Mosaic institutions had forever passed away to make room for the universal dispensation of Christianity; and that he wrote, too, among Gentiles for whom the abolition of these institutions had no special interest. In general style and spirit, moreover, the gospel of John is closely allied to his first epistle, and cannot well be separated from it by a great interval of time; but the epistle undoubtedly belongs to a later period of the apostle's life. From the language of John, chap. 5:2, "Now there _is_ at Jerusalem, by the sheep-gate, a pool, which is called in the Hebrew tongue, Bethesda, _having_ five porches,"--it has been argued that, when John wrote, the city must have been still standing. But Eusebius speaks of the pool as remaining in his day, and why may not the porches, as useful to the Roman conquerors, have been preserved, at least for a season? We have seen the relation of John's gospel to the other three in respect to time. It must have been written several years later than the last of them; perhaps not less than fifteen years. If, now, we look to its relation in regard to _character_, we must say that it differs from them as widely as it well could while presenting to our view the same divine and loving Saviour. Its general plan is different. For reasons not known to us, the synoptical gospels are mainly occupied with our Lord's ministry in Galilee. They record only his last journey to Jerusalem, and the momentous incidents connected with it. John, on the contrary, notices his visits to Jerusalem year by year. Hence his materials are, to a great extent, different from theirs; and even where he records the same events--as, for example, the miracle of the loaves and fishes, and the last supper--he connects with them long discourses, which the other evangelists have omitted. Particularly noticeable are our Lord's oft-repeated discussions with the unbelieving Jews respecting his Messiahship, and his confidential intercourse with his disciples, in both of which we have such treasures of divine truth and love. How strikingly this gospel differs from the others in its general style and manner every reader feels at once. It bears throughout the impress of John's individuality, and by this it is immediately connected with the epistles that bear his name. It should be added that in respect to the time when our Lord ate the passover with his disciples there is an apparent disagreement with the other three gospels, which the harmonists have explained in various ways. The essential point of the above comparison is this: Notwithstanding the striking difference between the later fourth gospel and the earlier three, it was at once received by all the churches as of apostolic authority. Now upon the supposition of its genuineness, both its peculiar character and its undisputed reception everywhere are easily explained. John, the bosom disciple of our Lord, wrote with the full consciousness of his apostolic authority and his competency as a witness of what he had himself seen and heard. He therefore gave his testimony in his own independent and original way. How far he may have been influenced in his selection of materials by a purpose to supply what was wanting in the earlier gospels, according to an old tradition, it is not necessary here to inquire; it is sufficient to say that, under the illumination of the Holy Spirit, he marked out that particular plan which we have in his gospel, and carried it out in his own peculiar manner, thus opening to the churches new mines, so to speak, of the inexhaustible fulness of truth and love contained in him in whom "dwelleth all the fulness of the godhead bodily." And when this original gospel, so different in its general plan and style from those that preceded, made its appearance, the apostolic authority of its author secured its immediate and universal reception by the churches. All this is very plain and intelligible. But upon the supposition that the gospel of John is a spurious production of the age succeeding that of the apostles, let any one explain, if he can, how it could have obtained universal and unquestioned apostolic authority. Its very difference from the earlier gospels must have provoked inquiry and examination, and these must have led to its rejection, especially at a time when some who had known the apostle yet survived; and no one now pretends to assign to it a later period. 15. We will next consider the relation of the first three gospels to each other. Here we have remarkable agreements with remarkable differences. The general plan of all three is the same. It is manifest also, at first sight, that there lies at the foundation of each a basis of common matter--common not in substance alone, but to a great extent in form also. Equally manifest is it that the three evangelists write independently of each other. Matthew, for example, did not draw his materials from Luke; for there is his genealogy of our Lord, and his full account of the sermon on the mount, not to mention other particulars. Nor did Luke take his materials from Matthew; for there is his genealogy also, with large sections of matter peculiar to himself. Mark has but little matter that is absolutely new; but where he and the other two evangelists record the same events, if one compares his narratives with theirs, he finds numerous little incidents peculiar to this gospel woven into them in a very vivid and graphic manner. They come in also in the most natural and artless way, as might be expected from one who, if not himself an eye-witness, received his information immediately from eye-witnesses. The three writers, moreover, do not always agree as to the order in which they record events; yet, notwithstanding the diversities which they exhibit, they were all received from the first as of equal authority. The natural explanation of this is that all three wrote in the apostolic age, and consequently had access, each of them independently of the other two, to the most authentic sources of information. These sources (so far as the evangelists were not themselves eye-witnesses) lay partly, perhaps, in written documents like those referred to by Luke, 1:1, partly in the unwritten traditions current in the apostolic churches, and partly in personal inquiry from eye-witnesses, especially, in the case of Mark and Luke, from apostles themselves. From these materials each selected as suited his purposes, and the churches everywhere unhesitatingly received each of the three gospels, notwithstanding the above-named variations between them, because they had undoubted evidence of their apostolic authority. We cannot suppose that after the apostolic age three gospels, bearing to each other the relation which these do, could have been imposed upon the churches as all of them equally authentic. We know from the history of Marcion's gospel how fully alive they were to the character of their sacred records. On apostolic authority they could receive--to mention a single example--both Matthew's and Luke's account of our Lord's genealogy; but it is certain that they would not have received the two on the authority of men who lived after the apostolic age. 16. In the gospel narratives are numerous incidental allusions to passing events without the proper sphere of our Lord's labors, to social customs, and to the present posture of public affairs, civil and ecclesiastical. In all these the severest scrutiny has been able to detect _no trace of a later age_. This is a weighty testimony to the apostolic origin of the gospels. Had their authors lived in a later age, the fact must have manifested itself in some of these references. The most artless writer can allude in a natural and truthful way to present events, usages, and circumstances; but it transcends the power of the most skilful author to multiply incidental and minute references to a past age without betraying the fact that he does not belong to it. 17. Every age has, also, its peculiar impress of thought and reasoning in religious, not less than in secular matters. Although t