The shades of
night recede before the approach of morning light; moon and stars fade away
when the bright luminary of day gilds the eastern horizon; and thus, when the
Sun of Righteousness arose upon the world, the shadows, types, symbols and
metaphors of the Mosaic dispensation were fulfilled and had to pass away.
“In the beginning
was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in
the beginning with God. All things were made by Him; and without Him was not
anything made that was made.” “And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us
(and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father), full
of grace and truth.” “The law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by
Jesus Christ” (John i. 1-3, 14, 17).
In the days of
Herod the Great, king of Judea, the angel Gabriel was sent from God unto a city
of Galilee, named Nazareth, to a virgin* espoused to a man whose name was
Joseph, of the house of David; “and the virgin’s name was Mary. And the angel
came in unto her, and said, Hail, thou that art highly favored, the Lord is with
thee: blessed art thou among women. And when she saw him she was troubled at
his saying, and cast in her mind what manner of salutation this should be. And
the angel said unto her, Fear not, Mary; for thou hast found favor with God.
And, behold, thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt
call his name Jesus.+ He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the
Hightest: and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David:
And he shall reign over the house of Jacob forever; and of his kingdom there
shall be no end” (Luke i. 26-33).
*Matthew gives,
in his first chapter, the descent of Christ from David and Abraham, according to
prophecies made about 1000 and 2000 years before, and he abridges his
genealogies, as the Jews frequently did, giving three lists, each containing
fourteen names, probably to aid the memory. Luke, in his third chapter, gives
the descent of Christ from Adam, or “the seed of the woman,” according to the
promise made to the first pair in the garden of Eden, 4000 years before.
Joseph, as Luke tells us (iii. 23), was not the real, but only the supposed or
reputed father of Jesus. According to Numbers xxxvi. 8, Joseph and Mary must
have been of the same tribe and family. It is thought that Jacob, the father of
Joseph, as mentioned by Matthew, was the brother of Heli or Eli, mentioned, as
the father of Joseph, by Luke, and that Mary was the daughter of Eli; so that
Joseph and Mary were first cousins, and Joseph was the son-in-law of Eli-
son-in-law being called son by the Jews. Thus, while Matthew gives the royal or
legal descent of Joseph, it is likely that Luke gives the natural or private
descent of Mary. The Jews, in their genealogical tables, reckoned descent
wholly by males. The bitterest early enemies of Christ did not deny His descent
from David. Many able scholars believe that both Matthew and Luke give the
genealogy of Joseph- Mary’s descent from David being implied.
+Jesus
means Jehovah Savior; the reason of the name being given by the angel to
Joseph in a dream- “for He shall save His people from their sins” (Matt. i. 21).
And, in the
fulfillment of this prediction made to Mary by the angel, as well as of all
those made by the prophets, under the legal dispensation, touching that event,
it is written that, in obedience to a decree made by Caesar Augustus, taxing the
Roman world, Joseph and his espoused wife “went up from Galilee, out of the city
of Nazareth, into Judea, unto the city of David, which is called Bethlehem
(because he was of the house of lineage of David), to be taxed with Mary his
espoused wife, being great with child. And so it was that, while they were
there, the days were accomplished that she should be delivered. And she brought
forth her first-born son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in
a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn. And there were in the
same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by
night. And lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord
shone round about them; and they were sore afraid. And the angel said unto
them, Fear not; for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall
be to all people. For unto you is born this day, in the city of David, a
Savior, which is Christ the Lord. And this shall be a sign unto you: Ye shall
find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger. And suddenly
there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host, praising God, and
saying, Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men”
(Luke ii. 1-13). The shepherds went in search of the child and found him in a
manger, and his mother and Joseph, and then returned “glorifying and praising
God for all the things that they had heard and seen, as it was told unto them.”
At the expiration of eight days, the child was circumcised, and “his name was
called Jesus, which was so named of the angel before he was conceived in the
womb. And when the days of her purification, according to the law of Moses,
were accomplished, they brought him to Jerusalem, to present him to the Lord”
(Luke ii. 16-22).
The precise time
of our Savior’s birth, for some wise purpose, seems to have been lost sight of
by chronologists. But it may be set down as having most probably occurred a few
months before the death of Herod the Great, four years before the common
Christian era, in the year of Rome 750, and in the year of the world 4000.
Learned men have investigated this point, but, with all their researches, have
not been able to fix precisely either the year or the day of His birth. The
early Christians were divided on this subject, and of course it must be a
matter of uncertainty to all succeeding generations. In view of this
uncertainty, not even the exact year, much less the exact month being known, how
groundless and puerile appears the custom of the Romish and English, as well as
other communions, in holding sacred the twenty-fifth day of December (new style)
as the day of Christ’s nativity, and adorning their houses of worship with
flowers and evergreens as part of their religious devotion on that day!
But the precise
year, month or day in which the Sun of Righteousness arose is immaterial to the
church of God. She knows that He has arisen- has shone upon the world, has
warmed and animated the hearts of His people, who have enjoyed the direction and
influence of His vital and salutary beams. He came at the precise time and
moment predetermined by the Most High God, without variation or disappointment.
“When the fullness of the time was come, God sent forth His Son, made of
a woman, made under the law, to redeem them that were under the law, that we
might receive the adoption of sons” (Gal. iv. 4, 5).
The words and
deeds of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ have been recorded by four
evangelists, Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, holy men of old, who wrote as they
were moved by the Holy Ghost, and to their testimony we must refer for all
genuine information as to the advent and mission of the Son of God while
tenementing in clay. They inform us that He was taken early by His reputed
father into Egypt to escape Herod’s cruelty, and that at the age of twelve years
He was found conversing in the temple with the learned doctors of the law
concerning the sublime truths of religion.
Profane history,
and not that of the evangelists, notifies us that, at the period of the birth of
the Prince of Peace, there was peace throughout the Roman empire, which
continued for about twelve years, and, as a sign of universal peace, the temple
of Janus at Rome was closed, which, before the reign of Augustus Caesar, had not
been the case since 241 B.C.
“The external
condition and surroundings of the youth of Jesus are in sharp contrast with the
amazing result of His public life. He grew up quietly and unnoticed in a
retired Galilean mountain village of proverbial insignificance, and in a lowly
carpenter-shop, far away from the city of Jerusalem, from schools and libraries,
with no means of instruction save those which seemed open to the humblest Jew-
the care of godly parents, the beauties of nature, the services of the
synagogue, the secret communion of the soul with God, and the Scriptures of the
Old Testament, which recorded in type and prophecy His own character and
mission. All attempts to derive His doctrine from any of the existing schools
and sects have utterly failed. He never referred to the traditions of the
elders except to oppose them. From the Pharisees and Sadducees He differed
alike, and provoked their deadly hostility. With the Essenes He never came in
contact. He was independent of human learning and literature, of schools and
parties. He taught the world as one who owed nothing to the world. He came
down from Heaven and spoke out of the fullness of His personal intercourse with
the great Jehovah. Wiser than all sages, He spake as never man spake, and made
an impression on His age and on all ages after Him such as no man ever made or
can make.”-P. Schaff, in History of Christian Church. His
matchless teaching forms the clear, brief, powerful text of all Christian
doctrine. “His short ministry of three years,” says Mr. Leckey, the
infidel historian of European Morals, “has produced a more deep and lasting
impression on the human race than all the disquisitions of all the philosophers,
and all the exhortations of all the moralists that ever lived.”
“Hillel and
Shammai and other eminent ravvins of this period,” says Mr. W.G. Blaikie, in his
Manual of Bible History, “were probably alive when Christ came into the
world; some of them may have been among those with whom the child Jesus
conversed in the temple; and they, or their successors, must have exercised
influence in His rejection and death. There could not have been a greater
contrast than that between their worship of traditions and Christ’s reverence
for the Word; between their theory of changing men by an influence from
without, and Christ’s by a power from within; between the vain,
trifling inquiries on which their teachings bore, and the grand realities of
life and death which Christ’s constantly contemplated; between their pride,
formality and contemptuous spirit, and Christ’s humility, simplicity and love.”
From His twelfth
to His thirtieth year nothing is said of His history by the evangelists. But
when about thirty years of age, the period when the Jewish priests entered the
sacred office, they inform us that He came unto John the Baptist to be baptized
by him. John at first refused to administer the rite to Him, urging his great
inferiority, but the Savior insisted, and John at length yielded and baptized
Him in the river Jordan. After being baptized He “went up straightway out of
the water: and, lo, the Heavens were opened unto him, and he saw the Spirit of
God descending like a dove, and lighting upon Him: and, lo, a voice from
Heaven, saying, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased” (Matt. iii.
13-17).
God, the Father,
Son, and Holy Ghost, was present on that occasion to honor the sacred rite of
baptism and set apart the Messiah for the work of the gospel ministry. This
office He then took upon Himself, and henceforward proclaimed the principles of
the gospel kingdom till the time of His crucifixion. John was the forerunner of
Jesus; he was filled with the Holy Ghost from his mother’s womb- his name came
from Heaven, and his authority to baptize came from there also. The evangelists
call him “John the Baptist.” The Savior, having been baptized by him,
was surely a “Baptist,” and as He went forth preaching His own gospel He was
necessarily a “Baptist preacher,” thereby affording an example for all His
ministerial followers to the end of the world. And here is where the Baptists
came from. An unbaptized person has no Bible right to preach the gospel.
The birth of John
was announced to his father by an angel from Heaven, and it was miraculous,
because his mother was barren and his father, Zacharias, a Jewish priest, was
well stricken in years. To further strengthen his faith in the heavenly
promise, he was made dumb until his child was born and named.
It was a custom
of eastern princes, in their visits to distant nations, to send heralds or
messengers before them to notify the people in advance of their coming. Our
Savior, the Prince of Peace, King of kings, and Lord of lords, sent His
messenger before His face, both in His birth and ministerial character, six
months in advance.
“The beginning of
the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God; As it is written in the prophets,
Behold, I send my messenger before thy face, which shall prepare thy way before
thee. The voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the
Lord, make His paths straight. John did baptize in the wilderness, and preach
the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins” (Mark i. 1-4). He taught
the coming of Christ and the setting up of His gospel kingdom on earth. He
pointed to Christ, saying, “Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of
the world” (John i. 29). “Now in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius
Caesar, Pontius Pilate being governor of Judea, and Herod being tetrarch of
Galilee, and his brother Philip being tetrarch of Iturea and of the region of
Trachonitis, and Lysanias the tetrarch of Abilene, Annas and Caiaphas being the
high priests, the word of God came unto John, the son of Zacharias, in the
wilderness. And he came into all the country about Jordan, preaching the
baptism of repentance for the remission of sins; as it is written in the book
of the words of Esaias* the prophet, saying, The voice of one crying in the
wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make His paths straight. Every
valley shall be filled, and every mountain and hill shall be brought low, and
the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough ways shall be made smooth;
and all flesh shall see the salvation of God” (Luke iii. 1-6).
*Esaias is
the Greek form of the Hebrew name Isaiah.
Filled with the
Holy Ghost from before his birth, what a blessed, unworldly, unselfish and
faithful servant of Christ was John the Baptist! He disdained the luxuries and
smiles of men; he fearlessly rebuked, not only the Scribes and Pharisees and
soldiers, but even king Herod, for their sins; and he pointed men away from
himself to Christ as the sin-atoning Lamb of God. The embodiment and
culmination of the Old Testament, he labored for a short season, and then “in
unrivalled humility he diappeared as the red dawn in the splendor of the rising
Sun of the new covenant.”
While Christ was
to increase, John was to decrease. He was beheaded in prison by the cruel
monster Herod, in order to please a dancing damsel and her blood-thirsty
mother; and his followers for the most part attached themselves afterwards to
Christ and His Apostles.
The followers of
the Savior were few in number during His life to what they were soon after His
resurrection and ascension to glory. He sent out his twelve Apostles first to
preach, and then seventy disciples afterwards, but their success appeared to be
very limited as to the acquisition of numbers. The number twelve appears to
refer to the twelve patriarchs, and the numver seventy to the seventy elders
under the Jewish dispensation; and teach that the former were to be superseded
by the latter.
Jesus called to
Him whomsoever He would, and thus set up His gospel kingdom in the world. From
among the number of His adherents, He ordained twelve to attend His ministry in
person, to become witnesses of His miracles, of His doctrine and sufferings,
and, by occupying twelve thrones as judges of the twelve tribes of Israel,
spiritually, to hand down to the latest period of time, to all succeeding
generations, the principles of the gospel kingdom that He came to set up.
As Apostles they
have had no successors, and therefore all matters of faith and practice must be
referred to them; that is, to their inspired writings. They received their
instructions from the Savior. He commanded them to teach and baptize the people
who believed in Him, and then to teach them to observe all things whatsoever he
had commanded them (Matt. xxviii. 19, 20). As also saith the prophet, “Behold,
a king shall reign in righteousness, and princes shall rule in judgment” (Isaiah
xxxii. 1). The names of the twelve Apostles were “Simon, who is called Peter,
and Andrew his brother; James the son of Zebedee, and John his brother; Philip
and Bartholomew; Thomas, and Matthew the publican; James the son of Alpheus;
Lebbeus, whose surname was Thaddeus; Simon the Canaanite, and Judas Iscariot,
who also betrayed Him” (Matt. x. 2-4).
“During His
ministry He had no home, no earthly possessions, no friends among the mighty and
the rich. A few pious women from time to time filled his purse; and this purse
was in the hands of a thief and a traitor. He associated with publicans and
sinners, to raise them up to a higher and nobler life, and began His work among
the lower classes which were despised and neglected by the proud hierarchy of
the day. He never courted the favor of the great, but incurred their hatred and
persecution. He never flattered the prejudices of the age, but rebuked sin and
vice among the high and the low, aiming His severest words at the blind leaders
of the blind, the self-righteous hypocrites who sat in Moses’ seat. He never
encouraged the carnal Messianic hopes of the people, but withdrew when they
wished to make Him a king, and declared before the representative of the Roman
empire that His kingdom was not of this world. He announced to His disciples
His own martyrdom, and promised to them in this life only the same baptism of
blood. He went about in Palestine, often weary of travel, but never weary of
His work of love, doing good to the souls and bodies of men, speaking words of
spirit and life, and working miracles of power and mercy. He chose for Himself
the humblest of the Messianic titles, ‘the Son of Man,’ which implies His
consciousness that He was originally more than man and is now more than man,
having come as man among men in a condition of temporary humiliation, while at
the same time the title implies His unique position as the ideal, the perfect,
the representative, the archetypal Man. He calls Himself habitually, but no one
else, ‘the Son of Man,’ who ‘hath not where to lay His head,’ who ‘came not to
be ministered unto but to minister, and to give His life a ransom for many,’ who
‘hath power to forgive sins,’ who ‘came to seek and to save that which was
lost.’ When Peter made the great confession at Caesarea Philippi, Christ
accepted it, but immediately warned him of His approaching suffering and death,
from which the disciple shrunk in dismay. And with the certain expectation of
His crucifixion, but also of His triumphant resurrection on the third day, He
entered in calm and sublime fortitude on His last journey to Jerusalem which
‘killeth the prophets,’ and nailed Him to the cross as a false Messiah and
blasphemer. But in the infinite wisdom and mercy of God the greatest crime in
history was turned into the greatest blessing to mankind.”-P. Schaff.
As says the
learned John L. Mosheim: “It is not necessary to enter into a detail of the
life and actions of Jesus Christ. All Christians must be perfectly acquainted
with them. They must know that, during the space of three years, and amidst the
deepest trials of affliction and distress, He instructed the Jewish nation in
the will and counsels of the Most High, and omitted nothing in the course of His
ministry that could (righteously) contribute to gain the multitude or to charm
the wise. Every one knows that His life was a continued scene of perfect
sanctity, of the purest and most active virtue, not only without spot, but also
beyond the reach of suspicion- the only perfectly wise, perfectly sinless, and
perfectly benevolent being that ever walked this earth, according to the
unanimous acknowledgment of the human race; and it is also well known that, by
miracles of the most stupendous kind, and not more stupendous than salutary and
beneficent, He displayed to the universe the truth of that religion which He
brought with Him from above, and demonstrated in the most illustrious manner the
reality of His Divine commission.
“As this system
of religion was to be propagated to the extremities of the earth, it was
necessary that Christ should choose a certain number of persons to accompany Him
constantly through the whole course of His ministry; that thus they might be
faithful and respectable witnesses of the sanctity of His life, and the grandeur
of His miracles, to the remotest nations, and also transmit to the latest
posterity a genuine account of His sublime doctrines, and of the nature and end
of the gospel dispensation. Therefore Jesus chose, out of the multitude that
attended His discourses, twelve persons whom He separated from the rest by the
name of Apostles. These men were illiterate, poor, and of mean
extraction; and such alone were truly proper to answer His views. He avoided
making use of the ministry of persons endowed with the advantages of fortune and
birth, or enriched with the treasures of eloquence and learning, lest the fruits
of this embassy and the progress of the gospel should be attributed to human and
natural causes (1 Cor. i. 21). These Apostles were sent but once to preach to
the Jews during the life of Christ (Matt. x. 7). He chose to keep them about
His own person, that they might be thoroughly instructed in the affairs of His
kingdom. That the multitude, however, might not be destitute of teachers to
enlighten them with the knowledge of the truth, Christ appointed seventy
disciples to preach the glad tidings of eternal life throughout the whole
province of Judea (Luke x. 1).
“The ministry of
Jesus was (principally) confined to the Jews, nor while He remained upon earth
did He permit His Apostles or disciples to extend their labors beyond this
distinguished nation (Matt. x. 5, 6; xv. 24). At the same time, if we consider
the illustrious acts of mercy and omnipotence that were performed by Christ, it
will be natural to conclude that His fame must have been very soon spread abroad
in other countries.
“A great number
of the Jews, influenced by those illustrious marks of Divine authority and power
which shone forth in the ministry and actions of Christ, regarded Him as the Son
of God, the true Messiah. The rulers of the people, and more especially the
chief priests and Pharisees, whose licentiousness and hypocrisy He censured with
a noble and generous freedom, labored with success by the help of their passions
to extinguish in their breasts the conviction of His celestial mission, or at
least to suppress the effects it was adapted to produce upon their conduct.
Fearing also that His ministry might tend to diminish their credit, and to
deprive them of the advantages they derived from the impious abuse of their
authority in religious matters, they laid snares for His life, which for a
considerable time were without effect. They succeeded at last by the infernal
treason of an apostate disciple, by the treachery of Judas, who, discovering the
retreat which his Divine Master had chosen for the purposes of meditation and
repose, delivered Him into the merciless hands of a brutal soldiery.
“In consequence
of this, Jesus was produced as a criminal before the Jewish high priest and
Sanhedrim, being accused of having violated the law and blasphemed the majesty
of God. Dragged thence to the tribunal of Pilate, the Roman praetor, he was
charged with seditious enterprises and with treason against Caesar. Both these
accusations were so evidently false, and destitute even of every appearance of
truth, that they must have been rejected by any judge who acted upon the
principles of common equity. But the clamor of an enraged populace, influenced
by the impious instigations of their priests and rulers, intimidated Pilate, and
engaged him, though with the utmost reluctance, and in opposition to the
dictates of his conscience, to pronounce a capital sentence against Christ. The
Redeemer of mankind behaved with inexpressible dignity under this heavy trial.
As the end of His mission was to make expiation for the sins of men, so when all
things were ready, and when He had finished the work of His glorious ministry,
He placidly submitted to the death of the cross, and, with a serene and
voluntary resignation, committed His spirit into the hands of the Father.
“After Jesus had
remained three days in the sepulchre he resumed that life which He had
voluntarily laid down; and, rising from the dead, declared to the universe, by
that triumphant act, that the Divine justice was satisfied, and the paths of
salvation and immortality were rendered accessible to the human race. He
conversed with His disciples during forty days after His resurrection, and
employed that time in instructing them more fully with regard to the nature of
His kingdom. Many wise and important reasons prevented His showing Himself
publicly at Jerusalem to confound the malignity and unbelief of His enemies. He
contented Himself by manifesting the certainty of His glorious resurrection to a
sufficient number of faithful and credible witnesses, being aware that, if He
should appear in public, those malicious unbelievers, who had formerly
attributed His miracles to the power of magic would represent His resurrection
as a phantom, or vision, produced by the influence of infernal powers. After
having remained upon earth during the space of time above mentioned, and given
to His disciples a Divine commission to preach the glad tidings of salvation and
immortality to the human race, He ascended into Heaven in their presence, and
resumed that enjoyment of that glory which He had possessed before the worlds
were created.”
The crucifixion
of our Lord and Savior was a matter of as much certainty and necessity as His
birth. Both were included in the great design to save poor fallen man, and the
former as well as the latter, being known and determined by the Almighty from
everlasting, was spread upon the pages of Divine revelation thousands of years
before its actual fulfillment; as proved by the animal sacrifices offered up by
spiritual worshipers for forty centuries before His coming, and by the numerous
Messianic prophecies that we have cited at the close of Chapter VI., and by Acts
iv. 26-28.
It was of
necessity therefore that this man had somewhat also to offer as the great
High Priest of spiritual Israel, made after the order of Melchizedek, and not
after the order of Aaron.
Jesus was taken
by the Roman soldiers from the judgment-hall of Pontius Pilate and carried to
Calvary, or Golgotha, a low, rounded, bare hill outside the north gate of
Jerusalem. There was He nailed to the cross and elevated above the earth, as a
spectacle to angels and men. The crucifixion took place on Friday, most
probably April 6th, A.D. 30. Christ hung upon the cross from 9A.M. to 3P.M., at
which hour He died. From the sixth to the ninth hour (which corresponds with
our time from 12 noon to 3P.M.) there was darkness over all the land. About the
ninth hour (3P.M.) He cried with a loud voice, “Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?
that is to say, My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me?” And when He had
cried with a loud voice, “It is finished!” “Father, into Thy hands I commend my
Spirit,” He yielded up the ghost. “And, behold, the veil of the temple was
rent in twain from the top to the bottom; and the earth did quake, and the
rocks rent; and the graves were opened; and many bodies of the saints which
slept arose, and came out of the graves after His resurrection, and went into
the holy city, and appeared unto many” (Matthew xxvii. 46-53; John xix. 30;
Luke xxiii. 46).
The crucifixion
of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ was the most memorable and wonderful event
in the history of the world. The redemption of countless millions of the human
race depended on it, and without it there was salvation for none. Yet the dark
deed of judicial murder, instigated by the malignity of the Jews, was rebuked by
the absent rays of the bright luminary of Heaven, when darkness covered the
earth for three dreary, doleful hours on that memorable day.* He laid down His
life as a propitiatory sacrifice for the sins of His people, and remained a
captive to death from Friday, the Jews’ preparation day, till Sunday, the first
day of the week, being the day succeeding their Sabbath. On Sunday morning He
burst the bonds of death, and arose a mighty conqueror over death, hell and the
grave, and in about forty days ascended to His Father’s right hand, leading
captivity captive and receiving gifts for men. The same body that was crucified
was buried; the same body that was buried arose from the grave; and the same
body that arose from the grave was glorified, and is now seated on the
mediatorial throne at the right hand of God, in Divine composure until His
enemies be made His footstool, and until the consummation of all things, when He
shall again come to gather His ransomed people home, and take vengeance on them
that know not God.
*This darkness
could not have been an ordinary eclipse of the sun, which is caused by the
coming of the moon between the sun and earth, and never lasts, in its totality,
more than eight minutes; because Christ was crucified at the Jewish Passover,
which was always when the moon was full, and therefore on the opposite side of
the earth from the sun, and the darkness lasted three hours. The darkness at
Christ’s death was nature’s sympathy with her suffering Lord. As the glory of
the Lord shone around the scene of His birth (Luke ii. 9), so a pall of darkness
was fitly spread over His dying scene. Amos (viii. 9) predicted that the sun
would go down at noon, and the earth be darkened in the clear day. The darkness
might precede and accompany the earthquake that took place on the same
occasion; for darkness almost nocturnal, arising from sulphureous vapors, often
precedes an earthquake. Both the darkness and the earthquake at Christ’s
crucifixion were no doubt supernatural.
The object of His
mission to earth was to save sinners by the sacrifice of Himself, and to
inculcate upon the minds of men the great method of redemption.
If Jesus was, as
even infidelity admits, the Sun of Righteousness, then He was what He professed
to be, the Son of God. Upon this all-important point infinite reason could not
be deceived, and infinite holiness could not deceive others. All hypotheses
representing Jesus as a mere man have refuted and destroyed each other. “He
learned nothing from human teachers. His wisdom was not of this world. He
needed no visions and revelations like the prophets and Apostles. He came
directly from His great Father in Heaven, and when He spoke of Heaven, He spoke
of His familiar home. He spoke from the fullness of God dwelling in Him. And
His words were perfectly verified by His unapproachable deeds.”-P. Schaff, in
“History of Christian Church.”
His doctrine
comprehended the nature and perfections of God, the Father, and that He and the
Father were one- the misery of fallen man- a declaration of His own character as
the Son of God and the promised Messiah- the design of His mission into this
world, which was to save His people from their sins, who were the gift of the
Father to Him- the impossibility of their perishing or being plucked out of His
hand- His eternal union with them as their covenant or chosen Head- His giving
them repentance and remission of sins- the divinely-given immortality of the
soul- the resurrection from the dead- the certainty of a future state of rewards
and punishments- the necessity of a preached gospel to all nations- His
appointment by God Almighty to judge the world in righteousness at the last day,
and the certain assurance that the Holy Ghost, the Comforter, shall abide with
His church forever.
“Christ’s ethical
teaching shines most brightly in those points where other systems fail, namely,
the truthfulness of inward cleansing, the majesty of lowliness, and the glory of
love.”-T.D. Bernard.
“In His doctrine
He rescued the moral law from the false glosses imposed upon it by the Scribes
and Pharisees; unfolded its spirituality and extent, as requiring perfect love
to God and man; and enforced its indispensable obligation upon all men as the
rule of their correspondence with God; declaring that He Himself came not to
abrogate or annul one tittle, but to fulfill its utmost requirements by His own
obedience and conformity thereunto, and adopting it as the unalterable law of
His kingdom, which is to regulate the conduct of His disciples to the end of
time.”-W. Jones.
The judicial,
civil, or political law was intended by God for the special government of the
ancient Hebrew nation. The ceremonial or Levitical law was a prefiguration of
the gospel, in types and shadows, and was completely fulfilled and ended by
Christ. The decalogue, or ten commandments, or moral law, was audibly spoken by
the voice of God from Mount Sinai, was written by His finger on two tables of
stone, and was perpetually preserved in the Ark of the Covenant, the innermost
shrine of the tabernacle and temple. It was perfectly kept by Christ for His
people both actively and passively, He doing all that the moral law required
them to do, and suffering death, the penalty of their violation of the moral
law; so that there is no condemnation to them who are in Christ Jesus. Those
who are in Christ Jesus have His Spirit of life and love in them; and they have
not only in their minds, but also written in their hearts, the same holy
spiritual law that He fulfilled, so that they delight in that law after the
inward man, and serve God in newness of spirit and not in the oldness of the
letter, from a principle, not of bondage, but of love. As they have been made
free by the Son of God, and are free indeed- not to sin, but to love- and, as
where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty, the perfect moral law of God
is to them a perfect law of liberty; and the blessed precepts of the gospel are
but the Divine expansion and efflorescence of the same holy law, based upon the
powerful new motive of the atoning love of Jesus. The oldest Baptist Articles
of Faith declare that the moral law is a compendious “rule of life for the
Christian;” so did the ablest and soundest Baptist ministers before the
nineteenth century. But in the present century some speakers and writers deny
that the moral law is a rule of life, and affirm that the precepts of the gospel
only are such a rule; and these people have been stigmatized by others as
Antinomians, or opposed to the law. The question as to whether the moral law or
the preceptive part of the New Testament is the Christian’s rule of life
is what Paul calls a “vain and unprofitable strife about words, whereof come
envy, railings, and evil surmisings, and which we are to avoid” (Titus iii. 9;
1 Tim. vi. 4). The law within the heart of Christ (Psalm. xl. 6-8; Heb. x.
5-7) is not inferior to, but is the same as, the law written in the hearts of
His covenant people (Jer. xxxi. 31-34; Heb. x. 16, 17). A holy, perfect and
unchangeable God makes at all times the same moral requirements of His
creatures. According to the Scriptures, love- supreme love of God and love of
our neighbor as ourselves- was the essence of the Sinaitic moral law, and is the
essence of Christianity, so that there is no difference between the Old and New
Testament Divine Moral Standards. This fact is absolutely demonstrated
by the following Scriptures: Exodus xx. 6; Lev. xix. 18; Deut. vi. 5; Psalms
i. 1-3; xxxvii. 31; xl. 6-8; cii. 27; cxix. 29, 32, 45, 165, 174; Jer.
xxxi. 33, 34; Matt. v. 17, 19; xxii. 36-40; John xv. 12; Rom. iii. 31; vii.
12, 14, 16, 22; xiii. 10; 1 Cor. ix. 21; xiii. 1-13; James i. 17; ii. 8; 1
John iv. 21. Christ was the only man that ever perfectly fulfilled the holy
law of God, loving God supremely and His neighbor as Himself; and the entire
eternal salvation of His church is based upon His perfect obedience of the
Divine law (Rom. v. 19-21; Gal. iii. 13). Yet all the children of God are
led by the same Holy Spirit of obedience (Rom viii. 14; Gal. iv. 6; Psalm
xxiii. 3); not able, while in the flesh, to obey the moral law or the gospel
precepts perfectly (Rom. iii. 20; 1 John i. 8), and reposing all their hope of
Heaven upon the perfect obedience of Christ (Rom. v. 2; 1 Cor. i. 30; Col. i.
5, 27).
In the teaching
and meditation of Christ was laid the foundation of Christianity, the principles
of which were to be elucidated and made abundantly manifest by the descent of
the Holy Ghost on the day of Pentecost, who was to enlighten the understanding
of His disciples and bring to their remembrance all things whatsoever that He
had said unto them (John xiv. 26).
Before the
crucifixion of Christ He directed His Apostles to tarry in Jerusalem until they
were endued with power from on high (Luke xxiv. 49). Accordingly, they did so,
and were found together in one place in Jerusalem, at the end of seven times
seven days after His resurrection, and ten days after His ascension, viz., the
Apostles and one hundred and twenty disciples, when “suddenly there came a sound
from Heaven, as of a rushing mighty wind, and it filled all the house where they
were sitting. And there appeared unto them cloven tongues, like as of fire,
sitting upon each of them, and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and
began to speak with other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance” (Acts ii.
2-4). Instantaneously light broke in upon their understandings. Their old
apprehension of a natural kingdom being set up in the world by their Lord
vanished away; its true spiritual character was immediately revealed to them,
and, although ignorant and unlearned, as touching all human sciences, they rose
and addressed the vast multitudes that assembled on the occasion from various
parts of the world, declaring the wonderful works of God, with great precision,
in many different languages of earth!
Such a miraculous
display of Divine power brought many thousands together to behold it, and three
thousand of them, being quickened into Divine life by the Spirit of God (John
xvi. 7-11) believed the preaching of the Apostles and were added to the number
in one day. Thus the mother church was fairly set up in Jerusalem, from which
all others sprang. It was a Baptist church, composed of baptized believers;
because all who believed, and made a profession of thier faith, were baptized
straightway. None others were received into fellowship and communion. And here
is where the Baptists came from.
The Apostles and
primitive saints were endowed with a holy boldness, and under the guidance of
the Holy Spirit went in all directions, preaching the gospel of the kingdom.
They stood in no fear of man, but feared God, and, at the risk of their lives,
determined to serve Him. They planted churches after the pattern of the one at
Jerusalem, and they were independent bodies, distinct from each other, though
all of the same faith and order. Each was a little “republic”* within itself,
governed by the rudiments of Christ and not of the world. After the Apostles
came pastors and deacons as officers in the churches. Such was the evidence of
Divine authority attending the doctrine and labors of the Apostles and early
ministers of the gospel that large numbers were added to the churches, and the
interest was so great that some concluded they had turned the world upside down
(Acts xvii. 6). In this respect it might be inferred that they did greater
things than their Master (John xiv. 12).
*This is the term
used by Edward Gibbon, in the famous fifteenth chapter of his “History of the
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,” to designate each one of the primitive
churches. No uninspired historian has ever surpassed Gibbon in accuracy
of statement.
The success which
attended the first publication of the gospel is very beautifully described in
the book of Revelation (vi. 1,2) by a vision which the Apostle had of the Lamb
opening the first seal. “And I saw,” says he, “and behold a white
horse; and he that sat on him had a bow; and a crown was given unto him; and
he went forth conquering, and to conquer.” The history of the Apostles and
first preachers affords a striking comment on these words, at the same time that
it illustrates to us an ancient prediction concerning the Messiah (Psalm cx. 2,
etc.); for now we see the standard of Christ first erected as an ensign to the
nations; from hence went forth the rod of His strength, by which he ruled in
the midst of His enemies, and (from that time, or) in that day of His power the
willing nations submitted to Him cheerfully, and “numerous as drops of morning
dew.” Here indeed was the kingdom set up, which was to stand forever; as saith
the prophet; “In the days of these kings shall the God of Heaven set up a
kingdom, which shall never be destroyed: and the kingdom shall not be left to
other people, but it shall break in pieces and consume all other kingdoms, and
it shall stand forever” (Daniel ii. 44). And here is where the Baptists came
from. On the day of Pentecost three thousand were added to the number of the
disciples; and, on the day the cripple who lay at the gate of the temple was
healed, five thousand were numbered among the believers. And all this conquest
made by grace was made in direct opposition to earthly powers, both Jew and
Gentile.
If the religion
of Christ prevailed in its infancy against the wishes and persecutions of the
combined powers of earth, why should it not do so now, when it has spread its
roots with the growth of eighteen centuries? Is God Almighty more dependent on
men now than He was then to carry on the work of evangelization?
Some would have us believe so, who go about begging the unconverted world (which
belongs to Satan’s kingdom) to give them funds sufficient to break down their
master’s kingdom and convert the world to God! This is setting up Satan to cast
out Satan, thereby dividing his own kingdom, and exalting him above the
Almighty. How preposterous!
The Apostles for
some considerable time executed the different offices of Apostle, Elder and
Deacon; the former, or highest office in the Christian church, being evidently
considered as including every inferior one. But when murmuring among the
Grecians against the Hebrews was heard, because some of their widows were
neglected in the daily ministrations, then the Apostles decided to call the
church together, and have men chosen whose chief duty it should be to serve
tables, and see that none were neglected in the daily ministrations. By
donations made to the Apostles for that purpose, a fund had been raised to
purchase food for the poor of the church, and there were two classes who
received the benefit of it, viz.: first, those Jews, called Hebrews, who lived
in Judea and worshiped in the synagogues at Jerusalem and its vicinity, in the
use of the Hebrew and Chaldee languages; and secondly, those Jews who lived
outside Judea, and who had been accustomed chiefly to the use of the Greek
language, into which the Old Testament Scriptures had been translated (the
version which we now call the Septuagint), and which had been for some time in
common use, previous to the coming of Christ, in all the Jewish synagogues
dispersed throughout the cities beyond the limits of Judea. These last were
called Hellenists or Grecians; and of them it would appear that many were at
that time, in Jerusalem, members of the church. The church came together and
chose seven men, full of wisdom and the Holy Ghost, to attend to this matter,
and thereby allow the Apostles liberty to devote their time wholly to prayer and
the ministry of the word. They chose Stephen and Philip and Prochorus and
Nicanor, Timon, Parmenas, and Nicolas, a proselyte of Antioch (Acts vi.). Some
of them (probably all) were occasionally engaged in preaching the gospel, but
this was no part of thier office of Deacons (if this was the Deaconship), the
latter being restricted to the serving of tables or ministering to the wants of
the poor.
Stephen was soon
stoned to death. When the worshipers of Moses could not cope with him in
argument, they could outdo him with stones, and resorted to the ancient and
modern custom of killing those whom they could not convince. Stephen was a
heritic of course in the estimation of these Solomons, and therefore
he must not be rejected, as Paul afterward advised in the case of
heretics, but must be slain by virtue of a decree of the Jewish
Sanhedrim. This servant of God died as did his Master, praying for his
murderers, and yielding up his spirit unto God who gave it. Saul of Tarsus was
there aiding and abetting in this fanatical fury. He held the clothes of the
young men who stoned Stephen; and this so whetted his appetite for blood that
he persecuted the faithful followers of Jesus in all directions, dragging them
to prison and to death, both men and women. The field of his cruelty seemed to
expand as his business prospered, and he persecuted them in cities remote from
Jerusalem. In the meanwhile the disciples, in obedience to the command of their
Lord and Master, yielded to the storm, and dispersed themselves among the cities
of Judea and Samaria. Philip went down to the city of Samaria and preached
Christ among the inhabitants with great success. The second church was formed
there. He also preached to an Ethiopian eunuch on his way home from Jerusalem,
and baptized him upon a profession of his faith in Christ. The Spirit of the
Lord caught away Philip, while the eunuch went on his way rejoicing; thereby
fulfilling the prediction of the Psalmist, “Ethiopia shall stretch out her hands
unto God” (Psalm lxviii. 31). Saul of Tarsus was of Jewish parents, both father
and mother. His father was of the tribe of Benjamin, and a freeman of Rome. He
was liberally educated. The rudiments he received in his native city, which was
a rival of Athens and Alexandria in learning; and he then completed his studies
in Jerusalem at the feet of Gamaliel, a noted doctor of the law of Moses and the
traditions of the Elders.
The three highest
elements of human nobility met in Saul- Roman citizenship, Grecian culture, and
Hebrew religion. He had, even by nature, a mind of the highest order, and a
spirit of extraordinary mold. As Moses was learned in the wisdom of the
Egyptians, so Paul was learned in the wisdom of the Greeks; being one of the
“not many wise men called” to the service of Christ (1 Cor. i. 26). And a
wonderful energy, resolution, zeal, fearlessness, sincerity, morality and
devotion to the Mosaic law characterized him. Next to the fall of man and the
crucifixion of Christ, no incident occupies so much space in the Scriptures as
the conversion of Saul of Tarsus. Besides being referred to several times in
Paul’s epistles, it is related three times in the Acts of the Apostles (chapters
ix., xxii. and xxvi.); first by Luke, the historian, then by Paul to the Jews,
and then by Paul to the Gentiles; and, next to the sin of Adam and the death
of Christ, no other event in human history is so full of spiritual instruction.
If no other conversion had been described in the Bible, and if no explicit
statement of doctrine had been made, the simple record of the Divine and
instantaneous and total transformation of the bitterest enemy to the most
devoted servant of Christ on earth would have perfectly demonstrated, and
written, as it were, upon the Heavens, in letters of living light, the
sovereignty, the almightiness and irresistibility of the grace of God in the
conviction and conversion of the sinner. By the operation of this efficacious
grace, the persecuting Pharisee, who was all the while a chosen vessel unto
God, became the lifelong martyr of Jesus of Nazareth; and, next to
incarnate Deity, Paul became- far more truly than Julius Caesar- “the foremost
man of all this world”- the most richly endowed with the Spirit of God to
proclaim the unsearchable riches of Christ to all the coming generations of the
human race, the great Apostle of the Gentile world, the humblest as well as the
most learned of the Apostles, the unselfish moral hero of humanity, the
dauntless champion of Divine sovereignty and spiritual religion, the greatest
laborer and suferer and witness for Christ that ever appeared in the annals of
time, not only preaching but living Christ “as the source and end of his whole
being,” and surpassing all other men (excepting John) in the heights of
spirituality and holiness to which he attained. About two-thirds of the Acts of
the Apostles are devoted to his career; and he himself wrote nearly one-third
of the New Testament. All the greatness of Paul was due to the efficacious
grace of God (1 Cor. xv. 10); and one of the most striking effects of that
grace was to make him feel to be “the least of the Apostles” (1 Cor. xv.
9); and, later in life, instead of feeling that he was getting better, he uses
a still stronger expression of humility, and calls himself “less than the
least of all saints” (Eph. iii. 8); and, still later in life, he felt
constrained to confess himself “the chief of sinners” (1 Tim. i. 15).
Like John the Baptist, he could say of Christ, “He must increase, but I must
decrease” (John iii. 30). Abandoning the name Saul (meaning in Hebrew
asked, and in Greek conceited), the proudest name in the tribe of
Benjamin, he wears the Roman or Gentile name Paul (meaning little);
and he continued, all his life long, to grow less in his own esteem, while
Christ, the hope of glory, grew greater within him. The humblest in the
kingdom of Heaven is the greatest, said our Lord (Matt. xviii. 4); and
we know that no one was ever more meek and lowly, or ever more great than He
(Matt. xi. 39; Philip. ii. 6-11). Poverty of spirit is the first
beatitude (Matt. v. 3); and there is no richer or lovelier sign of grace (Num.
xii. 3; Job xlii. 6; Psalms viii. 2; xxxiv. 18; li. 17; Isa. lvii. 15;
lxi. 1; lxvi. 2; Jer. xxxi. 9, 18-20; Dan. v. 21, 22; Micah vi. 8; Matt.
xi. 25; Luke iv. 18; xviii. 9-14; James i. 10; ii. 5; iv. 9, 10).
The reality of
the life and conversion of Paul, and the genuineness of his leading epistles,
are unavoidably and frankly acknowledged by the most destructive and infidel
historical critics of Germany. While those rationalists futilely attempt
to prove that our canonical Gospels were all written in the second century of
the Christian era, and are only corrupted copies of the originals, they admit
that Paul’s espistles, especially those to the Romans, the Corinthians and
Galatians (containing all the most important truths of Christianity), were
certainly written by Paul in the first century; and that Paul himself was
suddenly converted from a persecutor to a preacher of the Christian religion.
Nothing but the feeblest credulity can believe that this great change in such a
mind as Paul’s was produced by a flash of lightning and his imagination.
We will now
notice the circumstances of the conversion of Saul of Tarsus, and of Cornelius
the Roman centurion, the first described in the ninth and the second in the
tenth chapter of Acts, as these are good examples of what are called the two
classes of Christian conversion.
Saul was making
havoc of the church (elumaineto, a term used nowhere else in the New
Testament, and employed in the Septuagint and in classical Greek to describe the
ravages of wild beasts), endeavoring, with all his might, to exterminate the
last vestige of the Christian religion from the earth, not even sparing the
helplessness and tenderness of the female sex (Acts viii. 3), and doing all this
in the name of religion, than which a more heinous crime cannot be imagined;
and yet filled with Satanic malignity against God and His people, and breathing
out threatenings and slaughter against the disciples of the Lord, he voluntarily
applied to the high priest for letters addressed to the synagogues of Damascus
(where were many Jews and some Christians), authorizing him to arrest and bring
bound to Jerusalem every Christian man and woman, for the purpose of trial and
execution. It was a journey of nearly 140 miles, and usually occupied six
days. Saul was accompanied by several attendants. As they neared Damascus, one
of the most beautiful and ancient cities in the world, the sun attained high
noon; and suddenly there shone from heaven a brighter light than even the
meridian splendor of a Syrian sun- the Shekinah, or excellent glory of the
Divine presence. The whole company saw the light, and were prostrated to the
ground; and all heard an awful sound, but Saul, alone understood the words,
because they were specially intended for him. Saul also saw in the Heavens the
ascended and glorified Redeemer (Acts ix. 17, 27; xxii. 14; xxvi. 16; 1 Cor.
ix. 1; xv. 8), who said to him in the Hebrew tongue, “Saul, Saul, why
persecutest thou me? it is hard for thee to kick against the goads.” The name
of Saul was repeated to denote special solemnity, as in the case of Abraham
(Gen. xxii. 11), Moses (Ex. iii. 4), Martha (Luke x. 41), Simon (Luke xxii. 31),
and Jerusalem (Matt. xxiii. 37). In Paul’s first spiritual lesson, Christ
identifies Himself with His poor persecuted people (Matt. xxv. 40, 45; 1 Cor.
xii. 27; Eph. i. 22, 23; v. 30; Col. ii. 19); and Christ reminds him that,
while all his measures for crushing the church of God are vain, still, like a
stupid ox, he is, by his stubborn fury, continually injuring himself. The
moment Saul heard the voice of the Son of God he lived (John v. 25); from his
death in trespasses and sins he was quickened by the Holy Spirit into spiritual
life (Eph. ii. 1; John vi. 63); he was a new creature (2 Cor. v. 17); his
stony heart was replaced by a fleshly heart (Ezek. xxxvi. 26, 27), his carnal
mindedness by spritual mindedness (Rom. viii. 6); and every thought was brought
into captivity to the obedience of Christ (2 Cor. x. 5). In an instant and
forever Saul was converted to God (John xvii. 3). “Out of the noonday God had
struck him into darkness, only that He might kindle a noon in the midnight of
his heart.” “It pleased God, who separated him from his mother’s womb, and
called him by His grace, to reveal His Son in him” (Gal. i. 15, 16). “God, who
commanded the light to shine out of darkness,” soon “shined in his heart, to
give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ”
(2 Cor. iv. 6). “Trembling and astonished, Saul said, Lord, what wilt Thou have
me to do?” From that moment obedience to Christ became the ruling principle of
Paul’s life. His falling to the ground represented the fall of his pride and
rebellion against God; his physical blindness denoted the utter spiritual
blindness of his natural mind, notwithstanding his fine education, morality and
legalism. Christ directed him to arise and go into the city, and it should be
told him what he must do. This he did, being led by the hand in astonishment by
his companions, who were themselves witnesses of the marvelous light and sound,
though they understood nothing of the meaning. It was all done at noonday, when
there could be no deception, and to the utter amazement of all. And the
strong-minded, educated, practical, truthful Apostle of the Gentiles knew, as
well as he knew his own existence, that he had seen and conversed with the Lord
Jesus Christ in glory. His whole future blameless, devoted, suffering,
unworldly life is an unanswerable attestation of this fact. Though an angel
from Heaven preached a different gospel- which was not a gospel- from his, it
was false; for he had his gospel directly from the Son of God (Gal. i. 8, 12).
And Paul was never ashamed of the gospel of Christ, nor of his experience of its
saving power (Rom. i. 18), relating that experience even before governors and
kings (Acts xxvi.).
For three days
Saul neither saw nor ate nor drank. Then to a certain disciple in Damascus
named Ananias, a devout man according to the law, and of good report among the
Jews, the Lord appeared in a vision, and said, “Arise, and go into the street
which is called Straight, and inquire in the house of Judas for one called Saul,
of Tarsus: for, behold, he prayeth, and hath seen in a vision a man named
Ananias coming in, and putting his hand on him, that he might receive his
sight.” And to Ananias’s objection the Lord answered that Saul was a chosen
vessel unto Him, to bear His name before the Gentiles, and kings, and the
children of Israel; for “I will shew him,” said He, “how great things he must
suffer for my name’s sake. And Ananias went his way, and entered into the
house; and putting his hands on him said, Brother Saul, the Lord, even Jesus,
that appeared unto thee in the way as thou camest, hath sent me, that thou
mightest receive thy sight, and be filled with the Holy Ghost. And immediately
there fell from his eyes as it had been scales: and he received sight
forthwith, and arose, and was baptized” (Acts ix.). Thus the Lord revealed His
will to each of His servants in a vision (Acts ii. 17,18); there was a perfect
agreement in the two revelations; Saul was at once pointedly directed to the
church, and commanded to enter it by baptism, which he did. In regard to
Ananias’s putting his hands on Saul, by the command of God, we observe the
highly important fact that, not only was it done before Saul’s baptism,
but it was done by a man who was not an Apostle, nor a successor of an
Apostle (if such a thing as succession to the Apostleship were at all scriptural
or possible), for the Apostles were all then living; and thus the case of the
great Apostle of the Gentiles totally undermines the Episcopal doctrine of the
necessity of the confirmation of every believer, after baptism, either by
an Apostle or the successor of an Apostle. Upon Cornelius and his company, it
is distinctly asserted, in the tenth chapter of Acts, that the Holy Ghost, both
in His converting and miracle-working power, was poured out, before they
were baptized; and no mention is made of Peter’s putting his hands on
the company at all. The apostolic imposition of hands after baptism (except for
ordination) is mentioned in only two instances in the New Testament (Acts viii.
17; xix. 6); and in both cases it was certainly used, as we know from the
context (Acts viii. 7, 18; xix. 6), to represent the bestowal of the
miracle-working power of the Holy Ghost. Christ put His hands upon unbaptized
infants and blessed them (Matt. xix. 13-15; Luke xviii. 15, 16). As for
Hebrews vi. 1, 2, in which these six principles of the doctrine of Christ are
mentioned- repentance, faith, baptism, laying on of hands, resurrection and
judgment, we observe that nothing is said of an Apostle or a successor of an
Apostle; it is not said upon whom or for what purpose hands are to be laid;
but, if we are to infer from the order, that laying on of hands should follow
every baptism, so we are compelled to infer that every baptism must follow
repentance from dead works, and faith toward God; and this inevitable
corrollary of “confirmation,” as deduced from this passage, utterly
sweeps away the foundation of infant baptism, a chief corner-stone of
hierarchism. The ordination to the Deaconship or Eldership by the laying on
of the hands of the presbytery is scriptural (Acts vi. 6; xiii. 3; 1 Tim. iv.
14; 2 Tim. i. 6; 1 Peter v. 1; 2 John 1). So Moses ordained Joshua by laying
his hands upon him (Num. xxvii. 18; Deut. xxxiv. 9).
Saul, before his
converson, “verily thought that he ought to do many things contrary to the name
of Jesus of Nazareth” (Acts xxvi. 9). His sincerity by no means proved that he
was right or acceptable with God; because it was the sincerity of a carnal and
darkened mind. The Hindoo is sincere in immolating himself under the car of
Juggernaut; but such immolation is suicide.
While a Pharisee,
Saul had no doubt uttered long and numerous forms of prayer, but he never truly
prayed until quickened into spiritual life by the voice of the Son of God and
the power of the Holy Ghost (Acts ix. 11; John v. 25; Eph. ii. 1; John vi.
63).
Paul, after his
conversion, immediately preached in the synagogues at Damascus, confounding the
Jews, and proving that Jesus is the Messiah and the Son of God. Then, as we
learn from Galatians i. 17, 18, he retired for about three years into Arabia,
most probably the Sinaitic peninsula (Gal. iv. 25; Heb. xii. 18-21), for the
purpose, it would seem, of searching the Holy Scriptures, and, afar from the
haunts of men, like Moses, in the backside of the desert (Exodus iii. 1, etc.),
to commune alone with God on that holy ground where the bush “had glowed in
unconsuming fire, and the granite crags had trembled at the voice which uttered
the fiery law.” The God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, the God who had communed
there with Moses 1,500 years before, met His chosen and honored servant, and
taught him the momentous lesson that he was to bear in his earthen vessel to the
unborn generations of the people of God- the spirituality of the Mosaic law
and his own carnality, that thus, through the law, he might be
dead to the law, and so might live unto God (Acts xxii. 14; Romans vii.
14; Gal. ii. 19; 2 Cor. iv. 7). While alive to the law, hoping for
salvation by obeying it, and dreading condemnation by disobeying it, he was
dead unto God; and it was only when he learned from God (Isaiah liv. 13;
John vi. 45) how spiritual the law was, demanding perfect sinlessness of
thought as well as of word and deed, and how carnal he was,
sold under sin, and having no good thing dwelling in him, did he become
dead to the law and all legal dependence, divorced from the legal covenant,
delivered from the curse of the law, and truly alive unto God, united to Christ,
crucified with Jesus to the sinful and perishing vanities of the world, and yet
living, or rather Christ living in him, and he living the life that he now lived
in the flesh by the faith of the Son of God, who loved him and gave Himself for
him (Gal. ii. 19, 20).
The outward
miracle of the light and sound was a sign of the inward miracle wrought upon the
heart of Saul by the Holy Spirit “delivering him from the power of darkness, and
translating him into the kingdom of God’s dear Son” (Col. i. 13); and he who
denies that the conversion of the sinner is a miracle (that is, supernatural)
point-blank denies the authority of inspiration (2 Cor. iv. 6; Gen. i. 3; 2
Cor. v. 17, 18; Eph. ii. 1-10; John v. 25; Acts ix. 1-22). If creation and
resurrection are not miraculous or supernatural, then surely nothing can be;
and such atheistic philosophy would thrust God out of both His natural and His
spiritual universe.
In view of Saul’s
conversion, and the Scriptures just cited, it is no wonder that even Mr. John
Wesley wrote: “It may be allowed, that God acts as sovereign in convincing
some souls of sin, arresting them in their mad career by His resistless power.
It seems, also, that at the moment of our conversion, He acts irresistably”
(Wesley’s Works, vol. vi., p. 136, as quoted in Watson’s Theological
Institutes, vol. ii., p. 444).
The conversion of
Saul of Tarsus illustrates the saying of God quoted by Paul from Isaiah (Isaiah
xlv. 1; Rom. x. 20: “I am found of them that sought me not; I am made
manifest unto them that asked not after me.” The case of Cornelius, the
Roman centurion (Acts x.), illustrates what has been called the other class of
conversions, which fulfill the promise: “Ye shall seek me and find me, when
ye shall search for me with all your heart” (Jer. xxix. 13). This language
of the Lord by Jeremiah was addressed to the chosen people of God then in
Babylonian captivity, and it was a most comforting prediction to them: “For
thus saith the Lord, that after seventy years be accomplished at Babylon I will
visit you, and perform my good word toward you, in causing you to return to this
place. For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the Lord,
thoughts of peace, and not evil, to give you an expected end. Then shall ye
call upon me, and ye shall go and pray unto me, and I will hearken unto you.
And ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your
heart. And I will be found of you, saith the Lord: and I will turn away your
captivity, and I will gather you from all the nations, and from all the places
whither I have driven you, saith the Lord: and I will bring you again into the
place whence I caused you to be carried away captive” (Jer. xxix. 10-14).
These were the chosen people of God all the time, and it was certain, from this
Divine prediction, that in the fullness of time they would call upon and seek
the Lord with their whole heart, and be found of Him, and be delivered from
their captivity.
The conversion of
Cornelius, like that of Saul, occupies a large space in the Acts (chapters ten
and eleven), far more space than that devoted to the conversion of thousands in
Jerusalem. It was the opening of the door of faith to the uncircumcised
Gentiles, without their passing through the intermediate state of Judaism. The
disciples scattered abroad by the persecution after Stephen’s death went
everywhere preaching the word, and Philip had preached and baptized believers in
Samaria, as well as the Ethiopian eunuch. But there was to be a Gentile
Pentecost at Caesarea, as there had been a Jewish Pentecost at Jerusalem, and
the Apostle of the circumcision was, by the plainest indication of the Divine
will, to admit Gentile converts into the church. By visions, or Divine
communications, Cornelius and Peter were both prepared for the solemn scene
(Acts ii. 17; x. 3, 10-17), Cornelius being assured of God’s merciful purpose
towards him, and being directed to send for Peter; and Peter being informed of
the breaking down of the old partition between Jews and Gentiles, and directed
to go with the men sent to him by Cornelius. As Peter was entering the house of
Cornelius, where the latter had assembled his kinsmen and near friends,
Cornelius met him, and, with a deep feeling of reverence for the personage whom
God had sent him, such as John felt for the Angel (Rev. xix. 10; xxii. 8, 9),
he prostrated himself at Peter’s feet; but Peter at once raised him up and said
to him, “I myself also am a man.” Those who falsely claim to be the successors
of Peter totally differ from him in allowing and requiring such homage (contrast
1 Peter v. 1-6, with 2 Thess. ii. 6). After Peter and Cornelius had told each
other their visions, Peter said, in the beginning of his discourse: “Of a truth
I perceive that God is no respecter of persons; but in every nation he that
feareth Him, and worketh righteousness, is accepted with Him.” By saying that
God is no respecter of persons, Peter means, as is proved by the original Greek,
and by the thirty-fifth verse, and by 2 Chronicles xix. 7, Eph.vi. 9 and James
ii. 1-9, that God does not regard external distinctions; or, as Samuel says,
“Man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart” (1
Sam. xxi. 7). Other Scriptures inform us that God does have especial respect
for His lowly, spiritual, covenant people (Gen. iv. 4; Exodus ii. 25; Lev.
xxvi. 9; 2 Kings xiii. 23; Psalm cxxxviii. 6). “Fearing God” and “working
righteousness” are the most usual Old Testament descriptions of the true
spiritual worhipers of God; and these are not the meritorious conditions or
prerequisites of Divine grace, but the fruits and evidences of that grace
already in the heart, proving that these characters are God’s covenant people
(Jer. xxxii. 38-41; Heb. xii. 28; Psalms xxv. 14; xxxii. 18; ciii. 13-17;
cxlvii. 11; Isaiah xlv. 24; liv. 17; lxi. 3, 10, 11; Jer. xxiii. 6; xxxiii.
16; Psalms xxiii. 3; xxiv. 5; Rom. v. 19; Gal. ii. 21; 1 John ii. 29; John
iii. 3-8). According to the testimony of Luke, the historian, and of the Angel,
and of Peter (Acts x. 2, 4, 34, 35), Cornelius was already, before Peter came, a
God-fearing, righteous, benevolent, praying man, accepted with God; and Peter
was only to instruct him more fully in the way of God. God had already cleansed
him, as He had shown Peter in the vision (Acts x. 15). The very fact of his
having the spirit of prayer, like Saul of Tarsus, after he was divinely
arrested, proved that he was a child of grace (Jer. xxxi. 1-9; l. 4-20; Zech.
xii. 10; Rom. viii. 15, 16, 26, 27; Eph. vi. 18; Jude 20). Even the Anglican
“Speaker’s Commentary,” which will not be suspected of undue spirituality,
admits that Cornelius not only “had the honest and good heart for the reception
of the good seed,” but also a genuine though “limited faith, which was the basis
of prayer and alms-giving.” While Peter was preaching Jesus to Cornelius and
his company, the miracle-working power of the Holy Ghost, as well as His
internal efficacy, fell upon the hearers, and they spoke with various tongues
and magnified God, just as the Jewish disciples had done on the day of Pentecost
(Acts ii. 4; x. 44-46). They were thus partakers of God’s eternal salvation (1
Peter i. 1-5; John i. 12, 13; 1 John v. 4, 5) even before they were baptized
in water; and Peter then appropriately asked, “Can any man forbid water, that
these should not be baptized, who have received the Holy Ghost as well as we?”
Only after they become spiritual believers in Christ does Peter think of
baptizing them in water; and such is the case with every baptism in the New
Testament- spiritual belief in Christ first, and then the burial in water;
first the thing signified, and afterwards the sign, which, under such
circumstances only, is not a mockery and a delusion. Though the believer
should be baptized, in obedience to Christ, and for the answer of a good
conscience (1 Peter iii. 21), yet Christ, and not water, is his only God and
Savior (Isaiah xlv. 21, 22; Acts iv. 12).
“The saving grace
of God teaches men to worship Him with reverence and godly fear, to serve Him
conscientiously, to unite justice and charity, and to pray with constancy and
perseverance. It leads men to order their households in the fear of God; and
commonly they become instrumental to the good of those around them. The
excellent and devout Roman soldier, no less than Saul the persecutor, the
converted jailor, and the thief upon the cross, was saved only by the atonement
of Christ; that no flesh should glory in the prescence of God (1 Cor. i. 29).”
“Should the Lord create an humble, teachable and inquiring disposition in the
heart of an inhabitant of China, Japan or the unexplored parts of Africa, He
would sooner send an angel from Heaven, or a minister from the uttermost part of
the earth, to show him the way of salvation, than leave him destitute of that
knowledge, for which he longs and prays without ceasing. The alms and
supplications of such persons spring from right principles and motives, and go
up as a memorial before God, not to merit His favor, but to plead with Him to
fulfill His gracious promises.” “The sublime subjects which pertain to
redemption through the blood of the Son of God seem more proper for the tongues
of angels to proclaim than for us poor worms of the earth. Doubtless, in many
respects, they could preach them unspeakably better; yet our humiliating and
thankful experience may balance something on the other side. In that case,
however, it would not be so evident that the excellency of the power, which
makes the word successful, is wholly of God; nor would their presence and
language be so suited to man’s weakness, or so conducive to his comfort.”-T.
Scott.
“The fear of the
Lord is the beginning of wisdom,” say both David and Solomon (Psalm cxi. 10;
Prov. ix. 10); “the fear of the Lord is clean, enduring forever, “ says David
(Psalm xix. 9); “unto you that fear my name shall the Sun of Righteousness
arise with healing in His wings,” says the Lord by Malachi (iv. 2). These
preacious declarations are precisely equivalent to the comforting assurance of
the Apostle Paul, “that He who hath begun a good work in you will perform (epiteleo,
bring to an end, accomplish, perfect) it until the day of Jesus Christ”
(Philip. i. 6)- not only the day when He is manifested as the Sun of
Righteousness and the Divine Savior of the trembling sinner, but, as shown by
the fourth verse below (Philip. i. 10), and by 1 Thess. v. 2, and 2 Peter iii.
10, the day at the close of this dispensation, when Christ shall come in final
judgment. This one verse (Philip. i. 6), like Heb. xii. 2, in which Jesus is
called both “the Author and Finisher of our faith,” and like Isaiah xxxv. 10, in
which it is declared that “the ransomed of the Lord shall return and come to
Zion with songs and everlasting joy upon their heads,” and like many other
verses of Scripture, cuts up the system of conditional salvation by the roots,
and incontestably and eternally establishes the system of salvation by sovereign
grace, beginning and consummating the good work in the sinner’s heart, so that
all the glory, without the slightest reservation, shall be given by the saved
sinner to God (Psalms cvii. 1-32; cxx. 1; Ex. xv. 1-19; Rev. v. 9, 10; xv.
3; Romans iii. 27, 28). Every system of conditionalism represents the
sinner as doing that which insures his salvation, and which should,
therefore, entitle him to the chief glory. As for good works,
they are, as we have shown by abundant scriptural quotations, but the fruit
of Divine grace implanted in the heart.
I now condense,
mainly from the writing of T.D. Bernard and P. Schaff, some
excellent remarks upon the books of the New Testament, especially the
epistles.
“In the Gospels
Christ is manifested as man and as God; in the Acts He is preached to the
world; in the epistles he is received by His indwelling Spirit in the hearts of
believers; and in Revelation He is, in His mystical body, the church, after
great tribulation, translated to glory. In the Gospels we see the Divine temple
building; in the Acts we see the doors thrown open and Jews and Gentiles
fleeing into it as a refuge; in the epistles we become inmates of the temple
ourselves, and behold its internal, spiritual and assimilating glory; in the
Revelation the temple, with all its inmates, after passing through manifold
fiery trials, is perfected and elevated into the immediate, beatific and eternal
presence of God.”
Some general and
comparative remarks in reference to the Four Gospels have been given in the
Introduction to this work.
The book entitles
the Acts of the Apostles “forms the bridge between the Gospels and the
epistles. It is a direct continuation of the third Gospel, by the same author,
Luke, and is addressed to the same Theophilus (‘friend of God’), probably a
Christian convert of distinguished social position. In the Gospel Luke repeats
what he heard and read; in the Acts what he heard and saw. The Gospel records
the life and work of Christ; the Acts the work of the Holy Spirit, who is
recognized at every step. The word Spirit, or Holy Spirit, occurs more
frequently in the Acts than in any other book of the New Testament. It might
porperly be called ‘the Gospel of the Holy Spirit.’ The Acts is a cheerful and
encouraging book, like the third Gospel. It represents the progress of
Christianity from Jerusalem, the capital of Judaism, to Rome, the capital of
heathenism. It is a history of the planting of the church among the Jews by
Peter, and among the Gentiles by Paul. More than three-fifths of it are devoted
to Paul, and especially to his later labors and journeys, in which the author
could speak from personal knowledge. Luke was in the company of Paul, including
some interruptions, at least twelve years. He was again with Paul in his last
captivity, shortly before Paul’s martyrdom, his most faithful and devoted
companion (2 Tim. iv. 11). He probably began the book of Acts or a preliminary
diary while with Paul at Philippi, continuing it at Caesarea during Paul’s two
years’ imprisonment there, and finishing it soon after Paul’s first imprisonment
in Rome, before the terrible persecution in the summer of A.D. 64, which he
could hardly left unnoticed. The Acts and epistles supplement and confirm each
other by a series of coincidences in all essential points. Paley’s examination
of these numerous and undesigned coincidences in his Horae Paulinae, and
James Smith’s Voyage and Shipwreck of St. Paul, furnish to readers of
sound common sense and unbiased judgment unanswerable arguments for the
credibility of the Acts. No ancient work affords so many tests of veracity as
the Acts, because no other has such numerous points of contact in all directions
with contemporary history, politics and topography, whether Jewish, or Greek, or
Roman. No other history of thirty years has ever been written so truthful and
impartial, so important and interesting, so healthy in tone and hopeful in
spirit, so agressive and yet so genial, so cheering and inspiring, so replete
with lessons of wisdom and encouragement for work in spreading the glad tidings
of salvation, and yet withal so simple and modest, as the Acts of the Apostles.
“The epistles are
addressed to baptized believers, and aim to strengthen them in their faith, and,
by brotherly instruction, exhortation, rebuke and consolation, to build up the
church in all Christian graces on the historical foundation of the teaching and
example of Christ. The prophets of the Old Testament delivered Divine oracles
to the people with ‘Thus saith the Lord;’ the Apostles of the New Testament
wrote letters to the brethren, who shared with them the same faith and hope as
members of Christ- a more open, equal and hearty mode of communication, suited
to the gospel day, showing rather companionship than dictation, reasoning out of
the Old Testament Scriptures and teaching the brethren how so to reason, giving
the individual experience of the writer, yet bearing lofty, authoritative,
unwavering, sure testimony to the truth, and sometimes making definite additions
to former revelations. The epistles are the voice of the Spirit within the
church to those who are within the church. The essential thought is ‘Of Him are
ye in Christ Jesus.’ God is represented as the immediate and the still
continuous author of our existance in Christ. In the epistles, we know, as
Christ promised (John xiv. 20), that He is in His Father, as well as His Father
is in Him, and that we are in Him and He in us. Believers are in Christ, and so
are partakers in all that He does and has and is- they died in Him, rose with
Him, and live with Him; when the eye of God looks on them, they are found in
Chirst, and there is no condemnation to them; they are righteous in His
righteousness, and loved with the love that rests on Him, and are sons of God in
His Sonship, and heirs with Him in His inheritance, and are soon to be glorified
with Him in His glory; and this relationship was contemplated in eternal
counsels, and predestined before the foundation of the world. So Christ is in
those who believe by His indwelling Spirit, leading them to God and giving them
the earnest of their eternal inheritance. Thus, by intertwined relations, the
life of the believer is constituted a life in Christ and a life in God. This
idea underlies all the epistles, both their doctrine and their exhortation. It
is a new world of thought- a new element. All their relations and actions are
in Christ. And, finally, this character of existence is not changed by that
which changes all besides- they die in the Lord, and sleep in Jesus, and, when
He shall appear, they will appear; when He comes God shall bring them with Him,
and they shall reign in life by Him. Men bid us live in truth and duty, in
purity and love- they do well; but the gospel does better, calling and enabling
us to live in Christ, and find in Him the enjoyment of all that we would
possess, and the realization of all that we would become.
“The epistles of
the New Testament are without a parallel in ancient literature, and yield in
importance only to the Gospels, which stand higher, as Christ Himself rises
above the Apostles. They presuppose throughout the Gospel history, and often
allude to the death and resurrection of Christ as the foundation of the church
and the Christian hope. They compress more ideas in fewer words than any other
writings, human or Divine, excepting the Gospels. They discuss the highest
possible themes- God, Christ, the Holy Spirit, sin and redemption, incarnation,
regeneration, repentance, faith and good works, holy living and dying, the
conversion of the world, the general judgment, eternal glory. They are of more
real value to the church than all the systems of theology and all the
confessions of faith.
“The appointed
epistolary teachers of the church were Peter and John, the two chief of the
original twelve Apostles; James and Jude, the brethren of the Lord; and Paul,
the great Apostle of the Gentiles, who wrote five times as much as all the other
four together.
“The seven
epistles of James, First and Second Peter, First, Second and Third John, and
Jude, usually follow, in the old manuscripts, the Acts of the Apostles, and
precede the Pauline epistles, perhaps as being the works of the older Apostles;
they are now placed last, probably because they are supplementary and
confirmatory to the more elaborate writings of Paul. The epistle of James was
probably written before A.D. 50 (some think as early as A.D. 44), and is thought
to be the oldest book in the New Testament; First Peter (probably also Second
Peter and Jude) is believed to have been written before A.D. 67; and the
epistles of John between A.D. 90 and 100. Of the epistles of Paul, those to the
Thessalonians were written first, A.D. 52 or 53; then Galatians, Corinthians,
and Romans between 56 and 58; then the four epistles of the captivity,
Colossians, Ephesians, Philemon and Philippians, between 61 and 63; last, the
pastoral epistles, but their date is uncertain, except that the second epistle
to Timothy is his farewall letter on the eve of his martyrdom. The epistle to
the Hebrews was probably written about A.D. 63. Its author is unknown; but it
has been generally thought that Paul was its author; on account of its
uncertified authorship, it was placed after Paul’s other epistles. From the
fourth to the eighteenth century the Pauline authorship was the prevailing
opinion; this was based upon the unanimous tradition of the Eastern church- the
mention of Timothy and the reference to a release from captivity (xiii. 23)- and
the agreement of the epistle with Paul’s system of doctrine, the tone of
apostolic authority, and the depth and unction of the epistle. The non-Pauline
authorship is argued on the following grounds: the decided opposition to the
Pauline authorship by Western tradition, both Roman and North African, down to
the time of Augustine (about 350 A.D.); the absence of the customary name and
salutation; the phraseology in Heb. ii. 3, seeming to distinguish the author
from the Apostles, and very different from the language of Paul in the first
chapter of Galatians; the difference from Paul’s writings, not in substance, but
in the form and method of teaching and arguing; the superior purity,
correctness and rhetorical finish of style; the difference in the quotations
from the Old Testament, the author always following the Septuagint, while Paul
often quotes the Hebrew. As to the real author, five of Paul’s fellow-laborers
have been proposed, either as sole or as joint authors with Paul- Barnabas,
Luke, Clement, Apollos and Silas. The arguments for and the objections against
them are equally strong, and we have no data to decide between them. Whoever
may have been the writer, the inspiration and leading ideas are those of Paul.
“The following
suggestive doctrinal arrangement of Paul’s undoubted epistles has been made: 1.
Anthropological and Soteriological- Galatians and Romans. 2. Ethical and
Ecclesiastical- 1st and 2d Corinthians. 3. Christological- Colossians and
Philippians. 4. Ecclesiological- Ephesians (in part also Corinthians). 5.
Eschatological- Thessalonians. 6. Pastoral- Timothy and Titus. 7. Social and
Personal- Philemon.
“As Matthew is
the fit beginning of the Gospels, linking the New with the Old Testament, so the
epistle to the Romans is the fit beginning to the epistles, giving the genealogy
of the doctrine of Christ through the Old Testament. The Apostle Paul, in this
epistle, firmly holds his ground in the prophetic and historic line of the Old
Covenant, and from that standing point opens the dispensation of the Spirit.
The Acts left him in Rome; the succeeding epistle is addressed to the Romans.
It stands justly at the head of the Pauline epistles. It is the most
comprehensive and systematic statement of Paul’s theology, both theoretical and
practical, for which he lived and died. It gives the clearest and fullest
exposition of a vital and fundamental subject, salvation by free grace, the
need, nature and effects of gospel justification for individual souls,
vindicated by the witness of the Law and the Prophets. Luther calls Romans ‘the
chief book of the New Testament, and the purest gospel;’ Coleridge styles it
‘the profoundest book in existence;’ Meyer, ‘the greatest and richest of all
the apostolic works;’ and Godet denominated it ‘the cathedral of the Christian
faith.’
“The epistles to
the Corinthians are addressed to the Greeks who seek after wisdom; and these
epistles condemn a spirit of self-confident freedom both in thought and conduct-
in other words, the essential spirit of the world, and they assert the Divine
and indefeasible authority of the gospel, which claims the subjection of the
mind and the regulation of the life of the church. These epistles abound in
variety of topics, and show the extraordinary versatility of the mind of the
writer, and his inspired practical wisdom in dealing with delicate and
complicated questions and unscrupulous opponents. For every aberration he has a
word of severe censure, for every danger a word of warning, for every weakness a
word of cheer and sympathy, for every returning offender a word of pardon and
encouragement. The first epistle contains the unrivaled description of the
chief Christian grace, Charity or Love; the second epistle gives us almost an
autobiography of the Apostle, and is a mine of pastoral wisdom.
“The epistle to
the Galatians encounters, not the spirit of presumptuous freedom (as those to
the Corinthians), but the spirit of a willful bondage, which returns, after its
own stubborn and insensate fashion, to the elements of the world and of the
flesh; and this epistle asserts the direct revelation from Christ of the
apostolic doctrine which shines out more clearly as a dispensation of the Spirit
and of liberty. It was directed against those Judaizing teachers who undermined
Paul’s apostolical authority, and misled the Galatian churches into an apostasy
from the gospel of free grace to a false gospel of legal bondage. The epistle
to the Galatians treats of the same subject as that to the Romans- the
preparativeness and subordination of the law to the gospel. It is a remarkable
fact that the two races represented by the original readers of these epistles-
the Celtic and the Latin- have far departed from the doctrines taught in them,
and gone back from gospel freedom to legal bondage- thus repeating the apostasy
of the fickle-minded Galatians. The Pauline gospel was for centuries ignored,
misunderstood, and (in spite of Augustine) cast out at last by Rome, as
Christianity itself was cast out by Jerusalem of old. But these two epistles,
more than any other books of the New Testament, inspired the Reformation of the
sixteenth century, and are to this day the Gibraltar of evangelical
Protestantism.
“The succeeding
epistles of Paul address those whose minds are now cleared, settled, and
secured. The Apostle ascends to a more calm and lofty stage of thought in his
epistles to the Ephesians and Colossians, wherein, no longer in collision with
human error, he expatiates in the view of the eternal purposes of God, and of
the ideal perfections of the church in Christ; if inspiration was asserted in
the other epistles, here it is felt; yet, in both epistles, this high strain
passes by the most natural transition into the plainest counsels; and, in the
epistles to the Philippians and Philemon, the voice is that, not only of a
prophet, but of an affectionate brother and friend. These four epistles were
written in captivity, probably during Paul’s first imprisonment in Rome. He
glorified in being a ‘prisoner of Christ.’ He experienced the blessedness of
persecution for righteousness’ sake (Matt. v. 10), and ‘the peace of God which
passeth all understanding’ (Philip. iv. 7). He was thus divinely enabled to
turn the prison into a pulpit, to send comfort and joy to his distant chruches,
and render a greater service to future ages than he could have done by active
labor. Chained day and night by his right arm to the left arm of a Roman
soldier, he preached the gospel to his keepers, and many in the praetorian guard
and in Caesar’s household believed. The epistle to the Colossians is the most
Christly of Paul’s epistles, the Christology approaching very closely to that of
John; and the Epistle to the Ephesians is the most churchly book of the New
Testament- the very reverse, however, of churchy, as nothing can be
further removed from the genius of Paul than that narrow, mechanical and
pedantic churchiness which sticks to the shell of outward forms and
ceremonies, and mistakes them for the kernel within. The churchliness of the
epistle to the Ephesians is rooted and grounded in Christliness and has no sense
whatever if separated from this root. A ‘church’ without Christ would be at
best, a prayer-saying corpse (and there are such so-called ‘churches’). Paul
emphasizes the person of Christ in Colossians, and the person and work of the
Holy Spirit in Ephesians. Ephesians is, in some respects, the most profound and
difficult, as it is certainly the most spiritual and devout of Paul’s epistles.
It is the Epistle of the Heavenlies, an ode to Christ and His spotless bride,
the Song of Songs in the New Testament. Philippi was the first place in Europe
where the gospel was preached. Here Paul was severely persecuted and
marvelously delivered. Here were his most devoted brethren; for them he felt
the strongest personal attachment; from them alone would he receive
contributions for his support. The epistle to the Philippians is like Paul’s
midnight hymn of praise in the dungeon of Philippi. Its key-note is thankful
joy. He had no doctrinal error or practical vice to rebuke, as in Galatians and
Corinthians. The epistle to Philemon was written and transmitted at the same
time as that to the Colossians, and may be regarded as a personal postscript to
it. Onesimus, a slave of Philemon, had, on account of some offense, probably
theft, run away from his master, who was a zealous Christian at Colosse, and had
experienced a hope in Christ under Paul’s preaching at Rome, and now desired to
return, as a penitent, in company with Tychicus, the bearer of the epistle to
the Colossians. Paul accordingly sent back Onesimus to his master, yet under a
new character, no more a contemptible thief and runaway, but a regenerate man
and a beloved brother, with the touching request that Philemon might receive him
as kindly as he would the Apostle himself. The epistle reveals Paul to us as an
unsurpassed Christian gentleman; it is a model of courtesy, delicacy, and
tenderness of feeling.
“The Thessalonian
epistles complete Paul’s addresses to seven churches, and, though first in
composition, are properly the last in the canon as they are distinguished by the
eschatological element, and sustain the conflict of faith by the preaching of
that blessed hope and the glorious appearing and coming of the day of God. Paul
wrote these two letters from Corinth, during his first sojourn in that city;
and it seems to have been a chief object of the Apostle to correct a
misapprehension into which the Thessalonians had fallen in regard to the speedy
coming of Christ. He taught them that the Lord would not come so soon as they
expected, but that first there must be a falling away, and the man of sin, the
son of perdition, must be revealed; that they could not make a mathematical
calculation of the time when Christ would come; and that in no case should the
expectation check industry and zeal, but rather stimulate them.
“To this rich
body of doctrine the pastoral epistles add their suggestive words on the
principles and spirit of the ministerial office, which has the care of the
church and the stewardship of the truth. There is a very marked difference
between the ecclesiastical constitution of the pastoral epistles and that of the
second century. There is not a word said about the Divine origin of
episcopacy; not a trace of a congregational episcopate, such as we find in the
Ignatian epistles, still less of a diocesan episcopate of the time of Irenaeus
and Tertullian. Bishops and presbyters (or Elders) are still identical as they
are in the Acts (xx. 17, 28), and in the epistle to the Philippians (i. 1).
Even Timothy and Titus appear simply as delegates of the Apostle for a specific
mission. These epistles agree with Paul’s doctrinal system in clearly tracing
salvation to Divine grace alone; they are illuminated with flashes of his
genius; they bear the marks of his intense personality; they contain rare gems
of inspired truth, and most wholesome admonition and advice, which makes them
to-day far more valuable than any number of works on pastoral theology and
church government. They contain several passages which , for doctrine or
practice, are equal to the best Paul ever wrote, and are deeply lodged in the
experience and affection of Christians. Nothing could be a more fitting, a more
sublime and beautiful, finale of such a hero of faith than the sixth, seventh
and eighth verses of the last chapter of his last epistle (2 Tim.), written in
the very face of martyrdom.
“The epistle to
the Hebrews presents to the perplexed Hebrew-Christian mind the correct
divinely-intended relation and subordination of the Old Covenant to the New.
The internal evidence is that it was written from Italy between A.D. 60 and 70,
before Paul’s martyrdom. The author was a man full of faith and the Holy
Spirit, and gifted with a tongue of fire. He had the grace of exhortation and
consolation in the highest degree. The epistle is a profound argument for the
superiority of Christ over the angels, over Moses, and over the Levitical
priesthood, and for the finality of the second covenant. It unfolds far more
fully than any other book the great idea of the eternal priesthood and sacrifice
of Christ, offered once and forever for human redemption, as distinct from the
national and transient character of the Mosaic priesthood and the ever-repeated
sacrifices of the tabernacle and the temple. He shows from the Old Testament
itself that God had designed the latter as but the temporary shadow, type and
prophecy of Christianity, the abiding substance. The epistle is, like
Colossians and Philippians, eminently Christoligical, and forms a stepping-stone
to the Christology of John. The object of the author was to warn the
conservative Christians in Jerusalem of the danger of apostatizing to Judaism.
His arguments were providentially emphasized soon after by the destruction of
the city and temple. The language of the epistle is the purest Greek of the New
Testament. The opening sentence is a rich and elegant period of classic
construction. The description of the heroes of faith in the eleventh chapter is
one of the most eloquent and sublime in the entire range of religious
literature.
“The seven
epistles following Hebrews in the canon are sometimes called Catholic or
General; but his designation properly applies to only five of them: James,
First and Second Peter, First John, and Jude; the second and third epistles of
John are addressed to individuals. These writers do not enter into theological
discussions like those of Paul, but give simpler statements of truth,
supplementing and confirming Paul’s doctrine.
“James was not an
Apostle, but the brother of the Lord, and the first pastor of the church in
Jerusalem, where he died a martyr. He was a man of the most exemplary piety,
being called even by the Jews ‘the Just,’ and he enjoyed almost apostolic
authority, especially in Judea and among Jewish Christians. He had high regard
for the Mosaic law. His epistle is addressed to ‘the twelve tribes scattered
abroad,’ and is directed against a one-sided, speculative, dead, Antinomian
faith, and shows the practical ethical side of the doctrine of Christ. James
exhorts his readers to good works of faith, warns them against a merely nominal
orthodoxy, covetousness, pride and worldliness, and comforts them in view of
present and future trials and persecutions. Though meagre in doctrine, it is
rich in comfort and lessons of holy living based on faith in Jesus Christ, ‘the
Lord of glory.’ It is a commentary upon Christ’s sermon on the mount. James
was unwilling to impose the yoke of circumcision upon the Gentiles (Acts xv. 19,
20), and he recognized Paul as the Apostle of the Gentiles, giving him the right
hand of fellowship (Gal. ii. 9). There is no real contradiction between James
and Paul on the subject of faith and works. James says: ‘Faith is dead without
works.’ Paul says: ‘Works are dead without faith.’ Both are right: James in
opposition to dead orthodoxy, Paul in opposition to self-righteous legalism.
James does not demand works without faith, but works prompted by faith; while
Paul, on the other hand, likewise declares a faith worthless which is without
love, though it remove mountains. James looks mainly at the fruit, Paul at the
root. Paul solves the difficulty in one phrase- ‘faith working through love’
(Gal. v. 6). By ‘faith’ Paul never means dead faith, but James sometimes does.
James maintains the absolute necessity of living faith (James i. 3, 6; ii. 1,
5, 18, 22, 23, 26; v. 15); and Paul emphasizes the value of good works as
evidencing our faith, profiting others, and glorifying God (Rom. ii. 13;
xii.-xvi.; 1 Cor. xvi.; 2 Cor. ix.; Gal. v. 6; Eph. ii. 10; v., vi.; Col.
i. 10; iii., iv.; Philip. iv.; 2 Thess. ii.17; 1 Tim. ii. 10; v. 10; vi.
18; 2 Tim. iii. 17; Titus ii. 7-14; iii. 8). Paul’s life of self-sacrificing
labors for Christ speaks more loudly on the importance of works of love than all
his writings.
“Peter, writing
to the Pauline churches, confirms them in the Pauline faith. In the Gospels,
the human nature of Simon appears most prominent; the Acts unfold the Divine
mission of Peter in the founding of the church, with a temporary relapse at
Antioch (recorded in Gal. ii); in his epistles we see the complete triumph of
Divine grace. Deeply humbled and softened, he gives the fruit of a rich
spiritual experience. In no other epistles do the language and spirit come more
directly home to the personal trials and wants and weaknesses of the Christian
life. In his first epistle he warns against hierarchical ambition in prophetic
anticipation of the abuse of his name among the Apostles (v. 1-4), calling
himself simply ‘an Elder,’ and exhorting his fellow-Elders to ‘feed the flock of
God, not for filthy lucre but of a ready mind; neither as being lords over
God’s heritage, but being ensamples to the flock.’ God overruled Peter’s very
sins and inconsistencies for his humiliation and spiritual progress. Nowhere,
except in Christ, do we find a spirit more humble, meek, gentle, tender, loving
and lovely. Almost every word and incident in the gospel history connected with
Peter left its impress upon his epistles in the way of humble or thankful
reminiscence and allusion. Christ having prayed that his faith should not fail,
and having looked upon him after his denial, Peter was enabled by Divine grace
to weep bitterly and turn again to his Lord, and thus he is still strengthening
his brethren. Not-withstanding Paul’s sharp rebuke of him before the church at
Antioch, Peter, in his second epistle, makes an affectionate allusion to his
‘beloved brother Paul’ and his profound writings, which he classes with the
‘other Scriptures.’ Thus he probed how thoroughly the Spirit of Christ had,
through experience, trained him to humility, meekness and self-denial.
“The first
epistle of John is a postscript to the fourth Gospel. It is a practical
application of the lessons of the life of Christ to the wants of the church at
the close of the first century. It is a circular letter of the venerable
Apostle to his beloved children in Asia Minor, exhorting them to a holy life of
faith and love in Christ, and earnestly warning them against the Gnostic
‘antichrists,’ already existing or to come, who deny the mystery of the
incarnation, sunder religion from morality, and run into Antionomian practices.
The second and third epistles of John are short private letters, the second to a
Christian woman (some suppose to a Christian church), and the third to Gaius
(whether in Macedonia, Acts xix. 29, or in Corinth, Romans xvi. 23, 1 Cor. i.
14, or Derbe, Acts xx. 4, is unknown). The second epistle greatly resembles the
first, and so does the style of the third. In both the Apostle calls himself
‘the Elder.’ as Peter had done. True grace produces modesty and meekness.
“Jude was a
brother of James, a half-brother of Christ, and not probably an Apostle. Some,
however, suppose that both James and Jude, the authors of the epistles, were
Apostles. The epistle of Jude strongly resembles the second chapter of the
second epistle of Peter. It is a solemn warning against the licentious
tendencies of Gnosticism. The allusion to the remarkable Apocryphal book of
Enoch gives an inspired sanction only to the truth of the passage quoted, not to
the whole book. Jude fitly closes the epistle by exhorting his readers to
‘contend earnestly for the holy heavenly faith once delivered to the saints by
prophets and Apostles, looking unto Him who is able to keep them from falling,
and to present them faultless before the presence of His glory with exceeding
joy.’
“The epistles of
the New Testament were divinely intended for the redeemed, regenerated and
spiritual family of God, who inwardly feel their need of Divine mercy and
guidance and comfort and preservation; and these precious gifts of the Divine
Spirit should be constantly, habitually, familiarly and reverently studied.
“It is most
remarkable and confirmatory to notice that the first intimation of every truth
revealed to the Apostles by the Spirit, came from the lips of Christ (John xiv.
26; xvi. 13). The whole great doctrine of justification by faith elaborated in
Paul’s epistle to the Romans is involved in Christ’s declaration in John iii.
16; and the doctrine of Christian liberty in Galatians is comprehended in
Chirst’s language in John viii. 36; and the sacrificial doctrine of the epistle
to the Hebrews is fully implied in Christ’s words in Matthew xxvi. 28.”
The various
ecclesiastical traditions, handed down from the second and succeeding centuries,
representing that the Apostles labored in different countries outside of the
Roman Empire, are strange, uncritical, contradictory and apocryphal.
The system of
salvation proclaimed by our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ to His Apostles, and by
them orally and in manuscript to contemporaneous and future generations, was all
perfect and complete in the outset. Unlike all other systems of religion,
science or art, nothing can be added to it or taken from it, to increase its
beauty, usefulness or perfection; all attempts in this direction serve to mar
rather than add lustre to its excellence. And for 1800 years the only way to
obtain a perfect knowledge of Christian principles is to consult the original
record and to gather a “Thus saith the Lord” for all that His people say and
do. If men speak not according to this Word they speak at random, and give
evidence that there is no light in them (Isa. viii. 20).