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OUTLINES OF
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY
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SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY
DESIGNED FOR THE USE OF THEOLOGICAL STUDENTS
BY AUGUSTUS HOPKINS STRONG, D. D., LL. D.
PRESIDENT AND PROFESSOR OF BIBLICAL THEOLOGY IN THE ROCHESTER THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
PHILADELPHIA
THE GRIFFITH & ROWLAND PRESS
1701 Chestnut Street
COPYRIGHT,
Bv AUGUSTUS HOPKINS STRONG. 1908.
Cljrfsto 2Peo &alt>atori.
" The eye sees only that which it brings with it the power
of seeing." — Cicero.
" Open thou mine eyes, that i may behold wondrous things out or thy law." — Psalm 119 : 18.
" For with thee is the fountain of life : In thy light shall we see light." — Psalm 36 : 9.
" For we know in part, and we prophesy in part ; but when that which is perfect is come, that which is in part
SHALL BE DONE AWAY. " — 1 Cor. 13 : 9, 10.
INTRODUCTORY NOTE
The present work contains the substance of my "Systematic Theology." It omits all bibliographical and illustrative material, and confines itself to bare statements of doctrine. Those readers who desire further explanation of the various points under discus- sion will find their needs supplied in the larger work, a description of which immediately follows this Introductory Note. It is thought that the present volume may have its special value as a text-book and basis for class-recitation, supplemented, as such recitation may be, by the oral expositions of the teacher. As this volume, however, contains all the large print of the larger work, it constitutes in itself a complete whole, and presents the author's views in all essential particulars.
Kochester Theological Seminary,
Rochester, N. Y., May 1, 1908.
Vll
PREFACE
TO THE AUTHOR'S "SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY" IN" THREE VOLUME8.
The present work is a revision and enlargement of my "Systematic Theology," first published in 1886. Of the original work there have been printed seven editions, each edition embody- ing successive corrections and supposed improvements. During the twenty years which have intervened since its first publication I have accumulated much new material, which I now offer to the reader. My philosophical and critical point of view meantime has also somewhat changed. While I still hold to the old doctrines, I interpret them differently and expound them more clearly, because I seem to myself to have reached a fundamental truth which throws new light upon them all. This truth I have tried to set forth in my book entitled " Christ in Creation," and to that book I refer the reader for further information.
That Christ is the one and only Kevealer of God, in nature, in
humanity, in history, in science, in Scripture, is in my judgment
the key to theology. This view implies a monistic and idealistic conception of the world, together with an evolutionary idea as to
its origin and progress. But it is the very antidote to pantheism, in that it recognizes evolution as only the method of the tran- scendent and personal Christ, who fills all in all, and who makes the universe teleological and moral from its centre to its circumference and from its beginning until now.
Neither evolution nor the higher criticism has any terrors to one who regards them as parts of Christ's creating and educating pro- cess. The Christ in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and
ix
X PREFACE.
knowledge himself furnishes all the needed safeguards and limita- tions. It is only because Christ has been forgotten that nature and law have been personified, that history has been regarded as unpur- posed development, that Judaism has been referred to a merely human origin, that Paul has been thought to have switched the church off from its proper track even before it had gotten fairly started on its course, that superstition and illusion have come to seem the only foundation for the sacrifices of the martyrs and the triumphs of modern missions. I believe in no such irrational and atheistic evolution as this. I believe rather in him in whom all things consist, who is with his people even to the end of the world, and who has promised to lead them into all the truth.
Philosophy and science are good servants of Christ, but they are poor guides when they rule out the Son of God. As I reach my seventieth year and write these words on my birthday, I am thank- ful for that personal experience of union with Christ which has enabled me to see in science and philosophy the teaching of my Lord. But this same personal experience has made me even more alive to Christ's teaching in Scripture, has made me recognize in Paul and John a truth profounder than that disclosed by any secular writers, truth with regard to sin and atonement for sin, that satisfies the deepest wants of my nature and that is self- evidencing and divine.
I am distressed by some common theological tendencies of our time, because I believe them to be false to both science and religion. How men who have ever felt themselves to be lost sin- ners and who have once received pardon from their crucified Lord and Savior can thereafter seek to pare down his attributes, deny his deity and atonement, tear from his brow the crown of miracle and sovereignty, relegate him to the place of a merely moral teacher who influences us only as does Socrates by words spoken across a stretch of ages, passes my comprehension. Here is my test of
PREFACE. XI
orthodoxy : Do we pray to Jesus ? Do we call upon the name of Christ, as did Stephen and all the early church ? Is he our living Lord, omnipresent, omniscient, omnipotent ? Is he divine only in the sense in which we are divine, or is he the only-begotten Son, God manifest in the flesh, in whom is all the fulness of the Godhead bodily ? What think ye of the Christ ? is still the critical question, and none are entitled to the name of Christian who, in the I face of the evidence he has furnished us, cannot answer the ques- tion aright.
Under the influence of Ritschl and his Kantian relativism, many of our teachers and preachers have swung off into a practical denial of Christ's deity and of his atonement. We seem upon the verge of a second Unitarian defection, that will break up churches and compel secessions, in a worse manner than did. that of Channing and Ware a century ago. American Christianity recovered from that disaster only by vigorously asserting the authority of Christ and the inspiration of the Scriptures. We need a new vision of the Savior like that which Paul saw on the way to Damascus and John saw on the isle of Patmos, to convince us that Jesus is lifted above space and time, that his existence antedated creation, that he conducted the march of Hebrew history, that he was born of a Virgin, suffered on the Cross, rose from the dead, and now lives forevermore, the Lord of the universe, the only God with whom we have to do, our Savior here and our Judge hereafter. Without a revival of this faith our churches will become secularized, mission enterprise will die out, and the candlestick will be removed out of its place as it was with the seven churches of Asia, and as it has been with the apostate churches of New England.
I print this revised and enlarged edition of my " Systematic Theology," in the hope that its publication may do something to stem this fast advancing tide, and to confirm the faith of God's elect. I make no doubt that the vast majority of Christians still
Xll PKEFACE.
hold the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints, and that they will sooner or later separate themselves from those who deny the Lord who bought them. When the enemy comes in like a flood, the Spirit of the Lord will raise up a standard against him. I would do my part in raising up such a standard. I would lead others to avow anew, as I do now, in spite of the supercilious assumptions of modern infidelit}-, my firm belief, only confirmed by the experience and reflection of a half century, in the old doctrines of holiness as the fundamental attribute of God, of an original transgression and sin of the whole human race, in a divine preparation in Hebrew history for man's redemption, in the deity, preexistence, virgin birth, vicarious atonement and bodily resur- rection of Jesus Christ our Lord, and in his future coming to judge the quick and the dead. I believe that these are truths of science as well as truths of revelation ; that the supernatural will yet be seen to be most truly natural ; and that not the open minded theo- logian but the narrow minded scientist will be obliged to hide his head at Christ's coming.
The present volume, in its treatment of Ethical Monism, Inspir- ation, the Attributes of God, and the Trinity, contains an antidote to most of the false doctrine which now threatens the safety of the church. I desire especially to call attention to the section on Perfection, and the Attributes therein involved, because I believe that the recent mergiDg of Holiness in Love, and the practical denial that Righteousness is fundamental in God's nature, are responsible for the utilitarian views of law and the superficial views of sin which now prevail in some systems of theology. There can be no proper doctrine of the atonement and no proper doctrine of retribution, so long as Holiness is refused its preeminence. Love must have a norm or standard, and this norm or standard can be found only in Holiness. The old conviction of sin and the sense of guilt that drove the convicted sinner to the Cross are inseparable
PREFACE. Xlll
from a firm belief in the self-affirming attribute of God as logically prior to and as conditioning the self-communicating attribute. The theology of our day needs a new view of the Righteous One. Such a view will make it plain that God must be reconciled before man can be saved, and that the human conscience can be pacified only upon condition that propitiation is made to the divine Righteous- ness. In this volume I propound what I regard as the true Doc- trine of God, because upon it will be based all that follows in the volumes on the Doctrine of Man, and the Doctrine of Salvation.
The universal presence of Christ, the Light that lighteth every man, in heathen as well as in Christian lands, to direct or overrule all movements of the human mind, gives me confidence that the recent attacks upon the Christian faith will fail of their purpose. It becomes evident at last that not only the outworks are assaulted, but the very citadel itself. We are asked to give up all belief in special revelation. Jesus Christ, it is said, has come in the flesh precisely as each one of us has come, and he was before Abraham only in the same sense that we were. Christian experience knows how to characterize such doctrine so soon as it is clearly stated. And the new theology will be of use in enabling even ordinary believers to recognize soul-destroying heresy even under the mask of professed orthodoxy.
I make no apology for the homiletical element in my book. To be either true or useful, theology must be a passion. Pectus est quod theologum facit, and no disdainful cries of "Pectoral Theology ! " shall prevent me from maintaining that the eyes of the heart must be enlightened in order to perceive the truth of God, and that to know the truth it is needful to do the truth. Theology is a science which can be successfully cultivated only in connection with its practical application. I would therefore, in every discus- sion of its principles, point out its relations to Christian experience, and its power to awaken Christian emotions and lead to Christian
XIV PREFACE.
decisions. Abstract the ogy is not really scientific. Only that theology is scientific whi .1 brings the student to the feet of Christ. I would hasten the day when in the name of Jesus every knee shall bow. I believe that, if any man serve Christ, him the Father will honor, and that to serve Christ means to honor him as I honor the Father. I would not pride myself that I believe so little, but rather that I believe so much. Faith is God's measure of a man. Why should I doubt that God spoke to the fathers through the prophets ? Why should I think it incredible that God should raise the dead ? The things that are impossible with men are possible with God. When the Son of man comes, shall he find faith on the earth ? Let him at least find faith in us who profess to be his followers. In the conviction that the present darkness is but temporary and that it will be banished by a glorious sunrising, I give this new edition of my "Theology" to the public with the prayer that whatever of good seed is in it may bring forth fruit, and that whatever plant the heavenly Father has not planted may be rooted up. Rochester Theological Seminary,
Rochester, N. Y., August 3, 1906.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
Introductory Note, vii
Preface, xi-xiv
Table op Contents, xv-xxviii
PAKT I.— PROLEGOMENA, ... 1-17
Chapter I. — Idea op Theology, 1-8
I. — Definition of Theology, 1
II. — Aim of Theology, 1
III. — Possibility of Theology — grounded in, 1-5
1. The existence of a God, 1-2
2. Man's capacity for the knowledge of God, 2-3
3. God's revelation of himself to man 3-5
TV. — Necessity of Theology, 5-6
V. — Relation of Theology to Religion, 7-8
Chapter II. — Material of Theology, 9-12
I. — Sources of Theology, 0 9-11
1. Scripture and Nature, 9-10
2. Scripture and Rationalism, 10
3. Scripture and Mysticism, 10-11
4. Scripture and Romanism, 11
II. — Limitations of Theology, 11-12
III. — Relations of Material to Progress in Theology, 12
Chapter HE. — Method of Theology, 13-17
I. — Requisites to the Study of Theology, 13
II. — Divisions of Theology, 13-14
III. — History of Systematic Theology, 14-15
IV.— Order of Treatment, 15-16
V.— Text-books in Theology, 16-17
PART II.— THE EXISTENCE OF GOD, 18-32
Chapter I. — Origin of our Idea of God's Existence, 18-23
I.— First Truths in General, 18-19
H.— The Existence of God a First Truth, 19-20
1. Its universahty, 19
2. Its necessity, 19-20
3. Its logical independence and priority, 20
HE. — Other supposed Sources of the Idea, 21-22
IV.— Contents of this Intuition, 22-23
xv
XVI TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter II. — Corroborative Evidences of God's Existence, 24-28
I. — The Cosmological Argument, 24-25
II.— The Teleogical Argument, 25-26
III. — The Anthropological Argument, 26-27
IV.— The Ontological Argument, 27-28
Chapter in. — Erroneous Explanations, and Conclusion, . . . 29-32
I.— Materialism, 29-30
II. — Materialism Idealism, 30
III. — Idealistic Pantheism, 30-31
IV.— Ethical Monism, 31-32
PART m.— THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION FROM
GOD, 33-66
Chapter I. — Preliminary Considerations, 34-42
I. — Reasons a priori for expecting a Revelation from God, . 33-34
II. — Marks of the Revelation man may expect, 34-35
III. — Miracles as attesting a Divine Revelation, 35-39
1. Definition of Miracle, 35-36
2. Possibility of Miracles 36
3. Probability of Miracles, 36-37
4. Amount of Testimony necessary to prove a Miracle, 37-38
5. Evidential Force of Miracles, 38
6. Counterfeit Miracles, 39
IV. — Prophecy as attesting a Divine Revelation 39-41
V. — Principles of Historical Evidence applicable to the Proof
of a Divine Revelation, 41-42
1. As to Documentary Evidence, 41
2. As to Testimony in General, 41-42
Chapter II. — Positive Proofs that the Scriptures are a
Divine Revelation, 43-55
I. — Genuineness of the Christian Documents, 43-49
1. Genuineness of the Books of the New Testament, 43-48
1st. The Myth-theory of Strauss, 45-46
2d. The Tendency-theory of Baur, 46-47
3d. The Romance-theory of Renan, 47
4th. The Development- theory of Harnack, 47-43
2. Genuineness of the Books of the Old Testament, 48-49
II. — Credibility of the "Writers of the Scriptures, 49-50
HI. — Supernatural Character of the Scripture Teaching, 50-52
1. Scripture Teaching in General, 50-51
2. Moral System of the New Testament, 51
3. The Person and Character of Christ, 51-52
4. The Testimony of Christ to Himself, 52
IV. — Historical Results of the Propagation of Scripture,
Doctrine, 53-54
Chapter HI. — Inspiration of the Scriptures, 55-56
I. — Definition of Inspiration, 55
TABLE OF CONTENTS XV11
II. — Proof of Inspiration, 65-56
TTT, — Theories of Inspiration, 56-58
1. The Intuition-theory, 56-57
2. The Illuinination-theory, 57
3. The Dictation-theory, 57-58
4. The Dynamical-theory, 58
IV. — The Union of the Divine and Human Elements in
Inspiration, 58-61
V. — Objections to the Doctrine of Inspiration, 61-66
1. Errors in Matters of Science, 61-62
2. Errors in Matters of History, 62
3. Errors in Morality, 63
4. Errors of Seasoning, 63
5. Errors in Quoting or Interpreting the Old Testament, . . . 63-64
6. Errors in Prophecy, 64
7. Certain Books unworthy of a Place in Inspired Scripture, 64
8. Portions of the Scripture Books 'written by others than
the Persons to whom they are ascribed, 64-64
9. Sceptical or Fictitious Narratives, 65
10. Acknowledgment of the Non-inspiration of Scripture
Teachers and their Writings, 65-66
PART TV.— THE NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF
GOD, 67-123
Chapteb I. — The Attributes of God, 67-81
I. — Definition of the term Attributes, 67
IT. — Relation of the Divine Attributes to the Divine Essence, . 67-68
HI. — Methods of Determining the Divine Attributes, 68-69
TV.— Classification of the Attributes 69-70
V. — Absolute or Immanent Attributes, 70-75
First Division. — Spirituality, and Attributes therein
involved, 70-71
1. Life, 71
2. Personality, 71
Second Division. — Infinity, and Attributes therein
involved, 72 73
1. Self-existence, 72
2. Immutability, 72-73
3. Unity, 73
Third Division. — Perfection, and Attributes therein
involved, 73-75
1. Truth, 73-74
2. Love, 74-75
3. Holiness, 75
VL — Relative or Transitive Attributes, 76-79
First Division. — Attributes having relation to Time
and Space, 76
1. Eternity, 76
XV111 TABLE OF CONTENTS
2. Immensity, 76
Second Division. — Attributes having relation to Cre- ation, 76-78
1. Omnipresence, 76-77
2. Omniscience, 77
3. Omnipotence, 77-78
Third Division. — Attributes having relation to Moral
Beings, 78-79
1. Veracity and Faithfulness, or Transitive Truth, 78
2. — Mercy and Goodness, or Transitive Love, 78
3. Justice and Righteousness, or Transitive
Holiness, 78-79
VII. — Eank and Relations of the several Attributes, 79-81
1. Holiness the Fundamental Attribute in God, 79-80
2. The Holiness of God the Ground of Moral Obligation,. . . 80-81
Chapter II. — Doctrine of the Trinity, 82-94
I. — In Scripture there are Three who are recognized as God,. 82-86
1. Proofs from New Testament, 82-85
A. The Father is recognized as God, 82
B. Jesus Christ is recognized as God, 82-85
C. The Holy Spirit is recognized as God, 85
2. Intimations of the Old Testament, 85-86
A. Passages which seem to teach Plurality of some
sort in the Godhead, 85 86
B. Passages relating to the Angel of Jehovah, 86
C. Descriptions of the Divine "Wisdom and Work,. . . 86
D. Descriptions of the Messiah, 86
H. — These Three are so described in Scripture, that we are
compelled to conceive them as distinct Persons, 87-88
1. The Father and the Son are Persons distinct from
each other, 87
2. The Father and the Son are Persons distinct from
the Spirit, 87
3. The Holy Spirit is a Person, 87-88
HI. — This Tripersonality of the Divine Nature is not merely
economic and temporal, but is immanent and eternal,. . 88-89
1. Scripture Proof that these distinctions of Per-
sonality are eternal, 88
2. Errors refuted by the Scripture Passages, 88-89
A. The SabeUian, 88
B. The Arian, 88 89
IV. — "While there are three Persons, there is but one Essence, . 89
V. — These three Persons are Equal, 89-92
1. These Titles belong to the Persons, 89-90
2. Qualified Sense of these Titles, 90-91
3. Generation and Procession consistent with Equality, 91-92
TABLE OF CONTENTS xix
VL — The Doctrine of the Trinity inscrutable, yet not self- contradictory, but the Key to all other Doctrines, . 92-94
1. The Mode of this Triune Existence is inscrutable, . . 92-93
2. The Doctrine of the Trinity is not self -contradictory, 93
3. The Doctrine of the Trinity has important relations
to other Doctrines, 93-94
Chapter ELI. — The Decrees of God, 95-100
I. — Definition of Decrees, 95
II. — Proof of the Doctrine of Decrees, 96-97
1. From Scripture, 96
2. From Eeason, 96-67
A. From the Divine Foreknowledge, 96-97
B. From the Divine Wisdom, 97
C. From the Divine Immutability, 97
D. From the Divine Benevolence, 97
ELL — Objections to the Doctrine of Decrees, 97-100
1. That they are inconsistent 'with the Free Agency of
Man, 97-99
2. That they take away all Motive for Human Exertion, 90-100
3. That they make God the Author of Sin,
TV. — Concluding Remarks, 100
1. Practical Uses of the Doctrine of Decrees, 100
2. True Method of Preaching the Doctrine, 100
CHAtTTER TV. — The Works of God, or the Execution of the
Decrees, 101-123
Section I. — Creation, 101-109
I. — Definition of Creation, 101
EL — Proof of the Doctrine, 101-103
1. Direct Scripture Statements, 102-103
2. Indirect Evidence from Scripture, 103
ELL — Theories which oppose Creation, 103-106
1. Dualism, 103-104
2. Emanation, 104
3. Creation from Eternity, 104-105
4. Spontaneous Generation, 105-106
TV. — The Mosaic Account of Creation, 106
1. Its Twofold Nature, 106
2. Its Proper Interpretation, 106
V.— God's End in Creation, 106-107
1. The Testimony of Scripture, 106-107
2. The Testimony of Eeason, 107-108
VE — Relation of the Doctrine of Creation to other Doctrines, . 108-109
1. To the Holiness and Benevolence of God, 108
2. To the Wisdom and Free Will of God, 108
3. To Christ as the Revealer of God, 108
4. To Providence and Redemption, 109
5. To the Observance of the Sabbath, 109
XX TABLE OF CONTENTS
Section II. — Presekvation, 109-112
I. — Definition of Preservation, 109-110
II. — Proof of the Doctrine of Preservation, 110
1. From Scripture, 110
2. From Beason, 110
HE. — Theories which virtually deny the Doctrine of Preserva- tion, 110-111
1. Deism, 110-111
2. Continuous Creation, Ill
IV. — Eemarks upon the Divine Concurrence, 111-112
Section HI. — Providence, 112-118
I. — Definition of Providence, 112
II. — Proof of the Doctrine of Providence, 112-113
1. Scriptural Proof, 112-113
2. Bational Proof, 113
HI. — Theories opposing the Doctrine of Providence, 114-115
1. Fatalism, 114
2. Casualism, 114
3. Theory of a merely General Providence, 114-115
IV. — Belations of the Doctrine of Providence, 115-118
1. To Miracles and Works of Grace, ... , 115-116
2. To Prayer and its Answer, 116-117
3. To Christian Activity, 117-118
4. To the Evil Acts of Free Agents, 118
Section IV. — Good and Enid Angels, 118-123
I. — Scripture Statements and Intimations, 119-121
1. As to the Nature and Attributes of Angels, 119
2. As to their Number and Organization, 119
3. As to their Moral Character, 119-120
4. As to their Employments, 120-121
A. The Employments of Good Angels, 120
B. The Employments of Evil Angels, r. 120-121
n. — Objections to the Doctrine of Angels, 121-122
1. To the Doctrine of Angels in General, 121-122
2. To the Doctrine of Evil Angels in General, 122
IH. — Practical Uses of the Doctrine of Angels, 123
1. Uses of the Doctrine of Good Augels, 123
2. Uses of the Doctrine of Evil Angels, 123
PABT V.— ANTHBOPOLOGT, OB THE DOCTBINE OF MAN, 124-178
Chapter I. — Preliminary, 124-134
I.— Man a Creation of God and a Child of God, 124-125
H.— Unity of the Bace, 125-127
1. Argument from History, 125
2. Argument from Language, 126
3. Argument from Psychology, 126
4. Argument from Physiology, 126-127
TABLE OF CONTENTS Xxi
HI.— Essential Elements of Human Nature, 127-128
1. The Dichotomous Theory 127
2. The Trichotomous Theory, 127-128
IV.— Origin of the Soul, 128-130
1. The Theory of Preexistence, 128-129
2. The Creatian Theory, 129-130
3. The Traducian Theory, 130
V.— The Moral Nature of Man, 131-134
1. Conscience, 131-132
2. Will, 132-134
Chapter EC. — The Original State of Man, 135-140
I. — Essentials of Man's Original State, 135-137
1. Natural Likeness to God, or Personality, 135
2. Moral Likeness to God, or Holiness, 135-137
A. The Image of God as including only Person-
ality, 136
B. The Image of God as consisting simply in
Man's Natural Capacity for Religion, 136-137
LT. — Incidents of Man's Original State, 137-138
1. Results of Man's Possession of the Divine Image, . . . 137-138
2. Concomitants of Man's Possession of the Divine
Image, 138
1st. The Theory of an Original Condition of
Savagery, 138-139
2d. The Theory of Comte as to the Stages of
Human Progress, 139-140
Chapter LTL— Sin, or Man's State of Apostasy, 141-178
Section I. — The Law of God, 141-145
L— Lawin General, 141-142
II.— The Law of God in Particular, 142-144
1. Elemental Law, 142-144
2. Positive Enactment, 144
HI.— Relation of the Law to the Grace of God, 144-145
Section II. — Nature of Sin, 145-151
I.— Definition of Sin, 145-148
1. Proof, 146-148
2. Inferences, 148
LL— The Essential Principle of Sin, 148-151
1. Sin as Sensuousness, 149
2. Sin as Finiteness, 149-150
3. Sin as Selfishness, 150-151
Section HI. — Universality of Sin, 152-153
I. — Every human being who has arrived at Moral Conscious- ness has committed acts, or cherished dispositions, con- trary to the Divine Law, 152
II. — Every member of the human race, without exception,
XX11 TABLE OF CONTENTS
possesses a Corrupted Nature, which is a source of
actual sin, and is itself sin, 153
Section IV. — Origin op Sin in the Personal Act or Adam, . . 154-156
I. — The Scriptural Account in Genesis, 154-155
1. Its General Character not Mythical or Allegorical,
but Historical, 154
2. The Course of the Temptation, and the resulting
Fall, 154-155
II. — Difficulties connected with the Fall, considered as the
personal Act of Adam, 155-156
1. How could a holy being Fall ? 155
2. How could God justly permit Satanic Temptation?. 155
3. How could a Penalty so great be justly connected
with Disobedience to so slight a Command ? 155-156
DTI. — Consequences of the Fall — so far as respects Adam, 156-157
1. Death, 156
A. Physical Death, or the Separation of the Soul
from the Body, 156
B. Spiritual Death, or the Separation of the Soul
from God, 156
2. Positive and formal Exclusion from God's Presence, 156-157
Section V. — Imputation of Adam's Sin to his Posterity, 157-169
Scripture Teaching as to Kace-sin and Bace-responsi-
bility, 157-158
I. — Theories of Imputation, 158-166
1. The Pelagian Theory, or Theory of Man's Natural
Innocence, 158-159
2. The Arminian Theory, or Theory of voluntarily
appropriated Depravity, 159-161
3. The New-School Theory, or Theoiy of Condem-
nable Yitiosity, 161-162
4. The Federal Theory, or Theory of Condemnation
by Covenant, 162-164
5. Theory of Mediate Imputation, or Theory of Con-
demnation for Depravity, 164-165
6. Augustinian Theory, or Theory of Adam's Natural
Headship, 165-166
II. — Objections to the Augustinian Theory of Imputation, 167-169
Section VI. — Consequences of Sin to Adam's Posterity, 169-177
I.— Depravity, ] 70-172
1. Depravity Partial or Total? 170
2. Ability or Inability ? 170-172
II.— Guilt, 172-174
1. Nature of Guilt, 172-173
2. Degrees of Guilt, 172-174
HL— Penalty, 174-177
1. Idea of Penalty, 174-175
TABLE OF CONTENTS xxiil
2. Actual Penalty of Sin, 175-177
Section VLI.— The Salvation of Infants, 177-178
PART VI.— SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SAL- VATION THROUGH THE WORK OF CHRIST AND OF THE HOLY SPIRIT, 179-233
Chapter I. — Christology, or the Redemption Wrought by
Chkist, 179-206
Section I. — Historical Preparation for Redemption, 179-180
L — Negative Preparation, in the History of the Heathen
World, 179
II. — Positive Preparation, in the History of Israel, 179-180
Section II. — The Person of Christ, 180-188
I. — Historical Survey of Views respecting the Person of
Christ, 180-181
1. The Ebionites 180
2. The Docetse, 180
3. The Arians, 180
4. The Apollinarians, ... 180-181
5. The Nestorians, 181
6. The Eutychians, 181
7. The Orthodox Doctrine, 181
II. — The two Natures of Christ, — their Reality and Integrity, 181-183
1. The Humanity of Christ, 181-182
A. Its Reality, 181-182
B. Its Integrity, 182
2. The Deity of Christ, 182-183
ELI. — The Union of the two Natures in one Person, 183-188
1. Proof of this Union, 183-184
2. Modern Misrepresentations of this Union, 184-186
A. The Theory of Gess and Beecher, that the
Humanity of Christ is a Contracted and Metamorphosed Deity, 184-185
B. The Theory of Dorner and Rothe, that the
Union between the Divine and the Human Natures is not completed by the Incarnating Act, 185-186
3. The Real Nature of this Union, 186-188
Section HI. — The Two States of Christ, 188-191
I.— The State of Humiliation, 188-190
1. The Nature of Christ's Humiliation, 188-190
A. The Theory of Thomasius, Delitzsch, and
Crosby, that the Humiliation consisted in the Surrender of the Relative Attributes, 188-189
B. The Theory that the Humiliation consisted
in the Surrender of the Independent Exercise
of the Divine Attributes, 189-190
xxiV TABLE OR CONTENTS
2. The Stages of Christ's Humiliation, 190
II.— The State of Exaltation, 190-191
1. The Nature of Christ's Exaltation, 190
2. The Stages of Christ's Exaltation, 190-191
Section IY. — The Officers of Chbist, 191-206
I.— The Prophetic Office of Christ, 191-192
1. The Nature of Christ's Prophetic Work, 191
2. The Stages of Christ's Prophetic Work, 191-192
IL— The Priestly Office of Christ, 192-206
1. Christ's Sacrificial Work, or the Doctrine of the
Atonement, 192-205
General Statement of the Doctrine 192-193
A. Scriptural Methods of Representing the Atone-
ment, 193
B. The Institution of Sacrifice, especially as found
in the Mosaic System, 194-195
C. Theories of the Atonement, 195-203
1st. The Socinian, or Example Theory of the
Atonement, 195-196
2d. The BushneUian, or Moral-Influence
Theory of the Atonement, 196-197
3d. The Grotian, or Governmental Theory
of the Atonement, 197-198
4th. The Irvingian Theory, or Theory of
gradually extirpated Depravity, 198-199
5th. The Anselmic, or Commercial Theory
of the Atonement, 199-200
6th. The Ethical Theory of the Atonement, . 200-203
First, The Atonement as related to Holi- ness in God, , 200-201
Secondly, The Atonement as related to
Humanity in Christ, 201-203
D. Objections to the Ethical Theory of the Atone-
ment, 203-205
E. The Extent of the Atonement, 205
2. Christ's Intercessory Work, 205 206
HI.— The Kingly Office of Christ, 206
Chapter IE. — The Reconciliation of Man to God, or the Application of Redemption through the
Work of the Holy Spirit, 207-233
Section I. — The Application of Christ's Redemption, in
its Preparation, 207-211
I.— Election, 208-210
1. Proof of the Doctrine of Election, 208-209
2. Objections to the Doctrine of Election, 209-210
II.— Calling, 210-211
A. Is God's General Call Sincere ? 210-211
TABLE OF CONTENTS XXV
B. Is God's Special Call Irresistible ? 211
Section II. — The Application of Christ's Redemption, in
its Actual Beginning, 211-229
I.— Union with Christ, 211-214
1. Scripture Representations of this Union, 212
2. Nature of this Union, 212-213
3. Consequences of this Union, 213-214
IT.— Regeneration, 214-219
1. Scripture Representations, 214
2. Necessity of Regeneration, 215
3. The Efficient Cause of Regeneration, 215-216
4. The Instrumentality used in Regeneration, 216-217
5. The Nature of the Change wrought in Regeneration, 218-219 HI. — Conversion, 219-224
1. Repentance, 220-221
Elements of Repentance, 220-221
Explanations of the Scripture Representations, . . . 221
2. Faith, 221-224
Elements of Faith, 221-222
Explanations of the Scripture Representations, .... 222-224
IV.— Justification, 224-229
1. Definition of Justification, 224
2. Proof of the Doctrine of Justification, 224-225
3. Elements of Justification, 225-226
4. Relation of Justification to God's Law and Holiness, 226-227
5. Relation of Justification to Union with Christ and
the Work of the Spirit, 227-228
6. Relation of Justification to Faith, 228
7. Advice to Inquirers demanded by a Scriptural View
of Justification, 229
Section III. — The Application of Christ's Redemption, in
its Continuation, 229-233
I. — Sanctification, 229-232
1. Definition of Sanctification, 229
2. Explanations and Scripture Proof, 229-230
3. Erroneous Views refuted by the Scripture Passages, 230-232
A. The Antinomian, 230
B. The Perfectionist, 231-232
II. — Perseverance, 232-233
1. Proof of the Doctrine of Perseverance, 232
2. Objections to the Doctrine of Perseverance, 232-233
PART VH.— ECCLESIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF
THE CHURCH, 234-257
Chapter I. — The Constitution of the Church, or Church
Polity, 234-243
I.— Definition of the Church, 234-235
XXVI TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. The Church, like the Family and the State, is an
Institution of Divine Appointment, 235
2. The Church, unlike the Family and the State, is a
Voluntary Society, 235
II.— Organization of the Church, 235-238
1. The Fact of Organization, 235-236
2. The Nature of this Organization, 236-237
3. The Genesis of this Organization, 237-238
III.— Government of the Church, 238-242
1. Nature of this Government in General, 238-240
A. Proof that the Government of the Church is
Democratic or Congregational, 238-239
B. Erroneous Views as to Church Government,
refuted by the Scripture Passages, 239-240
(a) The World-church Theory, or the Romanist View, 239
( b ) The National-church Theory, or the
Theory of Provincial or National Churches, 239-240
2. Officers of the Church, 240-242
A. The Number of Offices in the Church is two, . . . 240
B. The Duties belonging to these Offices, 240-241
C. Ordination of Officers, 241-242
( a ) What is Ordination? 241
( b ) Who are to Ordain ? 241-242
3. Discipline of the Church, 242
A. Kinds of Discipline, 242
B. Belation of the Pastor to Discipline, 242
IV. — Belation of Local Churches to one another, 242-243
1. The General Nature of this Relation is that of
Fellowship between Equals, 242
2. This Fellowship involves the Duty of Special Con-
sultation with regard to Matters affecting the common Interest, 243
3. This Fellowship may be broken by manifest Depart-
ures from the Faith or Practice of the Scriptures
on the part of any Church, ... 243
Chaptek II. — The Obdinanoes of the Chukch, 244-257
I.— Baptism, 244-251
1. Baptism an Ordinance of Christ, 244-245
2. The Mode of Baptism, 245-246
A. The Command to Baptize is a Command to
Immerse, 245
B. No Church has the Right to Modify or Dispense
with this Command of Christ, 246
3. The Symbolism of Baptism, 246-247
TABLE OF CONTENTS IXV11
A. Expansion of the Statement as to the Symbolism
of Baptism, 246
B. Inferences from tho Passages referred to, 247
4. The Subjects of Baptism, 247-251
A. Proof that only Persons giving Evidence of
being Regenerated are proper Subjects of Baptism, 247-248
B. Inferences from the Fact that only Persons giv-
ing Evidence of being Regenerate are proper
Subjects of Baptism, 248-249
O. Infant Baptism, 249-251
( a ) Infant Baptism without Warrant in the
Scripture, 249-250
( b ) Infant Baptism expressly Contradicted
by Scripture, 250
( c ) Its Origin in Sacramental Conceptions
of Christianity, 250
( d ) The Reasoning by which it is supported
Unscriptural, Unsound, and Dangerous
in its Tendency, 250-251
( e ) The Lack of Agreement among Pedo-
baptists, 251
(/) The Evil Effects of Infant Baptism, 251
IL- The Lord's Supper, 251-257
1. The Lord's Supper an Ordinance instituted by
Christ, 251-252
2. The Mode of Administering the Lord's Supper, 252
3. The Symbolism of the Lord's Supper, 252-253
A. Expansion of the Statement as to the Symbolism
of the Lord's Supper, 252
B. Inferences from this Statement, 253
4. Erroneous Views of the Lord's Supper, 253-254
A. The Romanist View, 253-254
B. The Lutheran and High Church View 254
5. Prerequisites to Participation in the Lord's Supper, 254-257
A. There are Prerequisites, 254
B. Laid down by Christ and his Apostles, 254-255
C. The Prerequisites are Four, 255-257
First, — Regeneration, 255
Secondly, — Baptism, 255-256
Thirdly,— Church Membership, 256
Fourthly,— An Orderly Walk, 256
D. The Local Church is the Judge whether these
Prerequisites are fulfilled, 256-257
E. Special Objections to Open Communion, 257
PART VLTI.— ESCHATOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF
FINAL THINGS, 258-274
XXV111 TABLE OF CONTENTS
I.— Physical Death, 258-260
That this is not Annihilation, argued :
1. Upon Eational Grounds, 258-259
2, Upon Scriptural Grounds, 259-260
II. — The Intermediate State, 260-262
1. Of the Righteous, 260-261
2. Of the Wicked, 261-262
Eefutation of the two Errors :
(a) That the Soul sleeps, between Death
and the Resurrection, 261
( b ) That the Suffering of the Intermediate
State is Purgatorial, 261
Concluding Remark, 262
III.— The Second Coming of Christ, 262-264
1. The Nature of Christ's Coming, 262
2. The Time of Christ's Coming, 262-263
3. The Precursors of Christ's Coming, 263
4. Relation of Christ's Second Coming to the
Millennium, 263-264
IV.— The Resurrection, 264-266
1. The Exegetical Objection, 265
2. The Scientific Objection, 265-266
V.— The Last Judgment, 266-268
1. The Nature of the Final Judgment, 267
2. The Object of the Final Judgment, 267
3. The Judge in the Final Judgment, 268
4. The Subjects of the Final Judgment, 268
5. The Grounds of the Final Judgment, 268
VI.— The Final States of the Righteous and of the Wicked, .... 268-274
1. Of the Righteous, 268-269
A. Is Heaven a Place as well as a State ? 269
B. Is this Earth to be the Heaven of the Saints ? . . 269
2. Of the Wicked, 269-274
A. Future Punishment is not Annihilation, 270
B. Punishment after Death excludes new Proba-
tion and ultimate Restoration, 270-271
C. This future Punishment is Everlasting, 271-272
D. Everlasting Punishment is not inconsistent
with God's Justice, 272-273
E. Everlasting Punishment is not inconsistent
with God's Benevolence, 273-274
F. Preaching of Everlasting Punishment is not a
hindrance to the success of the Gospel, 274
OUTLINES OF
SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY.
PAET I.
PROLEGOMENA.
CHAPTER I.
IDEA OF THEOLOGY.
I. Definition. — Theology is the science of God and of the relations between God and the universe.
LI. Aim. — The aim of theology is the ascertainment of the facts respect- ing God and the relations between God and the universe, and the exhibi- tion of these facts in their rational unity, as connected parts of a formulated and organic system of truth.
III. Possibility. —The possibility of theology has a threefold grounds 1. In the existence of a God who has relations to the universe ; 2. In the capacity of the human mind for knowing God and certain of these relations ; and 3. In the provision of means by which God is brought into actual con- tact with the mind, or in other words, in the provision of a revelation.
1. In the existence of a God who has relations to the universe. — It has been objected, indeed, that since God and these relations are objects apprehended only by faith, they are not proper objects of knowledge or subjects for science. We reply :
A. Faith is knowledge, and a higher sort of knowledge. — Physical sci- ence also rests upon faith — faith in our own existence, in the existence of a world objective and external to us, and in the existence of other persons than ourselves ; faith in our primitive convictions, such as space, time, cause, substance, design, right ; faith in the trustworthiness of our faculties and in the testimony of our fellow men. But physical science is not thereby invalidated, because this faith, though unlike sense-perception or logical demonstration, is yet a cognitive act of the reason, and may be defined as certitude with respect to matters in which verification is unattainable.
B. Faith is a knowledge conditioned by holy affection. — The faith which apprehends God's being and working is not opinion or imagination. It is certitude with regard to spiritual realities, upon the testimony of our rational nature and upon the testimony of God. Its only peculiarity as a cog- nitive act of the reason is that it is conditioned by holy affection. As the
1
2 POSSIBILITY OF THEOLOGY.
science of aesthetics is a product of reason as including a power of recog- nizing beauty practically inseparable from a love for beauty, and as the science of ethics is a product of reason as including a power of recognizing the morally right practically inseparable from a love for the morally right, so the science of theology is a product of reason, but of reason as including a power of recognizing God which is practically inseparable from a love for God.
C. Faith, therefore, can furnish, and only faith can furnish, fit and sufficient material for a scientific theology. — As an operation of man's higher rational nature, though distinct from ocular vision or from reason- ing, faith is not only a kind, but the highest kind, of knowing. It gives us understanding of realities which to sense alone are inaccessible, namely, God's existence, and some at least of the relations between God and his creation.
2. In the capacity of the human mind for knowing God and certain of these relations. — But it has urged that such knowledge is impossible for the following reasons :
A. Because we can know only phenomena. We reply : (a) We know mental as well as physical phenomena. (b) In knowing phenomena, whether mental or physical, we know substance as underlying the phe- nomena, as manifested through them, and as constituting their ground of unity, (c) Our minds bring to the observation of phenomena not only this knowledge of substance, but also knowledge of time, sjjace, cause, and right, realities which are in no sense phenomenal. Since these objects of knowledge are not phenomenal, the fact that God is not phenomenal can- not prevent us from knowing him.
B. Because we can know only that which bears analogy to our own nature or experience. We reply: (a) It is not essential to knowledge that there be similarity of nature between the knower and the known. We know by difference as well as by likeness. (6) Our past experience, though greatly facilitating new acquisitions, is not the measure of our pos- sible knowledge. Else the first act of knowledge would be inexplicable, and all revelation of higher characters to lower wovdd be precluded, as well as all progress to knowledge which surpasses our present attainments, (c) Even if knowledge depended upon similarity of nature and experience, we might still know God, since we are made in God's image, and there are important analogies between the divine nature and our own.
C. Because we know only that of which we can conceive, in the sense of forming an adequate mental image. We reply : (a) It is true that we know only that of which we can conceive, if by the term "conceive" we mean our distinguishing in thought the object known from all other objects. But, (b) The objection confounds conception with that which is merely its occasional accompaniment and help, namely, the picturing of the object by the imagination. In this sense, conceivability is not a final test of truth, (c) That the formation of a mental image is not essential to conception or knowledge, is plain when we remember that, as a matter of fact, we both conceive and know many things of which we cannot form
POSSIBILITY OF THEOLOGY. 3
a mental image of any sort that in the least corresponds to the reality ; for example, force, cause, law, space, our own minds. So wo may know God, though we cannot form an adequate mental image of him.
D. Because we can know truly only that which we know in whole and not in part. We reply : («) The objection confounds partial knowledge with the knowledge of a part. We know the mind in part, but we do not know a part of the mind. (6) If the objection were valid, no real knowledge of anything would be possible, since we know no single thing in all its relations. We conclude that, although God is a being not com- posed of parts, we may yet have a partial knowledge of him, and this knowledge, though not exhaustive, may yet be real, and adequate to the purposes of science.
E. Because all predicates of God are negative, and therefore furnish no real knowledge. We answer : (a) Predicates derived from our con- sciousness, such as spirit, love, and holiness, are positive. (o) The terms "infinite" and "absolute," moreover, express not merely a negative but a positive idea — the idea, in the former case, of the absence of all limit, the idea that the object thus described goes on and on forever ; the idea, in the latter case, of entire self-sufficiency. Since predicates of God, there- fore, are not merely negative, the argument mentioned above furnishes no valid reason why we may not know him.
F. Because to know is to limit or define. Hence the Absolute as unlimited, and the Infinite as undefined, cannot be known. We answer : (a) God is absolute, not as existing in no relation, but as existing in no necessary relation; and (b) God is infinite, not as excluding all coexistence of the finite with himself, but as being the ground of the finite, and so unfettered by it. (c) God is actually limited by the unchangeablenessof his own attributes and personal distinctions, as well as by his self-chosen relations to the universe he has created and to humanity in the person of Christ. God is therefore limited and defined in such a sense as to render knowledge of him possible.
G. Because all knowledge is relative to the knowing agent; that is, what we know, we know, not as it is objectively, but only as it is related to our own senses and faculties. In reply : (a) We grant that we can know only that which has relation to our faculties. But this is simply to say that we know only that which we come into mental contact with, that is, we know only what we know. But, (6) We deny that what we come into mental contact with is known by us as other than it is. So far as it is known at all, it is known as it is. In other words, the laws of our knowing are not merely arbitrary and regulative, but correspond to the nature of things. We conclude that, in theology, we are equally warranted in assuming that the laws of our thought are laws of God's thought, and that the results of normally conducted thinking with regard to God correspond to the objective reality.
3. In God's actual revelation of himself and certain of these rela- tions.— As we do not in this place attempt a positive proof of God's exist- ence or of man's capacity for the knowledge of God, so we do not now
4 PROLEGOMENA.
attempt to prove that God has brought himself into contact with man's mind by revelation. We shall consider the grounds of this belief here- after. Our aim at present is simply to show that, granting the fact of revelation, a scientific theology is possible. This has been denied upon the following grounds :
A. That revelation, as a making known, is necessarily internal and subjective — either a mode of intelligence, or a quickening of man's cog- nitive powers — and hence can furnish no objective facts such as constitute the proper material for science.
In reply to this objection, urged mainly by idealists in philosophy,
(a) We grant that revelation, to be effective, must be the means of inducing a new mode of intelligence, or in other words, must be under- stood. We grant that this understanding of divine things is impossible without a quickening of man's cognitive powers. We grant, moreover, that revelation, when originally imparted, was often internal and subjective.
(6) But we deny that external revelation is therefore useless or impos- sible. Even if religious ideas sprang wholly from within, an external rev- elation might stir up the dormant powers of the mind. Religious ideas, however, do not spring wholly from within. External revelation can impart them. Man can reveal himself to man by external communica- tions, and, if God has equal power with man, God can reveal himself to man in Like manner.
(c) Hence God's revelation may be, and, as we shall hereafter see, it is, in great part, an external revelation in works and words. The universe is a revelation of God ; God's works in nature precede God's words in history. We claim, moreover, that, in many cases where truth was originally com- municated internally, the same Spirit who communicated it has brought about an external record of it, so that the internal revelation might be handed down to others than those who first received it.
(d) With this external record we shall also see that there is given under proper conditions a special influence of God's Spirit, so to quicken our cognitive powers that the external record reproduces in our minds the ideas with which the minds of the writers were at first divinely filled.
(e) Internal revelations thus recorded, and external revelations thus interpreted, both furnish objective facts which may serve as proper mater- ial for science. Although revelation in its widest sense may include, and as constituting the ground of the possibility of theology does include, both insight and illumination, it may also be used to denote simply a pro- vision of the external means of knowledge, and theology has to do with inward revelations only as they are expressed in, or as they agree with, this objective standard.
B. That many of the truths thus revealed are too indefinite to consti- tute the material for science, because they belong to the region of the feel- ings, because they are beyond our full understanding, or because they are destitute of orderly arrangement. We reply :
RELATION TO RELIGION. 5
(a) Theology has to do with subjective feelings only as they can be defined, and shown to bo effects of objective truth upon tho mind. They are not more obscure than are the facts of morals or of psychology, and tho same objection which woidd exclude such feelings from theology would make these latter sciences impossible.
(6) Those facts of revelation which are beyond our full understanding may, like the nebular hypothesis in astronomy, the atomic theory in chemistry, or the doctrine of evolution in biology, furnish a principle of union between great classes of other facts otherwise irreconcilable. We may define our concepts of God, and even of the Trinity, at least sufficiently to distinguish them from all other concepts ; and whatever difficulty may encumber the putting of them into language only shows the importance of attempting it and the value of even an approximate success.
(c) Even though there were no orderly arrangement of these facts, either in nature or in Scripture, an accurate systematizing of them by the human mind would not therefore be proved impossible, unless a principle were assumed which would show all physical science to be equally impossible. Astronomy and geology are constructed by putting together multitudinous facts which at first sight seem to have no order. So with theology. And yet, although revelation does not present to us a dogmatic system ready- made, a dogmatic system is not only implicitly contained therein, but parts of the system are wrought out in the epistles of the New Testament, as for example in Rom. 5 : 12-19 ; 1 Cor. 15 : 3, 4 ; 8 : 6 ; 1 Tim. 3:16; Heb. 6 : 1, 2.
TV. Necessity. — The necessity of theology has its grounds
(a) In the organizing instinct of the human mind. This organizing principle is a part of our constitution. The mind cannot endure confusion or apparent contradiction in known facts. The tendency to harmonize and unify its knowledge appears as soon as the mind becomes reflective ; just in proportion to its endowments and culture does the impulse to sys- tematize and formulate increase. This is true of all departments of human inquiry, but it is peculiarly true of our knowledge of God. Since the truth with regard to God is the most important of all, theology meets the deepest want of man's rational nature. Theology is a rational necessity. If all existing theological systems were destroyed to-day, new systems would rise to-morrow. So inevitable is the operation of this law, that those who most decry theology show nevertheless that they have made a theology for them- selves, and often one sufficiently meagre and blundering. Hostility to theology, where it does not originate in mistaken fears for the corruption of God's truth or in a naturally illogical structure of mind, often proceeds from a license of speculation which cannot brook the restraints of a com- plete Scriptural system.
(6) In the relation of systematic truth to the development of charac- ter. Truth thoroughly digested is essential to the growth of Christian character in the individual and in the church. All knowledge of God has its influence upon character, but most of all the knowledge of spiritual facts in their relations. Theology cannot, as has sometimes been objected,
6 PEOLEGOMENA.
deaden the religions affections, since it only draws ont from their sources and puts into rational connection with each other the truths which are best adapted to nourish the religious affections. On the other hand, the strongest Christians are those who have the firmest grasp upon the great doctrines of Christianity ; the heroic ages of the church are those which have witnessed most consistently to them ; the piety that can be injured by the systematic exhibition of them must be weak, or mystical, or mistaken.
(c) In the importance to the 'preacher of definite and just views of Christian doctrine. His chief intellectual qualification must be the power clearly and comprehensively to conceive, and accurately and power- fully to express, the truth. He can be the agent of the Holy Spirit in con- verting and sanctifying men, only as he can wield ' ' the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God" ( Eph. 6 : 17), or, in other language, only as he can impress truth upon the minds and consciences of his hearers. Nothing more certainly nullifies his efforts than confusion and inconsistency in his statements of doctrine. His object is to replace obscure and erroneous conceptions among his hearers by those which are correct and vivid. He cannot do this without knowing the facts with regard to God in their relations — knowing them, in short, as parts of a system. With this truth he is put in trust. To mutilate it or misrepresent it, is not only sin against the Revealer of it,— it may prove the ruin of men's souls. The best safeguard against such mutilation or misrepresen- tation, is the diligent study of the several doctrines of the faith in their relations to one another, and especially to the central theme of theology, the person and work of Jesus Christ.
(d) In the intimate connection between correct doctrine and the safety and aggressive power of the church. The safety and progress of the church is dependent upon her " holding the pattern of sound words " (2 Tim. 1 : 13), and serving as "pillar and ground of the truth " ( 1 Tim. 3: 15). Defective understanding of the truth results sooner or later in defects of organization, of operation, and of life. Thorough comprehen- sion of Christian truth as an organized system furnishes, on the other hand, not only an invaluable defense against heresy and immorality, but also an indispensable stimulus and instrument in aggressive labor for the world's conversion.
(e) In the direct and indirect injunctions of Scripture. The Scrip- ture urges upon us the thorough and comprehensive study of the truth (John 5:39, marg., — "Search the Scriptures"), the comparing and harmonizing of its different parts (1 Cor. 2: 13 — "comparing spiritual things with spiritual"), the gathering of all about the great central fact of revelation (Col. 1 : 27 — "which is Christ in you, the hope of glory"), the preaching of it in its wholeness as well as in its due proportions (2 Tim. 4 : 2 — " Preach the word"). The minister of the Gospel is called "a scribe who hath been made a disciple to the kingdom of heaven" (Mat. 13 : 52); the "pastors "of the churches are at the same time to be "teachers" (Eph. 4 : 11); the bishop must be "apt to teach" (1 Tim. 3 : 2), " handling aright the word of truth " ( 2 Tim. 2 : 15 ), "holding to the faithfid word which is according to the teaching, that he may be 'able both to exhort in the sound doctrine and to convict the gainsay ers " (Tit. 1:9).
NECESSITY OF THEOLOGY. 7
V. Relation to Religion. — Theology ami religion are related to each other as effects, in different spheres, of the same cause. As theology is an effect produced in the sphere of systematic thought by the facts respecting God and the universe, so religion is an effect which these same facts pro- duce in the sphere of individual and collective life. With regard to the term ' religion', notice :
1. Derivation.
(a) The derivation from religdre, 'to bind back' (man to God), is negatived by the authority of Cicero and of the best modern etymologists; by the difficulty, on this hypothesis, of explaining such forms as religio, r< ligens; and by the necessity, in that case, of presupposing a fuller knowledge of sin and redemption than was common to the ancient world.
(6) The more correct derivation is from rclcgerc, " to go over again," "carefully to ponder." Its original meaning is therefore "reverent observance " (of duties due to the gods).
2. False Conceptions.
(a) Religion is not, as Hegel declared, a kind of knowing ; for it woidd then be only an incomplete form of philosophy, and the measure of knowledge in each case would be the measure of piety.
(6) Religion is not, as Schleiermacher held, the mere feeling of depend- ence ; for such feeling of dependence is not religious, unless exercised toward God and accompanied by moral effort.
(c) Religion is not, as Kant maintained, morality or moral action ; for morality is conformity to an abstract law of right, while religion is essen- tially a relation to a person, from whom the soul receives blessing and to whom it surrenders itself in love and obedience.
3. Essential Idea.
Religion in its essential idea is a life in God, a life lived in recognition of God, in communion with God, and under control of the indwelling 'Spirit of God. Since it is a life, it cannot be described as consisting solely in the exercise of any one of the powers of intellect, affection, or will. As physical life involves the unity and cooperation of all the organs of the body, so religion, or spiritual life, involves the united working of all the powers of the soul. To feeling, however, we must assign the logical priority, since holy affection toward God, imparted in regeneration, is the condition of truly knowing God and of truly serving him.
4. Inferences.
From this definition of religion it follows :
(a) That in strictness there is but one religion. Man is a religious being, indeed, as having the capacity for this divine life. He is actually religious, whoever, only when he enters into this living relation to God. False religions are the caricatures which men given to sin, or the imaginations which men groping after light, form of this life of the soul in God.
(6) That the content of religion is greater than that of theology. The facts of religion come within the range of theology only so far as they can be definitely conceived, accurately expressed in language, and brought into rational relation to each other.
8 PKOLEGOMENA.
(c) That religion is to be distinguished from formal worship, which is simply the outward expression of religion. As such expression, worship is "formal communion between God and his people." In it God speaks to man, and man to God. It therefore properly includes the reading of Scripture and preaching on the side of God, and prayer and song on the side of the people.
CHAPTER II.
MATERIAL OF THEOLOGY.
I. Sources of Theology. — God himself, in the last analysis, must be the only source of knowledge with regard to his own being aud relations. Theology is therefore a summary and explanation of the content of God's self -revelations. These are, first, the revelation of God in nature ; secondly and supremely, the revelation of God in the Scriptures.
1. Scripture and Nature. By nature we here mean not only physical facts, or facts with regard to the substances, properties, forces, and laws of the material world, but also spiritual facts, or facts with regard to the intellectual and moral constitution of man, and the orderly arrangement of human society aud history.
(a) Natural theology. — The universe is a source of theology. The Scriptures assert that God has revealed himself in nature. There is not only an outward witness to his existence and character in the constitution and government of the universe (Ps. 19 ; Acts 14 :17 ; Rom. 1: 20), but an inward witness to his existence and character in the heart of every man (Rom. 1 :17, 18, 19, 20, 32 ; 2 : 15). The systematic exhibition of these facts, whether derived from observation, history or science, constitutes natural theology.
( b ) Natural theology supplemented. — The Christian revelation is the chief soiu*ce of theology. The Scriptures plainly declare that the revela- tion of God in nature does not supply all the knowledge which a sinner needs ( Acts 17 : 23 ; Eph. 3:9). This revelation is therefore supplemented by another, in which divine attributes and mercifid provisions only dimly shadowed forth in nature are made known to men. This latter revela- tion consists of a series of supernatural events and communications, the record of which is presented in the Scriptures.
( c) The Scriptures the final standard of appeal. — Science and Scripture throw light upon each other. The same divine Spirit who gave both reve- lations is still present, enabling the believer to interpret the one by the other and thus progressively to come to the knowledge of the truth. Because of our finiteneea and sin, the total record in Scripturo of God's past communications is a more trustworthy source of theology than are our conclusions from nature or our private impressions of the teaching of the Spirit. Theology therefore looks to the Scripture itself as its chief source of material and its final standard of appeal.
(d) The theology of Scripture not unnatural. — Though wo speak of the systematized truths of nature as constituting natural theology, we are not to infer that Scriptural theology is unnatural. Since the Scriptures
9
10 PROLEGOMENA.
have the same author as nature, the same principles are illustrated in the one as in the other. All the doctrines of the Bible have their reason in that same nature of God which constitutes the basis of all material things. Christianity is a supplementary dispensation, not as contradicting, or cor- recting errors in, natural theology, but as more perfectly revealing the truth. Christianity is indeed the ground-plan upon which the whole creation is built — the original and eternal truth of which natural theology is but a partial expression. Hence the theology of nature and the theol- ogy of Scripture are mutually dependent. Natural theology not only pre- pares the way for, but it receives stimulus and aid from, Scriptural theology. Natural theology may now be a source of truth, which, before the Scriptures came, it could not furnish.
2. Scripture and Rationalism. Although the Scriptures make known much that is beyond the power of man's unaided reason to discover or fully to comprehend, their teachings, when taken together, in no way con- tradict a reason conditioned in its activity by a holy affection and enlight- ened by the Spirit of God. To reason in the large sense, as including the mind's power of cognizing God and moral relations — not in the narrow sense of mere reasoning, or the exercise of the purely logical faculty — the Scriptures continually appeal.
A. The proper office of reason, in this large sense, is : (a) To furnish us with those primary ideas of space, time, cause, substance, design, right, and God, which are the conditions of all subsequent knowledge. (6) To judge with regard to man's need of a special and supernatural revelation, (c) To examine the credentials of communications professing to be, or of documents professing to record, such a revelation, (d) To estimate and reduce to system the facts of revelation, when these have been found pro- perly attested, (r) To deduce from these facts their natural and logical conclusions. Thus reason itself prepares the way for a revelation above reason, and wan-ants an implicit trust in such revelation when once given.
B. Bationalism, on the other hand, holds reason to be the ultimate source of all religious truth, while Scripture is authoritative only so far as its revelations agree with previous conclusions of reason, or can be rationally demonstrated. Every form of rationalism, therefore, commits at least one of the following errors : (a) That of confounding reason with mere rea- soning, or the exercise of the logical intelligence. (6) That of ignoring the necessity of a holy affection as the condition of all right reason in religious things, (c) That of denying our dependence in our present state of sin upon God's past revelations of himself, (c?) That of regarding the unaided reason, even its normal and unbiased state, as capable of dis- covering, comprehending, and demonstrating all religious truth.
3. Scripture and Mysticism. As rationalism recognizes too little as coming from God, so mysticism recognizes too much.
A. True mysticism. — "We have seen that there is an illumination of the minds of all believers by the Holy Spirit. The Spirit, however, makes no new revelation of truth, but uses for his instrument the truth already revealed by Christ in nature and in the Scriptures. The illuminating
LIMITATIONS OF THEOLOGY. 11
work of the Spirit is therefore an opening of men's minds to understand Christ's previous revelations. As one initiated into the mysteries of Chris- tianity, every true believer may be called a mystic. True mysticism is that higher knowledge and fellowship which the Holy Spirit gives through the use of nature and Scripture as subordinate and principal means.
B. False mysticism. — Mysticism, however, as the term is commonly used, errs in holding to the attainment of religious knowledge by direct coniniunication from God, and by passive absorption of the hmnan activi- ties into the divine. It either partially or wholly loses sight of (a) the out- ward organs of revelation, nature and the Scriptures ; (/;) the activity of the human powers in the reception of all religious knowledge ; (c) the personality of man, and, by consequence, the personality of God.
4. Scripture and Romanism. While the history of doctrine, as show- ing the progressive apprehension and unfolding by the church of the truth contained in nature and Scripture, is a subordinate source of theology, Protestantism recognizes the Bible as under Christ the primary and final authority.
Komanism, on the other hand, commits the two-fold error (a) Of making the church, and not the Scriptures, the immediate and sufficient source of religious knowledge ; and (6) Of making the relation of the individual to Christ depend upon his relation to the church, instead of making his rela- tion to the church depend upon, follow, and express his relation to Christ.
II. Limitations of Theology. — Although theology derives its mate- rial from God's two-fold revelation, it does not profess to give an exhaus- tive knowledge of God and of the relations between God and the universe. After showing what material we have, we must show what material we have not. We have indicated the sources of theology ; we now examine its limi- tations. Theology has its limitations :
(a) In the finiteness of the human understand in;/. This gives rise to a class of necessary mysteries, or mysteries connected with the infinity and incomprehensibleness of the divine nature (Job 11 : 7 ; Eom. 11 : 33).
(b) In the imperfect state of science, both natural and metaphysical. This gives rise to a class of accidental mysteries, or mysteries which consist in the apparently irreconcilable nature of truths, which, taken separately, are perfectly comprehensible.
(c) In the inadequacy of language. Since language is the medium through which truth is expressed and formulated, the invention of a pro- per terminology in theology, as in every other science, is a condition and criterion of its progress. The Scriptures recognize a peculiar difficulty in putting spiritual truths into earthly language ( 1 Cor. 2 : 13 ; 2 Cor. 3:6; 12 : 4 ).
(d) In the incompleteness of our knowledge of the Scriptures. Since it is not the mere letter of the Scriptures that constitutes the truth, the progress of theology is dependent upon hermeneutics, or the interpre- tation of the word of God.
12 PROLEGOMENA.
(e) In the silence of written revelation. For our discipline and pro- bation, much is probably hidden from us, which we might even with our l^resent powers comprehend.
(/) In the lack of spiritual discernment caused by sin. Since holy affection is a condition of religious knowledge, all moral imperfection in the individual Christian and in the church serves as a hindrance to the working out of a complete theology.
III. Relations op Material to Peogress in Theology.
(a) A perfect system of theology is impossible. We do not expect to construct such a system. All science but reflects the present attainment of the human mind. No science is complete or finished. However it may be with the sciences of nature and of man, the science of God will never amount to an exhaustive knowledge. We must not expect to dem- onstrate all Scripture doctrines upon rational grounds, or even in every case to see the principle of connection between them. Where we cannot do this, we must, as in every other science, set the revealed facts in their places and wait for further light, instead of ignoring or rejecting any of them because we cannot understand them or their relation to other parts of our system.
(6) Theology is nevertheless progressive. It is progressive in the sense that our subjective understanding of the facts with regard to God, and our consequent expositions of these facts, may and do become more perfect. But theology is not progressive in the sense that its objective facts change, either in their number or their nature. With Martineau we may say : "Religion has been reproached with not being progressive ; it makes amends by being imperishable." Though our knowledge may be imperfect, it will have great value still. Our success in constructing a theology will depend upon the proportion which clearly expressed facts of Scripture bear to mere inferences, and upon the degree in which they all cohere about Christ, the central person and theme.
CHAPTER III.
METHOD OF THEOLOGY.
I. Requisites to the Study. — The requisites to the successful study of theology have already in part been indicated in speaking of its limita- tions. In spite of some repetition, however, we mention the following :
(«) A disciplined mind. Only such a mind can patiently collect the facts, hold in its grasp many facts at once, educe by continuous reflection their connecting principles, suspend final judgment until its conclusions are verified by Scripture and experience.
(6) An intuitional as distinguished from a merely logical habit of mind, — or, trust in the mind's primitive convictions, as well as in its processes of reasoning. The theologian must have insight as well as under- standing. He must accustom himself to ponder spiritual facts as well as those which are sensible and material ; to see things in their inner relations as well as in then- outward forms ; to cherish confidence in the reality and the unity of truth.
(c) An acquaintance with physical, mental, and moral science. The method of conceiving and expressing Scripture truth is so affected by our elementary notions of these sciences, and the weapons with which theology is attacked and defended are so commonly drawn from them as arsenals, that the student cannot afford to be ignorant of them.
(d) A knowledge of the original languages of the Bible. This is necessary to enable us not only to determine the meaning of the funda- mental terms of Scripture, such as holiness, sin, propitiation, justification, but also to interpret statements of doctrine by their connections with the context.
(e) A holy affection toward God. Only the renewed heart can pro- perly feel its need of divine revelation, or understand that revelation when given.
(/) The enlightening influence of the Holy Spirit. As only the Spirit fathoms the things of God, so only he can illuminate our minds to apprehend them.
II. Divisions of Theology. — Theology is commonly divided into Bibli- cal, Historical, Systematic, and Practical.
1. Biblical Theology aims to arrange and classify the facts of revelation, confining itself to the Scriptures for its material, and treating of doctrine only so far as it was developed at the close of the apostolic age.
13
14 PROLEGOMENA.
2. Historical Theology traces the development of the Biblical doctrines from the time of the apostles to the present day, and gives account of the results of this development in the life of the church.
3. Systematic Theology takes the material furnished by Biblical and by Historical Theology, and with this material seeks to build up into an organic and consistent whole all our knowledge of God and of the relations between God and the universe, whether this knowledge be originally derived from nature or from the Scriptures.
4. Practical Theology is the system of truth considered as a means of renewing and sanctifying men, or, in other words, theology in its publica- tion and enforcement.
III. History of Systematic Theology.
1. In the Eastern Church, Systematic Theology may be said to have had its beginning and end in John of Damascus (700-760).
2. In the Western Church, we may ( with Hagenbach ) distinguish three periods :
(a) The period of Scholasticism, — introduced by Peter Lombard (1100-1160), and reaching its culmination in Thomas Aquinas (1221-1274) and Duns Scotus (1265-1308).
( b ) The period of Symbolism, — represented by the Lutheran theol- ogy of Philip Melanchthon (1497-1560), and the Beformed theology of John Calvin (1509-1564) ; the former connecting itself with the Analytic theology of Cahxtus (1585-1656), and the latter with the Federal theology of Cocceius (1603-1669).
(c) The period of Criticism and Speculation, — in its three divisions : the Bationalistic, represented by Sender (1725-1791) ; the Transitional, by Schleiermacher (1768-1834) ; the Evangelical, by Nitzsch, Miiller, Tholuck and Dorner.
3. Among theologians of views diverse from the prevailing Protes- tant faith, may be mentioned :
(a) Bellarmine (1542-1621), the Boman Catholic. (6) Arminius (1560-1609), the opponent of predestination. (e) Laelius Socinus (1525-1562), and Faustus Socinus (1539-1604), the leaders of the modern Unitarian movement.
4. British Theology, represented by :
(a) The Baptists, John Bunyan (1628-1688), John Gill (1697-1771), and Andrew Fuller (1754-1815).
(b) The Puritans, John Owen (1616-1683), Bichard Baxter (1615-1691), John Howe (1530-1705), and Thomas Bidgeley (1666-1734).
(c) The Scotch Presbyterians, Thomas Boston (1676-1732), John Dick (1764-1833), and Thomas Chalmers (1780-1847).
(d) The Methodists, John Wesley (1703-1791), and Bichard "Watson (1781-1833).
ORDER OF TREATMENT IN SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY. 15
(e) The Quakers, George Fox (1624-1691), and Robert Barclay (1648- 1690).
(/) The English Churchmen, Richard Hooker (1553-1600), Gilbert Burnet (1613-1715), and John Pearson (1613-1686).
5. American theology, running in two lines:
(a) The Reformed system of Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758), modified successively by Joseph Bellamy (1719-1790), Samuel Hopkins (1721-1803), Timothy Dwight (1752-1817), Nathanael Emmons (1745-1840), Leonard Woods (1774-1854), Charles G. Finney (1792-1875), Nathaniel W. Taylor (1786-1858), and Horace BushneU (1802-1876). Calvinism, as thus modified, is often called the New England, or New School, theology.
(6) The older Calvinism, represented by Charles Hodge the father (1797- 1878) and A. A. Hodge the son (1823-1886), together with Henry B. Smith ( 1815-1877 ), Robert J. Breckinridge ( 1800-1871 ), Samuel J. Baird, and William G. T. Shedd (1820-1894). All these, although with minor differences, hold to views of human depravity and divine grace more nearly conformed to the doctrine of Augustine and Calvin, and are for this reason distinguished from the New England theologians and their followers by the popular title of Old School.
IV. Order of Treatment in Systematic Theology.
1. Various methods of arranging the topics of a theological system.
(a) The Analytical method of Calixtus begins with the assumed end of all things, blessedness, and thence passes to the means by which it is secured. (6) The Trinitarian method of Leydecker and Martensen regards Christian doctrine as a manifestation successively of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, (c) The Federal method of Cocceius, Witsius, and Boston treats theology under the two covenants, (d) The Anthropological method of Chalmers and Rothe ; the former beginning with the Disease of Man and passing to the Remedy ; the latter dividing his Dogmatik into the Consciousness of Sin and the Consciousness of Redemption, (e) The Christological method of Hase, Thomasius and Andrew Fuller treats of God, man, and sin, as presuppositions of the person and work of Christ. Mention may also be made of (/) The Historical method, followed by Ursinus, and adopted in Jonathan Edwards's History of Redemption ; and {g) The Allegorical method of Dannhauer, in which man is described as a wanderer, life as a road, the Holy Spirit as a light, the church as a candle- stick, God as the end, and heaven as the home ; so Bunyan's Holy War, and Howe's Living Temple.
2. The Synthetic Method, which we adopt in this compendium, is both the most common and the most logical method of arranging the topics of theology. This method proceeds from causes to effects, or, in the language of Hagenbach ( Hist. Doctrine, 2 : 152 ), " starts from the highest principle, God, and proceeds to man, Christ, redemption, and finally to the end of all things. " In such a treatment of theology we may best arrange our topics in the following order :
16 PROLEGOMENA.
1st. The existence of God.
2d. The Scriptures a revelation from God.
3d. The nature, decrees and works of God.
4th. Man, in his original likeness to God and subsequent apostasy.
5th. Redemption, through the work of Christ and of the Holy Spirit.
6th. The nature and laws of the Christian church.
7th. The end of the present system of things.
V. Text-books in Theology, valuable for reference :-
1. Confessions: Schaff, Creeds of Christendom.
2. Compendiums : H. B. Smith, System of Christian Theology ; A. A. Hodge, Outlines of Theology ; E. H. Johnson, Outline of Systematic Theology ; Hovey, Manual of Theology and Ethics ; W. N. Clarke, Outline of Christian Theology ; Hase, Hutterus Redivivus ; Luthardt, Compendium der Dogmatik ; Kurtz, Religionslehre.
3. Extended Treatises : Dorner, System of Christian Doctrine ; Shedd, Dogmatic Theology ; Calvin, Institutes ; Charles Hodge, Systematic Theology ; Van Oosterzee, Christian Dogmatics ; Baird, Elohim Revealed ; Luthardt, Fundamental, Saving, and Moral Truths ; Phillippi, Glaubens- lehre ; Thomasius, Christi Person und Werk.
4. Collected Works : Jonathan Edwards ; Andrew Fuller.
5. Histories of Doctrine : Harnack ; Hagenbach ; Shedd ; Fisher ; Sheldon ; Orr, Progress of Dogma.
6. Monographs : Julius Muller, Doctrine of Sin ; Shedd, Discourses and Essays ; Liddon, Our Lord's Divinity ; Dorner, History of the Doctrine of the Person of Christ ; Dale, Atonement ; Strong, Christ in Creation ; Upton, Hibbert Lectures.
7. Theism : Martineau, Study of Religion ; Harris, Philosophical Basis of Theism ; Strong, Philosophy and Religion ; Bruce, Apologetics ; Drummond, Ascent of Man ; Griffith-Jones, Ascent through Christ.
8. Christian Evidences : Butler, Analogy of Natural and Revealed Religion ; Fisher, Grounds of Theistic and Christian Belief ; Row, Bampton Lectures for 1877 ; Peabody, Evidences of Christianity ; Mair, Christian Evidences ; Fairbairn, Philosophy of the Christian Religion ; Matheson, Spiritual Development of St. Paul.
9. Intellectual Philosophy : Stout, Handbook of Psychology ; Bowne, Metaphysics ; Porter, Human Intellect ; Hill, Elements of Psychology ; Dewey, Psychology.
10. Moral Philosophy: Robinson, Principles and Practice of Morality ; Smyth, Christian Ethics ; Porter, Elements of Moral Science ; Calderwood, Moral Philosophy ; Alexander, Moral Science ; Robins, Ethics of the Christian Life.
11. General Science : Todd, Astronomy ; Wentworth and Hill, Physics ; Remsen, Chemistry ; Brigham, Geology ; Parker, Biology ; Martin, Physiology ; Ward, Fairbanks, or West, Sociology ; Walker, Political Economy.
TEXT-BOOKS IN THEOLOGY. 17
12. Theological Encyclopaedias : Schaff-Herzog ( English ) ; McClin- tock and Strong ; Herzog (Second German Edition).
13. Bible Dictionaries : Hastings ; Davis -, Cheyne ; Smith (edited by Hackett ).
11. Commentaries: Meyer, on the New Testament; Philippi, Lange, Shedd, Sauday, on the Epistle to the Romans ; Godet, on John's Gospel ; Light foot, on Philippians and Colossians ; Expositor's Bible, on the Old Testament books.
15. Bibles: American Revision (standard edition); Revised Greek- English New Testament ( published by Harper & Brothers); Annotated Paragraph Wble (published by the London Religions Tract Society) Stier and TL tile, Polyglotten-Bibeh
PART II.
THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
CHAPTER I.
ORIGIN" OF OUR IDEA OF GOD'S EXISTENCE.
God is the infinite and perfect Spirit in whom all things have their source, support, and end.
The existence of God is a first truth ; in other words, the knowledge of God's existence is a rational intuition. Logically, it precedes and con- ditions all observation and reasoning. Chronologically, only reflection upon the phenomena of nature and of mind occasions its rise in con- sciousness.
I. FlKST TRUTHS IN GENERAL.
1. Their nature.
A. Negatively. — A first truth is not (a) Truth written prior to conscious- ness upon the substance of the soul — for such passive knowledge implies a materialistic view of the soul ; (6) Actual knowledge of which the soul finds itself in possession at birth — for it cannot be proved that the soul has such knowledge ; (c) An idea, undeveloped at birth, but which has the power of self-development apart from observation and experience — for this is contrary to all we know of the laws of mental growth.
B. Positively. — A first truth is a knowledge which, though developed upon occasion of observation and reflection, is not derived from observa- tion and reflection,— a knowledge on the contrary which has such logical priority that it must be assumed or supposed, in order to make any obser- vation or reflection possible. Such truths are not, therefore, recognized first in order of time ; some of them are assented to somewhat late in the mind's growth ; by the great majority of men they are never consciously formulated at all. Yet they constitute the necessary assumptions upon which all other knowledge rests, and the mind has not only the inborn capacity to evolve them so soon as the proper occasions are presented, but the recognition of them is inevitable so soon as the mind begins to give account to itself of its own knowledge.
2. Their criteria. The criteria by which first truths are to be tested are three :
18
THE EXISTENCE OF GOD A FIRST TRUTH. 19
A. Their universality. By this wo mean, not that all men assent to them or understand them when propounded in scientific form, but that all men manifest a practical belief in them by their language, actions, and expectations.
B. Their necessity. By this we mean, not that it is impossible to deny these truths, but that the mind is compelled by its very constitution to recognize them upon the occurrence of the proper conditions, and to employ them in its arguments to prove their non-existence.
0. Their logical independence and priority. By this we mean that these truths can be resolved into no others, and proved by no others ; that they are presupposed in the acquisition of all other knowledge, and can therefore be derived from no other source than an original cognitive power of the mind.
II. The Existence of God a first truth.
1. That the knowledge of God's existence answers the first criterion of universality, is evident from the following considerations :
A. It is an acknowledged fact that the vast majority of men have actu- ally recognized the existence of a spiritual being or beings, upon whom they conceived themselves to be dependent.
B. Those races and nations which have at first seemed destitute of such knowledge have uniformly, upon further investigation, been found to pos- sess it, so that no tribe of men with winch we have thorough acquaintance can be said to be without an object of worship. We may presume that further knowledge will show this to be true of all.
C. This conclusion is corroborated by the fact that those individuals, in heathen or in Christian lands, who profess themselves to be without any knowledge of a spiritual power or powers above them, do yet indirectly manifest the existence of such an idea in their minds and its positive influ- ence over them.
D. This agreement among individuals and nations so widely separated in time and place can be most satisfactorily explained by supposing that it has its ground, not in accidental circumstances, but in the nature of man as man. The diverse and imperfectly developed ideas of the supreme Being which prevail among men are best accounted for as misinterpretations and perversions of an intuitive conviction common to all.
2. That the knowledge of God's existence answers the second criterion of necessity, will be seen by considering :
A. That men, under circumstances fitted to call forth this knowledge, cannot avoid recognizing the existence of God. In contemplating finite existence, there is inevitably suggested the idea of an infinite Being as its correlative. Upon occasion of the mind's perceiving its own finiteness, dependence, responsibility, it immediately and necessarily perceives the existence of an infinite and unconditioned Being upon whom it is depend- ent and to whom it is responsible.
20 THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
B. That men, in virtue of their humanity, have a capacity for religion. This recognized capacity for religion is proof that the idea of God is a neces- sary one. If the mind upon proper occasion did not evolve this idea, there would be nothing in man to which religion could appeal.
C. That he who denies God's existence must tacitly assume that existence in his very argument, by employing logical processes whose validity rests upon the fact of God's existence. The full proof of this belongs under the next head.
3. That the knowledge of God's existence answers the third criterion of logical independence and priority, may be shown as follows :
A. It is presupposed in all other knowledge as its logical condition and foundation. The validity of the simplest mental acts, such as sense-percep- tion, self-consciousness, and memory, depends upon the assumption that a God exists who has so constituted our minds that they give us knowledge of things as they are.
B. The more complex processes of the mind, such as induction and de- duction, can be relied on only by presupposing a thinking Deity who has made the various parts of the universe and the various aspects of truth to correspond to each other and to the investigating faculties of man.
C. Our primitive belief in final cause, or, in other words, our convic- tion that all things have their ends, that design pervades the universe, involves a belief in God's existence. In assuming that there is a universe, that the universe is a rational whole, a system of thought-relations, we assume the existence of an absolute Thinker, of whose thought the universe is an expression.
D. Our primitive belief in moral obligation, or, in other words, our conviction that right has universal authority, involves the belief in God's existence. In assuming that the universe is a moral whole, we assume the existence of an absolute Will, of whose righteousness the universe is an expression.
To repeat these four points in another form — the intuition of an Abso- lute Reason is (a) the necessary presupposition of all other knowledge, so that we cannot know anything else to exist except by assuming first of all that God exists ; (fi) the necessary basis of all logical thought, so that we cannot put confidence in any one of our reasoning processes except by taking for granted that a thinking Deity has constructed our minds with reference to the universe and to truth ; (c) the necessary implication of our primitive belief in design, so that we can assume all things to exist for a purpose, only by making the prior assumption that a purposing God exists — can regard the universe as a thought, only by postulating the existence of an absolute Thinker ; and (d) the necessary foundation of our convic- tion of moral obligation, so that we can believe in the universal authority of right, only by assuming that there exists a God of righteousness who reveals his will both in the individual conscience and in the moral universe at large. We cannot prove that God is ; but we can show that, in order to the existence of any knowledge, thought, reason, conscience, in man, man must assume that God is.
OTIIER SUPPOSED SOURCES. 21
LH. Other Supposed Sources op our Idea of God's Existence.
Our proof that the idea of God's existence is a rational intuition will not be complete, until wo show that attempts to account in other ways for the origin of the idea are insufficient, and require as their presupposition the very intuition which they would supplant or reduce to a secondary place. We claim that it cannot be derived from any other source than an original cognitive power of the mind.
1. Not from external revelation, — whether communicated (a) through the Scriptures, or (6) through tradition ; for, unless man had from another source a previous knowledge of the existence of a God from whom such a revelation might come, the revelation itself could have no authority for him.
2. Not from experience, — whether this mean (a) the sense-perception and reflection of the individual (Locke), (6) the accumulated results of the sensations and associations of past generations of the race (Herbert Spen- cer), or (e) the actual contact of our sensitive nature with God, the super- sensible reality, through the religious feeling (Newman Smyth).
The first form of this theory is inconsistent with the fact that the idea of God is not the idea of a sensible or material object, nor a combination of such ideas. Since the spiritual and infinite are direct opposites of the material and finite, no experience of the latter can account for our idea of the former.
The second form of the theory is open to the objection that the very first experience of the first man, equally with man's latest experience, presup- poses this intuition, as well as the other intuitions, and therefore cannot be the cause of it. Moreover, even though this theory of its origin were cor- rect, it would still be impossible to think of the object of the intuition as not existing, and the intuition would still represent to us the highest meas- ure of certitude at present attainable by man. If the evolution of ideas is toward truth instead of falsehood, it is the part of wisdom to act upon the hypothesis that our primitive belief is veracious.
The third form of the theory seems to make God a sensuous object, to reverse the proper order of knowing and feeling, to ignore the fact that in all feeling there is at least some knowledge of an object, and to forget that the validity of this very feeling can be maintained only by previously assuming the existence of a rational Deity.
3. Not from reasoning, — because
(a) The actual rise of this knowledge in the great majority of minds is not the result of any conscious process of reasoning. On the other hand, upon occurrence of the proper conditions, it flashes upon the soul with the quickness and force of an immediate revelation.
( b ) The strength of men's faith in God's existence is not proportioned to the strength of the reasoning faculty. On the other hand, men of greatest logical power are often inveterate sceptics, while men of unwavering faith are found among those who cannot even understand the arguments for God's existence.
22 THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
(c) There is more in this knowledge than reasoning could ever have furnished. Men do not limit their belief in God to the just conclusions of argument. The arguments for the divine existence, valuable as they are for purposes to be shown hereafter, are not sufficient by themselves to warrant our conviction that there exists an infinite and absolute Being. It will appear upon examination that the a priori argument is capable of proving only an abstract and ideal proposition, but can never conduct us to the existence of a real Being. It will appear that the a posteriori arguments, from merely finite existence, can never demonstrate the existence of the infinite. In the words of Sir Win. Hamilton (Discussions, 23 ) — "A dem- onstration of the absolute from the relative is logically absurd, as in such a syllogism we must collect in the conclusion what is not distributed in the premises" — in short, from finite premises we cannot draw an infinite conclusion.
( d) Neither do men arrive at the knowledge of God's existence by infer- ence; for inference is condensed syllogism, and, as a form of reasoning, is equally open to the objection just mentioned. We have seen, moreover, that all logical processes are based upon the assumption of God's existence. Evidently that which is presupposed in all reasoning cannot itself be proved by reasoning.
TV. Contents of this Intuition.
1. In this fundamental knowledge that God is, it is necessarily implied that to some extent men know intuitively what God is, namely, ( a ) a Reason in which their mental processes are grounded ; ( b ) a Power above them upon which they are dependent ; ( c ) a Perfection which imposes law upon their moral natures ; ( d ) a Personality which they may recognize in prayer and worship.
In maintaining that we have a rational intuition of God, we by no means imply that a presentative intuition of God is impossible. Such a presenta- tive intuition was perhaps characteristic of unfallen man ; it does belong at times to the Christian ; it will be the blessing of heaven ( Mat. 5:8 — "the pure in heart. . . shall see God" ; Rev. 22 : 4 — "they shall see his face"). Men's experiences of face-to-face apprehension of God, in danger and guilt, give some reason to believe that a presentative knowledge of God is the normal condition of humanity. But, as this presentative intui- tion of God is not in our present state universal, we here claim only that all men have a rational intuition of God.
It is to be remembered, however, that the loss of love to God has greatly obscured even this rational intuition, so that the revelation of nature and the Scriptures is needed to awaken, confirm and enlarge it, and the special work of the Spirit of Christ to make it the knowledge of friendship and communion. Thus from knowing about God, we come to know God ( John 17 : 3— "This is life eternal, that they should know thee " ; 2 Tim. 1 : 12 — "I know him whom I have believed " ).
2. The Scriptures, therefore, do not attempt to prove the existence of God, but, on the other hand, both assume and declare that the knowledge
CONTENTS OF THIS INIUITION. 23
that God is, is universal ( Roni. 1 : 19-21, 28, 32 ; 2 : 15). God has inlaid the evidence of this fundamental truth in the very nature of man, so that nowhere is he without a witness. The preacher may confidently follow the example of Scripture by assuming it. But he must also explicitly declare it, as the Scripture does. "For the invisible things of him since the creation of the world are clearly seen" (Kadoptirai — spiritually viewed) ; the organ given for this purpose is the vows (voovfieva) ; but then — and this forms the transition to our next division of the subject — they are " per- ceived through the things that are made"(roZf Troifaaoiv, Roni. 1 :20).
CHAPTER II.
COEEOBOEATIVE EVIDENCES OF GOD'S EXISTENCE.
Although the knowledge of God's existence is intuitive, it may be expli- cated and confirmed by arguments drawn from the actual universe and from the abstract ideas of the human mind.
Eemark 1. These arguments are probable, not demonstrative. For this reason they supplement each other, and constitute a series of evidences which is cumulative in its nature. Though, taken singly, none of them can be considered absolutely decisive, they together furnish a corroboration of our primitive conviction of God's existence, which is of great practical value, and is in itself sufficient to bind the moral action of men.
Kemark 2. A consideration of these arguments may also serve to expli- cate the contents of an intuition which has remaided obscure and only half conscious for lack of reflection. The arguments, indeed, are the efforts of the mind that already has a conviction of God's existence to give to itself a formal account of its belief. An exact estimate of their logical value and of their relation to the intuition which they seek to express in syllogistic form, is essential to any proper refutation of the prevalent atheistic an'd pantheistic reasoning.
Eemark 3. The arguments for the divine existence may be reduced to four, namely : I. The Cosmological ; II. The Teleological ; III. The Anthropological ; and IV. The Outological. We shall examine these in order, seeking first to determine the precise conclusions to which they respectively lead, and then to ascertain in what manner the four may be combined.
I. The Cosmological Argument, or Argument from Change in Nature.
This is not properly an argument from effect to cause ; for the proposi- tion that every effect must have a cause is simply identical, and means only that every caused event must have a cause. It is rather an argument from begun existence to a sufficient cause of that beginning, and may be accu- rately stated as follows :
Everything begun, whether substance or phenomenon, owes its existence to some producing cause. The universe, at least so far as its present form is concerned, is a thing begun, and owes its existence to a cause which is equal to its production. This cause must be indefinitely great.
1. The defects of the Cosmological Argument.
A. It is impossible to show that the universe, so far as its substance is concerned, has had a beginning. The law of causality declares, not that
24
THE TELEOLOGICAL ARGUMENT. 25
everything has a cause — for then God himself must have a cause — but rather that everything begun has a cause, or in other words, thai erery event or change has a cause.
B. Granting that the universe, so far as its phenomena art; concerned, has had a cause, it is impossible to show that any other cause is required than a cause within itself, such as the pantheist supposes.
C. Granting that the universe must have had a cause outside of itself, it is impossible to show that this cause has not itself been caused, /'. e. , consists of an infinite series of dependent causes. The principle of causality does not require that everything begun should be traced back to an uncaused cause ; it demands that we should assign a cause, but not that we should assign a first cause.
D. Granting that the cause of the universe has not itself been caused, it is impossible to show that this cause is not finite, like the universe itself. The causal principle requires a cause no greater than just sufficient to account for the effect.
2. The value of the < bamological Argument, then, is simply this, — it proves the existence of some cause of the universe indefinitely great. When we go beyond this and ask whether this cause is a cause of being, or merely a cause of change, to the universe ; whether it is a cause apart from the universe, or one with it ; whether it is an eternal cause, or a cause dependent upon some other cause ; whether it is intelligent or unintelli- gent, infinite or finite, one or many, — this argument cannot assure us.
II. The Teleological Argument, or Argument from Order and Useful Collocation in Nature.
This is not properly an argument from design to a designer ; for that design implies a designer is simply an identical proposition. It may be more correctly stated as follows : Order and useful collocation pervading a system respectively imply intelligence and purpose as the cause of that order and collocation. Since order and useful collocation pervade the universe, there must exist an intelligence adequate to the production of this order, and a will adequate to direct this collocation to useful ends.
1. Further explanations.
A. The major premise expresses a primitive conviction. It is not invalidated by the objections : ( a ) that order and useful collocation may exist without being purposed — for we are compelled by our very mental constitution to deny this in all cases where the order and collocation pervade a system : ( h ) that order and useful collocation may result from the mere operation of physical forces and laws — for these very forces and laws imply, instead of excluding, an originating and superintending intelligence and will.
B. The minor premise expresses a working-principle of all science, namely, that all things have their uses, that order pervades the universe, and that the methods of nature are rational methods. Evidences of this appear in the correlation of the chemical elenieute to each other ; in the fitness of
26 THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
the inanimate world to be the basis and support of life ; in the typical forms and unity of plan apparent in the organic creation ; in the existence and cooperation of natural laws ; in cosmical order and compensations.
This minor jn-emise is not invalidated by the objections: (a) That we frequently misunderstand the end actually subserved by natural events and objects ; for the principle is, not that we necessarily know the actual end, but that we necessarily believe that there is some end, in every case of systematic order and collocation, (o) That the order of the universe is manifestly imperfect; for this, if granted, would argue, not absence of contrivance, but some special reason for imperfection, either in the limita- tions of the contriving intelligence itself, or in the nature of the end sought (as, for example, correspondence with the moral state and probation of sinners).
2. Defects of the Teleological Argument. These attach not to the premises but to the conclusion sought to be drawn therefrom.
A. The argument cannot prove a personal God. The order and useful collocations of the universe may be only the changing phenomena of an impersonal intelligence and will, such as pantheism supposes. The finality may be only immanent finality.
B. Even if this argument could prove personality in the intelligence and will that originated the order of the universe, it could not prove either the unity, the eternity, or the infinity of God ; not the unity — for the use- ful collocations of the universe might be the result of oneness of counsel, instead of oneness of essence, in the contriving intelligence ; not the eter- nity— for a created demiurge might conceivably have designed the universe ; not the infinity — since all marks of order and collocation within our obser- vation are simply finite.
3. The value of the Teleological Argument is simply this, — it proves from certain useful collocations and instances of order which have clearly had a beginning, or in other words, from the present harmony of the uni- verse, that there exists an intelligence and will adequate to its contrivance. But whether this intelligence and will is personal or impersonal, creator or only fashioner, one or many, finite or infinite, eternal or owing its being to another, necessary or free, this argument cannot assure us.
In it, however, we take a step forward. The causative power which we have proved by the Cosmological Argument has now become an intelligent and voluntary power.
in. The Anthropologics Argument, or Argument from Man's Mental and Moral Nature.
This is an argument from the mental and moral condition of man to the existence of an Author, Lawgiver, and End. It is sometimes called the Moral Argument.
The argument is a complex one, and may be divided into three parts.
1. Man's intellectual and moral nature must have had for its author an intellectual and moral Being. The elements of the proof are as follows : —
THE ONTOLOGICAL ARGUMENT. 37
(a) Man, as an intellectual and moral being, has had a beginning upon the planet, (o) Material and unconscious forces do not afford a sufficient cause for man's reason, conscience, and free will, (c) Man, as an effect, can be referred only to a cause possessing self-consciousness and a moral nature, in other words, personality.
2. Man's moral nature proves tho existence of a holy Lawgiver and Judge. Tho elements of the proof are: — (a) Conscience recognizes the existence of a moral law which has supreme authority. ( 6 ) Known viola- tions of this moral law are followed by feelings of ill-desert and fears of judgment, (c) This moral law, since it is not self-imposed, and these threats of judgment, since they are not self -executing, respectively argue the existence of a holy will that has imposed the law, and of a punitive power that will execute the threats of the moral nature.
3. Man's emotional and voluntary nature proves the existence of a Being who can furnish in himself a satisfying object of human affection and an end which will call forth man's highest activities and ensure his highest progress.
Only a Being of power, wisdom, holiness, and goodness, and all these indefinitely greater than any that we know upon the earth, can meet this demand of the human soul. Such a Being must exist. Otherwise man's greatest need would be unsupplied, and belief in a lie be more productive of virtue than belief in the truth.
A. The defect s of the Anthropological Argument are : (a) It cannot prove a creator of the material universe. ( b ) It cannot prove the infinity of God, since man from whom we argue is finite. ( c ) It cannot prove the mercy of God. But,
B. The value of the Argument is, that it assures us of the existence of a personal Being, who rules us in righteousness, and who is the proper object of supreme affection and service. But whether this Being is the original crsator of all things, or merely the author of our own existence, whether he is infinite or finite, whether he is a Being of simple righteous- ness or also of mercy, this argument cannot assure us.
Among the arguments for the existence of God, however, we assign to this the chief place, since it adds to the ideas of causative power (which we derived from the Cosmological Argument) and of contriving intelli- gence (which we derived from the Teleological Argument), the far wider ideas of personality and righteous lordship.
IV. The Ontological Argument, or Argument from our Abstract and Necessary Ideas.
This argument infers the existence of God from the abstract and neces- sary ideas of the human mind. It has three forms :
1. That of Samuel Clarke. Space and time are attributes of substance or being. But space and time are respectively infinite and eternal. There must therefore be an infinite and eternal substance or Being to whom these attributes belong.
28 THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
Gillespie states the argument somewhat differently. Space and time are modes of existence. But space and time are respectively infinite and eter- nal. There must therefore be an infinite and eternal Being who subsists in these modes. But we reply :
Space and time are neither attributes of substance nor modes of exist- ence. The argument, if valid, would prove that God is not mind but matter, for that could not be mind, but only matter, of which space and time were either attributes or modes.
2. That of Descartes. We have the idea of an infinite and perfect Being. This idea cannot be derived from imperfect and finite things. There must therefore be an infinite and perfect Being who is its cause.
But we reply that this argument confounds the idea of the infinite with an infinite idea. Man's idea of the infinite is not infinite but finite, and from a finite effect we cannot argue an infinite cause.
3. That of Anselm. We have the idea of an absolutely perfect Being. But existence is an attribute of perfection. An absolutely perfect Being must therefore exist.
But we reply that this argument confounds ideal existence witk real existence. Our ideas are not the measure of external reality.
Although this last must be considered the most perfect form of the Onto- logical Argument, it is evident that it conducts us only to an ideal con- clusion, not to real existence. In common with the two preceding forms of the argument, moreover, it tacitly assumes, as already existing in the human mind, that very knowledge of God's existence which it would derive from logical demonstration. It has value, therefore, simply as showing what God must be, if he exists at all.
But the existence of a Being indefinitely great, a personal Cause, Con- triver and Lawgiver, has been proved by the preceding arguments ; for the law of parsimony requires us to apply the conclusions of the first three arguments to one Being, and not to many. To this one Being we may now ascribe the infinity and perfection, the idea of which lies at the basis of the Ontological Argument — ascribe them, not because they are demon- strably his, but because our mental constitution will not allow us to think otherwise. Thus clothing him with all perfections which the human mind can conceive, and these in illimitable fullness, we have one whom we may justly call God.
As a logical process this is indeed defective, since all logic as well as all observation depends for its validity upon the presupposed existence of God, and since this particular process, even granting the validity of logic in general, does not warrant the conclusion that God exists, except upon a second assumption that our abstract ideas of infinity and perfection are to be applied to the Being to whom argument has actually conducted us.
But although both ends of the logical bridge are confessedly wanting, the process may serve and does serve a more useful purpose than that of mere demonstration, namely, that of awakening, explicating, and confirming a conviction which, though the most fundamental of all, may yet have been partially slumbering for lack of thought.
CHAPTEE III.
ERRONEOUS EXPLANATIONS, AND CONCLUSION.
Any correct explanation of the universe must postulate an intuitive knowledge of the existence of the external world, of self, and of God. The desire for scientific unity, however, has occasioned attempts to reduce these three factors to one, and according as one or another of the three has been regarded as the all-inclusive principle, the result has been Materialism, Materialistic Idealism, or Idealistic Pantheism. This scientific impulse is better satisfied by a system which we may designate as Ethical Monism.
I. Materialism.
Materialism is that method of thought which gives priority to matter, rather than to mind, in its explanations of the universe. Upon this view, material atoms constitute the liltimate and fundamental reality of which all things, rational and irrational, are but combinations and phenomena. Force is regarded as a universal and inseparable property of matter.
The element of truth in materialism is the reality of the external world. Its error is in regarding the external world as having original and inde- pendent existence, and in regarding mind as its product.
In addition to the general error indicated above, we object to this system as follows :
1. In knowing matter, the mind necessarily judges itself to be different in kind, and higher in rank, than the matter Avhich it knows.
2. Since the mind's attributes of (a) continuous identity, (b) self-activity, (c) unrelatedness to space, are different in kind and higher in rank than the attributes of matter, it is rational to conclude that mind is itself different in kind from matter and higher in rank then matter.
3. Mind rather than matter must therefore be regarded as the original and independent entity, unless it can be scientifically demonstrated that mind is material in its origin and nature. But all attempts to explain the psychical from the physical, or the organic from the inorganic, are acknowl- edged failures. The most that can be claimed is, that psychical are always accompanied by physical changes, and that the inorganic is the basis and support of the organic. Although the precise connection between the mind and the body is unknown, the fact that the continuity of physical changes is unbroken in times of psychical activity renders it certain that mind is not transformed physical force. If the facts of sensation indicate the depen- dence of mind upon body, the facts of volition equally indicate the depen- dence of body upon mind.
30 THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
4. The materialistic theory, denying as it does the priority of spirit, can furnish no sufficient cause for the highest features of the existing universe, namely, its personal intelligences, its intuitive ideas, its free-will, its moral progress, its belief s in God and immortality.
II. Materialistic Idealism.
Idealism proper is that method of thought which regards all knowledge as conversant only with affections of the percipient mind.
Its element of truth is the fact that these affections of the percipient mind are the conditions of our knowledge. Its error is in denying that through these and in these we know that which exists independently of our consciousness.
The idealism of the present day is mainly a materialistic idealism. It defines matter and mind alike in terms of sensation, and regards both as opposite sides or successive manifestations of one underlying and unknow- able force.
To this view we make the following objections :
1. Its definition of matter as a "permanent possibility of sensation" contradicts our intuitive judgment that, in knowing the phenomena of matter, we have direct knowledge of substance as underlying phenomena, as distinct from our sensations, and as external to the mind which experiences these sensations.
2. Its definition of mind as a "series of feelings aware of itself" contradicts our intuitive judgment that, in knowing the phenomena of mind, we have direct knowledge of a spiritual substance of which these phenomena are manifestations, which retains its identity independently of our consciousness, and which, in its knowing, instead of being the passive recipient of impressions from without, always acts from within by a power of its own.
3. In so far as this theory regards mind as the obverse side of matter, or as a later and higher development from matter, the mere reference of both mind and matter to an underlying force does not save the theory from any of the difficulties of pure materialism already mentioned ; since in this case, equally with that, force is regarded as purely physical, and the priority of spirit is denied.
4. In so far as this theory holds the underlying force of which matter and mind are manifestations to be in any sense intelligent or voluntary, it renders necessary the assumption that there is an intelligent and voluntary Being who exerts this force. Sensations and ideas, moreover, are expli- cable only as manifestations of Mind.
III. Idealistic Pantheism.
Pantheism is that method of thought which conceives of the universe as the development of one intelligent and voluntary, yet impersonal, sub- stance, which reaches consciousness only in man. It therefore identifies God, not with each individual object in the universe, but with the totality of things. The current Pantheism of our day is idealistic.
ETHICAL MONISM. 31
The elements of truth in Pantheism are the intelligence and voluntari- ness of God, and his immanence in the universe ; its error lies in denyiug God's personality and transcendence.
Wo object to this system as follows
1. Its idea of God is self -contradictory, since it makes him infinite, yet consisting only of the finite ; absolute, yet existing in necessary relation to the universe ; supreme, yet shut up to a process of self-evolution and dependent for self-consciousness on man ; without self-determination, yet the cause of all that is.
2. Its assumed unity of substance is not only without proof, but it directly contradicts our intuitive judgments. These testify that we are not parts and particles of God, but distinct personal subsistences.
3. It assigns no sufficient cause for that fact of the universe which is highest in rank, and therefore most needs explanation, namely, the exist- ence of personal intelligences. A substance which is itself unconscious, and uuder the law of necessity, cannot produce beings who are self-conscious and free.
4. It therefore contradicts the affirmations of our moral and religious natures by denying man's freedom and responsibility ; by making God to include in himself all evil as well as all good ; and by precluding all prayer, worship, and hope of immortality.
5. Our intuitive conviction of the existence of a God of absolute per- fection compels us to conceive of God as possessed of every highest quality and attribute of men, and therefore, especially, of that which constitutes the chief dignity of the human spirit, its personality.
6. Its objection to the divine personality, that over against the Infinite there can be in eternity past no non-ego to call forth self-consciousness, is refuted by considering that even man's cognition of the non-ego logically presupposes knowledge of the ego, from which the non-ego is distinguished ; that, in an absolute mind, self-consciousness cannot be conditioned, as in the case of finite mind, upon contact with a not-self ; and that, if the dis- tinguishing of self from a not-self were an essential condition of divine self-consciousness, the eternal personal distinctions in the divine nature or the eternal states of the divine mind might furnish such a condition.
IT. Ethical Monism.
Ethical Monism is that method of thought which holds to a single sub- stance, groiind, or principle of being, namely, God, but which also holds to the ethical facts of God's transcendence as well as his immanence, and of God's personality as distinct from, and as guaranteeing, the personality of man.
1. While Ethical Monism embraces the one element of truth contained in Pantheism — the truth that God is iu all things and that all things are in God — it regards this scientific unity as entirely consistent with the facts of ethics — man's freedom, responsibility, sin, and guilt; in other words, Metaphysical Monism, or the doctrine of one substance, ground, or prin-
32 THE EXISTENCE OF GOD.
ciple of being, is qualified by Psychological Dualism, or the doctrine that the soul is personally distinct from matter on the one hand, and from God on the other.
2. In contrast then with the two errors of Pantheism — the denial of God's transcendence and the denial of God's personality — Ethical Monism holds that the universe, instead of being one with God and conterminous with God, is but a finite, partial and progressive manifestation of the divine Life : Matter being God's self -limitation under the law of Necessity ; Humanity being God's self -limitation under the law of Freedom ; Incarna- tion and Atonement being God's self -limitations under the law of Grace.
3. The immanence of God, as the one substance, ground and principle of being, does not destroy, but rather guarantees, the individuality and rights of each portion of the universe, so that there is variety of rank and endowment. In the case of moral beings, worth is determined by the degree of their voluntary recognition and appropriation of the divine. While God is all, he is also in all ; so making the universe a graded and pro- gressive manifestation of himself, both in his love for righteousness and his opposition to moral evil.
4. Since Christ is the Logos of God, the immanent God, God revealed in Nature, in Humanity, in Kedeniption, Ethical Monism recognizes the universe as created, upheld, and governed by the same Being who in the course of history was manifest in human form and who made atonement for human sin by his death on Calvary. The secret of the universe and the key to its mysteries are to be found in the Cross.
PART III.
THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
CHAPTER I.
PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS.
I. Reasons .4 priori for expecting a Revelation from God.
1. Needs of man's nature. Man's intellectual and moral nature requires, in order to preserve it from constant deterioration, and to ensure its moral growth and progress, an authoritative and helpful revelation of religious truth, of a higher and completer sort than any to which, in its present state of sin, it can attain by the use of its unaided powers. The proof of this proposition is partly psychological, and partly historical.
A. Psychological proof. — (a) Neither reason nor intuition throws light upon certain questions whose solution is of the utmost importance to us ; for example, Trinity, atonement, pardon, method of worship, personal existence after death. ( b ) Even the truth to which we arrive by our natural powers needs divine confirmation and authority when it addresses miuds and wills perverted by sin. ( c ) To break this power of sin, and to furnish encourage- ment to moral effort, we need a special revelation of the merciful and help- ful aspect of the divine nature.
B. Historical proof. — (a) The knowledge of moral and religious truth possessed by nations and ages in which special revelation is unknown is grossly and increasingly imperfect. (6) Man's actual condition in ante- Christian times, and in modern heathen lands, is that of extreme moral depravity, (e) With this depravity is found a general conviction of help- lessness, and on the part of some nobler natures, a longing after, and hope of, aid from above.
2. Presumption of supply. What we know of God, by nature, affords ground for hope that these wants of our intellectual and moral being will be met by a corresponding supply, in the shape of a special divine revelation. We argue this :
(«) From our necessary conviction of God's wisdom. Having made man a spiritual being, for spiritual ends, it may be hoped that he will furnish the means needed to secure these ends. ( b ) From the actual, though incom- plete, revelation already given in nature. Since God has actually under- taken to make himself known to men, we may hope that he will finish the 3 33
34 THE SCRIPTUKES A REVELATION" FROM GOD.
work lie has begun. ( c ) From the general connection of want and supply. The higher our needs, the more intricate and ingenious are, in general, the contrivances for meeting them. "We may therefore hope that the highest want will be all the more surely met. ( d ) From analogies of nature and history. Signs of reparative goodness in nature and of forbearance in provi- dential dealings lead us to hope that, while justice is executed, God may still make known some way of restoration for sinners.
We conclude this section upon the reasons a priori for expecting a revelation from God with the acknowledgment that the facts warrant that degree of expectation which we call hope, rather than that larger degree of expectation which we call assurance ; and this, for the reason that, while conscience gives proof that God is a God of holiness, we have not, from the light of nature, equal evidence that God is a God of love. Reason teaches man that, as a sinner, he merits condemnation ; but he cannot, from reason alone, know that God will have mercy upon him and provide salvation. His doubts can be removed only by God's own voice, assuring him of "redemption . . . the forgiveness of . . . trespasses" (Eph. 1:7) and revealing to him the way in which that forgiveness has been rendered possible.
II. Marks of the Revelation man may expect.
1. As to its substance. We may exjject this later revelation not to con- tradict, but to confirm and enlarge, the kuowledge of God which we derive from nature, while it remedies the defects of natural religion and throws light upon its problems.
2. As to its method. We may expect it to follow God's methods of procedure in other communications of truth.
( a ) That of continuous historical development, — that it will be given in germ to early ages, and will be more fully unfolded as the race is pre- pared to receive it.
( b ) That of original delivery to a single nation, and to single persons in that nation, that it may through them be communicated to mankind.
( c ) That of preservation in written and accessible documents, handed down from those to whom the revelation is first communicated.
3. As to its attestation. We may expect that this revelation will be accompanied by evidence that its author is the same being whom we have previously recognized as God of nature. This evidence must constitute (a) a mauifestation of God himself ; (6) in the outward as well as the inward world ; ( c ) such as only God's power or knowledge can make ; and ( d ) such as cannot be counterfeited by the evil, or mistaken by the candid, soul. In short, we may expect God to attest by miracles and by prophecy, the divine mission and authority of those to whom he communicates a revelation. Some such outward sign would seem to be necessary, not only to assure the original recipient that the supposed revelation is not a vagary of his own imagination, but also to render the revelation received by a single individual authoritative to all (compare Judges 6: 17, 36-40 — Gideon asks a sign, for himself ; 1 K. 18 : 36-38 — Elijah asks a sign, for others).
MIRACLES, AS ATTESTING REVELATION. 35
But in ordei that our positive proof of a divine revelation may not be embarrassed by the suspicion that the miraculous and prophetic elements in the Scripture history create a presumption against its credibility, it will be desirable to take up at this point the general subject of miracles and prophecy.
III. Miracles, as attesting a Divine Kevelation. 1. Definition of Miracle.
A. Preliminary Definition. — A miracle is an event palpable to the senses, produced for a religious purpose by the immediate agency of God ; an event therefore which, though not contravening any law of nature, the laws of nahu-e, if fully known, would not without this agency of God be competent to explain.
This definition corrects several erroneous conceptions of the miracle : — ( a ) A miracle is not a suspension or violation of natural law ; since natural law is in operation at the time of the miracle just as much as before. (6) A miracle is not a sudden product of natural agencies — a product merely foreseen, by him who appears to work it ; it is the effect of a will outside of nature. ( c ) A miracle is not an event without a cause ; since it has for its cause a direct volition of God. (d) A miracle is not an irrational or capricious act of God ; but an act of wisdom, performed in accordance with the immutable laws of his being, so that in the same cir- cumstances the same course would be again pursued. ( c ) A miracle is not contrary to experience ; since it is not contrary to experience for a new cause to be followed by a new effect. (/ ) A miracle is not a matter of internal experience, like regeneration or illumination ; but is an event pal- pable to the senses, which may serve as an objective proof to all that the worker of it is divinely commissioned as a religious teacher.
B. Alternative and Preferable Definition. — A miracle is an event in nature, so extraordinary in itself and so coinciding with the prophecy or command of a religious teacher or leader, as fully to warrant the con- viction, on the part of those who witness it, that God has wrought it with the design of certifying that this teacher or leader has been commissioned by him.
This definition has certain marked advantages as compared with the pre- liminary definition given above : — (a) It recognizes the immanence of God and his immediate agency in nature, instead of assuming an antithesis between the laws of nature and the will of God. ( b ) It regards the mira- cle as simply an extraordinary act of that same God who is already present in all natural operations and who in them is revealing his general plan. ( c ) It holds that natural law, as the method of God's regular activity, in no way precludes unique exertions of his power when these will best secure his purpose in creation. ( d ) It leaves it possible that all miracles may have their natural explanations and may hereafter be traced to natural causes, while both miracles and their natural causes may be only names for the one and self-same will of God. (e) It reconciles the claims of both science and religion : of science, by permitting any possible or prob-
36 THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
able physical antecedents of the miracle ; of religion, by maintaining that these very antecedents together with the miracle itself are to be interpreted as signs of God's special commission to him under whose teaching or leadership the miracle is wrought.
2. Possibility of Miracle.
An event in nature may be caused by an agent in nature yet above nature. This is evident from the following considerations :
( a ) Lower forces and laws in nature are frequently counteracted and transcended by the higher ( as mechanical forces and laws by chemical, and chemical by vital), while yet the lower forces and laws are not suspended or annihilated, but are merged in the higher, and made to assist in accom- plishing purposes to which they are altogether unequal when left to them- selves.
(o) The human will acts upon its physical organism, and so upon nature, and produces results which nature left to herself never could accomplish, while yet no law of nature is suspended or violated. Gravitation still ope- rates upon the axe, even while man holds it at the sm-face of the water — for the axe still has weight ( cf. 2 K. 6 : 5-7 ).
( g ) In all free causation, there is an acting without means. Man acts upon external nature through his physical organism, but, in moving his physical organism, he acts directly upon matter. In other words, the human will can use means, only because it has the power of acting initially without means.
( d ) "What the human will, considered as a supernatural force, and what the chemical and vital forces of nature itself, are demonstrably able to accomplish, cannot be regarded as beyond the power of God, so long as God dwells in and controls the universe. If man's will can act directly upon matter in his own physical organism, God's will can work imme- diately upon the system which he has created and which he sustains. In other words, if there be a God, and if he be a personal being, miracles are possible. The impossibility of miracles can be maintained only upon prin- ciples of atheism or pantheism.
( e ) This possibility of miracles becomes doubly sure to those who see in Christ none other than the immanent God manifested to creatures. The Logos or divine Reason who is the principle of all growth and evolution can make God known only by means of successive new impartations of his energy. Since all progress implies increment, and Christ is the only source of life, the whole history of creation is a witness to the possibility of miracle.
3. Probability of Miracles.
A. We acknowledge that, so long as we confine our attention to nature, there is a presumption against miracles. Experience testifies to the uni- formity of natural law. A general uniformity is needful, in order to make possible a rational calculation of the future, and a proper ordering of life.
MIRACLES, AS ATTESTING REVELATION. 37
B. But wc deny that this uniformity of nature is absolute anil univer- sal. ( a ) It is not a truth of reason that can have no exceptions, like the axiom that a whole is greater than its parts. ( b ) Experience could not warrant a belief in absolute and universal uniformity, unless experience were identical with absolute and universal knowledge. ( c ) We know, on the contrary, from geology, that there have been breaks in this uniformity, such as the introduction of vegetable, animal and human life, which can- not be accounted for, except by the manifestation in nature of a super- natural power.
C. Since the in working of the moral law into the constitution and course of nature shows that nature exists, not for itself, but for the con- templation and use of moral beings, it is probable that the God of nature will produce effects aside from those of natural law, whenever there are sufficiently important moral ends to be served thereby.
D. The existence of moral disorder consequent upon the free acts of man's will, therefore, changes the presumption against miracles into a pre- sumption iu their favor. The non-appearance of miracles, in this case, would be the greatest of wonders.
E. As belief in the possibility of miracles rests upon our belief in the existence of a personal God, so belief in the probability of miracles rests upon our belief that God is a moral and benevolent being. He who has no God but a God of physical order will regard miracles as an impertinent intrusion upon that order. But he who yields to the testimony of con- science and regards God as a God of holiness, will see that man's unholi- ness renders God's miraculous interposition most necessary to man and most becoming to God. Our view of miracles will therefore be determined by our belief in a moral, or in a non-moral, God.
F. From the point of view of ethical monism the probability of miracle becomes even greater. Since God is not merely the intellectual but the moral Reason of the world, the disturbances of the world-order which are due to sin are the matters which most deeply affect him. Christ, the life of the whole system and of humanity as well, must suffer ; and, since we have evidence that he is merciful as well as just, it is probable that he will rec- tify the evil by extraordinary means, when merely ordinary means do not avail.
4. The amount of testimony necessary to prove a miracle is no greater than that which is requisite to prove the occurrence of any other unusual but confessedly possible event.
Hume, indeed, argued that a miracle is so contradictory of all human experience that it is more reasonable to believe any amount of testimony false than to believe a miracle to be true.
The argument is fallacious, because
(a) It is chargeable with a petitio principii, in making our own per- sonal experience the measure of all human experience . The same principle would make the proof of any absolutely new fact impossible. Even though God should work a miracle, he could never prove it.
38 THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
( b ) It involves a self-contradiction, since it seeks to overthrow our faith in human testimony by adducing to the contrary the general experience of men, of which we know only from testimony. This general experience, moreover, is merely negative, and cannot neutralize that which is positive, except upon principles which would invalidate all testimony whatever.
( c ) It requires belief in a greater wonder than those which it would escape. That multitudes of intelligent and honest men should against all their interests unite in deliberate and persistent falsehood, under the cir- cumstances narrated in the New Testament record, involves a change in the sequences of nature far more incredible than the miracles of Christ and his apostles.
5. Evidential force of Miracles.
(a) Miracles are the natural accompaniments and attestations of new communications from God. The great epochs of miracles — represented by Moses, the prophets, the first and second comings of Christ — are coinci- dent with the great epochs of revelation. Miracles serve to draw attention to new truth, and cease when this truth has gained currency and foothold.
( b ) Miracles generally certify to the truth of doctrine, not directly, but indirectly ; otherwise a new miracle must needs accompany each new doctrine taught. Miracles primarily and directly certify to the divine com- mission and authority of a religious teacher, and therefore warrant accept- ance of his doctrines and obedience to his commands as the doctrines and commands of God, whether these be communicated at intervals or all together, orally or in written documents.
( c ) Miracles, therefore, do not stand alone as evidences. Power alone cannot prove a divine commission. Purity of life and doctrine must go with the miracles to assure us that a religious teacher has come from God. The miracles and the doctrine in this manner mutually support each other, and form parts of one whole. The internal evidence for the Christian system may have greater power over certain minds and over certain ages than the external evidence.
( d ) Yet the Christian miracles do not lose their value as evidence in the process of ages. The loftier the structure of Christian life and doctrine the greater need that its foundation be secure. The authority of Christ as a teacher of supernatural truth rests upon his miracles, and especially upon the miracle of his resurrection. That one miracle to which the church looks back as the source of her life carries with it irresistibly all the other miracles of the Scripture record ; upon it alone we may safely rest the proof that the Scriptures are an authoritative revelation from God.
(e) The resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ — by which we mean his coming forth from the sepulchre in body as well as in spirit — is demon- strated by evidence as varied and ae conclusive as that which proves to us any single fact of ancient history. Without it Christianity itself is inexpli- cable, as is shown by the failure of all modern rationalistic theories to account for its rise and progress.
PROPHECY, AS ATTESTING REVELATION. 39
6. Counterfeit Miracles.
Sinco only an act directly wrought by God can properly be called a miracle, it follows that surprising events brought about by evil spirits or by men, through the use of natural agencies beyond our knowledge, are not entitled to this appellation. The Scriptures recognize the existence of such, but denominate them "lying wonders" (2 Thess. 2:9).
These counterfeit miracles in various ages argue that the belief in miracles is natural to the race, and that somewhere there must exist the true. They serve to show that not all supernatural occurrences are divine, and to impress upon us the necessity of careful examination before we accept them as divine.
False miracles may commonly be distinguished from the true by ( a ) their accompaniments of immoral conduct or of doctrine contradictory to truth already revealed — as in modern spiritualism ; ( 6 ) their internal character- istics of inanity .ind extravagance — as in the liquefaction of the blood of St. Januarius, or the miracles of the Apocryphal New Testament ; ( c ) the insufficiency of the object which they are designed to further — as in the case of Apollonius of Tyana, or of the miracles said to accompany the pub- lication of the doctrines of the immaculate conception and of the papal inf allibility ; ( d ) their lack of substantiating evidence — as in mediaeval miracles, so seldom attested by contemporary and disinterested witnesses ; (e) their denial or undervaluing of God's previous revelation of himself in nature — as shown by the neglect of ordinary means, in the cases of Faith- cure and of so-called Christian Science.
TV. Pkophecy as Attesting a Divine Kevelatton.
We here consider prophecy in its narrow sense of mere prediction, reserving to a subsequent chapter the consideration of prophecy as inter- pretation of the divine will in general.
1. Definition. Prophecy is the foretelling of future events by virtue of direct communication from God — a foretelling, therefore, which, though not contravening any laws of the human mind, those laws, if fully known, woidd not, without this agency of God, be sufficient to explain.
2. Relation of Prophecy to Miracles. Miracles are attestations of revelation proceeding from divine power ; prophecy is an attestation of rev- elation proceeding from divine knowledge. Only God can know the con- tingencies of the future. The possibility and probability of prophecy may be. argued upon the same grounds upon which we argue the possibility and probability of miracles. As an evidence of divine revelation, however, prophecy possesses two advantages over miracles, namely : ( a ) The proof, in the case of prophecy, is not derived from ancient testimony, but is under our eyes. ( b ) The evidence of miracles cannot become stronger, whereas every new fulfilment adds to the argument from prophecy.
3. Requirements in Prophecy, considered as an Evidence of Revela- tion. ( a ) The utterance must be distant from the event. ( b ) Nothing must exist to suggest the event to merely natural prescience. ( c ) The
40 THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
utterance must be free from ambiguity. ( d ) Yet it must not be so pre- cise as to secure its own fulfilment. ( e ) It must be followed in due time by the event predicted.
4. General Features of Prophecy in the Scriptures, (a) Its large amount — occupying a great portion of the Bible, and extending over many hundred years. ( b ) Its ethical and religious nature — the events of the future being regarded as outgrowths and results of men's present attitude toward God. (c) Its unity in diversity — finding its central point in Christ the true servant of God and deliverer of his people. ( d) Its actual fulfilment as regards many of its predictions — while seeming non-fulfil- ments are explicable from its figurative and conditional nature.
5. Messianic Prophecy in general, (a) Direct predictions of events — as in Old Testament prophecies of Christ's birth, suffering and subse- quent glory. ( b ) General prophecy of the Kingdom in the Old Testa- ment, and of its gradual triumph. ( c ) Historical types in a nation and in individuals — as Jonah and David, {d) Prefigurations of the future in rites and ordinances — as in sacrifice, circumcision, and the passover.
6. Special Prophecies uttered by Christ, (a) As to his own death and resurrection. ( b ) As to events occurring between his death and the destruction of Jerusalem ( multitudes of impostors ; wars and rumors of wars; famine and pestilence), (c) As to the destruction of Jerusalem and the Jewish polity (Jerusalem compassed with armies; abomination of desolation in the holy place ; flight of Christians ; misery ; massacre ; dis- persion), (d) As to the world-wide diffusion of his gospel (the Bible already the most widely circulated book in the world ).
7. On the double sense of Prophecy.
(a) Certain prophecies apparently contain a fulness of meaning which is not exhausted by the event to which they most obviously and literally refer. A prophecy which had a partial fulfilment at a time not remote from its utterance, may find its chief fulfilment in an event far distant. Since the principles of God's administration find ever recurring and ever enlarging illustration in history, prophecies which have already had a partial fulfilment may have whole cycles of fulfilment yet before them.
( b ) The prophet was not always aware of the meaning of his own proph- ecies ( 1 Pet. 1 : 11 ). It is enough to constitute his prophecies a proof of divine revelation, if it can be shown that the correspondences between them and the actual events are such as to indicate divine wisdom and pur- pose in the giving of them — in other words, it is enough if the inspiring Spirit knew their meaning, even though the inspired prophet did not.
8. Purpose of Prophecy — so far as it is yet unfulfilled. ( a ) Not to enable us to map out the details of the future ; but rather ( b ) To give gen- eral assurance of God's power and foreseeing wisdom, and of the certainty of his triumph ; and ( c ) To furnish, after f ulfilnient, the proof that God saw the end from the beginning.
PRINCIPLES OF HISTORICAL EVIDENCE. 41
9. Evidential force of Prophecy — so far as it is fulfilled. Prophecy, like miracles, does not stand alone as evidence of the divine commission of the Scripture writers and teachers. It is simply a corroborative attesta- tion, -which unites with miracles to prove that a religious teacher has come from God and speaks with divine authority. We cannot, however, dispense with this portion of the evidences, — for unless the death and resurrection of Christ are events foreknown and foretold by himself, as well as by the ancient prophets, we lose one main proof of his authority as a teacher sent from God.
Having tlms removed the presumption originally existing against mir- acles and prophecy, we may now consider the ordinary laws of evidence and determine the rules to be followed in estimating the weight of the Scripture testimony.
V. Principles of Historical Evidence applicable to the Proof of a DmNE Kevelation ( mainly derived from Greenleaf, Testimony of the Evangelists, and from Starkie on Evidence ).
1. As to documentary evidence.
(a) Documents apparently ancient, not bearing upon their face the marks of forgery, and found in proper custody, are presumed to be genuine until sufficient evidence is brought to the contrary. The New Testament documents, since they are found in the custody of the church, their natural and legitimate depository, must by this rule be presumed to be genuine.
(6) Copies of ancient documents, made by those most interested in their faithfulness, are presumed to correspond with the originals, even although those originals no longer exist. Since it was the church's interest to have faithful copies, the burden of proof rests upon the objector to the Christian documents.
( c ) In determining matters of fact, after the lapse of considerable time, documentary evidence is to be allowed greater weight than oral testimony. Neither memory nor tradition can long be trusted to give absolutely correct accounts of particular facts. The New Testament documents, therefore, are of greater weight in evidence than tradition would be, even if only thirty years had elapsed since the death of the actors in the scenes they relate.
2. As to testimony in general.
( a ) In questions as to matters of fact, the proper inquiry is not whether it is possible that the testimony may be false, but whether there is sufficient probability that it is true. It is unfair, therefore, to allow our examination of the Scripture witnesses to be prejudiced by suspicion, merely because their story is a sacred one.
( b ) A proposition of fact is proved when its truth is established by com- petent and satisfactory evidence. By competent evidence is meant such evidence as the nature of the thing to be proved admits. By satisfactory evidence is meant that amount of proof which ordinarily satisfies an
42 THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
unprejudiced mind beyond a reasonable doubt. Scripture facts are there- fore proved when they are established by that kind and degree of evidence which would in the affairs of ordinary life satisfy the mind and conscience of a common man. "When we have this kind and degree of evidence it is unreasonable to require more.
(c) In the absence of circumstances which generate suspicion, every witness is to be presumed credible, until the contrary is shown ; the burden of impeaching his testimony lying upon the objector. The principle which leads men to give true witness to facts is stronger than that which leads them to give false witness. It is therefore unjust to compel the Christian to establish the credibility of his witnesses before proceeding to adduce their testimony, and it is equally unjust to allow the uncorroborated testi- mony of a profane writer to outweigh that of a Christian writer. Christian witnesses should not be considered interested, and therefore untrustworthy ; for they became Christians against their worldly interests, and because they could not resist the force of testimony. Varying accounts among them should be estimated as we estimate the varying accounts of profane writers.
(d) A slight amount of positive testimony, so long as it is uncontradicted, outweighs a very great amount of testimony that is merely negative. The silence of a second witness, or his testimony that he did not see a certain alleged occurrence, cannot counterbalance the positive testimony of a first witness that he did see it. We should therefore estimate the silence of pro- fane writers with regard to facts narrated in Scripture precisely as we should estimate it if the facts about which they are silent were narrated by other profane writers, instead of being narrated by the writers of Scripture.
( e ) " The credit due to the testimony of witnesses depends upon : first, their ability ; secondly, their honesty ; thirdly, their number and the con- sistency of their testimony; fourthly, the conformity of their testimony with experience ; and fifthly, the coincidence of their testimony with collateral circumstances. " We confidently submit the New Testament witnesses to each and all of these tests.
CHAPTER II.
POSITIVE PROOFS THAT THE SCRIPTURES ARE A DIVINE
REVELATION.
I. The Genuineness op the Christian Documents, or proof that the books of the Okl and New Testaments were written at the age to which they are assigned and by the men or class of men to whom they are ascribed.
1. Cfenuinenesa of the Books of the Neio Testament.
We do not need to adduce proof of the existence of the books of the New Testament as far back as the third century, for we possess manuscripts of them which are at least fourteen hundred years old, and, siuce the third century, references to them have been inwoven into all history and litera- ture. We begin our proof, therefore, by showing that these documents not only existed, but were generally accepted as genuine, before the close of the second century.
A. All the books of the New Testament, with the single exception of 2 Peter, were not only received as genuine, but were used in more or less collected form, in the latter half of the second century. These collections of writings, so slowly transcribed and distributed, imply the long continued previous existence of the separate books, and forbid us to fix their origin later than the first half of the second century.
( a ) Tertullian (160-230) appeals to the 'New Testament' as made up of the ' Gospels ' and 'Apostles. ' He vouches for the genuineness of the four gospels, the Acts, 1 Peter, 1 John, thirteen epistles of Paul, and the Apoca- lypse ; in short, to twenty-one of the twenty-seven books of our Canon.
( b ) The Muratorian Canon in the West and the Peshito Version in the East ( having a common date of about 160) in their catalogues of the New Testament writings mutually complement each other's slight deficiencies, and together witness to the fact that at that time every book of our present New Testament, with the exception of 2 Peter, was received as genuine.
( c ) The Canon of Marcion (140), though rejecting all the gospels but that of Luke, and all the epistles but ten of Paul's, shows, nevertheless, that at that early day "apostolic writings were regarded as a complete original rule of doctrine." Even Marcion, moreover, does not deny the genuineness of those writings which for doctrinal reasons he rejects.
B. The Christian and Apostolic Fathers who lived in the first half of the second century not only quote from these books and allude to them, but testify that they were written by the apostles themselves. We are therefore compelled to refer their origin still further back, namely, to the first century, when the apostles lived.
43
44 THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
( a ) Irenseus ( 120-200 ) mentions and quotes the four gospels by name, and among them the gospel according to John : ' ' Afterwards John, the disciple of the Lord, who also leaned upon his breast, he likewise published a gospel, while he dwelt in Ephesus in Asia. " And Irenseus was the dis- ciple and friend of Polycarp ( 80-166 ), who was himself a personal acquain- tance of the Apostle John. The testimony of Irenseus is virtually the evidence of Polycarp, the contemporary and friend of the Apostle, that each of the gospels was written by the person whose name it bears.
( b ) Justin Martyr ( died 148 ) speaks of ' memoirs ( anofivvfiovevfiara ) of Jesus Christ,' and his quotations, though sometimes made from memory, are evidently cited from our gospels.
(c) Papias ( 80-164 ), whom Irenseus calls a 'hearer of John,' testifies that Matthew " wrote in the Hebrew dialect the sacred oracles (ra Myia)" and that " Mark, the interpreter of Peter, wrote after Peter, (varegov Uirpo) ) [ or under Peter's direction ], an unsystematic account ( ov ra^ei ) " of the same events and discourses.
( d ) The Apostolic Fathers, — Clement of Koine ( died 101 ), Ignatius of Antioch (martyred 115), and Polycarp (80-166), — companions and friends of the apostles, have left us in their writings over one hundred quotations from or allusions to the New Testament writings, and among these every book, except four minor epistles (2 Peter, Jude, 2 and 3 John) is repre- sented.
( e ) In the synoptic gospels, the omission of all mention of the fulfil- ment of Christ's prophecies with regard to the destruction of Jerusalem is evidence that these gospels were written before the occurrence of that event. In the Acts of the Apostles, universally attributed to Luke, wre have an allusion to ' the former treatise', or the gospel by the same author, which must, therefore, have been written before the end of Paul's first imprison- ment at Rome, and probably with the help and sanction of that apostle.
C. It is to be presumed that this acceptance of the New Testament doc- uments as genuine, on the part of the Fathers of the churches, was for good and sufficient reasons, both internal and external, and this presump- tion is corroborated by the following considerations :
( a ) There is evidence that the early churches took every care to assure themselves of the genuineness of these writings before they accepted them.
( b ) The style of the New Testament writings, and their complete cor- respondence with all we know of the lands and times in which they profess to have been written, affords convincing proof that they belong to the apostolic age.
( c ) The genuineness of the fourth gospel is confirmed by the fact that Tatian ( 155-170 ), the Assyrian, a disciple of Justin, repeatedly quoted it without naming the author, and composed a Harmony of our four gospels which he named the Diatessaron ; while Basilides ( 130 ) and Valentinus ( 150 ), the Gnostics, both quote from it.
THE GENUINENESS OF THE SCRIPTURE DOCUMENTS. 45
(d) The epistle to the Hebrews appears to have been accepted during the first century after it was written (so Clement of Borne, Justin Martyr, and the Peshito Version witness ). Then for two centuries, especially in the Roman and North African churches, and probably because its internal characteristics were inconsistent with the tradition of a Pauline authorship, its genuineness was doubted (so Tertullian, Cyprian, Iren:eus, Muratorian Canon). At the end of the fourth century, Jerome examined the evidence and decided in its favor; Augustine did the same; the third Council of Carthage formally recognized it (397) ; from that time the Latin churches united with the East in receiving it, and thus the doubt was finally and forever removed.
( e ) As to 2 Peter, Jude, and 2 and 3 John, the epistles most frequently held to be spurious, we may say that, although we have no conclusive external evidence earlier than A. D. 160, and in the case of 2 Peter none earlier than A. D. 230-250, we may fairly urge in favor of their genuine- ness not only their internal characteristics of literary style and moral value, but also the general acceptance of them all since the third century as the actual productions of the men or class of men whose names they bear.
(/) Upon no other hypothesis than that of their genuineness can the general acceptance of these four minor epistles since the third century, and of all the other books of the New Testament since the middle of the second century, be satisfactorily accounted for. If they had been mere collections of floating legends, they could not have secured wide circulation as sacred books for which Christians must answer with their blood. If they had been forgeries, the churches at large could neither have been deceived as to their previous non-existence, nor have been induced unanimously to pre- tend that they were ancient and genuine. Inasmuch, however, as other accounts of their origin, inconsistent with their genuineness, are now cur- rent, we proceed to examine more at length the most important of these opposing views.
D. Rationalistic Theories as to the origin of the gospels. These are attempts to eliminate the miraculous element from the New Testament records, and to reconstruct the sacred history upon principles of naturalism.
Against them we urge the general objection that they are unscientific in their principle and method. To set out in an examination of the New Tes- tament documents with the assumption that all history is a mere natural development, and that miracles are therefore impossible, is to make history a matter, not of testimony, but of a priori speculation. It indeed renders any history of Christ and his apostles impossible, since the witnesses whose testimony with regard to miracles is discredited can no longer be con- sidered worthy of credence in their account of Christ's life or doctrine.
1st. The Myth-theory of Strauss ( 1808-1874).
According to this view, the gospels are crystallizations into story of Mes- sianic ideas which had for several generations filled the minds of imagina- tive men in Palestine. The myth is a narrative in which such ideas are unconsciously clothed, and from which the element of intentional and deliberate deception is absent.
4G THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
We object to the Myth-theory of Strauss, that
( a ) The time between the death of Christ and the publication of the gospels was far too short for the growth and consolidation of such mythi- cal histories. Myths, on the contrary, as the Indian, Greek, Roman and Scandinavian instances bear witness, are the slow growth of centuries.
( b ) The first century was not a century when such formation of myths was possible. Instead of being a credulous and imaginative age, it was an age of historical inquiry and of Sadduceeism in matters of religion.
( c ) The gospels cannot be a mythical outgrowth of Jewish ideas and expectations, because, in their main features, they run directly counter to these ideas and expectations. The sullen and exclusive nationalism of the Jews could not have given rise to a gospel for all nations, nor could their expectations of a temporal monarch have led to the story of a suffering Messiah.
( cl ) The belief and propagation of such myths are inconsistent with what we know of the sober characters and self-sacrificing lives of the apostles.
(e) The mythical theory cannot account for the acceptance of the gospels among the Gentiles, who had none of the Jewish ideas and expec- tations.
(/) It cannot explain Christianity itself, with its belief in Christ's cruci- fixion and resurrection, and the ordinances which commemorate these facts.
2nd. The Tendency-theory of Baur ( 1792-1860 ).
This maintains that the gospels originated in the middle of the second century, and were written under assumed names as a means of reconciling opposing Jewish and Gentile tendencies in the church. ' ' These great national tendencies find their satisfaction, not in events corresponding to them, but in the elaboration of conscious fictions."
We object to the Tendency-theory of Baur, that
( a ) The destructive criticism to which it subjects the gospels, if applied to secular documents, would deprive us of any certain knowledge of the past, and render all history impossible.
( b ) The antagonistic doctrinal tendencies which it professes to find in the several gospels are more satisfactorily explained as varied but consistent aspects of the one system of truth held by all the apostles.
( c ) It is incredible that productions of such literary power and lofty religious teaching as the gospels should have sjming up in the middle of the second century, or that, so springing up, they should have been pub- lished under assumed names and for covert ends.
( d ) The theory requires us to believe in a moral anomaly, namely, that a faithful disciple of Christ in the second century could be guilty of fabri- cating a life of his master, and of claiming authority for it on the ground that the author had been a companion of Christ or his apostles.
THE GENUINENESS OF THE CHRISTIAN DOCUMENTS. 47
( e ) This theory cannot account for the universal acceptance of the gos- pels at the end of the second century, among widely separated communi- ties where- reverence for writings of the apostles was a mark of orthodoxy, and where the Gnostic heresies would have made new documents instantly liable to suspicion and searching examination.
( /) The acknowledgment by Baur that the epistles to the Romans, Gala- tians and Corinthians were written by Paul in the first century is fatal to his theory, since these epistles testify not only to miracles at the period at which they were written, but to the main events of Jesus' life and to the miracle of his resurrection, as facts already long acknowledged in the Christian clrurch.
3d. The Romance- theory of Renan ( 1823-1892 ).
This theory admits a basis of truth in the gospels and holds that they all belong to the century following Jesus' death. "According to" Mat- thew, Mark, etc., however, means only that Matthew, Mark, etc., wrote these gospels in substance. Renan claims that the facts of Jesus' life were so sublimated by enthusiasm, and so overlaid with pious fraud, that the gos- pels in their present form cannot be accepted as genuine, — in short, the gospels are to be regarded as historical romances which have only a foun- dation in fact.
To this Romance-theory of Renan, we object that
( a ) It involves an arbitrary and partial treatment of the Christian doc- uments. The claim that one writer not only borrowed from others, but interpolated ad libitum, is contradicted by the essential agreement of the manuscripts as quoted by the Fathers, and as now extant.
( b ) It attributes to Christ and to the apostles an alternate fervor of romantic enthusiasm and a false pretense of miraculous power which are utterly irreconcilable with the manifest sobriety and holiness of their lives and teachings. If Jesus did not work miracles, he was an impostor.
( c ) It fails to account for the power and progress of the gospel, as a system directly opposed to men's natural tastes and prepossessions — a system which substitutes truth for romance and law for impulse.
4th. The Development-theory of Harnack ( born 1851).
This holds Christianity to be a historical development from germs which were devoid of both dogma and miracle. Jesus was a teacher of ethics, and the original gospel is most clearly represented by the Sermon on the Mount. Greek influence, and especially that of the Alexandrian philoso- phy, added to this gospel a theological and supernatural element, and so changed Christianity from a life into a doctrine.
We object to the Development-theory of Harnack, that
( a ) The Sermon on the Mount is not the sum of the gospel, nor its original form. Mark is the most original of the gospels, yet Mark omits the Sermon on the Mount, and Mark is preeminently the gospel of the miracle-worker.
48 THE SCKIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
( b ) All four gospels lay the emphasis, not on Jesus' life and ethical teaching, but on his death and resurrection. Matthew implies Christ's deity when it asserts his absolute knowledge of the Father (11 : 27), his universal judgeship (25 :32), his supreme authority (28 : 18), and his omnipresence (28 : 20), while the phrase "Son of man" implies that he is also "Son of God."
( c ) The preexistence and atonement of Christ cannot be regarded as accretions upon the original gospel, since these find expression in Paul who wrote before any of our evangelists, and in his epistles anticipated the Logos-doctrine of John.
( d ) We may grant that Greek influence, through the Alexandrian phi- losophy, helped the New Testament writers to discern what was already present in the life and work and teaching of Jesus ; but, like the microscope which discovers but does not create, it added nothing to the substance of the faith.
(e) Though Mark says nothing of the virgin-birth because his story is limited to what the apostles had witnessed of Jesus' deeds, Matthew appar- ently gives us Joseph's story and Luke gives Mary's story — both stories naturally published only after Jesus' resurrection.
(/) The larger understanding of doctrine after Jesus' death was itself predicted by our Lord (John 16 : 12). The Holy Spirit was to bring his teachings to remembrance, and to guide into all the truth (16 : 13), and the apostles were to continue the work of teaching which he had begun (Acts 1 : 1).
2. Genuineness of the Books of the Old Testament.
Since nearly one half of the Old Testament is of anonymous authorship and certain of its books may be attributed to definite historic characters only by way of convenient classification or of literary personification, we here mean by genuineness honesty of purpose and freedom from any- thing counterfeit or intentionally deceptive so far as respects the age or the authorship of the documents.
We show the genuineness of the Old Testament books :
( a ) From the witness of the New Testament, in which all but six books of the Old Testament are either quoted or alluded to as genuine.
( b ) From the testimony of Jewish authorities, ancient and modern, who declare the same books to be sacred, and only the same books, that are now comprised in our Old Testament Scriptures.
( c ) From the testimony of the Septuagint translation, dating from the first half of the third century, or from 280 to 180 B. C.
( d ) From indications that soon after the exile, and so early as the times of Ezra and Nehemiah ( 500-450 B. C. ), the Pentateuch together with the book of Joshua was not only in existence but was regarded as authori- tative.
( e ) From the testimony of the Samaritan Pentateuch, dating from the time of Ezra and Nehemiah (500-450 B. C. ).
CREDIBILITY OF THE WEITER8 OF THE SCRIPTURES, 49
(/) From the finding of "the book of the law" in the temple, in the eighteenth year of King Josiah, or in C21 B. C.
( g ) From references in the prophets Hosea ( B. C. 743-737) ami Amos ( 759-745 ) to a course of divine teaching and revelation extending far 1 >ack of their day.
(h) From the repeated assertions of Scripture that Moses himself wrote a law for his people, confirmed as these are by evidence of literary and legislative activity in other nations far antedating his time.
II. Credibility, of the Writers op the Scriptures.
We shall attempt to prove this only of the writers of the gospels ; for if they are credible witnesses, the credibility of the Old Testament, to which they bore testimony, follows as a matter of course.
1. Thcij arc capable or competent witnesses, — that is, they possessed actual knowledge with regard to the facts they professed to relate, (a) They had opportunities of observation and inquiry. ( b ) They were men of sobriety and discernment, and coidd not have been themselves deceived, (c) Their circumstances were such as to impress deeply upon their minds the events of which they were witnesses.
2. They are honest witnesses. This is evident when we consider that : ( a ) Their testimony imperiled all their worldly interests. ( b ) The moral elevation of then* writings, and their manifest reverence for truth and con- stant inculcation of it, show that they were not wilful deceivers, but good men. ( e ) There are minor indications of the honesty of these writers in the circumstantiality of their story, in the absence of any expectation that their narratives would be questioned, in their freedom from all disposition to screen themselves or the apostles from censure.
3. The writings of the evangelists mutually sup>%)ort each other. We argue their credibility upon the ground of their number and of the con- sistency of their testimony. While there is enough of discrepancy to show that there lias been no collusion between them, there is concurrence enough to make the falsehood of them all infinitely improbable. Four points under this head deserve mention : («) The evangelists are indepen- dent witnesses. This is sufficiently shown by the futility of the attempts to prove that any one of them has abridged or transcribed another. ( b ) The discrepancies between them are none of them irreconcilable with the truth of the recorded facts, but only present those facts in new lights or with additional detail, (o) That these witnesses were friends of Christ does not lessen the value of their united testimony, since they followed Christ only because they were convinced that these facts were true. ( d ) While one witness to the facts of Christianity might establish its truth, the combined evidence of four witnesses gives us a warrant for faith in the facts of the gospel such as we possess for no other facts in ancient history what- soever. The same rule which would refuse belief in the events recorded in the gospels "would throw doubt on any event in history."
50 THE SCEIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
4. The conformity of the gospel testimony tvith experience. We have already shown that, granting the fact of sin and the need of an attested revelation from God, miracles can furnish no presumption against the tes- timony of those who record such a revelation, but, as essentially belonging to such a revelation, miracles may be proved by the same kind and degree of evidence as is required in proof of any other extraordinary facts. We may assert, then, that in the New Testament histories there is no record of facts contrary to experience, but only a record of facts not witnessed in ordinary experience — of facts, therefore, in which we may believe, if the evidence in other respects is sufficient.
5. Coincidence of this testimony tvith collateral facts and circum- stances. Under this head we may refer to ( a) the numberless correspon- dences between the narratives of the evangelists and contemporary history;
(b) the failure of every attempt thus far to show that the sacred history is contradicted by any single fact derived from other trustworthy sources ;
( c ) the infinite improbability that this minute and complete harmony should ever have been secured in fictitious narratives.
6. Conclusion from the argument for the credibility of the writers of the gospels. These writers having been proved to be credible witnesses, their narratives, including the accounts of the miracles and prophecies of Christ and his apostles, must be accepted as true. But God would not work miracles or reveal the future to attest the claims of false teachers. Christ and his apostles must, therefore, have been what they claimed to be, teachers sent from God, and their doctrine must be what they claimed it to be, a revelation from God to men.
III. The Supernatural Chabacter of the Scripture Teaching. 1. Scripture teaching in general.
A. The Bible is the work of one mind.
( a ) In spite of its variety of authorship and the vast separation of its writers from one another in point of time, there is a unity of subject, spirit, and aim throughout the whole.
( b ) Not one moral or religious utterance of all these writers has been contradicted or superseded by the utterances of those who have come later, but all together constitute a consistent system.
( c ) Each of these writings, whether early or late, has represented moral and religious ideas greatly in advance of the age in which it has appeared, and these ideas still lead the world.
( d ) It is impossible to account for this unity without supposing such a supernatural suggestion aud control that the Bible, while in its various parts written by human agents, is yet equally the work of a superhuman intelligence.
B. This one mind that made the Bible is the same mind that made the soid, for the Bible is divinely adapted to the soul.
( a ) It shows complete acquaintance with the soul.
SUPERNATURAL CHARACTER OP SCRIPTURE TEACHING. 51
(6) It judges the soul — contradicting its passions, revealing its guilt, and humbling its pride.
( c ) It meets the deepest needs of the soul — by solutions of its problems, disclosures of God's character, presentations of the way of pardon, conso- lations and promises for life and death.
( d ) Yet it is silent upon many questions for 'which writings of merely human origin seek first to provide solutions.
(e) There are infinite depths and inexhaustible reaches of meaning in Scripture, which difference it from all other books, and which compel us to believe that its author must be divine.
2. Moral System of the New Testament.
The perfection of this system is generally conceded. All will admit that it greatly surpasses auy other system known among men. Among its dis- tinguishing characteristics may be mentioned :
(a) Its comprehensiveness, — including all human duties in its code, even the most generally misunderstood and neglected, while it permits no vice whatsoever.
(b) Its spirituality, — accepting no merely external conformity to right precepts, but judging all action by the thoughts and motives from which it springs.
(c) Its simplicity, — inculcating principles rather than imposing rules; reducing these principles to an organic system ; and connecting this system with religion by summing up all human duty in the one command of love to God and man.
(d) Its practicality, — exemplifying its precepts in the life of Jesus Christ; and, while it declares man's depravity and inability in his own strength to keep the law, f urnishing motives to obedience, and the divine aid of the Holy Spirit to make this obedience possible.
We may justly argue that a moral system so pure and perfect, since it surpasses all human powers of invention and runs counter to men's natural tastes and passions, must have had a supernatural, and if a supernatural, then a divine, origin.
In contrast with the Christian system of morality the defects of heathen systems are so marked and fundamental, that they constitute a strong corroborative evidence of the divine origin of the Scripture revelation.
3. The person and character of Christ.
A. The conception of Christ's person as presenting deity and humanity indissolubly united, and the conception of Christ's character, with its fault- less and all-comprehending excellence, cannot be accounted for upon any other hypothesis than that they were historical realities.
( a ) No source can be assigned from which the evangelists could have derived such a conception. The Hindu avatars were only temporary unions of deity with humanity. The Greeks had men half-deified, but no
52 THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION" FROM GOD.
unions of God and man. The monotheism of the Jews found the person of Christ a perpetual stumbling-block. The Essenes were in principle more opposed to Christianity than the Rabbinists.
( b ) No mere human genius, and much less the genius of Jewish fisher- men, could have originated this conception. Bad men invent only such characters as they sympathize with. But Christ's character condemns bad- ness. Such a portrait could not have been drawn without supernatural aid. But such aid would not have been given to fabrication. The concep- tion can be explained only by granting that Christ's person and character were historical realities.
B. The acceptance and belief in the New Testament descriptions of Jesus Christ cannot be accounted for except upon the ground that the person and character described had an actual existence.
( a ) If these descriptions were false, there were witnesses still living who had known Christ and who woidd have contradicted them. ( b ) There was no motive to induce acceptance of such false accounts, but every motive to the contrary. ( e ) The success of such falsehoods could be explained only by supernatural aid, but God would never have thus aided falsehood. Thi^ person and character, therefore, must have been not fictitious but real; and if real, then Christ's words are true, and the system of which his person and character are a part is a revelation from God.
4. The testimony of Christ to himself — as being a messenger from God and as being one with God.
Only one personage in history has claimed to teach absolute truth, to be one with God, and to attest his divine mission by works such as only God could perform.
A. This testimony cannot be accounted for upon the hypothesis that Jesus was an intentional deceiver : for ( a ) the perfectly consistent holiness of his life ; ( b ) the unwavering confidence with which he challenged investigation of his claims and staked all upon the result ; (<•) the vast improbability of a lifelong lie in the avowed interests of truth ; and ( d ) the impossibility that deception should have wrought such blessing to the world, — all show that Jesus was no conscious impostor.
B. Nor can Jesus' testimony to himself be explained upon the hypoth- esis that he was self-deceived : for this would argue ( a ) a weakness and folly amounting to positive insanity. But his whole character and life exhibit a calmness, dignity, equipoise, insight, self-mastery, utterly incon- sistent with such a theory. Or it would argue ( b ) a self -ignorance and self- exaggeration which coidd spring only from the deepest moral perversion. But the absolute purity of his conscience, the humility of his spirit, the self-denying beneficence of his life, show this hypothesis to be incredible.
If Jesus, then, cannot be charged with either mental or moral unsound- ness, his testimony must be true, and he himself must be one with God and the revealer of God to men.
HISTORICAL RESULTS OF SCRIPTURE TEACHING. 53
IV. The Historical Results of the Propagation of Scripture Doctrine.
1. The rapid progress of the gospel in (he first centuries of our era shows its divine origin.
A. That Paganism should have been in three centuries supplanted by Christianity, is an acknowledged wonder of history.
B. The wonder is the greater when we consider the obstacles to the progress of Christianity :
( a ) The scepticism of the cultivated classes ; ( b ) the prejudice and hatred of the common people ; and ( c ) the persecutions set on foot by government.
C. The wonder becomes yet greater when we consider the natural insuffi- ciency of the means used to secure this progress.
(a) The proclaimers of the gospel were in general unlearned men, belong- ing to a despised nation. ( b ) The gospel which they proclaimed was a gospel of salvation through faith in a Jew who had been put to an ignomi- nious death. ( c ) This gospel was one which excited natural repugnance, by humbling men's pride, striking at the root of their sins, and demanding a life of labor and self-sacrifice. ( d ) The gospel, moreover, was an exclu- sive one, suffering no rival and declaring itself to be the universal and only religion.
The progress of a religion so unprepossessing and uncompromising to outward acceptance and dominion, within the space of three hundred years, cannot be explained without supposing that divine power attended its pro- mulgation, and therefore that the gospel is a revelation from God.
2. The beneficent influence of the Scripture doctrines and precepts, wherever they have had sivay, shows their divine origin. Notice :
A. Their influence on civilization in general, securing a recognition of principles which heathenism ignored, such as Garbett mentions : ( a ) the importance of the individual ; ( b ) the law of mutual love ; ( c ) the sacred- ness of human life ; ( d ) the doctrine of internal holiness ; ( e ) the sanctity of home ; (/) monogamy, and the religious equality of the sexes ; ( g ) iden- tification of belief and practice.
The continued corruption of heathen lands shows that this change is not due to any laws of merely natural progress. The confessions of ancient writers show that it is not due to philosophy. Its only explanation is that the gospel is the power of God.
B. Their influence upon individual character and happiness, wherever they have been tested in practice. This influence is seen (a) in the moral transformations they have wrought — as in the case of Paul the apostle, and of persons in every Christian community ; ( b ) in the self-denying labors for human welfare to which they have led — as in the case of Wilberforce and Judson ; ( c ) in the hopes they have inspired in times of sorrow and death.
These beneficent fruits cannot have their source in merely natural causes, apart from the truth and divinity of the Scriptures ; for in that case the
54 THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
contrary beliefs would be accompanied by the same blessings. But since we find these blessings only in connection with Christian teaching, we may justly consider this as their cause. This teaching, then, must be true, and the Scriptures must be a divine revelation. Else God has made a he to be the greatest blessing to the race,
CHAPTER in.
INSPIRATION" OF THE SCRIPTURES.
I. Definition of Inspiration.
Inspiration is that influence of the Spirit of God upon the minds of the Scripture writers which made their writings the record of a progressive divine revelation, sufficient, when taken together and interpreted by the same Spirit who inspired them, to lead every honest inquirer to Christ and to salvation.
( a ) Inspiration is therefore to be defined, not by its method, but by its residt. It is a general term including all those kinds and degrees of the Holy Spirit's influence which were brought to bear upon the minds of the Scripture writers, in order to secure the putting into permanent and written form of the truth best adapted to man's moral and religious needs.
( b ) Inspiration may often include revelation, or the direct communi- cation from God of truth to which man could not attain by his unaided powers. It may include illumination, or the quickening of man's cogni- tive powers to understand truth already revealed. Inspiration, however, does not necessarily and always include either revelation or illumination. It is simply the divine influence which secures a transmission of needed truth to the future, and, according to the nature of the truth to be trans- mitted, it may be only an inspiration of superintendence, or it may be also and at the same time an inspiration of illumination or revelation.
( c ) It is not denied, but affirmed, that inspiration may qualify for oral utterance of truth, or for wise leadership and daring deeds. Men may be inspired to render external service to God's kingdom, as in the cases of Bezalel and Samson ; even though this service is rendered unwillingly or unconsciously, as in the cases of Balaam and Cyrus. All human intelli- gence, indeed, is due to the inbreathing of that same Spirit who created man at the beginning. "We are now concerned with inspiration, however, only as it pertains to the authorship of Scripture.
II. Proof of Inspiration.
1. Since we have shown that God has made a revelation of himself to man, we may reasonably presume that he will not trust this revelation wholly to human tradition and misrepresentation, but will also provide a record of it essentially trustworthy and sufficient ; in other words, that the same Spirit who originally communicated the truth will preside over its publication, so far as is needed to accomplish its religious purpose.
2. Jesus, who has been proved to be not only a credible witness, but a messenger from God, vouches for the inspiration of the Old Testament, by
55
56 THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION" FROM GOD.
quoting it with the formula: "It is written" ; by declaring that "one jot or one tittle" of it "shall in no wise pass away," and that "the Scripture cannot be broken."
3. Jesus commissioned his apostles as teachers and gave them promises of a supernatural aid of the Holy Spirit in their teaching, like the promises made to the Old Testament prophets.
4. The apostles claim to have received this promised Spirit, and under his influence to speak with divine authority, putting their writings upon a level with the Old Testament Scriptures. We have not only direct state- ments that both the matter and the form of their teaching were supervised by the Holy Spirit, but we have indirect evidence that this was the case in the tone of authority which pervades their addresses and epistles.
5. The apostolic writers of the New Testament, unlike professedly inspired heathen sages and poets, gave attestation by miracles or prophecy that they were inspired by God, and there is reason to believe that the productions of those who were not apostles, such as Mark, Luke, Hebrews, James, and Jude, were recommended to the churches as inspired, by apos- tolic sanction and authority.
6. The chief proof of inspiration, however, must always be found in the internal characteristics of the Scriptures themselves, as these are disclosed to the sincere inquirer by the Holy Spirit. The testimony of the Holy Spirit combines with the teaching of the Bible to convince the earnest reader that this teaching is as a whole and in all essentials beyond the power of man to communicate, and that it must therefore have been put into per- manent and written form by special inspiration of God.
III. Theobies of Inspiration.
1. The Intuition-theory .
This holds that inspiration is but a higher development of that natural insight into truth which all men possess to some degree; a mode of intelli- gence in matters of morals and religion which gives rise to sacred books, as a corresponding mode of intelligence in matters of secular truth gives rise to great works of philosophy or art. This mode of intelligence is regarded as the product of man's own powers, either without special divine influence or with only the inworking of an impersonal God.
With regard to this theory we remark :
( a ) Man has, indeed, a certain natural insight into truth, and we grant that inspiration uses this, so far as it will go, and makes it an instrument in discovering and recording facts of nature or history.
( b ) In all matters of morals and religion, however, man's insight into truth is vitiated by wrong aflections, and, unless a supernatural wisdom can guide him, he is certain to err himself, and to lead others into error.
( c ) The theory in question, holding as it does that natural insight is the only source of religious truth, involves a self-contradiction ; — if the theory be true, then one man is inspired to utter what a second is inspired
THEORIES OF INSPIRATION. 57
to pronounce false. The Vedas, the Koran and the Bible cannot be inspired to contradict each other.
( d ) It makes moral and religious truth to be a purely subjective thing — a matter of private opinion — having no objective reality independently of men's opinions regarding it.
( c ) It logically involves the denial of a personal God who is truth and reveals truth, and so makes man to be the highest intelligence in the uni- verse. This is to explain inspiration by denying its existence ; since, if there be no personal God, inspiration is but a figure of speech for a purely natiu'al fact.
2. The Illumination Theory.
This regards inspiration as merely an intensifying and elevating of the religious perceptions of the Christian, the same in kind, though greater in degree, -with the illumination of every believer by the Holy Spirit. It holds, not that the Bible is, but that it contains, the word of God, and that not the writings, but only the writers, were inspired. The illumination given by the Holy Spirit, however, puts the inspired writer only in full possession of his normal powers, but does not communicate objective truth beyond,his ability to discover or understand.
With regard to this theory we remark :
( a ) There is unquestionably an illumination of the mind of every believer by the Holy Spirit, and we grant that there may have been instances in which the influence of the Spirit, in inspiration, amounted only to illumination.
(b) But we deny that this was the constant method of inspiration, or that such an influence can account for the revelation of new truth to the prophets and apostles. The illumination of the Holy Spirit gives no new truth, but only a vivid apprehension of the truth already revealed. Any original communication of truth must have required a work of the Spirit different, not in degree, but in kind.
( c ) Mere illumination could not secure the Scripture writers from frequent and grievous error. The spiritual perception of the Christian is always rendered to some extent imperfect and deceptive by remaining depravity. The subjective element so predominates in this theory, that no certainty remains even with regard to the trustworthiness of the Scriptures as a whole.
( d ) The theory is logically indefensible, as intimating that illumina- tion with regard to truth can be imparted without imparting truth itself, whereas God must first furnish objective truth to be perceived before he can illuminate the mind to perceive the meaning of that truth.
3. The Dictation-theory.
This theory holds that inspiration consisted in such a possession of the minds and bodies of the Scripture writers by the Holy Spirit, that they became passive instruments or amanuenses — pens, not penmen, of God.
58 THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
Of this view we may remark :
(a) We grant that there are instances when God's communications were uttered in an audible voice and took a definite form of words, and that this was sometimes accompanied with the command to commit the words to writing.
( b ) The theory in question, however, rests upon a partial induction of Scripture facts, — unwarrantably assuming that such occasional instances of direct dictation reveal the invariable method of God's communications of truth to the writers of the Bible.
( c ) It cannot account for the manifestly human element in the Script- ures. There are peculiarities of style which distinguish the jxroductions of each writer from those of every other, and there are variations in accounts of the same transaction which are inconsistent with the theory of a solely divine authorship.
(d) It is inconsistent with a wise economy of means, to suppose that the Scripture writers should have had dictated to them what they knew already, or what they could inform themselves of by the use of their nat- ural powers.
( e ) It contradicts what we know of the law of God's working in the soul. The higher and nobler God's communications, the more fully is man in possession and use of his own faculties. We cannot suppose that this high- est work of man under the influence of the Spirit was purely mechanical.
4. The Dynamical Theory.
The true view holds, in opposition to the first of these theories, that inspiration is not simply a natural but also a supernatural fact, and that it is the immediate work of a personal God in the soul of man.
It holds, in opposition to the second, that inspiration belongs, not only to the men who wrote the Scriptures, but to the Scriptures which they wrote, so that these Scriptures, when taken together, constitute a trust- worthy and sufficient record of divine revelation.
It holds, in opposition to the third theory, that the Scriptures contain a human as well as a divine element, so that while they present a body of divinely revealed truth, this truth is shaped in human moulds and adapted to ordinary human intelligence.
In short, inspiration is characteristically neither natural, partial, nor mechanical, but supernatural, plenary, and dynamical. Further explan- ations will be grouped under the head of The Union of the Divine and Human Elements in Inspiration, in the section which immediately follows.
IV. The Union of the Divine and Human Elements in Inspiration.
1. The Scriptures are the production equally of God and of man, and are therefore never to be regarded as merely human or merely divine.
The mystery of inspiration consists in neither of these terms separately, but in the union of the two. Of this, however, there are analogies in the interpenetration of human powers by the divine efficiency in regeneration
DIVINE AND HUMAN ELEMENTS IN INSPIRATION. 59
and sanctification, and in the nnion of the divine and human natures in the person of Jesus Christ.
2. This union of the divine and human agencies in inspiration is not to be conceived of as one of external imputation and reception.
On the other hand, those whom God raised up and providentially qualified to do this work, spoke and wrote the words of God, when inspired, not as from without, but as from within, and that not passively, but in the most conscious possession and the most exalted exercise of their own powers of intellect, emotion, and will.
3. Inspiration, therefore, did not remove, but rather pressed into its own service, all the personal peculiarities of the writers, together with their defects of culture and literary style.
Every imperfection not inconsistent with truth in a human composition may exist in inspired Scripture. The Bible is God's Avord, in the sense that it presents to us divine truth in human forms, and is a revelation not for a select class but for the common mind. Kightly understood, this very humanity of the Bible is a proof of its divinity.
4. In inspiration God may use all right and normal methods of literary composition.
As we recognize in literature the proper function of history, poetry, and fiction ; of prophecy, parable, and drama ; of personification and proverb ; of allegory and dogmatic instruction ; and even of myth and legend ; we cannot deny the possibility that God may use any one of these methods of communicating truth, leaving it to us to determine in any single case which of these methods he has adopted.
5. The inspiring Spirit has given the Scriptures to the world by a pro- cess of gradual evolution.
As in communicating the truths of natural science, God has communi- cated the truths of religion by successive steps, germinally at first, more fully as men have been able to comprehend them. The education of the race is analogous to the education of the child. First come pictures, object-lessons, external rites, predictions ; then the key to these in Christ, and their didactic exposition in the Epistles.
6. Inspiration did not guarantee inerrancy in things not essential to the main purpose of Scripture.
Inspiration went no further than to secure a trustworthy transmission by the sacred writers of the truth they were commissioned to deliver. It was not omniscience. It was a bestowal of various kinds and degrees of knowledge and aid, according to need ; sometimes suggesting new truth, sometimes presiding over the collection of preexisting material and guard- ing from essential error in the final elaboration. As inspiration was not omniscience, so it was not complete sanctificatioii. It involved neither personal infallibility, nor entire freedom from sin.
7. Inspiration did not always, or even generally, involve a direct com- munication to the Scripture writers of the words they wrote.
60 THE SCKIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
Thought is possible without words, and in the order of nature precedes words. The Scripture writers appear to have been so influenced by the Holy Spirit that they perceived and felt even the new truths they were to publish, as discoveries of their own minds, and were left to the action of their own minds in the expression of these truths, with the single exception that they were supernaturally held back from the selection of wrong words, and when needful were provided with right ones. Inspiration is therefore not verbal, while yet we claim that no form of words which taken in its connections would teach essential error has been admitted into Scripture.
8. Yet, notwithstanding the ever-present human element, the all-per- vading inspiration of the Scriptures constitutes these various writings an organic whole.
Since the Bible is in all its parts the work of God, each part is to be judged, not by itself alone, but in its connection with»every other part. The Scriptures are not to be interpreted as so many merely human produc- tions by different authors, but as also the work of one divine mind. Seem- ingly trivial things are to be explained from their connection with the whole. One history is to be built up from the several accounts of the life of Christ. One doctrine must supplement another. The Old Testament is part of a progressive system, whose culmination and key are to.be found in the New. The central subject and thought which binds all parts of the Bible together, and in the light of which they are to be interpreted, is the person and work of Jesus Christ.
9. When the unity of the Scripture is fully recognized, the Bible, in spite of imperfections in matters non-essential to its religious purpose, fur- nishes a safe and sufficient guide to truth and to salvation.
The recognition of the Holy Spirit's agency makes it rational and natural to believe in the organic unity of Scripture. When the earlier parts are taken in connection with the later, and when each part is interjjreted by the whole, most of the difficulties connected with inspiration disappear. Taken together, with Christ as its culmination and explanation, the Bible furnishes the Christian rule of faith and practice.
10. While inspiration constitutes Scripture an authority more trust- worthy than are individual reason or the creeds of the church, the only ultimate authority is Christ himself.
Christ has not so constructed Scripture as to dispense with his personal presence and teaching by his Spirit. The Scripture is the imperfect mirror of Christ. It is defective, yet it reflects him and leads to him. Authority resides not in it, but in him, and his Spirit enables the individual Christian and the collective church progressively to distinguish the essential from the non-essential, and so to perceive the truth as it is in Jesus. In thus judging Scripture and interpreting Scripture, we are not rationalists, but are rather believers in him who promised to be with us alway even unto the end of the world and to lead us by his Spirit into all the truth.
11. The preceding discussion enables us at least to lay down three car- dinal principles and to answer three common questions with regard to inspiration.
OBJECTIONS TO THE DOCTRINE OF INSPIRATION. 61
Principles : ( a ) The human mind can be inhabited and energized by God while yet attaining and retaining its owu'highest intelligence and freedom. (b) The Scriptures being the work of the one God, as well as of the men in whom God moved and dwelt, constitute an articulated and organic unity. (e) The unity and authority of Scripture as a whole are entirely consis- tent with its gradual evolution and with great imperfection in its non-essen- tial parts.
Questions : (a) Is any part of Scripture uninspired? Answer : Every part of Scripture is inspired in its connection and relation with every other part. ( b ) Are there degrees of inspiration ? Answer : There are degrees of value, but not of inspiration. Each part in its connection with the rest is made completely true, and completeness has no degrees, (c) How may we know what parts are of most value and what is the teaching of the whole '? Answer : The same Spirit of Christ who inspired the Bible is promised to take of the things of Christ, and, by showing them to us, to lead us progressively into all the truth.
V. Objections to the Doctrine of Inspiration.
In connection with a divine-human work like the Bible, insoluble diffi- culties may be expected to present themselves. So long, however, as its inspiration is sustained by competent and sufficient evidence, these difficul- ties cannot justly prevent our full acceptance of the doctrine, any more than disorder and mystery in nature warrant us in setting aside the proofs of its divine authorship. These difficulties are lessened with time ; some have already disappeared ; many may be due to ignorance, and may be removed hereafter ; those which are permanent may be intended to stimulate inquiry and to discipline faith.
It is noticeable that the common objections to inspiration are urged, not so much against the religious teaching of the Scriptures, as against certain errors in secular matters which are supposed to be interwoven with it. But if these are proved to be errors indeed, it will not necessarily overthrow the doctrine of inspiration ; it will only compel us to give a larger place to the human element in the composition of the Scriptures, and to regard them more exclusively as a text-book of religion. As a rule of religious faith and practice, they will still be the infallible word of God. The Bible is to be judged as a book whose one aim is man's rescue from sin and reconciliation to God, and in these respects it will still be found a record of substantial truth. This will appear more fully as we examine the objec- tions one by one.
1. Errors in matters of Science.
Upon this objection we remark :
( a ) We do not admit the existence of scientific error in the Scripture. What is charged as such is simply truth presented in popular and impres- sive forms.
The common mind receives a more correct idea of unfamiliar facts when these are narrated in phenomenal language and in summary form than
62 THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION" FROM GOD.
when they are described in the abstract terms and in the exact detail of science.
( b ) It is not necessary to a proper view of inspiration to suppose that the human authors of Scripture had in mind the proper scientific interpre- tation of the natural events they recorded.
It is enough that this was in the mind of the inspiring Spirit. Through the comparatively narrow conceptions and inadequate language of the Scripture writers, the Spirit of inspiration may have secured the expres- sion of the truth in such germinal form as to be intelligible to the times in which it was [first published, and yet capable of indefinite expansion as science should advance. In the miniature picture of creation in the first chapter of Genesis, and in its power of adjusting itself to every advance of scientific investigation, we have a strong proof of inspiration.
(c) It may be safely said that science has not yet shown any fairly interpreted jJassage of Scripture to be untrue.
With regard to the antiquity of the race, we may say that owing to the differences of reading between the Septuagint and the Hebrew there is room for doubt whether either of the received chronologies has the sanction of inspiration. Although science has made probable the existence of man upon the earth at a period preceding the dates assigned in these chronol- ogies, no statement of inspired Scripture is thereby proved false.
(d) Even if error in matters of science were found in Scripture, it would not disprove inspiration, since inspiration concerns itself with science only so far as correct scientific views are necessary to morals and religion.
2. Errors in matters of History.
To this objection we reply :
(a) What are charged as such are often mere mistakes in transcription, and have no force as arguments against inspiration, unless it can first be shown that inspired documents are by the very fact of their inspiration exempt from the operation of those laws which affect the transmission of other ancient documents.
( b ) Other so-called errors are to be explained as a permissible use of round numbers, which cannot be denied to the sacred writers except upon the principle that mathematical accuracy was more important than the general impression to be secured by the narrative.
( c ) Diversities of statement in accounts of the same event, so long as they touch no substantial truth, may be due to the meagreness of the narrative, and might be fully explained if some single fact, now unrecorded, were only known. To explain these apparent discrepancies would not only be beside the purpose of the record, but would destroy one valuable evidence of the independence of the several writers or witnesses.
(d) While historical and archaeological discovery in many important particulars goes to sustain the general correctness of the Scripture narra- tives, and no statement essential to the moral and religious teaching of Scripture has been invalidated, inspiration is still consistent with much imperfection in historical detail and its nai'ratives "do not seem to be exempted from possibilities of error. "
OBJECTIONS TO THE DOCTRINE OF INSPIRATION. 03
3. Errors in Morality.
( a ) What are charged as such are sometimes evil acts and words of good meil _ words and acts not sanctioned by God. These are narrated by the inspired writers as simple matter of history, and subsequent results, or the story itself, is left to point the moral of the tale.
( b ) Where evil acts appear at first sight to be sanctioned, it is frequently some right intent or accompanying virtue, rather than the act itself, upon •which commendation is bestowed.
( c ) Certain commands and deeds are sanctioned as relatively just — expressions of justice such as the age could comprehend, and are to be judged as parts of a progressively unfolding system of morality whose key and culmination we have in Jesus Christ.
( d ) God's righteous sovereignty affords the key to other events. He has the right to do what he will with his own, and to punish the transgressor when and where he will ; and he may justly make men the foretellers or executors of his purposes.
( e ) Other apparent immoralities are due to un wan-anted interpretations. Symbol is sometimes taken for literal fact ; the language of irony is under- stood as sober affirmation ; the glow and freedom of Oriental description are judged by the unimpassioned style of Western literature ; appeal to lower motives is taken to exclude, instead of preparing for, the higher.
4. Errors of Reasoning.
(a) What are charged as such are generally to be explained as valid argument expressed in highly condensed form. The appearance of error may be due to the suppression of one or more links in the reasoning.
( b ) Where we cannot see the propriety of the conclusions drawn from given premises, there is greater reason to attribute our failure to ignorance of divine logic on our part, than to accommodation or ad homincm argu- ments on the part of the Scripture writers.
(c) The adoption of Jewish methods of reasoning, where it could be proved, would not indicate error on the part of the Scripture writers, but rather an inspired sanction of the method as applied to that particular case.
(d) If it should appear however upon further investigation that Kab- binical methods have been wrongly employed by the apostles in their argu- mentation, we might still distinguish between the truth they are seeking to convey and the arguments by which they support it. Inspiration may ci mceivably make known the truth, yet leave the expression of the truth to human dialectic as well as to human rhetoric.
5. Errors in quoting or interpreting the Old Testament.
(a) What are charged as such are commonly interpretations of the meaning of the original Scripture by the same Spirit who first inspired it.
( b ) Where an apparently false translation is quoted from the Septuagint, the sanction of inspiration is given to it, as expressing a part at least of the
64 THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
fulness of meaning contained in the divine original — a fulness of meaning which two varying translations do not in some cases exhaust.
( c ) The freedom of these inspired interpretations, however, does not warrant us in like freedom of interpretation in the case of other passages whose meaning has not been authoritatively made known.
(d) "While we do not grant that the New Testament writers in any proper sense misquoted or misinterpreted the Old Testament, we do not regard absolute correctness in these respects as essential to their inspira- tion. The inspiring Spirit may have communicated truth, and may have secured in the Scriptures as a whole a record of that truth sufficient for men's moral and religious needs, without imparting perfect gifts of scholar- ship or exegesis.
6. Errors in Prophecy.
(a) What are charged as such may frequently be explained by remem- bering that much of prophecy is yet unfulfilled.
( b ) The personal surmises of the prophets as to the meaning of the prophecies they recorded may have been incorrect, while yet the prophe- cies themselves are inspired.
( c ) The prophet's earlier utterances are not to be severed from the later utterances which elucidate them, nor from the whole revelation of which they form a part. It is unjust to forbid the prophet to explain his own meaning.
( d) The character of prophecy as a rough general sketch of the future, in highly figurative language, and without historical perspective, renders it peculiarly probable that what at first sight seem to be errors are due to a misinterpretation on our part, which confounds the drapery with the substance, or applies its language to events to which it had no reference.
7. Certain books unworthy of a place in inspired Scripture.
(a) This charge may be shown, in each single case, to rest upon a mis- apprehension of the aim and method of the book, and its connection with the remainder of the Bible, together with a narrowness of nature or of doctrinal view, which prevents the critic from appreciating the wants of the peculiar class of men to which the book is especially serviceable.
( b ) The testimony of church history and general Christian experience to the profitableness and divinity of the disputed books is of greater weight than the personal impressions of the few who criticize them.
( c ) Such testimony can be adduced in favor of the value of each one of the books to which exception is taken, such as Esther, Job, Song of Solo- mon, Ecclesiastes, Jonah, James, Revelation.
8. Portions of the Scripture books written by others than the persons to whom they are ascribed.
The objection rests upon a misunderstanding of the nature and object of inspiration. It may be removed by considering that
OBJECTIONS TO THE DOCTRINE OF INSPIRATION. 65
( a ) In the case of books made up from preexisting documents, inspira- tion simply preserved the compilers of them from selecting inadequate or improper material. The fact of such compilation does not impugn their value as records of a divine revelation, since these books supplement each other's deficiencies and together are sufficient for man's religious needs.
(b) In the case of additions to Scripture books by later writers, it is reasonable to suppose that the additions, as well as the originals, were made by inspiration, and no essential truth is sacrificed by allowing the whole to go under the name of the chief author.
( c ) It is unjust to deny to inspired Scripture tho right exercised by all historians of introducing certain documents and sayings as simply his- torical, while their complete truthfulness is neither vouched for nor denied.
9. Sceptical or fictitious Narratives.
( a ) Descriptions of human experience may be embraced in Scripture, not as models for imitation, but as illustrations of the doubts, struggles, and needs of the soul. In these cases inspiration may vouch, not for the cor- rectness of the views expressed by those who thus describe their mental history, but only for the correspondence of the description with actual fact, and for its usefulness as indirectly teaching important moral lessons.
( b ) Moral truth may be put by Scripture writers into parabolic or dra- matic form, and the sayings of Satan and of perverse men may form parts of such a production. In such cases, inspiration may vouch, not for the historical truth, much less for the moral truth of each separate statement, but only for the correspondence of the whole with ideal fact ; in other words, inspiration may guarantee that the story is true to nature, and is valuable as conveying divine instruction.
(c) In none of these cases ought the difficulty of distinguishing man's words from God's words, or ideal truth from actual truth, to prevent our acceptance of the fact of inspiration ; for in this very variety of the Bible, combined with the stimulus it gives to inquiry and the general plainness of its lessons, we have the very characteristics we should expect in a book whose authorship was divine.
10. Acknowledgment of the non-inspiration of Scripture teachers and their writings.
This charge rests mainly upon the misinterpretation of two particular passages :
( a ) Acts 23 : 5 ( " I wist not, brethren, that he was the high priest " ) may be explained either as the language of indignant irony : " I would not recognize such a man as high priest " ; or, more naturally, an actual con- fession of personal ignorance and fallibility, which does not affect the inspi- ration of any of Paul's final teachings or writings.
{b) 1 Cor. 7 : 12, 10 ("I, notthe Lord" ; "not I, buttho Lord"). Here the contrast is uot between tho apostle inspired and the apostle uninspired, but between the apostle's words and an actual saying of our Lord, as in
5
66 THE SCRIPTURES A REVELATION FROM GOD.
Mat. 5 : 32 ; 19 : 3-10 ; Mark 10 : 11 ; Luke 16 : 18 (Stanley on Corinthians), The expressions may be paraphrased : — "With regard to this matter no express command was given by Christ before his ascension. As one inspired by Christ, however, I give you my command."
PAET IV.
THE NATURE, DECREES AND WORKS OF GOD.
CHAPTER I.
THE ATTRIBUTES OF GOD.
In contemplating the words and acts of. God, as in contemplating the words and acts of individual men, we are compelled to assign uniform and permanent effects to uniform and permanent causes. Holy acts and words, we argue, must have their source in a principle of holiness ; truthful acts and words, in a settled proclivity to truth ; benevolent acts and words, in a benevolent disposition.
Moreover, these permanent and uniform sources of expression and action to which we have applied the terms principle, proclivity, disposition, since they exist harmoniously in the same person, must themselves inhere, and find their unity, in an underlying spiritual substance or reality of which they are the inseparable characteristics and partial manifestations.
Thus we are led naturally from the works to the attributes, and from the attributes to the essence, of God.
I. Definition of the term Attributes.
The attributes of God are those distinguishing characteristics of the divine nature which are inseparable from the idea of God and which con- stitute the basis and ground for his various manifestations to his creatures.
We call them attributes, because we are compelled to attribute them to God as fundamental qualities or powers of his being, in order to give rational account of certain constant facts in God's self-revelations.
II. Relation of the dtvine Attributes to the divine Essence.
1. The attributes have an objective existence. They are not mere names for human conceptions of God — conceptions which have their only ground in the imperfection of the finite mind. They are qualities objec- tively distinguishable from the divine essence and from each other.
The nominalistic notion that God is a being of absolute simplicity, and that in his nature there is no internal distinction of qualities or powers, tends directly to pantheism ; denies all reality of the divine perfections ; or, if these in any sense still exist, precludes all knowledge of them on the part of finite beings . To say that knowledge and power, eternity and holi- ness, are identical with the essence of God and with each other, is to deny that we know God at all.
67
68 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
The Scripture declarations of the possibility of knowing God, together with the manifestation of the distinct attributes of his nature, are conclu- sive against this false notion of the divine simplicity,,
2. The attributes inhere in the divine essence. They are not separate existences. They are attributes of God.
"While we oppose the nominalistic view which holds them to be mere names with which, by the necessity of our thinking, we clothe the one sim- ple divine essence, we need equally to avoid the opposite realistic extreme of making them separate parts of a composite God.
We cannot conceive of attributes except as belonging to an underlying essence which furnishes their ground of unity. In representing God as a compound of attributes, realism endangers the living unity of the Godhead.
3. The attributes belong to the divine essence as such. They are to be distinguished from those other powers or relations which do not appertain to the divine essence universally.
The personal distinctions (projirietates) in the nature of the one God are not to be denominated attributes ; for each of these personal distinctions belongs not to the divine essence as such and universally, but only to the particular person of the Trinity who bears its name, while on the contrary all of the attributes belong to each of the persons.
The relations which God sustains to the world (predicata), moreover, such as* creation, preservation, government, are not to be denominated attributes ; for these are accidental, not necessary or inseparable from the idea of God. God would be God, if he had never created.
4. The attributes manifest the divine essence. The essence is revealed only through the attributes. Apart from its attributes it is unknown and unknowable.
But though we can know God only as he reveals to us his attributes, we do, notwithstanding, in knowing these attributes, know the being to whom these attributes belong. That this knowledge is partial does not prevent its corresponding, so far as it goes, to objective reality in the nature of God.
All God's revelations are, therefore, revelations of himself in and through his attributes. Our aim must be to determine from God's works and words what qualities, dispositions, determinations, powers of his otherwise unseen and unsearchable essence he has actually made known to us ; or in other words, what are the revealed attributes of God.
III. Methods of detekmining the divine Attributes.
We have seen that the existence of God is a first truth. It is presup- posed in all human thinking, and is more or less consciously recognized by all men. This intuitive knowledge of God we have seen to be corroborated and explicated by arguments drawn from nature and from mind. Reason leads us to a causative and personal Intelligence upon whom we depend. This Being of indefinite greatness Ave clothe, by a necessity of our thinking, with all the attibutes of perfection. The two great methods of determining what these attributes are, are the Rational and the Biblical.
CLASSIFICATION OF THE ATTRIRUTE8. 69
1. The Rational method. This is threefold : — ( a ) the via negation is, or the way of negation, which consists in denying to God all imperfections observed in created beings; ( b ) the via eminentice, or the way of climax, which consists in attributing to God in infinite degree all the perfections found in creatures ; and ( c ) the via causal itatis, or the way of causality, whieh consists in predicating of God those attributes which are required in him to explain the world of nature and of mind.
This rational method explains God's nature from that of his creation, whereas the creation itself can be fully explained only from the nature of God. Though the method is valuable, it has insuperable limitations, and its place is a subordinate one. While we use it continually to confirm and supplement results otherwise obtained, our chief means of determining the divine attributes must be
2. The Biblical method. This is simply the inductive method, applied to the facts with regard to God revealed in the Scriptures. Now that we have proved the Scriptures to be a revelation from God, inspired in every part, we may properly look to them as decisive authority with regard to God's attributes.
IV. Classification of the Attkibutes.
The attributes may be divided into two great classes : Absolute or Imma- nent, and Relative or Transitive.
By Absolute or Immanent Attributes, we mean attributes which respect the inner being of God, which are involved in God's relations to himself, and which belong to his nature independently of his connection with the universe.
By Relative or Transitive Attributes, we mean attributes w.hich respect the outward revelation of God's being, which are involved in God's relations to the creation, and which are exercised in consequence of the existence of the universe and its dependence upon him.
Under the head of Absolute or Immanent Attributes, we make a three-fold division into Spirituality, with the attributes therein,involved, namely, Life and Personality ; Infinity, with •the attributes therein involved, namely, Self-existence, Immutability, and Unity ; and Perfection, with the attri- butes therein involved, namely, Truth, Love, and Holiness.
Under the head of Relative or Transitive Attributes, we make a three- fold division, according to the order of their revelation, into Attributes having relation to Time and Space, as Eternity and Immensity ; Attributes having relation to Creation, as Omnipresence, Omniscience, and Omnipo- tence ; and Attributes having relation to Moral Beings, as Veracity and Faithfulness, or Transitive Truth ; Mercy and Goodness, or Transitive Love and Justice and Righteousness, or Transitive Holiness.
70
NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
This classification may be better understood from the following schedule : 1. Absolute or Immanent Attributes :
A. Spirituality, involving
B. Infinity, involving
C. Perfection, involving
(a) Life,
( b ) Personality.
( a ) Self -existence, ' ( b ) Immutability,
( c ) Unity.
(a) Truth, ( 6 ) Love, .(c) Holiness.
2. Relative or Transitive Attributes
A. Related to Time and Space — \ , ,{
f (&)
B. Related to Creation -
(a) Eternity, Immensity.
( a ) Omnipresence, ( b ) Omniscience, ( c ) Omnipotence.
0 fcfc C
*-> •
cd s>
p
>-(
P-+s
CD O
0. Related to Moral Beings ■
1
( a ) Veracity and Faithfulness, or Transitive Truth.
( 6 ) Mercy and Goodness, or Transitive Love.
( c ) Justice and Righteousness, or Transitive Holiness.
V. Absolute ok Immanent Attkibutes.
First division. — Spirituality, and attributes therein involved.
In calb'ng spirituality an attribute of God, we mean, not that we are jus- tified in applying to the divine nature the adjective " spiritual, " but that the substantive "Spirit " describes that nature ( John 4 : 24, marg. — "God is spirit"; Rom. 1 : 20 — "the invisible things of him" ; 1 Tim. 1 :17 — "incorruptible, invisible"; Col. 1:15 — "the invisible God"). This implies, negatively, that ( a ) God is not matter. Spirit is not a refined form of matter but an immaterial sixbstance, invisible, uncompounded, indestructible. ( b ) God is not dependent upon matter. It cannot be shown that the human mind, in any other state than the present, is depen- dent for consciousness upon its connection with a physical organism Much less is it true that God is dependent upon the material universe as his sensorium. God is not only spirit, but he is pxu'e spirit. He is not only not matter, but he has no necessary connection with matter ( Luke 24 : 39 — "A spirit hath not flesh and bones, as ye behold me having " ).
Those passages of Scripture which seem to ascribe to God the posses- sion of bodily parts and organs, as eyes and hands, are to be regarded as
ABSOLUTE OR IMMANENT ATTRIBUTES. 71
anthropomorphic and symbolic. When God is spoken of as appearing to the patriarchs and walking with them, the passages are to be explained as referring to God's temporary manifestations of himself in human form — manifestations which prefigured the final tabernacling of the Son of God in human flesh. Side by side with these anthropomorphic expressions and manifestations, moreover, are specific declarations which repress any materializing conceptions of God ; as, for example, that heaven is his throne and the earth his footstool ( Is. 66 : 1), and that the heaven of heavens can- not contain him (1 K. 8 :27).
We come now to consider the positive import of the term Spirit. The spirituality of God involves the two attributes of Life and Personality.
1. Life.
The Scriptures represent God as the living God.
Life is a simple idea, and is incapable of real definition. We know it, however, in ourselves, and we can perceive the insufficiency or inconsist- ency of certain current definitions of it. We cannot regard life in God as
(a) Mere process, without a subject; for we cannot conceive of a divine life without a God to live it.
Nor can we regard life as
( o ) Mere correspondence with outward condition and environment ; for this would render impossible a life of God before the existence of the universe.
( c ) Life is rather mental energy, or energy of intellect, affection, and will. God is the living God, as having in his own being a source of being and activity, both for himself aud others.
2. Personality.
The Scriptures represent God as a personal being. By personality we mean the power of self-consciousness and of self-determination. By way of further explanation we remark :
( a ) Self-consciousness is more than consciousness. This last the brute may be supposed to possess, since the brute is not an automaton. Man is distinguished from the brute by his power to objectify self. Man is not only conscious of his own acts and states, but by abstraction and reflection he recognizes the self which is the subject of these acts and states. ( b ) Self-determination is more than determination. The brute shows determi- nation, but his determination is the result of influences from without; there is no inner spontaneity. Man, by virtue of his free-will, determines his action from within. He determines self in view of motives, but his deter- mination is not caused by motives ; he himself is the cause.
God, as personal, is in the highest degree self-conscious and self-deter- mining. The rise in our own minds of the idea of God, as personal, depends largely upon our recognition of personality in ourselves. Those who deny spirit in man place a bar in the way of the recognition of this attribute of God.
72 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
Second Division. — Infinity, and attributes therein involved.
By infinity we mean, not that the divine nature has no known limits or bounds, but that it has no limits or bounds. That which has simply no known limits is the indefinite. The infinity of God implies that he is in no way limited by the universe or confined to the universe ; he is tran- scendent as well as immanent. Transcendence, however, must not be con- ceived as freedom from merely spatial restrictions, but rather as unlimited resource, of which God's glory is the expression.
In explanation of the term infinity, we may notice :
( a ) That infinity can belong to but one Being, and therefore cannot be shared with the universe. Infinity is not a negative but a positive idea. It does not take its rise from an impotence of thought, but is an intuitive conviction which constitutes the basis of all other knowledge.
( b ) That the infinity of God does not involve his identity with ' the all, or the sum of existence, nor prevent the coexistence of derived and finite beings to which he bears relation. Infinity implies simply that God exists in no necessary relation to finite things or beings, and that whatever limita- tion of the divine nature results from their existence is, on the part of God, a self-hmitation.
( c ) That the infinity of God is to be conceived of as intensive, rather than as extensive. We do not attribute to God infinite extension, but rather infinite energy of spiritual life. That which acts up to the measure of its power is simply natural and physical force. Man rises above nature by virtue of his reserves of power. But in God the reserve is infinite. There is a transcendent element in him, which no self-revelation exhausts, whether creation or redemption, whether law or promise.
Of the attributes involved in Infinity, we mention :
1. Self-existence.
By self-existence we mean
( a ) That God is ' ' causa sui, " having the ground of his existence in him- self. Every being must have the ground of its existence either in or out of itself. We have the ground of our existence outside of us. God is not thus dependent. He is a se ; hence we speak of the aseity of God.
But lest this should be be misconstrued, we add
( b ) That God exists by the necessity of his own being. It is his nature to be. Hence the existence of God is not a contingent but a necessary existence. It is grounded, not in his volitions, but in his nature.
2. Immutability.
By this we mean that the nature, attributes, and will of God are exempt from all change. Reason teaches us that no change is possible in God, whether of increase or decrease, progress or deterioration, contraction or development. All change must be to better* or to worse. But God is absolute perfection, and no change to better is possible. Change to worse would be equally inconsistent with perfection. No'cause for such change exists, either outside of God or in God himself.
ABSOLUTE OR IMMANENT ATTRIBUTES. 73
The passages of Scripture which seem at first sight to ascribe change to God are to be explained in one of three ways :
( a ) As illustrations of the varied methods in which God manifests his immutable truth and wisdom in creation.
( o ) As anthropomorphic representations of the revelation of God's unchangiug attributes in the changing circumstances and varying moral conditions of creatures.
( c ) As describing executions, in time, of purposes eternally existing in the mind of God. Immutability must not be confounded with immobility. This woidd deny all those imperative volitions of God by which he enters into history, The Scriptures assure us that creation, miracles, incarnation, regeneration, are immediate acts of God. Immutability is consistent with constant activity and perfect freedom.
3. Unity.
By this we mean (a) that the divine nature is undivided and indivisible ( units) ; and (b) that there is but one infinite and perfect Spirit (unicus).
Against polytheism, tritheism, or dualism, we may urge that the notion of two or more Gods is self -contradictory ; since each limits the other and destroys his godhood. In the nature of things, infinity and absolute per- fection are possible only to one. It is unphilosophical, moreover, to assume the existence of two or more Gods, when one will explain all the facts. The unity of God is, however, in no way inconsistent with the doc- trine of the Trinity ; for, while this doctrine holds to the existence of hypostatical, or personal, distinctions in the divine nature, it also holds that this divine nature is numerically and eternally one.
Third Division. — Perfection, and attributes therein involved.
By perfection we mean, not mere quantitative completeness, but qualita- tive excellence. The attributes involved in perfection are moral attributes. Bight action among men presupposes a perfect moral organization, a nor- mal state of intellect, affection and will. So God's activity presupposes a principle of intelligence, of affection, of volition, in his inmost being, and the existence of a worthy object for each of these powers of his nature. But in eternity past there is nothing existing outside or apart from God. He must find, and he does find, tho sufficient object of intellect, affection, and will, in himself. There is a self-knowing, a self-loving, a self-willing, which constitute his absolute perfection. The consideration of the imma- nent attributes is, therefore, properly concluded with an account of that truth, love, and holiness, which render God entirely sufficient to himself.
1. Truth.
By truth we mean that attribute of the divine nature in virtue of which God's being and God's knowledge eternally conform to each other.
In further explanation we remark : A. Negatively :
(a) The immanent truth of God is not to be confounded with that veracity and faithfulness which partially manifest it to creatures. These
74 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
are transitive truth, and they presuppose the absolute and immanent attribute.
( b ) Truth in God is not a merely active attribute of the divine nature. God is truth, not only in the sense that he is the being "who truly knows, but also in the sense that he is the truth that is known. The passive pre- cedes the active ; truth of being precedes truth of knowing.
B. Positively :
(a) All truth among men, whether mathematical, logical, moral, or religious, is to be regarded as having its foundation in this immanent truth of the divine nature and as disclosing facts in the being of God.
( b ) This attribute therefore constitutes the principle and guarantee of all revelation, while it shows the possibility of an eternal divine self- contemplation apart from and before all creation. It is to be understood only in the light of the doctrine of the Trinity.
2. Love.
By love we mean that attribute of the divine nature in virtue of which God is eternally moved to self-communication.
In further explanation we remark :
A. Negatively :
( a ) The immanent love of God is not to be confounded with mercy and goodness toward creatures. These are its manifestations, and are to be denominated transitive love.
( b ) Love is not the all-inclusive ethical attribute of God. It does not include truth, nor does it include holiness.
( c ) Nor is God's love a mere regard for being in general, irrespective of its moral quality.
( d ) God's love is not a merely emotional affection, proceeding from sense or impulse, nor is it prompted by utilitarian considerations.
B. Positively :
( a ) The immanent love of God is a rational and voluntary affection, grounded in perfect reason and deliberate choice.
( b ) Since God's love is rational, it involves a subordination of the emotional element to a higher law than itself, namely, that of truth and holiness.
( c ) The immanent love of God therefore requires and finds a perfect standard in his own holiness, and a personal object in the image of his own infinite perfections. It is to be understood only in the light of the doc- trine of the Trinity.
( d ) The immanent love of God constitutes a ground of the divine bless- edness. Since there is an infinite and perfect object of love, as well as of knowledge and will, in God's own nature, the existence of the universe is not necessary to his serenity and joy.
ABSOLUTE OR IMMANENT ATTRIBUTES. 75
( c ) The love of God involves also the possibility of divine suffering, and the suffering on account of sin which holiness necessitates on the part of God is itself the atonement.
3. Holiness.
Holiness is self -affirming purity. In virtuo of this attribute of his nature, God eternally wills and maintains his own moral excellence. In this defi- nition are contained three elements : first, purity ; secondly, purity will- ing ; thirdly, purity willing itself.
In further explanation we remark :
A. Negatively, that holiness is not
( a ) Justice, or purity demanding purity from creatures. Justice, the relative or transitive attribute, is indeed the manifestation and expression of the immanent attribute of holiness, but it is not to be confounded with it.
(6) Holiness is not a complex term designating the aggregate of the divine perfections. On the other hand, the notion of holiness is, both in Scripture and in Christian experience, perfectly simple, and perfectly dis- tinct from that of other attributes.
( c ) Holiness is not God's self-love, in the sense of supreme regard for his own interest and happiness. There is no utilitarian element in holiness.
( d ) Holiness is not identical with, or a manifestation of, love. Since self-maintenance must precede self-impartation, and since benevolence has its object, motive, standard and limit in righteousness, holiness the self- affirming attribute can in no way be resolved into love the self-communi- cating.
B. Positively, that holiness is
(a) Purity of substance. — In God's moral nature, as necessarily acting, there are indeed the two elements of willing and being. But the passive logically precedes the active ; being conies before willing ; God is pure before he wills purity. Since purity, however, in ordinary usage is a negative term and means only freedom from stain or wrong, we must include in it also the positive idea of moral rightness. God is holy in that he is the source and standard of the right.
(6) Energy of will. — This purity is not simply a passive and dead qual- ity ; it is the attribute of a personal being ; it is penetrated and pervaded by will. Holiness is the free moral movemeat of the Godhead.
( c) Self-affirmation. — Holiness is God's self- willing. His own purity is the supreme object of his regard and maintenance. God is holy, in that his infinite moral excellence affirms and asserts itself as the highest possi- ble motive and end. Like truth and love, this attribute can be under- stood only in the light of the doctrine of the Trinity.
76 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
VI. Be:lative ob Transitive Attributes.
First Division. — Attributes having relation to Time and Space.
1. Eternity.
By this we mean that God's nature ( a ) is without beginning or end ; ( b ) is free from all succession of time ; and ( c ) contains in itself the cause of time.
Eternity is infinity in its relation to time. It implies that God's nature is not subject to the law of time. God is not in time. It is more correct to say that time is in God. Although there is logical succession in God's thoughts, there is no chronological succession.
Yet we are far from saying that time, now that it exists, has no objective reality to God. To him, past, present, and future are "one eternal now," not in the sense that there is no distinction between them, but only in the sense that he sees past and future as vividly as he sees the present. With creation time began, and since the successions of history are veritable suc- cessions, he who sees according to truth must recognize them.
2. Immensity.
By this we mean that God's nature ( a ) is without extension ; ( b ) is sub- ject to no limitations of space ; and (c) contains in itself the cause of space.
Immensity is infinity in its relation to space. God's nature is not subject to the law of space. God is not in space. It is more correct to say that space is in God. Yet space has an objective reality to God. With creation space began to be, and since God sees according to truth, he recognizes relations of space in his creation.
Second Division. — Attributes having relation to Creation.
1. Omnipresence.
By this we mean that God, in the totality of his essence, without diffu- sion or expansion, multiplication or division, penetrates and fills the universe in all its parts.
In explanation of this attribute we may say :
(a) God's omnipresence is not potential but essential. — We reject the Socinian representation that God's essence is in heaven, only his power on earth. When God is said to " dwell in the heavens," we are to understand the language either as a symbolic expression of exaltation above earthly things, or as a declaration that his most special and glorious self-manifesta- tions are to the spirits of heaven.
( b ) God's omnipresence is not the presence of a part but of the whole of God in every place. — This follows from the conception of God as incor- poreal. We reject the materialistic representation that God is composed of material elements which can be divided or sundered. There is no multi- plication or diffusion of his substance to correspond with the parts of his dominions. The one essence of God is present at the same moment in all.
(c ) God's omnipresence is not necessary but free. — We reject the pan- theistic notion that God is bound to the universe as the universe is bound
RELATIVE OR TRANSITIVE ATTRIBUTES. 77
to God. God is immanent in the universe, not by compulsion, but by the free act of his own will, and this immanence is qualified by his tran- scendence.
2. Omniscience.
By this we mean God's perfect and eternal knowledge of all things which are objects of knowledge, whether they be actual or possible, past, present, or future.
( a ) The omniscience of God may be argued from his omnipresence, as well as from his truth or self-knowledge, in which the plan of creation has its eternal ground, and from prophecy, which expresses God's omniscience.
( b ) Since it is free from all imperfection, God's knowledge is immediate, as distinguished from the knowledge that comes through sense or imagina- tion ; simultaneous, as not acquired by successive observations, or built up by processes of reasoning ; distinct, as free from all vagueness or con- fusion ; true, as perfectly corresponding to the reality of things ; eternal, as comprehended in one timeless act of the divine mind.
( c ) Since God knows things as they are, he knows the necessary sequences of his creation as necessary, the free acts of his creatures as free, the ideally possible as ideally possible.
(d) The fact that there is nothing in the present condition of things from which the future actions of free creatures necessarily follow by nat- ural law does not prevent God from foreseeing such actions, since his knowledge is not mediate, but immediate. He not only foreknows the motives which will occasion men's acts, but he directly foreknows the acts themselves. The possibility of such direct knowledge without assignable grounds of knowledge is apparent if we admit that time is a form of finite thought to which the divine mind is not subject.
( e ) Prescience is not itself causative. It is not to be confounded with the predetermining will of God. Free actions do not take place because they are foreseen, but they are foreseen because they are to take place.
(/ ) Omniscience embraces the actual and the possible, but it does not embrace the self-contradictory and the impossible, because these are not objects of knowledge.
( g ) Omniscience, as qualified by holy will, is in Scripture denominated "wisdom." In virtue of his wisdom God chooses the highest ends and uses the fittest means to accomplish them.
3. Omnipotence.
By this we mean the power of God to do all things which are objects of power, whether with or without the use of means.
( a ) Omnipotence does not imply power to do that which is not an object of power ; as, for example, that which is self-contradictory or contradictory to the nature of God.
( b ) Omnipotence does not imply the exercise of all his power on the part of God. He has power over his power ; in other words, his power is
78 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
under the control of wise and holy will. God can do all he will, but he will not do all he can. Else his power is mere force acting necessarily, and God is the slave of his own omnipotence.
( c) Omnipotence in God does not exclude, but implies, the power of self limitation. Since all such self-limitation is free, proceeding from neither external nor internal compulsion, it is the act and manifestation of God's power. Human freedom is not rendered impossible by the divine omnipo- tence, but exists by virtue of it. It is an act of omnipotence when God humbles himself to the taking of human flesh in the person of Jesus Christ.
Third Division. — Attributes having relation to Moral Beings.
1. Veracity and Faithfulness, or Transitive Truth.
By veracity and faithfulness we mean the transitive truth of God, in its twofold relation to his creatures in general and to his redeemed people in particular.
( a ) In virtue of his veracity, all his revelations to creatures consist with his essential being and with each other.
(b) In virtue of his faithfulness, he fulfills all his promises to his people, whether expressed in words or implied in the constitution he has given them.
2. Mercy and Goodness, or Transitive Love.
By mercy and goodness we mean the transitive love of God in its two- fold relation to the disobedient and to the obedient portions of his creatures.
( a ) Mercy is that eternal principle of God's nature which leads him to seek the temporal good and eternal salvation of those who have opposed themselves to his will, even at the cost of infinite self-sacrifice.
( b ) Goodness is the eternal principle of God's nature which leads him to communicate of his own life and blessedness to those who are like him in moral character. Goodness, therefore, is nearly identical with the love of complacency ; mercy, with the love of benevolence.
3. Justice and Righteousness, or Transitive Holiness.
By justice and righteousness we mean the transitive holiness of God, in virtue of which his treatment of his creatures conforms to the purity of his nature, — righteousness demanding from aU nforal beings conformity to the moral perfection of God, and justice visiting non-conformity to that perfec- tion with penal loss or suffering.
(a) Since justice and righteousness are simply transitive holiness — righteousness designating this holiness chiefly in its mandatory, justice chiefly in its punitive, aspect, — they are not mere manifestations of benev- olence, or of God's disposition to secure the highest happiness of his creatures, nor are they grounded in the nature of things as something apart from or above God.
( b ) Transitive holiness, as righteousness, imposes law in conscience and Scripture, and may be called legislative holiness. As justice, it executes
RANK AND RELATIONS OF THE ATTRIBUTES. 79
the penalties of law, and may bo called distributive or judicial holiness. In righteousness God reveals chiefly his love of holiness ; in justice, chiefly his hatred of sin.
( c) Neither justice nor righteousness, therefore, isa matter of arbitrary will. They are revelations of the inmost nature of God, the one in tho form of moral requirement, the other in the form of judicial sanction. As God cannot but demand of his creatures that they be like him in moral character, so he cannot but enforce tho law which he imposes upon them. Justice just as much binds God to punish as it binds the sinner to be punished.
(d) Neither justice nor righteousness bestows rewards. This follows from tho fact that obedience is duo to God, instead of being optional or a gratuity. No creature can claim anything for his obedience. If God rewards, he rewards in virtue of his goodness and faithfulness, not in virtue of his justice or his righteousness. What the creatxire cannot claim, how- ever, Christ can claim, and the rewards which are goodness to the creature are righteousness to Christ. God rewards Christ's work for us and in us.
( e ) Justice in God, as the revelation of his holiness, is devoid of all pas- sion or caprice. There is in God no selfish anger. The penalties he inflicts upon transgression are not vindictive but vindicative. They express the revulsion of God's nature from moral evil, the judicial indignation of purity against impurity, the self-assertion of infinite holiness against its antagonist and would-be destroyer. But because its decisions are calm, they are irreversible.
VII. Rank and Relations op the several Attributes.
The attributes have relations to each other. Like intellect, affection and will in man, no one of them is to be conceived of as exercised separately from the rest. Each of the attributes is qualified by all the others. God's love is immutable, wise, holy. Infinity belongs to God's knowledge, power, justice. Yet this is not to say that one attribute is of as high rank as another. The moral attributes of truth, love, holiness, are worthy of higher reverence from men, and they are more jealously guarded by God, than the natural attributes of omnipresence, omniscience, and omnipo- tence. And yet even among the moral attributes one stands as supreme. Of this and of its supremacy we now proceed to speak.
1. Holiness the fundamental attribute in God.
That holiness is the fundamental attribute in God, is evident:
( a ) From Scripture, — in which God's holiness is not only most con- stantly and powerfully impressed upon the attention of man, but is declared to be the chief subject of rejoicing and adoration in heaven.
( 6 ) From our own moral constitution, — in which conscience asserts its supremacy over every other impulse and affection of our nature. As we may be kind, but must be righteous, so God, in whose image we are made, may be merciful, but must be holy.
80 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
(e) From the actual dealings of God, — in winch holiness conditions and limits the exercise of other attributes. Thus, for example, in Christ's redeeming work, though love makes the atonement, it is violated holiness that requires it ; and in the eternal punishment of the wicked, the demand of holiness for self -vindication overbears the pleading of love for the suf- ferers.
(d) From God's eternal purpose of salvation, — in which justice and mercy are reconciled only through the foreseen and predetermined sacri- fice of Christ. The declaration that Christ is ' ' the Lamb . . . slain from the foundation of the world " implies the existence of a principle in the divine nature which requires satisfaction, before God can enter upon the work of redemption. That principle can be none other than holiness.
2. The holiness of God the ground of moral obligation.
A. Erroneous Views. The ground of moral obligation is not
( a ) In power, — whether of civil law ( Hobbes, Gassendi ), or of divine will (Occam, Descartes). We are not bound to obey either of these, except upon the ground that they are right. This theory assumes that nothing is good or right in itself, and that morality is mere prudence.
( b ) Nor in utility, — whether our own happiness or advantage present or eternal (Paley), for supreme regard for our own interest is not virtu- ous ; or the greatest happiness or advantage to being in general ( Edwards ), for we judge conduct to be useful because it is right, not right because it is useful. This theory would compel us to believe that in eternity past God was holy only because of the good he got from it, — that is, there was no such thing as holiness in itself, and no such thing as moral character in God.
(c) Nor in the nature of things (Price), — whether by this we mean their fitness (Clarke), truth ( Wollaston), order ( Jouffroy), relations (Wayland), worthiness (Hickok), sympathy (Adam Smith), or abstract right (Haven and Alexander) ; for this nature of things is not ultimate, but has its ground in the nature of God. We are bound to worship the highest ; if anything exists beyond and above God, we are bound to worship that, — that indeed is God.
B. The Scriptural View. — According to the Scriptures, the ground of moral obligation is the holiness of God, or the moral perfection of the divine nature, conformity to which is the law of our moral being (Robin- son, Chalmers, Calderwood, Gregory, Wuttke). We show this :
(«) From the commands: "Ye shall be holy," where the ground of obligation assigned is simply and only : "for I am holy" (1 Pet. 1 : 16) ; and "Ye therefore shall be perfect," where the standard laid down is : "as your heavenly Father is perfect" (Mat. 5 : 48). Here we have an ultimate reason and ground for being and doing right, namely, that God is right, or, in other words, that holiness is his nature.
( b ) From the nature of the love in which the whole law is summed up ( Mat. 22 : 37 — " Thou shalt love the Lord thy God " ; Rom. 13:10 — " love therefore is the fulfilment of the law"). This love is not regard for
RANK AND RELATIONS OF THE ATTRIBUTES. 81
abstract right or for the happiness of being, much less for one's own interest, but it is regard for God as the fountain and standard of moral excellence, or in other words, love for God as holy. Hence this love is the principle and source of holiness in man.
( c ) From the example of Christ, whose life was essentially an exhibi- tion of supreme regard for God, and of supreme devotion to his holy will. As Christ saw nothing good but what was in God (Mark 10:18 — "none is good save one, even God"), and did only what he saw the Father do ( John 5 : 19 ; see also 30 — "I seek not inine own will, but the will of him that sent me " ), so for us, to be like God is the sum of all duty, and God's infinite moral excellence is the supreme reason why we should be like him.
6
CHAPTER II.
DOCTRINE OF THE TRINITY.
In the nature of the one God there are three eternal distinctions which are represented to us under the figure of persons, and these three are equal. This tripersonality of the Godhead is exclusively a truth of revela- tion. It is clearly, though not formally, made known in the New Testa- ment, and intimations of it may be found in the Old.
The doctrine of the Trinity may be expressed in the six following statements : 1. In Scripture there are three who are recognized as God. 2. These three are so described in Scripture that we are compelled to con- ceive of them as distinct persons. 3. This tripersonality of the divine nature is not merely economic and temporal, but is immanent and eternal. 4. This tripersonality is not tritheism ; for while there are three persons, there is but one essence. 5. The three persons, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, are equal. 6. Inscrutable yet not self -contradictory, this doctrine furnishes the key to all other doctrines. — These statements we proceed now to prove and to elucidate.
I. In Scripture there are Three who are recognized as God. 1. Proofs from the New Testament.
A. The Father is recognized as God, — and that in so great a number of jDassages ( such as John 6 : 27 — " him the Father, even God, hath sealed," and 1 Pet. 1 : 2 — "foreknowledge of God the Father") that we need not delay to adduce extended proof.
B. Jesus Christ is recognized as God.
( a ) He is expressly called God.
In' John 1:1 — Qeoq yv 6 16yoQ — the absence of the article shows Qe6g to be the predicate ( cf. 4 : 24 — nvev/na 6 Oedf ). This predicate precedes the verb by way of emphasis, to indicate progress in the thought = ' the Logos was not only with God, but was God ' ( see Meyer and Luthardt, Comm. in loco). " Only oloyog can be the subject, for in the whole Introduction the ques- tion is, not who God is, but who the Logos is " ( Godet ).
In John 1:18, /lovoyevyc Oe<$c — ' the only begotten God ' — must be regarded as the correct reading, and as a plain ascrijjtion of absolute Deity to Christ. He is not simply the only revealer of God, but he is himself God revealed.
In John 20 : 28, the address of Thomas '0 ni<pi6c /aov nal 6 6e6( juov, — ' My Lord and my God ' — since it was unrebuked by Christ, is equivalent to an assertion on his own part of his claim to Deity.
In Rom. 9 : 5, the clause 6 &v knl tv&vtuv Of or evkoynT6q cannot be translated ' blessed be the God over all, ' for &v is superfluous if the clause is a dox- ology ; " cvAoyqrSg precedes the name of God in a doxology, but follows it,
82
8CKIPTURE RECOGNIZES THREE AS GOD. 83
as here, in a description" (Hovey). The clause can thereforo justly he interpreted only as a description of the higher nature of the Christ who had just been said, rb mra odpm, or according to his lower nature, to have had his origin from Israel ( see Tholuck, Com. in loco ).
In Titus 2 : 13, £Ki<f>6v£iav rr/g S6£r/g rov fieyalov Qeov nal ourijpog rjitav 'l7/aov XpioTov we regard ( with Ellicott ) as "a direct, definite, and even studied declaration of Christ's divinity " = "the . . . appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ" (so English Revised Version). 'FjTri<paveia is a term applied specially to the Son and never to the Father, and fieyaAov is uncalled for if used of the Father, hut peculiarly appropriate if used of Christ. Upon the same principles we luust interpret the similar text 2 Pet. 1 :1 (see Huther, in Meyer's Com. : "The close juxtaposition indicates the author's certainty of the oneness of God and Jesus Christ ").
In Heb. 1 : 8, npbg it rov vl6v • 6 ■dp&voq aov, 6 Qcbg, eig rov a'tuva is quoted as an address to Christ, and verse 10 which follows — "Thou, Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth " — by applying to Christ an Old Testament ascription to Jehovah, shows that b 6e6g, in verse 8, is used in the sense of absolute Godhead.
In 1 John 5 : 20 — ec/nev iv tiL aXq&cvcJ, ev ru vlu avrov 'Itjcsov Xpiaroj. ovrdg kcTiv 6 a!rj$ivbg Qe6g — " it would be a flat repetition, after the Father had been twice called 6 aTi^ivbg, to say now again : ' this is 6 afydtvbg e?6g.' Our being in God has its basis in Christ his Son, and this also makes it more natural that ovmg should be referred to vi<L. But ought not i aXrjtiivbg then to be without the article ( as in John 1:1 — Oedg ijv 6 Uyog ) ? No, for it is John's purpose in 1 John 5 : 20 to say, not what Christ is, but ivho he is. In declaring ivhat one is, the predicate must have no article ; in declaring who one is, the predicate must have the article. St. John here says that this Son, on whom our being in the true God rests, is this true God himself " ( see Ebrard, Com. in loco ).
( b ) Old Testament descriptions of God are applied to him.
This application to Christ of titles and names exclusively appropriated to God is inexplicable, if Christ was not regarded as being himself God. The peculiar awe with which the term ' Jehovah ' was set apart by a nation of strenuous monotheists, as the sacred and incommunicable name of the one self-existent and covenant-keeping God, forbids the belief that the Scripture writers could have used it as the designation of a subordinate and created being.
( c ) He possesses the attributes of God.
Among these are life, self-existence, immutability, truth, love, holiness, eternity, omnipresence, omniscience, omnipotence . All these attributes are ascribed to Christ in connections which show that the terms are used in no secondary sense, nor in any sense predicable of a creature.
( d ) The works of God are ascribed to him.
We do not here speak of miracles, which may be wrought by communi- cated power, but of such works as the creation of the world, the upholding of all things, the final raising of the dead, and the judging of all men.
84 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
Power to perform these works cannot be delegated, for they are character- istic of omnijjotence.
( e ) He receives honor and worship due only to God.
In addition to the address of Thomas, in John 20 : 28, which we have already cited among the proofs that Jesus is expressly called God, and in which divine honor is paid to him, we may refer to the prayer and worship offered by the apostolic and post-apostolic church.
(/) His name is associated with that of God upon a footing of equality.
We do not here allude to 1 John 5 : 7 ( the three heavenly witnesses ), for the latter part of this verse is unquestionably spurious ; but to the formula of baptism, to the apostolic benedictions, and to those passages in which eternal life is said to be dependent equally upon Christ and upon God, or in which spiritual gifts are attributed to Christ equally with the Father.
( g ) Equality with God is expressly claimed.
Here we may refer to Jesus' testimony to himself, already treated of among the proofs of the supernatural character of the Scripture teaching ( see pages 50, 51 ). Equality with God is not only claimed for himself by Jesus, but it is claimed for him by his apostles.
( h ) Further proof of Christ's deity may be found in the application to him of the phrases: 'Son of God,' 'Image of God' ; in the declarations of his oneness with God ; in the attribution to him of the fulness of the Godhead.
( i ) These proofs of Christ's deity from the New Testament are corrobo- rated by Christian experience.
Christian experience recognizes Christ as an absolutely perfect Savior, perfectly revealing the Godhead and worthy of unlimited worship and adoration ; that is, it practically recognizes him as Deity. But Christian experience also recognizes that through Christ it has introduction and reconciliation to God as one distinct from Jesus Christ, as one who was alienated from the soul by its sin, but who is now reconciled through Jesus's death. In other words, while recognizing Jesus as God, we are also compelled to recognize a distinction between the Father and the Son through whom we come to the Father.
Although this experience cannot be regarded as an independent witness to Jesus' claims, since it only tests the truth already made known in the Bible, still the irresistible impulse of every person whom Christ has saved to lift his Redeemer to the highest place, and bow before him in the lowliest worship, is strong evidence that only that interpretation of Scripture can be true which recognizes Christ's absolute Godhead. It is the church's consciousness of her Lord's divinity, indeed, and not mere speculation upon the relations of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, that has compelled the formulation of the Scripture doctrine of the Trinity.
In contemplating passages apparently inconsistent with those now cited, in that they impute to Christ weakness and ignorance, limitation and sub- jection, we are to remember, first, that our Lord was truly man, as well as
SCRIPTURE RECOGNIZES THREE AS GOD. 85
truly God, and that this ignorance and weakness may bo predicated of him as the God-man in whom deity and humanity are united ; secondly, that the divine natnro itself was in some way limited and humbled during our Savior's earthly life, and that these passages may describe him as he was in his estate of humiliation, rather than in his original and present glory ; and, thirdly, that there is an order of office and operation which is consist- ent with essential oneness and equality, but which permits the Father to be spoken of as first and the Son as second. These statements will be further elucidated in the treatment of the present doctrine and in subsequent examination of the doctrine of the Person of Christ.
C. The Holy Spirit is recognized as God.
( a ) He is spoken of as God ; ( b ) the attributes of God are ascribed to him, such as Life, truth, love, holiness, eternity, omnipresence, omniscience, omnipotence ; ( c ) he does the works of God, such as creation, regenera- tion, resurrection ; ( d ) he receives honor due only to God ; ( c ) he is asso- ciated with God on a footing of equality, both in the formula of baptism and in the apostolic benedictions.
As spirit is nothing less than the inmost principle of life, and the spirit of man is man himself, so the spirit of God must be God (see 1 Cor. 2 : 11 — Meyer). Christian experience, moreover, expressed as it is in the prayers and hymns of the church, furnishes an argument for the deity of the Holy Spirit similar to that for the deity of Jesus Christ. When our eyes are opened to see Christ as a Savior, we are compelled to recognize the work in us of a divine Spirit who has taken of the things of Christ and has shown them to us ; and this divine Spirit we necessarily distinguish both from the Father and from the Son. Christian experience, however, is not an original and independent witness to the deity of the Holy Spirit : it simply shows what the church has held to be the natural and unforced interpretation of the Scriptures, and so confirms the Scripture argument already adduced.
This proof of the deity of the Holy Spirit is not invalidated by the limita- tions of his work under the Old Testament dispensation. John 7 : 39 — "for the Holy Spirit was not yet" — means simply that the Holy Spirit could not fulfill his peculiar office as Revealer of Christ until the atoning work of Christ should be accomplished.
2. Intimations of the Old Testament.
The passages which seem to show that even in the Old Testament there are three who are implicitly recognized as God may be classed under four heads :
A. Passages which seem to teach plurality of some sort in the Godhead.
( a) The plural noun D'TlliS! is employed, and that with a plural verb — a use remarkable, when we consider that the singular vN was also in exist- ence ; ( 6 ) God uses plural pronouns in speaking of himself ; ( © ) Jehovah distinguishes himself from Jehovah ; ( d ) a Son is ascribed to Jehovah ; ( e ) the Spirit of God is distinguished from God ; (/) there are a three- fold ascription and a threefold benediction.
86 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
The fact that D,ril?.N is sometimes used in a narrower sense, as applicable to the Son ( Ps. 45 : 6 ; cf. Heb. 1:8), need not prevent us from believing that the term was originally chosen as containing an allusion to a certain plurality in the divine nature. Nor is it sufficient to call this plural a simple pluralis majestaticus; since it is easier to derive this common figure from divine usage than to derive the divine usage from this common figure — especially when we consider the constant tendency of Israel to polytheism.
B. Passages relating to the Angel of Jehovah.
(a) The angel of Jehovah identifies himself with Jehovah ; (6) he is identified with Jehovah by others ; ( c ) he accepts worship due only to God. Though the phrase ' angel of Jehovah ' is sometimes used in the later Scriptures to denote a merely human messenger or created angel, it seems in the Old Testament, with hardly more than a single exception, to designate the pre-incarnate Logos, whose manifestations in angelic or human form foreshadowed his final coming in the flesh.
C. Descriptions of the divine Wisdom and Word.
( a ) Wisdom is represented as distinct from God, and as eternally exist- ing with God ; ( b ) the Word of God is distinguished from God, as execu- tor of his will from everlasting.
It must be acknowledged that in none of these descriptions is the idea of personality clearly developed. Still less is it true that John the apostle derived his doctrine of the Logos from the interpretations of these descrip- tions in Philo Judseus. John's doctrine (John 1 : 1-18 ) is radically differ- ent from the Alexandrian Logos-idea of Philo. This last is a Platonizing speculation upon the mediating principle between God and the world. Philo seems at times to verge towards a recognition of personality in the Logos, though his monotheistic scruples lead him at other times to take back what he has given, and to describe the Logos either as the thought of God or as its expression in the world. But John is the first to present to us a consistent view of this personality, to identify the Logos with the Messiah, and to distinguish the Word from the Spirit of God.
D. Descriptions of the Messiah.
( a) He is one with Jehovah ; ( b ) yet he is in some sense distinct from Jehovah.
It is to be remembered, in considering this, as well as other classes of passages previously cited, that no Jewish writer before Christ's coming had succeeded in constructing from them a doctrine of the Trinity. Only to those who bring to them the light of New Testament revelation do they show their real meaning.
Our general conclusion with regard to the Old Testament intimations must therefore be that, while they do not by themselves furnish a sufficient basis for the doctrine of the Trinity, they contain the germ of it, and may be used in confirmation of it when its truth is substantially proved from the New Testament.
SCRIPTURE DESCRIBES THE THREE AS PERSON'S. 87
II. Thkse Three are so described in Scripture that we are com- pelled TO CONCEIVE OF THEM AS DISTINCT PERSONS.
1. The Father and the Son are persons distinct from each other.
( a ) Christ distinguishes the Father from himself as ' another ' ; ( b ) the Father and the Son are distinguished as the begetter and the begotten ; ( c ) the Father and the Son are distinguished as the sender and the sent.
2. The Father and the Son are persons distinct from the Spirit.
( a ) Jesus distinguishes the Spirit from himself and from the Father ; ( b ) the Spirit proceeds from the Father ; ( c ) the Spirit is sent by the Father and by the Son.
3. The Holy Spirit is a person.
A. Designations proper to personality are given him.
( a ) The mascidine pronoun eneivos, though nvevfia is neuter ; ( b ) the name Taprk^rof, which cannot be translated by 'comfort', or be taken as the name of any abstract influence. The Comforter, Instructor, Patron, Guide, Advocate, whom this term brings before us, must be a person. This is evident from its application to Christ in 1 John 2 : 1 — "we have an Advocate — wapaKXr/rov — with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous."
B. His name is mentioned in immediate connection with other per- sons, and in such a way as to imply his own personality.
( a ) In connection with Christians ; ( b ) in connection with Christ ; ( c ) in connection with the Father and the Son. If the Father and the Son are persons, the Spirit must bo a person also.
C. He jjerforms acts proper to personality.
That which searches, knows, speaks, testifies, reveals, convinces, com- mands, strives, moves, helps, guides, creates, recreates, sanctifies, inspires, makes intercession, orders the affairs of the church, performs miracles, raises the dead — cannot be a mere power, influence, efflux, or attribute of God, but must be a person.
D. He is affected as a person by the acts of others.
That which can be resisted, grieved, vexed, blasphemed, must be a per- son ; for only a person can perceive insult and be offended. The blas- phemy against the Holy Ghost cannot be merely blasphemy against a power or attribute of God, since in that case blasphemy against God would be a less crime than blasphemy against his power. That against which the unpardonable sin can be committed must be a person.
E. He manifests himself in visible form as distinct from the Father and the Son, yet in direct connection with personal acts performed by them.
F. This ascription to the Spirit of a personal subsistence distinct from that of the Father and of the Son cannot be explained as personification ; for :
( a ) This would be to interpret sober prose by the canons of poetry. Such sustained personification is contrary to the genius of even Hebrew poetry, in which Wisdom itself is most naturally interpreted as designating
88 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
a personal existence. ( b ) Such an interpretation would render a multitude of passages either tautological, meaningless, or absurd, — as can be easily seen by substituting for the name Holy Spirit the terms which are wrongly held to be its equivalents ; such as the power, or influence, or efflux, or attribute of God. ( c ) It is contradicted, moreover, by all those passages in which the Holy Spirit is distinguished from his own gifts.
III. This Tripersonality of the Divine Nature is not merely
ECONOMIC AND TEMPORAL, ROT IS IMMANENT AND ETERNAL.
1. Scripture proof that these distinctions of personality are eternal.
We prove this ( a ) from those passages which speak of the existence of the Word from eternity with the Father ; ( b ) from passages asserting or implying Christ's preexistence ; ( c ) from passages implying intercourse between the Father and the Son before the foundation of the world; ( d ) from passages asserting the creation of the world by Christ ; ( e ) from passages asserting or implying the eternity of the Holy Spirit.
2. Errors refuted by the foregoing passages.
A. The Sabelhan.
Sabellius ( of Ptolemais in Pentapolis, 250 ) held that Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are mere developments or revelations to creatures, in time, of the otherwise concealed Godhead — developments which, since creatures will always exist, are not transitory, but which at the same time are not eternal a parte ante. God as united to the creation is Father ; God as united to Jesus Christ is Son ; God as united to the church is Holy Spirit. The Trinity of Sabellius is therefore an economic and not an immanent Trinity — a Trinity of forms or manifestations, but not a necessary and eternal Trinity in the divine nature.
Some have interpreted Sabellius as denying that the Trinity is eternal a parte post, as well as a parte ante, and as holding that, when the purpose of these temporary manifestations is accomplished, the Triad is resolved into the Monad. This view easily merges in another, which makes the persons of the Trinity mere names for the ever shifting phases of the divine activity.
It is evident that this theory, in whatever form it may be held, is far from satisfying the demands of Scripture. Scripture speaks of the second person of the Trinity as existing and acting before the birth of Jesus Christ, and of the Holy Spirit as existing and acting before the formation of the church. Both have a personal existence, eternal in the past as well as in the future — which this theory expressly denies.
B. The Arian.
Arius ( of Alexandria ; condemned by Council of Nice, 325 ) held that the Father is the only divine being absolutely without beginning ; the Son and the Holy Spirit, through whom God creates and recreates, having been themselves created out of nothing before the world was ; and Christ being called God, because he is next in rank to God, and is endowed by God with divine power to create.
THE THREE PERSONS ARE EQUAL. 89
The followers of Arius have differed as to the precise rank and claims of Christ. While Socinus held with Arius that worship of Christ was obliga- tory, the later Unitarians have perceived the impropriety of worshiping even the highest of created beings, and have constantly tended to a view of the Redeemer which regards him as a mere man, standing in a peculiarly intimate relation to God.
It is evident that the theory of Arius does not satisfy the demands of Scripture. A created God, a God whose existence had a beginning and therefore may come to an end, a God made of a substance which once was not, and therefore a substance different from that of the Father, is not God, but a finite creature. But the Scripture speaks of Christ as being in the beginning God, with God, and equal with God.
IV. This TRrPERsoNAiiiTY. is not Tbitheism ; fob, while there are three Persons, there is but one Essence.
(a) The term 'person' only approximately represents the truth. Although this word, more nearly than any other single word, expresses the conception which the Scriptures give us of the relation between the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, it is not itself used in this connection in Scripture, and we employ it in a qualified sense, not in the ordinary sense in which we apply the word ' person ' to Peter, Paul, and John.
( b ) The necessary qualification is that, while three persons among men have only a specific unity of nature or essence — that is, have the same species of nature or essence, — the persons of the Godhead have a numeri- cal unity of nature or essence — that is, have the same nature or essence. The undivided essence of the Godhead belongs equally to each of the per- sons ; Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, each possesses all the substance and all the attributes of Deity. The plurality of the Godhead is therefore not a plurality of essence, but a plurality of hypostatical, or personal, distinc- tions. God is not three and one, but three in one. The one indivisible essence has three modes of subsistence.
( c ) This oneness of essence explains the fact that, while Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, as respects their personality, are distinct subsistences, there is an intercommunion of persons and an immanence of one divine person in another which permits the peculiar work of one to be ascribed, with a sin- gle limitation, to either of the others, and the manifestation of one to be recognized in the manifestation of another. The limitation is simply this, that although the Son was sent by the Father, and the Spirit by the Father and the Son, it cannot be said vice versa'that the Father is sent either by the Son, or by the Spirit. The Scripture representations of this intercom- munion prevent us from conceiving of the distinctions called Father, Son, and Holy Spirit as involving separation between them.
V. The Three Persons, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, are equal. In explanation, notice that :
1. These titles belong to the Persons.
( a ) The Father is not God as such ; for God is not only Father, but also Son and Holy Spirit. The term ' Father ' designates that hypostat-
90 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
ical distinction in the divine nature in virtue of which God is related to the Son, and through the Son and the Spirit to the church and the world. As author of the believer's spiritual as well as natural life, God is doubly his Father ; but this relation which God sustains to creatures is not the ground of the title. God is Father primarily in virtue of the relation which he sustains to the eternal Son ; only as we are spiritually united to Jesus Christ do we become children of God.
( b ) The Son is not God as such ; for God is not only Son, but also Father and Holy Spirit. ' The Son ' designates that distinction in virtue of which God is Belated to the Father, is sent by the Father to redeem the world, and with the Father sends the Holy Spirit.
( c ) The Holy Spirit is not God as such ; for- God is not only Holy Spirit, but also Father and Son. ' The Holy Spirit ' designates that distinction in virtue of which God is related to the Father and the Son, and is sent by them to accomplish the work of renewing the ungodly and of sanctifying the church.
2. Qualified sense of these titles.
Like the word ' person ', the names Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are not to be confined within the precise limitations of meaning which would be required if they were applied to men.
( a ) The Scriptures enlarge our conceptions of Christ's Sonship by giving to him in his preexistent state the names of the Logos, the Image, and the Effulgence of God. — The term 'Logos ' combines in itself the two ideas of thought and word, of reason and expression. While the Logos as divine thought or reason is one with God, the Logos as divine word or expression is distinguishable from God. Words are the means by which personal beings express or reveal themselves. Since Jesus Christ was " the Word " before there were any creatures to whom revelations could be made, it would seem to be only a necessary inference from this title that in Christ God must be from eternity expressed or revealed to himself ; in other words, that the Logos is the principle of truth, or self-consciousness, in God. — The term • Image ' suggests the ideas of copy or counterpart. Man is the image of God only relatively and derivatively. Christ is the Image of God absolutely and archetypally. As the perfect representation of the Father's perfections, the Son would seem to be the object and principle of love in the Godhead. — The term ' Effulgence,' finally, is an allusion to the sun and its radiance. As the effulgence of the sun manifests the sun's nature, which otherwise would be unrevealed, yet is inseparable from the sun and ever one with it, so Christ reveals God, but is eternally one with God. Here is a principle of movement, of will, which seems to con- nect itself with the holiness, or self-asserting purity, of the divine nature.
( 6 ) The names thus given to the second person of the Trinity, if they have any significance, bring him before our minds in the general aspect of Revealer, and suggest a relation of the doctrine of the Trinity to God's immanent attributes of truth, love, and holiness. The prepositions used to describe the internal relations of the second person to the first are not pre-
THE THREE PERSONS HAVE ONE ESSENCE. 91
positions of rest, but prepositions of direction and movement. Tho Trinity, as the organism of Deity, secures a life-movement of the Godhead, a pro- cess in which God evermore objectifies himself and in the Son gives forth of his fulness. Christ represents the centrifugal action of the deity. But there must be centripetal action also. In tho Holy Spirit the movement is completed, and the divine activity and thought returns into itself. True religion, in reuniting us to God, reproduces in us, in our limited measure, this eternal process of the divine mind. Christian experience witnesses that God in himself is unknown ; Christ is the organ of external revelation ; tho Holy Spirit is the organ of internal revelation — only he can give us an inward apprehension or realization of the truth. It is "through the eter- nal Spirit " that Christ " offered himself without blemish unto God," and it is only through the Holy Spirit that the church has access to the Father, or fallen creatures can return to God.
( c ) In the light of what has been said, we may understand somewhat more fully the characteristic differences between the work of Christ and that of the Holy Spirit. We may sum them up in the four statements that, first, all outgoing seems to be the work of Christ, all return to God the work of the Spirit; secondly, Christ is the organ of external revelation, the Holy Spirit the organ of internal revelation ; thirdly, Christ is our advocate in heaven, the Holy Spirit is our advocate in the soul ; fourthly, in the work of Christ we are passive, in the work of the Spirit we are active. Of the work of Christ we shall treat more fully hereafter, in speaking of his Offices as Prophet, Priest, and King. The work of the Holy Spirit will be treated when we come to speak of the Application of Redemption in Regeneration and Sanctification. Here it is sufficient to say that the Holy Spirit is represented in the Scriptures as the author of life — in creation, in the conception of Christ, in regeneration, in resurrection ; and as the giver of light — in the inspiration of Scripture writers, in the conviction of sinners, in the illumination and sanctification of Christians.
3. Generation and iiroccssion consistent ruith equality.
That the Sonship of Christ is eternal, is intimated in Psalm 2:7. " This day have I begotten thee " is most naturally interpreted as the declar- ation of an eternal fact in the divine nature. Neither the incarnation, the baptism, the transfiguration, nor the resurrection marks the beginning of Christ's Sonship, or constitutes him Son of God. These are but recogni- tions or manifestations of a preexisting Sonship, inseparable from his God- hood. He is "born before every creature "( while yet no created thing existed — see Meyer on Col. 1 : 15) and "by the resurrection of the dead" is not made to be, but only "declared to be," " according to the Spirit of holiness" (= according to his divine nature) "the Son of God with power " ( see Philippi and Alford on Rom. 1:3, 4). This Sonship is unique — not predicable of, or shared with, any creature. The Scriptures inti- mate, not only an eternal generation of the Son, but an eternal procession of the Spirit.
The Scripture terms 'generation' and 'procession,' as applied to the Son and to the Holy Spirit, are but approximate expressions of the truth,
92 NATUEE, DECBEE8, AND WOEKS OF GOD.
and we are to correct by other declarations of Scripture any imperfect impressions which we might derive solely from them. We use these terms in a special sense, which we explicitly state and define as excluding all notion of inequality between the persons of the Trinity. The eternal gen- eration of the Son to which we hold is
( a ) Not creation, but the Father's communication of himself to the Son. Since the names, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are not applicable to the divine essence, but are only applicable to its hypostatical distinctions, they imply no derivation of the essence of the Son from the essence of the Father.
( b ) Not a commencement of existence, but an eternal relation to the Father, — there never having been a time when the Son began to be, or when the Son did not exist as God with the Father.
( c ) Not an act of the Father's will, but an internal necessity of the divine nature, — so that the Son is no more dependent upon the Father than the Father is dependent upon the Son, and so that, if it be consistent with deity to be Father, it is equally consistent with deity to be Son.
( d ) Not a relation in any way analogous to physical derivation, but a lif e- movement of the divine nature, in virtue of which Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, while equal in essence and dignity, stand to each other in an order of personality, office, and operation, and in virtue of which the Father works through the Son, and the Father and the Son through the Spirit.
The same principles upon which we interpret the declaration of Christ's eternal Sonship apply to the procession of the Holy Spirit from the Father through the Son, and show this to be not inconsistent with the Spirit's equal dignity and glory.
We therefore only formulate truth which is concretely expressed in Scripture, and which is recognized by all ages of the church in hymns and prayers addressed to Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, when we assert that in the nature of the one God there are three eternal distinctions, which are best described as persons, and each of which is the proper and equal object of Christian worship.
We are also warranted in declaring that, in virtue of these personal distinctions or modes of subsistence, God exists in the relations, respect- ively, first, of Source, Origin, Authority, and in this relation is the Father ; secondly, of Expression, Medium, Revelation, and in this relation is the Son ; thirdly, of Apprehension, Accomplishment, Realization, and in this relation is the Holy Spirit.
VI. Inscrutable, yet not self-oontradictory, this Doctrine fub-
NISHES THE KEY TO ALL OTHER DOCTRINES.
1. The mode of this triune existence is inscrutable.
It is inscrutable because there are no analogies to it in our finite experi- ence. For this reason all attempts are vain adequately to represent it :
( a ) From inanimate things — as the fountain, the stream, and the rivulet trickling from it ( Athanasius ) ; the cloud, the rain, and the rising mist
INSCRUTABLE, YET NOT SELF-CONTRADICTORY. 93
( Boardman ) ; color, shape, and size ( F. W. Robertson ) ; the actinic, luini- niferons, and calorific principles in the ray of light ( Solar Hieroglyphics, 34).
( b ) From the constitution or processes of our own minds — as the psychological unity of intellect, affection, and will ( substantially held by Augustine ) ; the logical unity of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis ( Hegel ) ; the metaphysical unity of subject, object, and subject-object ( Melanchthon, Olshausen, Shedd).
No one of these furnishes any proper analogue of the Trinity, since in no one of them is there found the essential element of tripersonality. Such illustrations may sometimes be used to disarm objection, but they furnish no positive explanation of the mystery of the Trinity, and, unless carefully guarded, may lead to grievous error.
2. The doctrine of the Trinity is not self-contradictory.
This it would be, only if it declared God to be three in the same numerical sense in which he is said to be one. This we do not assert. We assert simply that the same God who is one with respect to his essence is three with respect to the internal distinctions of that essence, or with respect to the modes of his being. The possibility of this cannot be denied, except by assuming that the human mind is in all respects the measure of the divine.
The fact that the ascending scale of life is marked by increasing differen- tiation of faculty and function should rather lead us to expect in the highest of all beings a nature more complex than our own. In man many faculties are united in one intelligent being, and the more intelligent man is, the more distinct from each other these faculties become ; until intellect and affection, conscience and will assume a relative independence, and there arises even the possibility of conflict between them. There is nothing irra- tional or self -contradictory in the doctrine that in God the leading functions are yet more markedly differentiated, so that they become personal, while at the same time these personalities are united by the fact that they each and equally manifest the one indivisible essence.
3. The doctrine of the Trinity has important relations to other doc- trines.
A. It is essential to any proper theism.
Neither God's independence nor God's blessedness can be maintained upon grounds of absolute unity. Anti-trinitarianism almost necessarily makes creation indispensable to God's perfection, tends to a belief in the eternity of matter, and ultimately leads, as in Mohammedanism, and in modem Judaism and Unitarianism, to Pantheism. ' ' Love is an impossible exercise to a solitary being." Without Trinity we cannot hold to a living Unity in the Godhead.
B. It is essential to any proper revelation.
If there be no Trinity, Christ is not God, and cannot perfectly know or reveal God. Christianity is no longer the one, all-inclusive, and final reve-
94 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
lation, but only one of many conflicting and competing systems, each of which has its portion of truth, but also its portion of error. So too with the Holy Spirit. "As God can be revealed only through God, so also can he be appropriated only through God. If the Holy Spirit be not God, then the love and self-communication of God to the human soul are not a reality." In other words, without the doctrine of the Trinity we go back to mere natural religion and the far-off God of deism, — and this is ulti- mately exchanged for pantheism in the way already mentioned.
C. It is essential to any proper redemption.
If God be absolutely and simply one, there can be no mediation or atone- ment, since between God and the most exalted creature the gulf is infinite. Christ cannot bring us nearer to God than he is himself. Only one who is God can reconcile us to God. So, too, only one who is God can purify our souls. A God who is only unity, but in whom is no plurality, may be our Judge, but, so far as we can see, cannot be our Savior or our Sanctifier.
D. It is essential to any proper model for human life.
If there be no Trinity immanent in the divine nature, then Fatherhood in God has had a beginning and it may have an end ; Sonship, moreover, is no longer a perfection, but an imperfection, ordained for a temporary purpose. But if fatherly giving and filial receiving are eternal in God, then the law of love requires of us conformity to God in both these respects as the highest dignity of our being.
CHAPTER III.
THE DECREES OF GOD.
L Definition of Deckees.
By the decrees of God we mean that eternal plan by which God has rendered certain all the events of the universe, past, present, and future. Notice in explanation that :
( a ) The decrees are many only to our finite comprehension ; in their own nature they arc but duo plan, which embraces not only effects but also causes, not only the ends to be secured but also the means needful to secure them.
( b ) The decrees, as the eternal act of an infinitely perfect will, though they have logical relations to each other, have no chronological relation. They are not therefore the result of deliberation, in any sense that implies short-sightedness or hesitancy.
( c ) Since the will in which the decrees have their origin is a free will, the decrees are not a merely instinctive or necessary exercise of the divine intelligence or volition, such as pantheism supposes.
( d) The decrees have reference to things outside of God. God does not decree to be holy, nor to exist as three persons in one essence.
( e ) The decrees primarily respect the acts of God himself, in Creation, Providence, and Grace ; secondarily, the acts of free creatures, which he foresees will result therefrom.
(/) The decree to act is not the act. The decrees are an internal exer- cise and manifestation of the divine attributes, and are not to be confounded with Creation, Providence, and Eedemption, which are the execution of the decrees.
( g ) The decrees are therefore not addressed to creatures ; are not of the nature of statute law ; and lay neither compulsion nor obligation upon the wills of men.
( h ) All human acts, whether evil or good, enter into the divine plan and so are objects of God's decrees, although God's actual agency with regard to the evil is only a permissive agency.
( i ) "While God's total plan with regard to creatures is called predesti- nation, or foreordination, his purpose so to act that certain will behove and be saved is called election, and his purpose so to act that certain will refuse to believe and be lost is called reprobation. We discuss election and repro- bation, in a later chapter, as a part of the Application of Redemption.
95
96 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
II. Pboof of the doctrine of Decrees.
1. From Scripture.
A. The Scriptures declare that all things are included in the divine decrees. B. They declare that special things and events are decreed ; as, for example, ( a ) the stability of the physical universe ; ( b ) the outward circumstances of nations ; ( c ) the length of human life ; ( d ) the mode of our death ; ( e ) the free acts of men, both good acts and evil acts. C. They declare that God has decreed ( a ) the salvation of believers ; ( b ) the establishment of Christ's kingdom; (c) the work of Christ and of his people in establishing it.
2. From Reason.
( a ) From the divine foreknowledge.
Foreknowledge implies fixity, and fixity implies decree. — From eternity God foresaw all the events of the universe as fixed and certain. This fixity and certainty could not have had its ground either in blind fate or in the variable wills of men, since neither of these had an existence. It could have had its ground in nothing outside the divine mind, for in eternity nothing existed besides the divine mind. But for this fixity there must have been a cause ; if anything in the future was fixed, something must have fixed it. This fixity coidd have had its ground only in the plan and purpose of God. In fine, if God foresaw the future as certain, it must have been because there was something in himself which made it certain ; or, in other words, because he had decreed it.
Decreeing creation implies decreeing the foreseen results of creation. — To meet the objection that God might have foreseen the events of the uni- verse, not because he had decreed each one, but only because he had decreed to create the universe and institute its laws, we may put the argu- ment in another form. In eternity there could have been no cause of the future existence of the universe, outside of God himself, since no being existed but God himself. In eternity God foresaw that the creation of the world and the institution of its laws would make certain its actual history even to the most insignificant details. But God decreed to create and to institute these laws. In so decreeing he necessarily decreed all that was to come. In fine, God foresaw the future events of the universe as certain, because he had decreed to create ; but this determination to create involved also a determination of all the actual results of that creation ; or, in other words, God decreed those results.
No undecreed event can be foreseen. — We grant that God decrees pri- marily and directly his own acts of creation, providence, and grace ; but we claim that this involves also a secondary and indirect decreeing of the acts of free creatures which he foresees will result therefrom. There is therefore no such thing in God as scientia media, or knowledge of an event that is to be, though it does not enter into the divine plan ; for to say that God foresees an undecreed event, is to say that he views as future an event that is merely possible ; or, in other words, that he views an event not as it is.
OBJECTIONS TO THE DOCTRINE OP DECREES. 97
Only knowledge of that which is decreed is foreknowledge — Knowlodge of a plan as ideal or possible may precede decree ; but knowledge of a plan as actual or fixed must follow decree. Only the latter knowledge is properly /oreknowledge. God therefore foresees creation, causes, laws, events, consequences, because he has decreed creation, causes, laws, events, consequences ; that is, because he has embraced all these in his plan. The denial of decrees logically involves the denial of God's foreknowledge of free human actions ; and to this Socinians, and some Arminians, are actually led.
( b ) From the divine wisdom.
It is the part of wisdom to proceed in every undertaking according to a plan. The greater the undertaking, the more needful a plan. Wisdom, moreover, shows itself in a careful provision for all possible circumstances ami emergencies that can arise in the execution of its plan. That many such circumstances and emergencies are uncontemplated and unprovided for in the plans of men, is due only to the limitations of human wisdom. It belongs to infinite wisdom, therefore, not only to have a plan, but to embrace all, even the minutest details, in the plan of the universe.
( c ) From the divine immutability.
What God does, he always purposed to do. Since with him there is no increase of knowledge or power, such as characterizes finite beings, it fol- lows that what under any given circumstances he permits or does, he must have eternally decreed to permit or do. To suppose that God has a multi- tude of plans, and that he changes his plan with the exigencies of the situ- ation, is to make him infinitely dependent upon the varying wills of his creatures, and to deny to him one necessary element of perfection, namely, immutability.
( d ) From the divine benevolence.
The events of the universe, if not determined by the divine decrees, must be determined either by chance or by the wills of creatures. It is contrary to any proper conception of the divine benevolence to suppose that God permits the course of nature and of history, and the ends to which both these are moving, to be determined for myriads of sentient beings by any other force or will than his own. Both reason and revelation, therefore, compel us to accept the doctrine of the Westminster Confession, that " God did from all eternity, by the most just and holy counsel of his own will, freely and unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass."
TTT. Objections to the doctrine of Decrees.
1. That they are inconsistent with the free agency of man.
To this we reply that :
A. The objection confounds the decrees with the execution of the decrees. The decrees are, like foreknowledge, an act eternal to the divine nature, and are no more inconsistent with free agency than foreknowledge is. Even foreknowledge of events implies that those events are fixed. If this absolute fixity and foreknowledge is not inconsistent with free agency,
7
98 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
much less can that which is more remote from man's action, namely, the hidden cause of this fixity and foreknowledge — God's decrees — be incon- sistent with free agency. If anything be inconsistent with man's free agency, it must be, not the decrees themselves, but the execution of the decrees in creation and providence.
B. The objection rests upon a false theory of free agency — namely, that free agency implies indeterminateness or uncertainty ; in other words, that free agency cannot coexist with certainty as to the results of its exercise. But it is necessity, not certainty, with which free agency is inconsistent. Free agency is the power of self-determination in view of motives, or man's power (a) to chose between motives, and ( b ) to direct his subsequent activity according to the motive thus chosen. Motives are never a cause, but only an occasion ; they influence, but never compel ; the man is the cause, aud herein is his freedom. But it is also true that man is never in a state of indeterminateness ; never acts without motive, or contrary to all motives ; there is always a reason why he acts, and herein is his rationality. Now, so far as man acts according to previously dominant motive — see (b ) above — we may by knowing his motive predict his action, and our certainty what that action will be in no way affects his freedom. We may even bring motives to bear upon others, the influence of which we foresee, yet those who act upon them may act in perfect freedom. But if man, influenced by man, may still be free, then man, influenced by divinely foreseen motives, may still be free, and the divine decrees, which simply render certain man's actions, may also be perfectly consistent with man's freedom.
There is, however, a smaller class of human actions by which character is changed, rather than expressed, and in which the man acts according to a motive different from that which has previously been dominant — see (a) above. These actions also are foreknown by God, although they cannot be predicted by man. Man's freedom in them would be inconsistent with God's decrees, if the previous certainty of their occurrence were, not cer- tainty, but necessity ; or, in other words, if God's decrees were in all cases decrees efficiently to produce the acts of his creatures. But this is not the case. God's decrees may be executed by man's free causation, as easily as by God's ; and God's decreeing this free causation, in decreeing to create a universe of which he foresees that this causation will be a part, in no way interferes with the freedom of such causation, but rather secures and estab- lishes it. Both consciousness and conscience witness that God's decrees are not executed by laying compulsion upon the free wills of men.
It may aid us, in estimating the force of this objection, to note the four senses in which the term 'freedom' may be used. It may be used as equivalent to ( 1 ) physical freedom, or absence of outward constraint ; ( 2 ) formal freedom, or a state of moral indeterminateness ; ( 3 ) moral free- dom, or self-determinateness in view of motives ; (4) real freedom, or abil- ity to conform to the divine standard. With the first of these we are not now concerned, since all agree that the decrees lay no outward constraint upon men. Freedom in the second sense has no existence, since all men have character. Free agency, or freedom in the third sense, has just been shown to be consistent with the decrees. Freedom in the fourth sense, or real
OBJECTIONS TO THE DOCTRINE OF DECREES. 99
freedom, is the special gift of God, ami is not to be confounded with free agency. The objection mentioned above rests wholly upon the second of these definitions of free agency. This we have shown to be false, and with this the objection itself falls to the ground.
2. That they take away all motive for human exertion. To this we reply that :
( a ) Tiny cannot thus influence men, since they are not addressed to men, ore not the rule of human action, and become known only after the event. This objection is therefore the mere excuse of indolence and disobedience.
(b) The objection confounds the decrees of God with fate. But it is to be observed that fate is unintelligent, ■while the decrees are framed by a personal God in infinite wisdom ; fate is indistinguishable from material causation and leaves no room for human freedom, while the decrees exclude all notion of physical necessity ; fate embraces no moral ideas or ends, while the decrees make these controlling in the universe.
( o ) The objection ignores the logical relation between the decree of the end and the decree of the means to secure it. The decrees of God not only ensure the end to be obtained, but they ensure free human action as logically prior thereto. All conflict between the decrees and human exertion must therefore be apparent and not real. Since consciousness and Scripture assure us that free agency exists, it must exist by divine decree ; and though we may be ignorant of the method in which the decrees are executed, we have no right to doubt either the decrees or the freedom. They must be held to be consistent, until one of them is proved to be a delusion.
( d ) Since the decrees connect means and ends together, and ends are decreed only as the result of means, they encourage effort instead of dis- couraging it. Belief in God's plan that success shall reward toil, incites to courageous and persevering effort. Upon the very ground of God's decree, the Scripture urges us to the diligent use of means.
3. That they make God the author of sin. To this we reply :
( a ) They make God, not the author of sin, but the author of free beings who are themselves the authors of sin. God does not decree efficiently to work evil desires or choices in men. He decrees sin only in the sense of decreeing to create and preserve those who will sin ; in other words, he decrees to create and preserve human wills which, in their own self -chosen courses, will be and do evil. In all this, man attributes sin to himself and not to God, and God hates, denounces, and punishes sin.
( b ) The decree to permit sin is therefore not an efficient but a permis- sive decree, or a decree to permit, in distinction from a decree to produce by his own efficiency. No difficulty attaches to such a decree to permit sin, which does not attach to the actual permission of it. But God does actually permit sin, and it must be right for him to permit it. It must therefore
100 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
be right for liim to decree to permit it. If God's holiness and wisdom and power are not impugned by the actual existence of moral evil, they are not impugned by the original decree that it should exist.
( c ) The difficulty is therefore one which in substance clings to all theis- tic systems alike — the question why moral evil is permitted under the government of a God infinitely holy, wise, powerful, and good. This problem is, to our finite powers, incapable of fuU solution, and must remain to a great degree shrouded in mystery. With regard to it we can only say :
Negatively, — that God does not permit moral evil because he is not unal- terably opposed to sin ; nor because moral evil was unforeseen and inde- pendent of his will ; nor because be could not have prevented it in a moral system. Both observation and experience, which testify to multiplied instances of deliverance from sin without violation of the laws of man's being, forbid us to limit the power of God.
Positively, — we seem constrained to say that God permits moral evil because moral evil, though in itself abhorrent to his nature, is yet the inci- dent of a system adajjted to his purpose of self -revelation ; and further, because it is his wise and sovereign will to institute and maintain this sys- tem of which moral evil is an incident, rather than to withhold his self- revelation or to reveal himself through another system in which moral evil hould be continually prevented by the exercise of divine power.
IT. Concluding Eemakks.
1. Practical uses of the doctrine of decrees.
(a) It inspires humility by its representation of God's unsearchable counsels and absolute sovereignty. ( b ) It teaches confidence in him who has wisely ordered our birth, our death, and our surroundings, even to the minutest particulars, and has made all things work together for the triumph of his kingdom and the good of those who love him ; ( c ) It shows the enemies of God that, as their sins have been foreseen and provided for in God's plan, so they can never, while remaining in their sins, hope to escape their decreed and threatened penalty. ( d ) It urges the sinner to avail himself of the appointed means of grace, if he would be counted among the number of those for whom God has decreed salvation.
2. True method of preaching the doctrine.
(a) We should most carefully avoid exaggeration or unnecessarily obnox- ious statement. ( b ) We should emphasize the fact that the decrees are not grounded in arbitrary will, but in infinite wisdom. ( c ) We should make it plain that whatever God does or will do, he must from eternity have pur- posed to do. ( d ) We should illustrate the doctrine so far as possible by instances of completeness and far-sightedness in human plans of great enterprises. ( e ) We may then make extended application of the truth to the encouragement of the Christian and the admonition of the unbeliever.
CHAPTER IV. THE WORKS OF GOD ; OR THE EXECUTION OF THE DECREES.
SECTION I. — CREATION".
I. Definition of Creation.
By creation we mean that freo act of the triune God by which in the beginning for his own glory he made, without the use of preexisting mate- rials, the whole visible and invisible universe.
Creation is designed origination, by a transcendent and personal God, of that which itself is not God. The universe is related to God as our own volitions are related to ourselves. They are not ourselves, and we are greater than they. Creation is not simply the idea of God, or even the plan of God, but it is the idea externalized, the plan executed ; in other words, it implies an exercise, not only of intellect, but also of will, and this will is not an instinctive and unconscious will, but a will that is personal and free. Such exercise of will seems to involve, not self-development, but self-limitation, on the part of God ; tho transformation of energy into force, and so a beginning of time, with its finite successions. But, what- ever the relation of creation to time, creation makes the universe wholly dependent upon God, as its originator.
In further explanation of our definition we remark that
( a ) Creation is not "production out of nothing," as if " nothing " were a substance out of which " something " could be formed.
( b ) Creation is not a fashioning of preexisting materials, nor an emana- tion from the substance of Deity, but is a making of that to exist which once did not exist, either in form or substance.
(c) Creation is not a distinctive or necessary process of the divine nature, but is the free act of a rational will, put forth for a definite and sufficient end.
( d ) Creation is the act of the triune God, in the sense that all the persons of the Trinity, themselves uncreated, have a part in it — the Father as the originating, the Son as the mediating, the Spirit as the realizing cause.
II. Proof of the Doctrine of Creation.
Creation is a truth of which mere science or reason cannot fully assure us. Physical science can observe and record changes, but it knows nothing of origins. Reason cannot absolutely disprove the eternity of matter.
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102 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
For proof of the doctrine of Creation, therefore, we rely -wholly upon Scripture. Scripture supplements science, and renders its explanation of the universe complete.
1. Direct Scripture Statements.
A. Genesis 1 :1 — " In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. " To this it has been objected that the verb fcO 2 does not necessarily denote production without the use of preexisting ma terials (see Gen. 1 :27 — " God created man in his own image " ; cf. 2:7 — " th e Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground " ; also Ps. 51 : 10 — " Create in me a clean heart").
We grant, in reply, that the argument for absolute creation derived from the mere word N}3 is not entirely conclusive. Other considerations in connection with the use of this word , however, seem to render this inter- pretation of Gen. 1 : 1 the most plausible. Some of these considerations we proceed to mention.
(a) While we acknowledge that the verb *03 " do es not necessarily or invariably denote production without the use of preexisting materials, we still maintain that it signifies the production of an effect for which no nat- ural antecedent existed before, and which can be only the result of divine agency." For this reason, in the Kal species it is used only of God, and is never accompanied by any accusative denoting material.
( b ) In the account of the creation, N T 3 seems to be distinguished from ntyy, " to make " either with or without the use of already existing material (JWJH *03, "created in making" or "made by creation," in 2 : 3 ; and WTX of the firmament, in 1 : 7), and from 13T, " to form " out of such mate- rial. ( See K}3M, of man regarded as a spiritual being, in 1 : 27 ; but 10, of man regarded as a physical being, in 2 : 7. )
( c ) The context shows that the meaning here is a making without the use of preexisting materials. Since the earth in its rude, unformed, chaotic condition is still called "the earth" in verse 2, the word SO 3 in verse 1 cannot refer to any shapiug or fashioning of the elements, but must signify the calling of them into being.
(d) The fact that NT 3 may have had an original signification of "cutting," "forming," and that it retains this meaning in the Piel conjugation, need not prejudice the conclusion thus reached, since terms expressive of the most spiritual processes are derived from sensuous roots. If &03 does not signify absolute creation, no word exists in the Hebrew language that can express this idea.
( e ) But this idea of production withoxit the use of preexisting materials unquestionably existed among the Hebrews. The later Scriptures show that it had become natural to the Hebrew mind. The possession of this idea by the Hebrews, while it is either not found at all or is very dimly and ambiguously expressed in the sacred books of the heathen, can be best explained by supposing that it was derived from this early revelation in Genesis.
THEORIES WHICH OPPOSE CREATION. 103
B. Hebrews 11 : 3 — " By faith we understand that the worlds have been framed by the word of God, so that what is seen hath not been made out of things which appear " = the world was not made out of sensible and preexisting material, but by the direct fiat of omnipotence ( see Alford, and Liinemann, Meyer's Com. in loco).
2. Indirect evidence from Scripture.
( a ) The past duration of the world is limited ; ( b ) before the world began to be, each of the persons of the Godhead already existed ; ( o ) the origin of the universe is ascribed to God, and to each of the persons of the Godhead. These representations of Scripture are not only most consistent with the view that the universe was created by God without use of preex- isting material, but they are inexplicable upon any other hypothesis.
m. Theories which oppose Creation.
1. Dualism.
Of dualism there are two forms :
A. That which holds to two self -existent principles, God and matter. These are distinct from and coeternal with each other. Matter, however, is an unconscious, negative, and imperfect substance, which is subordinate to God and is made the instrument of his will. This was the underlying principle of the Alexandrian Gnostics. It was essentially an attempt to combine with Christianity the Platonic or Aristoteliau conception of the i?>/. In this way it was thought to account for the existence of evil, and to escape the difficulty of imagining a production without use of preexist- ing material. Basilides ( flourished 125 ) and Valentinus ( died 160 ), the representatives of this view, were influenced also by Hindu philosophy, and their dualism is almost indistinguishable from pantheism. A similar view has been held in modern times by John Stuart Mill and apparently by Frederick W. Koberteon.
With regard to this view we remark :
(a) The maxim ex nihilo nihil Jit, upon which it rests, is true only in so far as it asserts that no event takes place without a cause. It is false, if it mean that nothing can ever be made except out of material previously existing. The maxim is therefore applicable only to the realm of second causes, and does not bar the creative power of the great first Cause. The doctrine of creation does not dispense with a cause ; on the other hand, it assigns to the universe a sufficient cause in God.
( 6 ) Although creation without the use of i^reexisting material is incon- ceivable, in the sense of being unpicturable to the imagination, yet the eternity of matter is equally inconceivable. For creation without pre- existing material, moreover, we find remote analogies in our own creation of ideas and volitions, a fact as inexplicable as God's bringing of new sub- stances into being.
( c ) It is unphilosophical to postulate two eternal substances, when one self-existent Cause of all things will account for the facts. ( d ) It contra-
104 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
diets our fundamental notion of God as absolute sovereign to suppose the existence of any otlier substance to be independent of Ms will. ( c ) This second substance with which God must of necessity work, since it is, accord- ing to the theory, inherently evil and the source of evil, not only limits God's power, but destroys his blessedness. (/) This theory does not answer its purpose of accounting for moral evil, unless it be also assumed that sjjirit is material, — in which case dualisru gives place to materialism.
The other form of dualisru is :
B. That which holds to the eternal existence of two antagonistic spirits, one evil and the other good. In this view, matter is not a negative and imperfect substance which nevertheless has self-existence, but is either the work or the instrument of a personal and positively malignant intelligence, who wages war against all good. This was the view of the Manichseans. Manichaeanism is a compound of Christianity and the Persian doctrine of two eternal and opposite intelligences. Zoroaster, however, held matter to be pure, and to be the creation of the good Being. Mani apparently regarded matter as captive to the evil spirit, if not absolutely his creation.
Of this view we need only say that it is refuted ( a ) by all the arguments for the unity, omnipotence, sovereignty, and blessedness of God ; ( b ) by the Scripture representations of the prince of evil as the creature of God and as subject to God's control.
2. Emanation.
This theory holds that the universe is of the same substance with God, and is the product of successive evolutions from his being. This was the view of the Syrian Gnostics. Their system was an attempt to interpret Christianity in the forms of Oriental theosormy. A similar doctrine was taught, in the last century, by Swedenborg.
"We object to it on the following grounds : (a) It virtually denies the infinity and transcendence of God, — by applying to him a principle of evolution, growth, and progress which belongs only to the finite and imper- fect. ( b ) It contradicts the divine holiness, — since man, who by the theory is of the substance of God, is nevertheless morally evil. ( c ) It leads logically to pantheism, — since the claim that human personality is illusory cannot be maintained without also surrendering belief in the per- sonality of God.
3. Creation from eternity.
This theory regards creation as an act of God in eternity past. It was propounded by Origen, and has been held in recent times by Martensen, Martineau, John Caird, Knight, and Pfleiderer. The necessity of suppos- ing such creation from eternity has been argued from God's omnipotence, God's timelessness, God's immutability, and God's love. We consider each of these arguments in their order.
LDl
( a ) Creation from eternity is not necessitated by God's omnipotence. Omnipotence does not necessarily imply actual creation ; it implies only
THEORIES WHICH OPPOSE CREATION. 105
power to create. Creation, moreover, is in the naturo of the case a thing begun. Creation from eternity is a contradiction in terms, and that which is self -contradictory is not an object of power.
( b ) Creation from eternity is not necessitated by God's timelessness. Because God is free from the law of time it does not follow that creation i:; free from that law. Rather is it true that no eternal creation is conceiv- able, since this involves an infinite number. Time must have had a begin- ning, and since the universe and time are coexistent, creation could not have been from eternity.
(c) Creation from eternity is not necessitated by God's immutability. His immutabihty requires, not an eternal creation, but only an eternal plan of creation. The opposite principle would compel us to deny the possibility of miracles, incarnation, and regeneration. Like creation, these too would need to be eternal.
( d ) Creation from eternity is not necessitated by God's love. Creation is finite and cannot furnish perfect satisfaction to the infinite love of God. God has moreover from eternity an object of love infinitely superior to any possible creation, in the person of his Son.
(c) Creation from eternity, moreover, is inconsistent with the divine independence and personality. Since God's power and love are infinite, a creation that satisfied them must be infinite in extent as well as eternal in past duration — in other words, a creation equal to God. But a God thus dependent upon external creation is neither free nor sovereign. A God existing in necessary relations to the universe, if different in substance from the universe, must be the God of dualism ; if of the same substance with the universe, must be the God of pantheism.
4. Sx>ontaneous generation.
This theory holds that creation is but the name for a natural process still going on, — matter itself having in it the power, under proper conditions, of taking on new functions, and of developing into organic forms. This view is held by Owen and Bastian. We object that
(a) It is a pure hypothesis, not only unverified, but contrary to all known facts. No credible instance of the production of living forms from inor- ganic material has yet been adduced. So far as science can at present teach us, the law of nature is " omne vivum e vivo," or "ex ovo."
( b ) If such instances cotild be authenticated, they would prove nothing as against a proper doctrine of creation, — for there would still exist an impossibility of accounting for these vivific properties of matter, except upon the Scriptural view of an intelligent Contriver and Originator of matter and its laws. In short, evolution implies previous involution, — if anything comes out of matter, it must first have been put in.
(e") This theory, therefore, if true, only supplements the doctrine of original, absolute, immediate creation, with another doctrine of mediate and derivative creation, or the development of the materials and forces originated at the beginning. This development, however, cannot proceed to
106 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
any valuable end without guidance of the same intelligence which initiated it. The Scriptures, although they do not sanction the doctrine of sponta- neous generation, do recognize processes of development as supplementing the divine fiat which first called the elements into being.
IV. The Mosaic Account of Creation.
1. Its twofold nature, — as uniting the ideas of creation and of develop- ment.
( a ) Creation is asserted. — The Mosaic narrative avoids the error of mak- ing the universe eternal or the result of an eternal process. The cosmogony of Genesis, unlike the cosmogonies of the heathen, is prefaced by the originating act of God, and is supplemented by successive manifestations of creative power in the introduction of brute and of human life.
(&) Devolopment is recognized. — The Mosaic account represents the present order of things as the result, not simply of original creation, but also of subsequent arrangement and development. A fashioning of inor- ganic materials is described, and also a use of these materials in providing the conditions of organized existence. Life is described as reproducing itself, after its first introduction, according to its own laws and by virtue of its own inner energy.
2. Its proper interpretation.
We adopt neither ( a ) the allegorical, or mythical, ( b ) the hyperliteral, nor (c) the hyperscientific interpretation of the Mosaic narrative ; but rather (d) the pictorial-summary interpretation, — which holds that the account is a rough sketch of the history of creation, true in all its essential features, but presented in a graphic form suited to the common mind and to earlier as well as to later ages. "While conveying to primitive man as accurate an idea of God's work as man was able to comprehend, the revela- tion was yet given in pregnant language, so that it could expand to all the ascertained results of subsequent physical research. This general corres- pondence of the narrative with the teachings of science, and its power to adapt itself to every advance in human knowledge, differences it from every other cosmogony current among men.
V. God's End in Creation.
Infinite wisdom must, in creating, propose to itself the most comprehen- sive and the most valuable of ends, — the end most worthy of God, and the end most fruitful in good. Only in the light of the end proposed can we properly jixdge of God's work, or of God's character as revealed therein.
In determining this end, we turn first to :
1. The testimony of Scripture.
This may be summed up in four statements. God finds his end ( a ) in himself ; ( b ) in his own will and pleasure ; ( c ) in his own glory ; ( d ) in the making known of his power, his wisdom, his holy name. All these statements may be combined in the following, namely, that God's supreme end in creation is nothing outside of himself, but is his own glory — in the
GOD'S END IX ( RKATION". 107
revelation, in and through creatures, of the infinite perfection of his own bein^-.
Since holiness is the fundamental attribute in God, to rnako himself, his own pleasure, his own glory, his own manifestation, to be his end in crea- tion, is to find his chief end in his own holiness, its maintenance, expres- sion, and communication. To make this his chief end, however, is not to exclude certain subordinate ends, such as the revelation of his wisdom, power, and love, and the consequent happiness of innumerable creatures to whom this revelation is made.
2. The testimony of reason.
That his own glory, in the sense just mentioned, is God's supreme end in creation, is evident from the following considerations :
( a ) God's own glory is the only end actually and perfectly attained in the universe. Wisdom and omnipotence cannot choose an end which is destined to be forever unattained ; for " what his soul desireth, even that he doeth" (Job 23 :13). God's supreme end cannot be the happiness of creatures, since many are miserable here and will be miserable forever. God's supreme end cannot be the holiness of creatures, for many are unholy here and will be unholy forever. But while neither the holiness nor the happiness of creatures is actually and perfectly attained, God's glory is made known and will be made known in both the saved and the lost. This then must be God's supreme end in creation.
(6) God's glory is the end intrinsically most valuable. The good of creatures is of insignificant importance compared with this. Wisdom dic- tates that the greater interest should have precedence of the less. Because God can choose no greater end, he must choose for his end himself. But this is to choose his holiness, and his glory in the manifestation of that holiness.
( c ) His own glory is the only end which consists with God's independ- ence and sovereignty. Every being is dependent upon whomsoever or whatsoever he makes his ultimate end. If anything in the creature is the last end of God, God is dependent upon the creature. But since God is dependent only on himself, he must find in himself his end.
( d ) His own glory is an end which comprehends and secures, as a sub- ordinate end, every interest of the universe. The interests of the universe are bound up in the interests of God. There is no holiness or happiness for creatures except as God is absolute sovereign, and is recognized as such. It is therefore not selfishness, but benevolence, for God to make his own glory the supreme object of creation. Glory is not vain-glory, and in expressing his idea!, that is, in expressing himself, in his creation., he communicates to his creatures the utmost possible good.
( c ) God's glory is the end which in a right moral system is proposed to creatures. This must therefore be the end which he in whose image they are made proposes to himself. He who constitutes the centre and end of
108 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
all his creatures must find his centre and end in himself. This principle of moral philosophy, and the conclusion drawn from it, are both explicitly and implicitly taught in Scripture.
VI. Relation of the Doctrine of Creation to other Doctrines.
1. To the holiness and benevolence of God.
Creation, as the work of God, manifests of necessity God's moral attri- butes. But the existence of physical and moral evil in the universe appears, at first sight, to impugn these attributes, and to contradict the Scripture declaration that the work of God's hand was "very good" (Gen. 1 :31). This difficulty may be in great part removed by considering that :
( a ) At its first creation, the world was good in two senses : first, as free from moral evil, — sin being a later addition, the work, not of God, but of created spirits ; secondly, as adapted to beneficent ends, — for example, the revelation of God's perfection, and the probation and happiness of intelligent and obedient creatures.
( b ) Physical pain and imperfection, so far as they existed before the introduction of moral evil, are to be regarded : first, as congruous parts of a system of which sin was foreseen to be an incident ; and secondly, as constituting, in 2>art, the means of future discipline and redemption for the fallen.
2. To the wisdom and free-will of God.
No plan whatever of a finite creation can fully express the infinite per- fection of God. Since God, however, is immutable, he must always have had a plan of the universe ; since he is perfect, he must have had the best possible plan. As wise, God cannot choose a plan less good, instead of one more good. As rational, he cannot between plans equally good make a merely arbitrary choice. Here is no necessity, but only the certainty that infinite wisdom will act wisely. As no compulsion from without, so no necessity from within, moves God to create the actual universe. Creation is both wise and free.
3. To Christ as the Bevealer of God. .
Since Christ is the Revealer of God in creation as well as in redemption, the remedy for pessimism is ( 1 ) the recognition of God's transcendence — the universe at "present not fully expressing his power, his holiness or his love, and nature being a scheme of progressive evolution which we imper- fectly comprehend and in which there is much to follow ; ( 2 ) the recog- nition of sin as the free act of the creature, by which all sorrow and pain have been caused, so that God is in no proper sense its author ; ( 3 ) the recognition of Christ for us on the Cross and Christ in us by his Spirit, as revealing the age-long sorrow and suffering of God's heart on account of human transgression, and as manifested, in self-sacrificing love, to deliver men from the manifold evils in which their sins have involved them ; and ( 4 ) the recognition of present probation and future judgment, so that pro- vision is made for removing the scandal now resting upon the divine government and for justifying the ways of God to men.
DEFINITION OF PRESERVATION. 109
4. To Provuii nee and Redemption.
Christianity is essentially a sclieme of supernatural lovo and power. It conceives of God as above the world, as well as in it, — able to manifest himself , and actually manifesting himself, in ways unknown to mere nature.
But this absolute sovereignty and transcendence, which are manifested in providence and redemption, are inseparable from creatorship. If the world be eternal, like God, it must be an efflux from the substance of God and must be absolutely equal with God. Only a proper doctrine of creatii m can secure God's absolute distinctness from the world and his sovereign1 over it.
The logical alternative of creation is therefore a system of pantheism, in which God is an impersonal and necessary force. Hence the pantheistic dicta of Fichte : " The assumption of a creation is the fundamental error of all false metaphysics and false theology " ; of Hegel : " God evolves the world out of himself, in order to take it back into himself again in the Spirit" ; and of Strauss : "Trinity and creation, speculatively viewed, are one and the same, — only the one is viewed absolutely, the other empirically."
5. To the Observance of the Sabbath.
We j>erceive from this point of view, moreover, the importance and value of the Sabbath, as commemorating God's act of creation, and thus God's personality, sovereignty and transcendence.
( a ) The Sabbath is of perpetual obligation as God's appointed memorial of his creating activity. The Sabbath requisition antedates the decalogue and forms a part of the moral law. Made at the creation, it applies to man as man, everywhere and always, in his present state of being.
( b ) Neither our Lord nor his apostles abrogated the Sabbath of the deca- logue. The new dispensation does away with the Mosaic prescriptions as to the method of keeping the Sabbath, but at the same time declares its observance to be of divine origin and to be a necessity of human nature.
( c ) The Sabbath law binds us to set apart a seventh portion of our time for rest and worship. It does not enjoin the simultaneous observance by all the world of a fixed portion of absolute time, nor is such observance possible. Christ's example and apostolic sanction have transferred the Sabbath from the seventh day to the first, for the reason that this last is the day of Christ's resurrection, and so the day when God's spiritual cre- ation became in Christ complete.
SECTION II. — PRESERVATION.
1. Definition of Preservation.
Preservation is that continuous agency of God by which he maintains in existence the things he has created, together with the properties aud powers with which he has endowed them. As the doctrine of Creation is
110 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
our attempt to explain the existence of the universe, so the doctrine of Preservation is our attempt to explain its continuance.
In explanation we remark :
(a) Preservation is not creation, for preservation presupposes creation. That which is preserved must already exist, and must have come into exist- ence by the creative act of God.
( b ) Preservation is not a mere negation of action, or a refraining to destroy, on the part of God. It is a positive agency by which, at every moment, he sustains the persons and the forces of the universe.
( c ) Preservation implies a natural concurrence of God in all operations of matter and of mind. Though personal beings exist and God's will is not the sole force, it is still true that, without his concurrence, no person or force can continue to exist or to act.
II. Pkoop of the Doctrine of Preservation.
1. From Scripture.
In a number of Scripture passages, preservation is expressly distin- guished from creation. Though God rested from his work of creation and established an order of natural forces, a special and continuous divine activity is declared to be put forth in the upholding of the universe and its powers. This divine activity, moreover, is declared to be the activity of Christ ; as he is the mediating agent in creation, so he is the mediating agent in preservation.
2. From Reason.
We may argue the j>reserving agency of God from the following considerations :
( a ) Matter and mind are not self-existent. Since they have not the cause of their being in themselves, their continuance as well as their origin must be due to a superior power.
( b ) Force implies a will of which it is the direct or indirect expression. "We know of force only through the exercise of our own wills. Since will is the only cause of which we have direct knowledge, second causes in nature may be regarded as only secondary, regular, and automatic workings of the great first Cause.
( c ) God's sovereignty requires a beHef in his special preserving agency ; since this sovereignty would not be absolute, if anything occurred or existed independent of his will.
III. Theories which virtually deny the doctrine of Preservation.
1. Deism.
This view represents the universe as a self-sustained mechanism, from which God withdrew as soon as he had created it, and which he left to a process of self-development. It was held in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries by the English Herbert, Collins, Tindal, and Bolingbroke.
REMARKS UPON- THE DIVINE CONCURRENCE. Hi
We object to this view that :
( a ) It rests upon a false analogy. — Man is able to construct a self-mov- ing watch only because ho employs preexisting forces, such as gravity, elasticitv, cohesion. But in a theory which likens the universe to a machine, these forces are the very things to be accounted for.
( b ) It is a system of anthropomorphism, while it professes to exclude anthropomorphism. — Because the upholding of all things would involve a multiplicity of minute cares if man were the agent, it conceives of the upholding of the universe as involving such burdens in the case of God. Thus it saves the dignity of God by virtually denying his omnipresence, omniscience, and omnipotence.
( c ) It cannot be maintained without denying all providential interfer- ence, in the history of creation and the subsequent history of the world. — But the introduction of life, the creation of man, incarnation, regeneration, the communion of intelligent creatures with a present God, and interposi- tions of God in secular history, are matters of fact.
2. Continuous Creation.
This view regards the universe as from moment to moment the result of a new creation. It was held by the New England theologians Edwards, Hopkins, and Emmons, and more recently in Germany by Kothe.
To this we object, upon the following grounds :
(a) It contradicts the testimony of consciousness that regular and executive activity is not the mere repetition of an initial decision, but is an exercise of the will entirely different in kind.
( 6 ) It exaggerates God's power only by sacrificing his truth, love, and holiness ; — for if finite personalities are not what they seem — namely, objective existences — God's veracity is impugned ; if the human soul have no real freedom and life, God's love has made no self -communication to creatures ; if God's will is the only force in the universe, God's holiness can no longer be asserted, for tho divine will must in that case be regarded as the author of human sin.
( c ) As deism tends to atheism, so the doctrine of continuous creation tends to pantheism. — Arguing that, because we get our notion of force from the action of our own wills, therefore all force must be will, and divine will, it is compelled to merge the human will in this all-comprehending will of God. Mind and matter alike become phenomena of one force, which has the attributes of both ; and, with the distinct existence and per- sonality of the human soul, we lose the distinct existence and personality of God, as well as the freedom and accountability of man.
IY. Remarks upon the Divine Concurrence.
(a) The divine efficiency interpenetrates that of man without destroying or absorbing it. The influx of God's sustaining energy is such that men retain their natural faculties and powers. God does not work all, but all in all.
112 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
( b ) Though God preserves mind and body in their working, we are ever to remember that God concurs with the evil acts of his creatures only as they are natural acts, and not as they are evil.
SECTION III. — PROVIDENCE.
I. Definition of Providence.
Providence is that continuous agency of God by which he makes all the events of the physical and moral universe fulfill the original design with which he created it.
As Creation explains the existence of the universe, and as Preservation explains its continuance, so Providence explains its evolution and progress.
In explanation notice :
( a ) Providence is not to be taken merely in its etymological sense of foreseeing. It is forseeing also, or a positive agency in connection with all the events of history.
( b ) Providence is to be distinguished from preservation. While preser- vation is a maintenance of the existence and powers of created things, providence is an actual care and control of them.
( c ) Since the original plan of God is aU-comprehending, the providence which executes the plan is all-comprehending also, embracing within its scope things small and great, and exercising care over individuals as well as over classes.
( d ) In respect to the good acts of men, providence embraces all those natural influences of birth and surroundings which prepare men for the operation of God's word and Spirit, and which constitute motives to obe- dience.
( e ) In respect to the evil acts of men, providence is never the efficient cause of siu, but is by turns preventive, permissive, directive, and deter- minative.
(/) Since Christ is the only revealer of God, and he is the medium of every divine activity, providence is to be regarded as the work of Christ ; see 1 Cor. 8 :G — " one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom are all things " ; cf. John 5 : 17 — " My Father worketh even until now, and I work."
II. Proof of the Doctrine of Providence. 1. Scriptural Proof.
The Scripture witnesses to
A. A general providential government and control ( a ) over the uni- verse at large ; ( b ) over the physical world ; ( c ) over the brute creation ; ( d ) over the affairs of nations ; ( e ) over man's birth and lot in life ; (/) over the outward successes and failures of men's lives ; (g) over things
PROOF OF THE DOCTRINE OF PROVIDENCE. 113
Beamingly accidental or insignificant ; ( h ) in tho protection of the righteous ; ( /' ) in the supply of the wants of God's people ; (j ) in the arrangement of answers to prayer ; ( k ) in tho exposuro and punishment of the wicked.
B. A government and control extending to the free actions of men — ( a ) to men's free acts in general ; ( 6 ) to the sinf id acts of men also.
God's providence with respect to men's evil acts is described in Scripture as of four sorts :
( a ) Preventive,— God by his providence prevents sin which would otherwise be committed. That he thus prevents sin is to bo regarded as matter, not of obligation, but of grace.
( b ) Permissive, — God permits men to cherish and to manifest tho evil dispositions of their hearts. God's permissive providence is simply the negative act of withholding impediments from the path of the sinner, instead of preventing his sin by the exercise of divine power. It implies no ignorance, passivity, or indulgence, but consists with hatred of the sin and determination to punish it.
( e ) Directive, — God directs the evil aots of men to ends unforeseen and unintended by the agents. When evil is in the heart and will certainly come out, God orders its flow in one direction rather than in another, so that its course can be best controlled and least harm may result. This is sometimes called overriding providence.
(d) Determinative, — God determines the bounds reached by the evil ] missions of his creatures, and the measure of their effects. Since moral evil is a germ capable of indefinite expansion, God's determining the measure of its growth does not alter its character or involve God's com- plicity -with the perverse wills which cherish it.
2. national proof.
A . Arguments a -priori from the divine attributes. ( a ) From the immutability of God. This makes it certain that he will execute his eter- nal plan of the universe and its history. But the execution of this plan involves not only creation and preservation, but also providence. ( b ) From the benevolence of God. This renders it certain that he will care for the intelligent universe he has created. What it was worth his while to create, it is worth his while to care for. But this care is providence. ( c ) From the justice of God. As the source of moral law, God must assure the vin- dication of law by administering justice in the universe and punishing the rebellious. But this administration of justice is providence.
B. Arguments a posteriori from the facts of nature and of history, (a) The outward lot of individuals and nations is not wholly in their own hands, but is in many acknowledged respects subject to the disposal of a higher power. ( b ) The observed moral order of the world, although imperfect, cannot be accounted for without recognition of a divine provi- dence. Vice is discouraged and virtue rewarded, in ways which are beyond the power of mere nature. There must be a governing mind and will, and this mind and will must be the mind and will of God.
8
114 NATURE, DECREES, AND AVORKS OP GOD.
III. Theories opposing the Doctrine of Providence.
1. Fatalism.
Fatalism maintains the certainty, but denies the freedom, of human self- determination, — thus substituting fate for providence.
To this view we object that ( a ) it contradicts consciousness, which testi- fies that we are free ; ( b ) it exalts the divine power at the expense of God's truth, wisdom, holiness, love ; ( c ) it destroys all evidence of the personality and freedom of God ; ( d ) it practically makes necessity the only God, and leaves the imperatives of our moral nature without present validity or future vindication.
2. Casualism.
Casualism transfers the freedom of mind to nature, as fatalism transfers the fixity of nature to mind. It thus exchanges providence for chance.
Upon this view we remark :
( a ) If chance be only another name for human ignorance, a name for the fact that there are trivial occurrences in life which have no meaning or relation to us, — we may acknowledge this, and still hold that providence arranges every so-called chance, for purposes beyond our knowledge. Chance, in this sense, is providential coincidence which we cannot under- stand, and do not need to trouble ourselves about.
( b ) If chance be taken in the sense of utter absence of all causal con- nections in the phenomena of matter and mind, — we oppose to this notion the fact that the causal judgment is formed in accordance with a funda- mental and necessary law of human thought, and that no science or knowl- edge is possible without the assumption of its validity.
( c ) If chance be used in the sense of undesigning cause, — it is evi- dently insufficient to explain the regular and uniform sequences of nature, or the moral progress of the human race. These things argue a superin- tending and designing mind — in other words, a providence. Since reason demands not only a cause, but a sufficient cause, for the order of the phys- ical and moral world, casualism must be ruled out.
3. Theory of a merely general providence.
Many who acknowledge God's control over the movements of planets and the destinies of nations deny any divine arrangement of particular events. Most of the arguments against deism are equally valid against the theory of a merely general providence. This view is indeed only a form of deism, which holds that God has not wholly withdrawn himself from the universe, but that his activity within it is limited to the maintenance of general laws.
In addition to the arguments above alluded to, we may urge against this theory that :
( a ) General control over the course of nature and of history is impossi- ble without control over the smallest particulars which affect the course of nature and of history. Incidents so slight as well-nigh to escape observa-
RELATrOXS OF TITE DOCTRIXE OF PliOVIDEXOE. 115
tion at the time of their occurrence are frequently found to determine the whole future of a human life, and through that life the fortunes of a whole empire and of a whole age.
(6) The love of God which prompts a general care for the universe must also prompt a particular care for the smallest events which affect the happi- ness of his creatures. It belongs to love to regard nothing as trifling or beneath its notice which has to do with the interests of the object of its affection. Infinite love may therefore be expected to provide for all, even the minutest things in the creation. Without belief in this particular care, men cannot long believe in God's general care. Faith in a particular provi- dence is indispensable to the very existence of practical religion ; for men will not worship or recognize a God who has no direct relation to them.
( c ) In times of personal danger, and in remarkable conjunctures of pub- lic affairs, men instinctively attribute to God a control of the events which take place around them. The prayers which such startling emergencies force from men's lips are proof that God is present and active in human atVairs. This testimony of our mental constitution must be regarded as virtually the testimony of him who framed this constitution.
(d) Christian experience confirms the declarations of Scripture that particular events are brought about by God with special reference to the good or ill of the individual. Such events occur at times in such direct connection with the Christian's prayers that no doubt remains with regard to the providential arrangement of them. The possibility of such divine agency in natural events cannot be questioned by one who, like the Chris- tian, has had experience of the greater wonders of regeneration and daily intercourse with God, and who believes in the reality of creation, incarna- tion, and miracles.
IV. Relations of the Doctrine of Providence.
1. To miracles and works of grace.
Particular providence is the agency of God in what seem to us the minor affairs of nature and human life. Special providence is only an instance of God's particular providence which has special relation to us or makes peculiar impression upon us. It is special, not as respects the means which God makes use of, but as respects the effect produced upon us. In special providence we have only a more impressive manifestation of God's universal control.
Miracles and works of grace like regeneration are not to be regarded as belonging to a different order of tilings from God's special providences. They too, like special providences, may have their natural connections and antecedents, although they more readily suggest their divine authorship. Nature and God are not mutually exclusive, — nature is rather God's method of working. Since nature is only the manifestation of God, special providence, miracle, and regeneration are simply different degrees of extraordinary nature. Certain of the wonders of Scripture, such as the destruction of Sennacherib's army and the dividing of the Red Sea, the
116 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
plagues of Egypt, the flight of quails, and the draught of fishes, can be counted as exaggerations of natural forces, while at the same time they are ojjerations of the wonder-working God.
2. To prayer and its answer.
What has been said with regard to God's connection with nature suggests the question, how God can answer prayer consistently with the fixity of natural law.
A. Negatively, we remark that the true solution is not to be reached:
( a ) By making the sole- effect of prayer to be its reflex influence upon the petitioner. — Prayer presupposes a God who hears and answers. It will not be offered, unless it is believed to accomplish objective as well as subjective results.
( b ) Nor by holding that God answers prayer simply by spiritual means, such as the action of the Holy Spirit upon the spirit of man. — The realm of spirit is no less subject to law than the realm of matter. Scripture and experience, moreover, alike testify that in answer to prayer events take place in the outward world which would not have taken place if prayer had not gone before.
( c ) Nor by maintaining that God suspends or breaks in upon the order of nature, in answering every prayer that is offered. — This view does not take account of natural laws as having objective existence, and as revealing the order of God's being. Omnipotence might thus suspend natural law, but wisdom, so far as we can see, would not.
( d ) Nor by considering prayer as a physical force, linked in each case to its answer, as physical cause is linked to physical effect. — Prayer is not a force acting directly upon nature ; else there would be no discretion as to its answer. It can accomplish results in nature, only as it influences God.
It seems more in accordance with both Scripture and reason to say that:
B. God may answer prayer, even when that answer involves changes in the sequences of nature, —
( a ) By new combinations of natural forces, in regions withdrawn from our observation, so that effects are produced which these same forces left to themselves would never have accomplished. As man combines the laws of chemical attraction and of combustion, to fire the gunpowder and split the rock asunder, so God may combine the laws of nature to bring about answers to prayer. In all this there may be no suspension or violation of law, but a use of law unknown to us.
Since prayer is nothing more nor less than appeal to a personal and present God, whose granting or withholding of the requested blessing is believed to be determined by the prayer itself, we must conclude that prayer moves God, or, in other words, induces the putting forth on his part of an imperative volition.
( b ) God may have so prearranged the laws of the material universe and the events of history that, while the answer to prayer is an expression of
RELATIONS OF THE DOCTRINE OF PROVIDENCE. 11?
his -will, it is granted through tho -working of natural agencies, and in per- fect accordance with the general principle that results, both temporal and spiritual, are to be attained by intelligent creatures through the use of tho appropriate and appointed means.
Since God is immanent in nature, an answer to prayer, coming about through the intervention of natural law, may be as real a revelation of God's personal care as if the laws of nature were suspended, and God inter- posed by an exercise of his creative power. Prayer and its answer, though having God's immediate volition as their connecting bond, may yet be provided for in the original plan of the universe.
C. If asked -whether this relation between prayer and its providential answer can be scientifically tested, "we reply that it may be tested just as a father's love may be tested by a dutiful son.
( a ) There is a general proof of it in the past experience of the Chris- tian and in the past history of the church.
( b ) In condescension to human blindness, God may sometimes submit to a formal test of his faithfulness and power, — as in the case of Elijah and the priests of Baal.
(e) When proof sufficient to convince the candid inquirer has been already given, it may not consist with the divine majesty to abide a test imposed by mere curiosity or scepticism, — as in the case of the Jews who sought a sign from heaven.
(d) Since God's -will is the link between prayer and its answer, there can be no such thing as a physical demonstration of its efficacy in any pro- posed case. Physical tests have no application to things into which free will enters as a constitutive element. But there are moral tests, and moral tests are as scientific as physical tests can be.
3. To Christian activity.
Here the truth lies between the two extremes of quietism and naturalism.
( a ) In opposition to the false abnegation of human reason and will which quietism demands, we hold that God guides us, not by continual miracle, but by his natural providence and the energizing of our faculties by his Spirit, so that we rationally and freely do our own work, and work out our own salvation.
( b ) In opposition to naturalism, we hold that God is continually near the human spirit by his providential working, and that this providential working is so adjusted to the Christian's nature and necessities as to fur- nish instruction with regard to duty, discipline of religious character, and needed help and comfort in trial.
In interpreting God's providences, as in interpreting Scripture, we are dependent upon the Holy Spirit. The work of the Spirit is, indeed, in great part an application of Scripture truth to present circumstances. While we never allow ourselves to act blindly and irrationally, but accus- tom ourselves to weigh evidence with regard to duty, we are to expect, as the gift of the Spirit, an understanding of circumstances — a fine sense of
118 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
God's providential purposes with regard to us, which will make our true course plain to ourselves, although we may not always be able to explain it to others.
4. To the evil acts of free agents.
(a) Here we must distinguish between the natural agency and the moral agency of God, or between acts of permissive providence and acta of efficient causation. We are ever to remember that God neither works evil, nor causes his creatures to work evil. All sin is chargeable to the self- will and perversity of the creature ; to declare God the author of it is the greatest of blasphemies.
( b ) But while man makes up his evil decision independently of God, God does, by his natural agency, order the method in which this inward evil shall express itself, by limiting it in time, place, and measure, or by giuding it to the end which his wisdom and love, and not man's intent, has set. In all this, however, God only allows sin to develop itself after its own nature, so that it may be known, abhorred, and if possible overcome and forsaken.
( c ) In cases of persistent iniquity, God's providence still compels the sinner to accomplish the design with which he and all things have been created, namely, the manifestation of God's holiness. Even though he struggle against God's plan, yet he must by his very resistance serve it. His sin is made its own detector, judge, and tormentor. His character and doom are made a warning to others. Befusing to glorify God in his salva- tion, he is made to glorify God in his destruction.
SECTION IY. — GOOD AND EVIL ANGELS.
As ministers of divine providence there is a class of finite beings, greater in intelligence and power than man in his present state, some of whom positively serve God's purpose by holiness and voluntary execution of his will, some negatively, by giving examples to the universe of defeated and punished rebellion, and by illustrating God's distinguishing grace in man's salvation.
The scholastic subtleties which encumbered this doctrine in the Middle Ages, and the exaggerated representations of the power of evil spirits which then prevailed, have led, by a natural reaction, to an undue depre- ciation of it in more recent times.
But there is certainly a possibility that the ascending scale of created intelligences does not reach its topmost point in man. As the distance between man and the lowest forms of life is filled in with numberless gra- dations of being, so it is possible that between man and God there exist creatures of higher than human intelligence. This possibility is turned to certainty by the express declarations of Scripture. The doctrine is inter- woven with the later as well as with the earlier books of revelation.
SCRIPTURE STATEMENTS AND INTIMATIONS. 119
I. Scripture Statements and Intimations.
1. As to tin- nutii re and attributes of angels.
( a ) They are created beings.
(ft) They are incorporeal beings.
( o ) They are personal — that is, intelligent and voluntary — agents.
( d ) Thoy are possessed of superhuman intelligence and power, yet an intelligence and power that has its fixed limits.
( c ) They are an order of intelligences distinct from man and older than man.
The constant representation of angels as personal beings in Scripture cannot be explained as a personification of abstract good and evil, in accom- modation to Jewish superstitions, without wresting many narrative passages from their obvious sense ; implying on the part of Christ either dissimu- lation or ignorance as to an important point of doctrine ; and surrendering belief in the inspiration of the Old Testament from which these Jewish views of angelic beings were derived.
The same remark applies to the view which regards Satan as but a col- lective term for all evil beings, human or superhuman. The Scripture representations of the progressive rage of the great adversary, from his first assault on human virtue in Genesis to his final overthrow in Revelation, join with the testimony of Christ just mentioned, to forbid any other con- clusion than this, that there is a personal being of great power, who carries on organized opposition to the divine government.
2. As to their number and organization, (a) They are of great midtitude.
( b ) They constitute a company, as distinguished from a race. ( c ) They are of various ranks and endowments. ( d ) They have an organization.
With regard to the ' cherubim ' of Genesis, Exodus, and Ezekiel, — with which the 'seraphim' of Isaiah and the 'living creatures ' of the book of Revelation are to be identified, — the most probable interpretation is that which regards them, not as actual beings of higher rank than man, but as symbolic appearances, intended to represent redeemed humanity, endowed with all the creature perfections lost by the Fall, and made to be the dwelliug-piace of God.
3. As to their moral character. ( a ) They were all created holy. (6) They had a probation.
( c ) Some preserved their integrity.
(d) Some fell from their state of innocence.
( e ) The good are confirmed in good.
120 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
(/) The evil are confirmed in evil.
4. As to their employments.
A. The employments of good angels.
(a) They stand in the presence of God and worship him.
( b ) They rejoice in God's works.
( c ) They execute God's will, — by working in nature ;
( d ) by guiding the affairs of nations ;
( e ) by watching over the interests of particular churches ;
(/) by assisting and protecting individual believers ;
(3) by punishing God's enemies.
A general survey of this Scripture testimony as to the employments of good angels leads us to the following conclusions :
First, — that good angels are not to be considered as the mediating agents of God's regular and common providence, but as the ministers of his special providence in the affairs of his church. He ' maketh his angels winds ' and ' a flaming fire, ' not in his ordinary procedure, but in connec- tion with special displays of his power for moral ends ( Deut. 33 : 2 ; Acts 7 : 53 ; Gal. 3 : 19 ; Heb. 2:2). Their intervention is apparently occasional and exceptional — not at their own option, but only as it is permitted or commanded by God. Hence we are not to conceive of angels as coming between us and God, nor are we, without special revelation of the fact, to attribute to them in any particular case the effects which the Scriptures generally ascribe to divine providence. Like miracles, therefore, angelic appearances generally mark God's entrance upon new epochs in the unfold- ing of his plans. Hence we read of angels at the completion of creation (Job 38 : 7 ) ; at the giving of the law ( Gal. 3 : 19 ) ; at the birth of Christ ( Luke 2 : 13 ) ; at the two temptations in the wilderness and in Gethsemane ( Mat. 4 : 11, Luke 22 : 43 ) ; at the resurrection (Mat. 28 : 2 ) ; at the ascen- sion ( Acts 1 :10) ; at the final judgment ( Mat. 25 :31 ).
Secondly, — that their power, as being in its nature dependent and derived, is exercised in accordance Avith the laws of the spiritual and natural world. They cannot, like God, create, perform miracles, act without means, search the heart. Unlike the Holy Spirit, who can influence the human mind directly, they can influence men only in ways analogous to those by which men influence each other. As evil angels may tempt men to sin, so it is probable that good angels may attract men to holiness.
B. The employments of evil angels.
( a ) They oppose God and strive to defeat his will. This is indicated in the names applied to their chief. The word "Satan" means "adver- sary"— primarily to God, secondarily to men ; the term " devil" signifies "slanderer " — of God to men, and of men to God. It is indicated also in the description of the "man of sin "as "he that opposeth and exalteth himself against all that is called God."
OBJECTIONS TO TITE DOCTRINE OF ANGELS. 121
(b) They hinder man's temporal and eternal welfare, — sometimes by exercising a certain control over natural phenomena, but more commonly by subjecting man's sold to temptation. Possession of man's being, either physical or spiritual, by demons, is also recognized in Scripture.
Satan's temptations are represented as both negative and positive, — he takes away the seed sown, and he sows tares. He controls many subordi- nate evil spirits ; there is only one devil, but there are many angels or demons, and through their agency Satan may accomplish his purposes.
Possession is distinguished from bodily or mental disease, though such disease often accompanies possession or results from it. — The demons speak in their own persons, with supernatural knowledge, and they are directly addressed by Christ. Jesus recognizes Satanic agency in these cases of possession, and he rejoices in the casting out of demons, as a sign of Satan's downfall. These facts render it impossible to interpret the narratives of demoniac possession as popular descriptions of abnormal physical or mental conditions.
( c ) Yet, in spite of themselves, they execute God's plans of punishing the ungodly, of chastening the good, and of illustrating the nature and fate of moral evil.
A survey of the Scripture testimony with regard to the employments of evil spirits leads to the following general conclusions :
First, — the power of evil spirits over men is not independent of the human will. This power cannot be exercised without at least the original consent of the human will, and may be resisted and shaken off through prayer and faith in God.
Secondly, — their power is limited, both in time and in extent, by the permissive will of God. Evil spirits are neither omnipotent, omniscient, nor omnipresent. We are to attribute disease and natural calamity to their agency, only when this is matter of special revelation. Opposed to God as evil spirits are, God compels them to serve his purposes. Their power for harm lasts but for a season, and ultimate judgment and punishment will vindicate God's permission of their evil agency.
II. Objections to the Doctkine of Angels.
1. To the doctrine of angels in general. It is objected :
( a ) That it is opposed to the modern scientific view of the world, as a system of definite forces and laws. — We reply that, whatever truth there may be in this modern view, it does not exclude the play of divine or human free agency. It does not, therefore, exclude the possibility of angelic agency.
( b ) That it is opposed to the modern doctrine of infinite space above and beneath us — a space peopled with worlds. With the surrender of the old conception of the firmament, as a boundary separating this world from the regions beyond, it is claimed that we must give up all belief in a heaven of the angels. — We reply that the notions of an infinite universe, of heaven as a definite place, and of spirits as confined to fixed locality, are without
122 NATURE, DECREES, AND WORKS OF GOD.
certain warrant either in reason or in Scripture. We know nothing of the modes of existence of pure spirits.
2. To the doctrine of evil angels in particular. It is objected that :
( a ) The idea of the fall of angels is self-contradictory, since a fall deter, mined by pride presupposes pride — that is, a fall before the fall. — We reply that the objection confounds the occasion of sin with the sin itself. The outward motive to disobedience is not disobedience. The fall took place only when that outward motive was chosen by free will. When the motive of independence was selfishly adopted, only then did the innocent desire for knowledge and power become pride and sin. How an evil voli- tion could originate in spirits created pure is an insoluble problem. Our faith in God's holiness, however, compels us to attribute the origin of this evil volition, not to the Creator, but to the creature.
( b ) It is irrational to suppose that Satan should have been able to change his whole nature by a single act, so that he thenceforth willed only evil. — But we reply that the circumstances of that decision are unknown to us ; while the power of single acts permanently to change character is matter of observation among men.
( c ) It is impossible that so wise a being should enter upon a hopeless rebellion. — We answer that no amount of mere knowledge ensures right moral action. If men gratify present passion, in spite of their knowledge that the sin involves present misery and future perdition, it is not impossi- ble that Satan may have done the same.
( d) It is inconsistent with the benevolence of God to create and uphold spirits, who he knows will be and do evil. — We reply that this is no more inconsistent with God's benevolence than the creation and preservation of men, whose action God overrules for the furtherance of his purposes, and whose iniquity he finally brings to light and punishes.
( e ) The notion of organization among evil spirits is self -contradictory, since the nature of evil is to sunder and divide. — We reply that such organization of evil spirits is no more- impossible than the organization of wicked men, for the purpose of furthering their selfish ends. Common hatred to God may constitute a principle of union among them, as among men.
(/) The doctrine is morally pernicious, as transferring the blame of human sin to the being or beings who tempt men thereto. — We reply that neither conscience nor Scripture allows temptation to be an excuse for sin, or regards Satan as having power to compel the human will. The objection, moreo^r, contradicts our observation, — for only where the personal exist- ence : i Satan is recognized, do we find sin recognized in its true nature.
(g ) The doctrine degrades man, by representing him as the tool and slave of Satan. — We reply that it does indeed show his actual state to be degraded, but only with the result of exalting our idea of his original dignity, and of his possible glory in Christ. The fact that man's sin was suggested from without, and not from within, may be the one mitigating circumstance which renders possible his redemption.
PRACTICAL USES OF THE DOCTRINE OF ANGELS. 123
ILT. Practical uses of the Doctrine of Angels.
A. Uses of the doctrine of good angels.
(a) It gives us a new sense of the greatness of the divine resources, and of God's grace in our creation, to think of the multitude of unfallen intel- ligences who executed the divine purposes before man appeared.
( b ) It strengthens our faith in God's providential care, to know that spirits of so high rank are deputed to minister to creatures who are environed with temptations and are conscious of sin.
( c ) It teaches us humility, that beings of so much greater knowledge and power than ours should gladly perform these unnoticed services, in behalf of those whose only claim upon them is that they are children of the same common Father.
( d ) It helps us in the struggle against sin, to learn that these messen- gers of God are near, to mark our wrong doing if we fall, and to sustain us if we resist temptation.
( e ) It enlarges our conceptions of the dignity of our own beiug, aud of the boundless possibilities of our future existence, to remember these forms of typical innocence and love, that praise and serve God unceasingly in heaven.
B. Uses of the doctrine of evil angels.
(a) It illustrates the real nature of sin, and the depth of the ruin to which it may bring the soul, to reflect upon the present moral condition and eternal wretchedness to which these spirits, so highly endowed, have brought themselves by their rebellion against God.
( b ) It inspires a salutary fear and hatred of the first subtle approaches of evil from within or from without, to remember that these may be the covert advances of a personal and malignant being, who seeks to overcome our virtue and to involve us in his own apostasy and destruction.
( c ) It shuts us up to Christ, as the only Being who is able to deliver us or others from the enemy of all good.
( d ) It teaches us that our salvation is wholly of grace, since for such multitudes of rebellious spirits no atonement and no renewal were provided — simple justice having its way, with no mercy to interpose or save.
PART V.
ANTHEOPOLOGY, OE THE DOCTEINE OF MAN.
CHAPTER I.
PRELIMINARY.
1. Man a Ckeation of God and a Child of God.
The fact of man's creation is declared in Gen. 1 : 27 — "And God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him " ; 2:7 — " And Jehovah God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life ; and man became a living soul. "
(a) The Scriptures, on the one hand, negative the idea that man is the mere product of unreasoning natural forces. They refer his existence to a cause different from mere nature, namely, the creative act of God.
(6) But, on the other hand, the Scriptures do not disclose the method of man's creation. Whether man's physical system is or is not derived, by natural descent, from the lower animals, the record of creation does not inform us. As the command "Let the earth bring forth living creatures " ( Gen. 1 : 24 ) does not exclude the idea of mediate creation, through natural generation, so the forming of man "of the dust of the ground" ( Gen. 2:7) does not in itself determine whether the creation of man's body was mediate or immediate.
(c) Psychology, however, comes in to help our interpretation of Script- ure. The radical differences between man's soul and the principle of intelligence in the lower animals, especially man's possession of self-con- sciousness, general ideas, the moral sense, and the power of self-determin- ation, show that that which chiefly constitutes him man could not have been derived, by any natural process of development, from the inferior creatures. "We are compelled, then, to believe that God's "breathing into man's nos- trils the breath of life " (Gen. 2 : 7), though it was a mediate creation as presupposing existing material in the shape of animal forms, was yet an immediate creation in the sense that only a divine reinforcement of the process of life turned the animal into man. In other words, man came not from the brute, but through the brute, and the same immanent God who had previously created the brute created also the man.
(d) Comparative physiology, moreover, has, up to the present time, done nothing to forbid the extension of this doctrine to man's body. No single instance has yet been adduced of the transformation of one animal species into another, either by natural or artificial selection ; much less has it been demonstrated that the body of the brute has ever been developed
124
UNITY OP THE HUMAN RACE. 125
into that of man. All evolution implies progress and reinforcement of life, and is unintelligible except as tbe immanent God gives new impulses to the process. Apart from the direct agency of God, the view that man's physical system is descended by natural generation from some ancestral simian form can bo regarded only as an irrational hypothesis. Sinco the soul, then, is an immediate creation of God, and the forming of man's body is mentioned by the Scripture writer in direct connection with this creation of the spirit, man's body was in this sense an immediate creation also.
( e ) While we concede, then, that man has a brute ancestry, we make two claims by way of qualification and explanation : first, that the laws of organic development which have been followed in man's origin are only the methods of God and proofs of his creatorship ; secondly, that man, when he appears upon the scene, is no longer brute, but a self-conscious and self-determining being, made in the image of his Creator and capable of free moral decision between good and evil.
(f) The truth that man is the offspring of God implies the correlative truth of a common divine Fatherhood. God is Father of all men, in that he originates and sustains them as personal beings like in nature to him- self. Even toward sinners God holds this natural relation of Father. It is his fatherly love, indeed, which provides the atonement. Thus the demands of holiness are met and the prodigal is restored to the privileges of sonship which have been forfeited by transgression. This natural Fatherhood, therefore, does not exclude, but prepares the way for, God's special Fatherhood toward those who have been regenerated by his Spirit and who have believed on his Son ; indeed, since all God's creations take place in and through Christ, there is a natural and physical sonship of all men, by virtue of their relation to Christ, the eternal Son, which antedates and prepares the way for the spiritual sonship of those who join themselves to him by faith. Man's natural sonship underlies the history of the fall, and qualifies the doctrine of Sin.
n. Unity of the Human Kace.
( a ) The Scriptures teach that the whole human race is descended from a single pah-.
( h ) This truth lies at the foundation of Paul's doctrine of the organic unity of mankind in the first transgression, and of the provision of salva- tion for the race in Christ.
(c) This descent of humanity from a single pair also constitutes the ground of man's obligation of natural brotherhood to every member of the race.
The Scripture statements are corroborated by considerations drawn from history and science. Four arguments may be briefly mentioned :
1. The argument from history.
So far as the history of nations and tribes in both hemispheres can be traced, the evidence points to a common origin and ancestry in central Asia.
126 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
2. The argument from language.
Comparative philology points to a common origin of all the more impor- tant languages, and furnishes no evidence that the less important are not also so derived.
3. The argument from psychology.
The existence, among all families of mankind, of common mental and moral characteristics, as evinced in common maxims, tendencies and capaci- ties, in the prevalence of similar traditions, and in the universal applicability of one philosophy and religion, is most easily explained upon the theory of a common origin.
4. The argument from physiology.
A. It is the common judgment of comparative physiologists that man constitutes but a single species. The differences which exist between the various families of mankind are to be regarded as varieties of this species. In proof of these statements we urge : ( a ) The numberless intermediate gradations which connect the so-called races with each other. ( b ) The essential identity of all races in cranial, osteological, and dental character- istics. ( c ) The fertility of unions between individuals of the most diverse types, and the continuous fertility of the offspring of such unions.
B. Unity of species is presumptive evidence of unity of origin. One- ness of origin furnishes the simplest explanation of specific uniformity, if indeed the very conception of species does not imply the repetition and reproduction of a primordial type-idea impressed at its creation upon an individual empowered to transmit this type-idea to its successors.
( a ) To this view is opposed the theory, propounded by Agassiz, of different centres of creation, and of different types of humanity correspond- ing to the varying fauna and flora of each. But this theory makes the plural origin of man an exception in creation. Science points rather to a single origin of each species, whether vegetable or animal. If man be, as this theory grants, a single species, he should be, by the same rule, restricted to one continent in his origin. This theory, moreover, applies an unproved hypothesis with regard to the distribution of organized beings in general to the very being whose whole nature and history show conclusively that he is an exception to such a general rule, if one exists. Since man can adapt himself to all climes and conditions, the theory of separate centres of creation is, in his case, gratuitous and unnecessary.
( b ) It is objected, moreover, that the diversities of size, color, and physical conformation, among the various families of mankind, are incon- sistent with the theory of a common origin. But we reply that these diversities are of a superficial character, and can be accounted for by cor- responding diversities of condition and environment. Changes which have been observed and recorded within historic times show that the differences alluded to may be the result of slowly accumulated divergences from one and the same original and ancestral type. The difficulty in the case, more- over, is greatly relieved when we remember ( 1 ) that the period during
ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF HUMAN NATURE. 127
which these divergences have arisen is by no means limited fco six thousand years ( see note on the antiquity of the race, page 62 ) ; and ( 2 ) that, since species in general exhibit their greatest power of divergence into varieties immediately after their first introduction, all the varieties of tho human species may have presented themselves in man's earliest history.
ILL Essential Elements op Humah Nature.
1. The Dichotomaua Theory,
Man has a two-fold nature, — ou the oue hand material, on the other hand immaterial. He consists of body, and of spirit, or soul. That there are two, and only two, elements in man's being, is a fact to which consciousness testifies. This testimony is confirmed by Scripture, hi which the prevailing representation of man's constitution is that of dichotomy.
( a ) The record of man's creation ( Gen. 2:7), in which, as a result of the inbreathing of the divine Spirit, the body becomes possessed and vitalized by a single principle — the living soul.
( b ) Passages in which the human soul, or spirit, is distinguished, both from the divine Spirit from whom it proceeded, and from the body which it inhabits.
( c ) The interchangeable use of the terms ' soul ' and ' spirit. '
( d ) The mention of body and soul ( or spirit ) as together constituting the whole man.
2. The Trichotomous Theory.
Side by side with this common representation of human nature as con- sisting of two parts, are found passages wrhich at first sight appear to favor trichotomy. It must be acknowledged that nvev/ia (spirit) and Vw,t>/ (soul), although often used interchangeably, and always designating the same indivisible substance, are sometimes employed as contrasted terms.
In this more accurate use, i>vxv denotes man's immaterial part in its infe- rior powers and activities ; — as tyoyfi, man is a conscious individual, and, in common with the brute creation, has an animal life, together with appetite, imagination, memory, understanding. UvEv/na, on the other hand, denotes man's immaterial part in its higher capacities and faculties ; — as nvevfia, man is a being related to God, and possessing powers of reason, conscience, and free will, which difference him from the brute creation and constitute him responsible and immortal.
The element of truth in trichotomy is simply this, that man has a triplic- ity of endowment, in virtue of which the single soul has relations to matter, to self, and to God. The trichotomous theory, however, as it is ordinarily defined, endangers the unity and immateriality of our higher nature, by holding that man consists of three substances, or three component parts — body, soul, and spirit — and that soul and spirit are as distinct from each other as are soul and body.
We regard the trichotomous theory as untenable, not only for the reasons already urged in proof of the dichotomouG theory, but from the following additional considerations :
128 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
(a) livevfia, as well as tyvxti, is used of the brute creation.
( 6 ) ¥vxi is ascribed to Jehovah.
( e ) The disembodied dead are called i>axvi.
(d) The highest exercises of religion are attributed to the fuxb.
( e) To lose this ->pvxv is to lose all.
(/) The passages chiefly relied upon as supporting trichotomy may be better explained upon the view already indicated, that soul and spirit are not two distinct substances or parts, but that they designate the immaterial principle from different points of view.
We conclude that the immaterial part of man, viewed as an individual and conscious life, capable of possessing and animating a physical organism, is called ipvxv > viewed as a rational and moral agent, susceptible of divine influence and indwelling, this same immaterial part is called nvev/ia. The irvevfia, then, is man's nature looking Godward, and capable of receiving and manifesting the Uvevfia ayiov ; the ^// is man's nature looking earth- ward, and touching the world of sense. The irvebfia is man's higher part, as related to spiritual realities or as capable of such relation ; the VA'W/ is man's higher part, as related to the body, or as capable of such relation. Man's being is therefore not trichotomous but dichotomons, and his immaterial part, while possessing duality of powers, has unity of substance.
This view of the soid and spirit as different aspects of the same spiritual principle furnishes a refutation of six important errors :
(a) That of the Gnostics, who held that the n-vevfia is part of the divine essence, and therefore incapable of sin.
( b ) That of the Apollinarians, who taught that Christ's hiimanity embraced only cu/m and i»>xv, while his divine nature furnished the vnev/xa.
( c ) That of the Semi-Pelagians, who excepted the human nvevfta from the dominion of original sin.
( d ) That of Placeus, who held that only the irvev/ia was directly created by God ( see our section on Theories of Imputation ).
( e ) That of Julius Miiller, who held that the i>vxv comes to us from Adam, but that our irvevfia was corrupted in a previous state of being ( see page 490 ).
(/) That of the Annihilationists, who hold that man at his creation had a divine element breathed into him, which he lost by sin, and which he recovers only in regeneration ; so that only when he has this -n-vev/na restored by virtue of his union with Christ does man become immortal, death being to the sinner a complete extinction of being.
TV. Origin of the Souii.
Three theories with regard to this subject have divided opinion :
1. The Theory of Preexistenee.
This view was held by Plato, Philo, and Origen ; by the first, in order
ORIOIN OF THE SOI L. 129
to explain the soul's possession of ideas not derived from sense ; by the second, to account for its imprisonment in the body ; by tho third, to jus- tify the disparity of conditions in which men enter the world. We concern ourselves, however, only with the forms which the view has assumed in modern times. Kant and Julius Muller in Germany, and Edward Beecher in America, have advocated it, upon the ground that the inborn depravity of tho human will can be explained only by supposing a personal act of self-determination in a previous, or timeless, state of being.
To the theory of preexistence we urge the following objections :
( a ) It is not only wholly without support from Scripture, but it directly contradicts the Mosaic account of man's creation in the image of God, and Paul's description of all evil and death in the human race as the result of Adam's sin.
( b ) If the soul in this preexistent state was conscious and personal, it is inexplicable that we shoidd have no remembrance of such preexistence, and of so important a decision in that previous condition of being ; — if the soul was yet unconscious and impersonal, the theory fails to show how a moral act involving consequences so vast could have been performed at all.
( c ) The view sheds no light either upon the origin of sin, or upon God's justice in dealing with it, since it throws back the first transgression to a state of being in which there was no flesh to tempt, and then represents God as putting the fallen into sensuous conditions in the highest degree unfavorable to their restoration.
( d ) While this theory accounts for inborn spiritual sin, such as pride and enmity to God, it gives no explanation of inherited sensual sin, which it holds to have come from Adam, and the guilt of which must logically be denied.
2. The Creatian Theory.
This view was held by Aristotle, Jerome, and Pelagius, and in modern times has been advocated by most of the Roman Catholic and Reformed theologians. It regards the soul of each human being as inmiediately created by God and joined to the body either at conception, at birth, or at some time between these two. The advocates of the theory urge in its favor certain texts of Scripture, referring to God as the Creator of the human spirit, together with the fact that there is a marked individuality in the child, which cannot be explained as a mere reproduction of the qualities existing in the parents.
Creatianism is untenable for the following reasons :
( a ) The passages adduced in its support may with equal propriety be regurded as expressing God's mediate agency in the origination of human souls ; while the general tenor of Scripture, as well as its representations of God as the author of man's body, favor this latter interpretation.
( b ) Creatianism regards the earthly father as begetting only the body of his child — certainly as not the father of the child's highest part. This 9
130 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN".
makes the beast to possess nobler powers of propagation than man ; for the beast multiplies himself after his own image.
( c ) The individiiality of the child, even in the most extreme cases, as in the sudden rise from obscure families and surroundings of marked men like Luther, may be better explained by supposing a law of variation impressed upon the species at its beginning — a law whose operation is foreseen and supervised by God.
(d) This theory, if it allows that the soul is originally possessed of depraved tendencies, makes God the direct author of moral evil ; if it holds the soul to have been created pure, it makes God indirectly the author of moral evil, by teaching that he puts this pure soul into a body which will inevitably corrupt it.
3. The Traducian Theory.
This view was propounded by Tertullian, and was implicitly held by Augustine. In modern times it has been the prevailing opinion of the Lutheran Church. It holds that the human race was immediately created in Adam, and, as respects both body and soul, was propagated from him by natural generation — all souls since Adam being only mediately created by God, as the upholder of the laws of propagation which were originally established by him.
With regard to this view we remrka :
(a) It seems best to accord with Scripture, which represents God as creating the species in Adam ( Gen. 1 : 27 ), and as increasing and perpetu- ating it through secondary agencies ( 1 : 28 ; cf. 22 ). Only once is breathed into man's nostrils the breath of life (2 : 7, cf. 22 ; 1 Cor. 11 : 8. Gen. 4:1; 5 : 3 ; 46 : 26 ; cf. Acts 17 : 21-26 ; Heb. 7 : 10 ), and after man's formation God ceases from his work of creation ( Gen. 2:2).
( 6 ) It is favored by the analogy of vegetable and animal life, in which increase of numbers is secured, not by a multiplicity of immediate creations, but by the natural derivation of new individuals from a parent stock. A derivation of the human soul from its parents no more implies a materialis- tic view of the soul and its endless division and subdivision, than the simi- lar derivation of the brute proves the principle of intelligence in the lower animals to be wholly material.
(c) The observed transmission not merely of physical, but of mental and spiritual, characteristics in families and races, and especially the uniformly evil moral tendencies and dispositions which all men possess from their birth, are proof that in soul, as well as in body, we derive our being from our human ancestry.
( d ) The traducian doctrine embraces and acknowledges the element of truth which gives plausibility to the creatian view. Traducianism, properly defined, admits a divine concurrence throughout the whole development of the human species, and allows, under the guidance of a superintending Providence, special improvements in type at the birth of marked men, similar tc those which we may sui:>pose to have occurred in the introduction of new varieties in the animal creation.
THE MORAL NATURE OF MAN. 131
V. The Moral Nature of Man.
By the moral nature of man we mean those powers which fit him for right or wrong action. These powers are intellect, sensibility, and will, together with that peculiar power of discrimination and impulsion, which we call conscience. In order to moral action, man has intellect or reason, to discern the difference between right and wrong ; sensibility, to be moved by each of these ; free will, to do the one or the other. Intellect, sensibil- ity, and will, are man's three faculties. But in connection with these facul- ties there is a sort of activity which involves them all, and without which there can be no moral action, namely, the activity of conscience. Con- science applies the moral law to particular cases in our personal experience, and proclaims that law as binding upon us. Only a rational and sentient being can be truly moral ; yet it does not come within our province to treat of man's intellect or sensibility in general. We speak here only of Con- science and of Will.
1. Conscience.
A. Conscience an accompanying knowledge. — As already intimated, conscience is not a separate faculty, like intellect, sensibility, and will, but rather a mode in which these faculties act. Like consciousness, conscience is an accompanying knowledge. Conscience is a knowing of self ( includ- ing our acts and states ) in connection with a moral standard, or law. Add- ing now the element of feeling, we may say that conscience is man's consciousness of his own moral relations, together with a peculiar feeling in view of them. It thus involves the combined action of the intellect and of the sensibility, and that in view of a certain class of objects, viz. : right and wrong.
B. Conscience discriminative and impulsive. — But we need to define more narrowly both the intellectual and the emotional elements in con- science. As respects the intellectual element, we may say that conscience is a power of judgment, — it declares our acts or states to conform, or not to conform, to law ; it declares the acts or states which conform to be obliga- tory, — those which do not conform, to be forbidden. In other words, conscience judges : ( 1 ) This is right ( or, wrong ) ; ( 2 ) I ought ( or, I ought not ). In connection with this latter judgment, there comes into view the emotional element of conscience, — we feel the claim of duty; there is an inner sense that the wrong must not be done. Thus conscience is ( 1 ) discriminative, and ( 2 ) impulsive.
C. Conscience distinguished from other mental processes. — The nature and office of conscience will be still more clearly perceived if we distinguish it from other processes and operations with which it is too often confounded. The term conscience has been used by various writers to designate either one or all of the following : 1. Moral intuition — the intuitive perception of the difference between right and wrong, as opposite moral categories. 2. Accepted laiv — the application of the intuitive idea to general classes of actions, and the declaration that these classes of actions are right or wrong, apart from our individual relation to them. This accepted law is the complex product of ( a ) the intuitive idea, ( b ) the logical intelligence,
132 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
(c) experiences of utility, (d) influences of society and education, and (e) positive divine revelation. 3. Judgment — applying this accepted law to individual and concrete cases in our own experience, and pronouncing our own acts or states either past, present, or prospective, to be right or wrong. 4. Command — authoritative declaration of obligation to do the right, or forbear the wrong, together with an impulse of the sensibility away from the one, and toward the other. 5. Remorse or approval — moral senti- ments either of approbation or disapprobation, in view of past acts or states, regarded as wrong or right. 6. Fear or hope — instinctive disj>osition of disobedience to expect punishment, and of obedience to expect reward.
D. Conscience the moral judiciary of the soul. — From what has been previously said, it is evident that only 3. and 4. are properly included under the term conscience. Conscience is the moral judiciary of the soul — the power within of judgment and command. Conscience must judge according to the law given to it, and therefore, since the moral standard accepted by the reason may be imperfect, its decisions, while relatively just, may be absolutely unjust. — 1. and 2. belong to the moral reason, but not to conscience proper. Hence the duty of enlightening and culti- vating the moral reason, so that conscience may have a proper standard of judgment. — 5. and 6. belong to the sphere of moral sentiment, and not to conscience proper. The office of conscience is to "bear witness " (Rom. 2 :15).
E. Conscience in its relation to God as law-giver. — Since conscience, in the proper sense, gives uniform and infallible judgment that the right is supremely obligatory, and that the wrong must be forborne at every cost, it can be called an echo of God's voice, and an indication in man of that which his own true being requires.
F. Conscience in its relation to God as holy. — Conscience is not an original authority. It points to something higher than itself. The "authority of conscience " is simply the authority of the moral law, or rather, the authority of the personal God, of whose nature the law is but a transcript. Conscience, therefore, with its continual and supreme demand that the right should be done, furnishes the best witness to man of the existence of a personal God, and of the supremacy of holiness in him in whose image we are made.
2. Will.
A. Will defined. — Will is the soul's power to choose between motives and to direct its subsequent activity according to the motive thus chosen, — in other words, the soul's power to choose both an end and the means to attain it. The choice of an ultimate end we call immanent preference ; the choice of means we call executive volition.
B. Will and other faculties. — ( a ) We accept the threefold division of human faculties into intellect, sensibility, and will ( b ) Intellect is the soul knowing ; sensibility is the soul feeling ( desires, affections ) ; will is the soul choosing (end or means), (c ) In every act of the soul, all the faculties act. Knowing involves feeling and willing ; feeling involves knowing and willing ; willing involves knowing and feeling. ( d ) Logi-
THE MORAL NATURE OF MAN. 133
cally, each latter faculty involves the preceding action of the former ; the the soul must know before feeling ; must know and feel before willing. ( i ) Yet since knowing and feeling are activities, neither of these is possible without willing.
C. Will and permanent states. — ( a ) Though every act of the soul involves the action of all the faculties, yet in any particular action ono faculty may be more prominent than the others. So we speak of acts of intellect, of affection, of will. ( b ) This predominant action of any single faculty produces effects upon the other faculties associated with it. The action of will gives a direction to the intellect and to the affections, as well as a permanent bent to the will itself. ( c ) Each faculty, therefore, has its permanent states as wrell as its transient acts, and the wall may originate these states. Hence we speak of voluntary affections, and may with equal propriety speak of voluntary opinions. These permanent voluntary states we denominate character.
D. Will and motives. — ( a ) The permanent states just mentioned, when they have been once determined, also influence the will. Internal views and dispositions, and not simply external presentations, constitute the strength of motives. ( b ) These motives often conflict, and though the soul never acts without motive, it does notwithstanding choose between motives, and so determines the end toward wdiich it will direct its activities. ( c ) Motives are not causes, which compel the will, but influences, which per- suade it. The power of these motives, however, is proportioned to the strength of will which has entered into them and has made them what they are.
E. Will and contrary choice. — ( a ) Though no act of pure will is pos- sible, the soul may put forth single volitions in a direction opposed to its previous ruling purpose, and thus far man has the power of a contrary choice ( Rom. 7 : 18 — "to will is present with me" ). ( b ) But in so far as will has entered into and revealed itself in permanent states of intellect and sensibility and in a settled bent of the will itself, man cannot by a single act reverse his moral state, and in this respect has not the power of a contrary choice. ( c ) In this latter case he can change his character only indirectly, by turning his attention to considerations fitted to awaken opposite dispositions, and by thus summoning up motives to an opposite course.
F. Will and responsibility. — (a) By repeated acts of will put forth in a given moral direction, the affections may become so confirmed in evil or in good as to make previously certain, though not necessary, the future good or evil action of the man. Thus, while the will is free, the man may be the "bondservant of sin" (John 8 : 31-36) or the "servant of right- eousness" (Bom. 6:15-23; cf. Heb. 12-23 — "spirits of just men made perfect "). ( b ) Man is responsible for all effects of will, as well as for will itself ; for voluntary affections, as well as for voluntary acts ; for the intellectual views into which will has entered, as well as for the acts of will by which these views have been formed in the past or are maintained in the present ( 2 Pet. 3:5—" wilfully forget ").
134 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN".
G. Inferences from this view of the will. — ( a ) "We can be responsible for the voluntary evil affections with which we are born, and for the will's inherited preference of selfishness, only upon the hypothesis that we originated these states of the affections and will, or had a part in originat- ing them. Scripture furnishes this explanation, in its doctrine of Original Sin, or the doctrine of a common apostasy of the race in its first father, and our derivation of a corrupted nature by natural generation from him. ( b ) While there remains to man, even in his present condition, a natural power of will by which he may put forth transient volitions externally conformed to the divine law and so may to a limited extent modify his character, it still remains true that the sinful bent of his affections is not directly under his control ; and this bent constitutes a motive to evil so constant, inveterate, and powerful, that it actually influences every member of the race to reaffirm his evil choice, and renders necessary a special working of God's Spirit upon his heart to ensure his salvation. Hence the Scripture doctrine of Eegeneration.
H. Special objections to the deterministic theory of the will. — Deter- minism holds that man's actions are uniformly determined by motives acting upon his character, and that he has no power to change these motives or to act contrary to them. This denial that the will is free has serious and pernicious consequences in theology. On the one hand, it weakens even if it does not destroy man's conviction with regard to respon- sibility, sin, guilt and retribution, and so obscures the need of atonement ; on the other hand, it weakens if it does not destroy man's faith in his own power as well as in God's power of initiating action, and so obscures the possibility of atonement.
CHAPTEE II.
THE ORIGINAL STATE OF MAN".
In determining man's original state, we are wholly dependent upon Scripture. This represents human nature as coining from God's hand, and therefore " very good " (Gen. 1 : 31 ). It moreover draws a parallel between man's first state and that of his restoration ( Col. 3:10; Eph. 4 : 21). In interpreting these passages, however, we are to remember the twofold danger, on the one hand of putting man so high that no progress is conceivable, on the other hand of putting him so low that he could not fall. We shall the more easily avoid these dangers by distinguishing between the essentials and the incidents of man's original state.
I. Essentials of Man's Original State.
These are summed up in the phrase "the image of God." In God's image man is said to have been created ( Gen. 1 : 26, 27 ). In what did this image of God consist ? We reply that it consisted in 1. Natural like- ness to God, or personality ; 2. Moral likeness to God, or holiness.
1. Natural likeness to God, or personality.
Man was created a personal being, and was by this personality distin- guished from the brute. By personality we mean the twofold power to know self as related to the world and to God, and to determine self in view of moral ends. By virtue of this personality, man could at hi» crea- tion choose which of the objects of his knowledge — self, the world, or God — should be the norm and centre of his development. This natural like- ness to God is inalienable, and as constituting a capacity for redemption gives value to the life even of the unregenerate ( Gen. 9 : 6 ; 1 Cor. 11:7; James 3 : 9 ).
2. Moral likeness to God, or holiness.
In addition to the powers of self-consciousness and self-determination just mentioned, man was created with such a direction of the affections and the will, as constituted God the supreme end of man's being, and consti- tuted man a finite reflection of God's moral attributes. Since holiness is the fundamental attribute of God, this must of necessity be the chief attri- bute of his image in the moral beings whom he creates. That original righteousness was essential to this image, is also distinctly taught in Script- ure ( Eccl. 7 :29 ; Eph. 4 : 24 ; CoL 3 : 10).
This original righteousness, in which the image of God chiefly consisted, is to be viewed :
( a ) Not as constituting the substance or essence of human nature, — for in this case human nature would have ceased to exist as soon as man sinned.
( b ) Nor as a gift from without, foreign to human nature, and added to
1&5
136 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN".
it after man's creation, — for man is said to have possessed the divine image by the fact of creation, and not by subsequent bestowal.
( c ) But rather, as an original direction or tendency of man's affections and will, still accompanied by the power of evil choice, and so, differing from the perfected holiness of the saints, as instinctive affection and child- like innocence differ from the holiness that has been developed and con- firmed by experience of temptation.
( d ) As a moral disposition, moreover, which was propagable to Adam's descendants, if it continued, and which, though lost to him and to them, if Adam sinned, would still leave man possessed of a natural likeness to God which made him susceptible of God's redeeming grace.
In the light of the preceding investigation, we may properly estimate two theories of man's original state which claim to be more Scriptural and reasonable :
A. The image of God as including only personality.
This theory denies that any positive determination to virtue inhered originally in man's nature, and regards man at the beginning as simply possessed of spiritual powers, perfectly adjusted to each other. This is the view of Schleiermacher, who is followed by Nitzsch, Julius Muller, and Hofmann.
In addition to what has already been said in support of the opposite view, we may urge against this theory the following objections :
(a) It is contrary to analogy, in making man the author of his own holiness ; our sinful condition is not the product of our individual wills, nor is our subsequent condition of holiness the product of anything but God's regenerating power.
( b ) The knowledge of God in which man was originally created logically presupposes a direction toward God of man's affections and will, since only the holy heart can have any proper understanding of the God of holiness.
( c ) A likeness to God in mere personality, such as Satan also possesses, comes far short of answering the demands of the Scripture, in which the ethical conception of the divine nature so overshadows the merely natural. The image of God must be, not simply ability to be like God, but actual likeness.
B. The image of God as consisting simply in man's natural capacity for religion.
This view, first elaborated by the scholastics, is the doctrine of the Roman Catholic Church. It distinguishes between the image and the likeness of God. The former ( D v¥ — Gen. 1 : 26 ) alone belonged to man's nature at its creation. The latter ( filD"i ) was the product of his own acts of obedi- ence. In order that this obedience might be made easier and the conse- quent likeness to God more sure, a third element was added — an element not belonging to man's nature — namely, a supernatural gift of special grace, which acted as a curb upon the sensuous impulses, and brought them under the control of reason. Original righteousness was therefore
INCIDENTS OF MAN'S ORIGINAL STATE. 137
not a natural endowment, but a joint product of man's obedience and of God's supernatural grace.
Many of the considerations already adduced apply equally as arguments against this view. We may say, however, with reference to certain features peculiar to the theory :
( a) No such distinction can justly be drawn between the words D7? aud nm. The addition of the synonym simply strengthens the expression, and both together signify "the very image."
( b ) Whatever is denoted by either or both of these words was bestowed upon man in and by the fact of creation, and the additional hypothesis of a supernatural gift not originally belonging to man's nature, but subse- quently conferred, has no foundation either here or elsewhere in Scripture. Man is said to have been created in the image and likeness of God, not to have been afterwards endowed with either of them.
('•) The concreated opposition between sense and reason which this theory supposes is inconsistent with the Scripture declaration that the work of God's hands "was very good" (Gen. 1:31), and transfers the blame of temptation and sin from man to God. To hold to a merely nega- tive innocence, in which evil desire was only slumbering, is to make God author of sin by making him author of the constitution which rendered sin inevitable.
( d ) This theory directly contradicts Scripture by making the effect of the first sin to have been a weakening but not a perversion of human nature, and the work of regeneration to be not a renewal of the affections but merely a strengthening of the natural powers. The theory regards that first sin as simply despoiling man of a special gift of grace and as putting him where he was when first created — still able to obey God and to cooperate with God for his own salvation, — whereas the Scripture represents man since the fall as " dead through . . . trespasses and sins " (Eph. 2 : 1), as incapable of true obedience ( Eom. 8 : 7 — "not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can it be " ), and as needing to be " created in Christ Jesus for good works " ( Eph. 2 : 10 ).
II. Incidents of Man's Original State.
1. Results of man's possession of the divine image.
(a) Reflection of this divine image in man's physical form. — Even in man's body were typified those higher attributes which chiefly constituted his likeness to God. A gross perversion of this truth, however, is the view which holds, upon the ground of Gen. 2 : 7, and 3 : 8, that the image of God consists in bodily resemblance to the Creator. In the first of these passages, it is not the divine image, but the body, that is formed of dust, and into this body the soul that possesses the divine image is breathed. The second of these passages is to be interpreted by those other portions of the Pen- tateuch in which God is represented as free from all limitations of matter (Gen. 11 :5; 18 : 15).
(6) Subjection of the sensuous impulses to the control of the spirit. — Here we are to hold a middle ground between two extremes. On the one
138 ANTHROPOLOGY, OK THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
hand, the first man possessed a body and a spirit so fitted to each other that no conflict was felt between their several claims. On the other hand, this physical perfection was not final and absolute, but relative and provisional. There was still room for progress to a higher state of being ( Gen. 3 : 22 ).
( c ) Dominion over the lower creation. — Adam possessed an insight into nature analogous to that of susceptible childhood, and therefore was able to name and to rule the brute creation ( Gen. 2 : 19 ). Yet this native insight was capable of development into the higher knowledge of culture and science. From Gen. 1 : 26 ( cf. Ps. 8 : 5-8 ), it has been erroneously inferred that the image of God in man consists in dominion over the brute creation and the natural world. But, in this verse, the words "let them have dominion" do not define the image of God, but indicate the result of possessing that image. To make the image of God consist in this dominion, would imply that only the divine omnipotence was shadowed forth in man.
( d) Communion with God. — Our first parents enjoyed the divine pres- ence and teaching (Gen. 2:16 ). It would seem that God manifested him- self to them hi visible form ( Gen. 3:8). This companionship was both in kind and degree suited to their spiritual capacity, and by no means necessarily involved that perfected vision of God which is possible to beings of confirmed and unchangeable holiness ( Mat. 5 : 8 ; 1 John 3:2).
2. Concomitants of man's possession of the divine image.
( a ) Surroundings and society fitted to yield happiness and to assist a holy development of human nature ( Eden and Eve ). We append some recent theories with regard to the creation of Eve and the nature of Eden.
(6) Provisions for the trying of man's virtue. — Since man was not yet in a state of confirmed holiness, but rather of simple childlike innocence, he could be made perfect only through temptation. Hence the "tree of the knowledge of good and evil " ( Gen. 2:9). The one slight command best tested the spirit of obedience. Temptation did not necessitate a fall. If resisted, it would strengthen virtue. In that case, the posse non peccare would have become the non posse peccare.
(c) Opportunity of securing physical immortality. — The body of the first man was in itself mortal ( 1 Cor. 15 : 45 ). Science shows that physical life involves decay and loss. But means were apparently provided for checking this decay and preserving the body's youth. This means was the "tree of lif e " (Gen. 2:9). If Adam had maintained his integrity, the body might have been developed and transfigured, without intervention of death. In other words, the posse non mori might have become a non posse mori.
The conclusions we have thus reached with regard to the incidents of man's original state are combated upon two distinct grounds :
1st. The facts bearing upon man's prehistoric condition point to a development from primitive savagery to civilization. Among these facts may be mentioned the succession of implements and weapons from stone to bronze and iron ; the polyandry and communal marriage systems of the
INCIDENTS OF MAN'S ORIGINAL STATE. 139
lowest tribes ; the relics of barbarous customs still prevailing among the most civilized.
"With regard to this view we remark :
( a ) It is based upon an insufficient induction of facts. — History shows a law of degeneration supplementing and often counteracting the tendency to development. In the earliest times of which we have any record, we find nations in a high state of civilization ; but in the case of every nation whose history runs back of the Christian era — as for example, the Romans, the Greeks, the Egyptians — the subsequent progress has been downward, and no nation is known to have recovered from barbarism except as the result of influence from without.
( b ) Later investigations have rendered it probable that the stone age of some localities was contemporaneous with the bronze and iron ages of others, while certain tribes and nations, instead of making progress from one to the other, were never, so far back as we can trace them, without the knowledge and use of the metals. It is to be observed, moreover, that even without such knowledge and use man is not necessarily a barbarian, though he may be a child.
( c ) The barbarous customs to which this view looks for support may better be explained as marks of broken-down civilization than as relics of a primitive and universal savagery. Even if they indicated a former state of barbarism, that state might have been itself preceded by a condition of comparative culture.
( d ) The well-nigh universal tradition of a golden age of virtue and happiness may be most easily explained upon the Scripture view of an actual creation of the race in holiness and its subsequent apostasy.
2nd. That the religious history of mankind wan-ants us in inferring a necessary and universal law of progress, in accordance with which man passes from fetichism to polytheism and monotheism, — this first theologi- cal stage, of winch fetichism, polytheism, and monotheism are parts, being succeeded by the metaphysical stage, and that in turn by the positive.
This assumed law of progress, however, is contradicted by the following facts :
( a ) Not only did the monotheism of the Hebrews precede the great polytheistic systems of antiquity, but even these heathen religions are purer from polytheistic elements, the further back we trace them ; so that the facts point to an original monotheistic basis for them all.
(6) "There is no proof that the Indo-Germanic or Semitic stocks ever practiced fetich worship, or were ever enslaved by the lowest types of myth- ological religion, or ascended from them to somewhat higher " ( Fisher ).
( c ) Some of the earliest remains of man yet found show, by the burial of food and weapons with the dead, that there already existed the idea of spiritual beings and of a future state, and therefore a religion of a higher sort than fetichism.
140 INCIDENTS OF MAN'S ORIGINAL STATE.
(d) The theory in question, in making theological thought a merely transient stage of mental evolution, ignores the fact that religion has its root in the intuitions and yearnings of the human soul, and that therefore no philosophical or scientific progress can ever abolish it. While the terms theological, metaphysical, and positive may properly mark the order in which the ideas of the individual and the race are acquired, positivism errs in holding that these three phases of thought are mutually exclusive, and that upon the rise of the later the earlier must of necessity become extinct.
CHAPTER III. SIN, OR MAN'S STATE OF APOSTASY.
SECTION" I. — THE LAW OF GOD.
As preliminary to a treatment of man's state of apostasy, it becomes necessary to consider the nature of that law of God, the transgression of which is sin. We may best approach the subject by inquiring what is the true conception of
I. Law in General.
1. Law an expression of will.
The essential idea of law is that of a general expression of will enforced by power. It implies : ( a ) A lawgiver, or authoritative will. ( b ) Sub- jects, or beings upon whom this will terminates. ( c ) A general command, or expression of this will. ( d ) A power, enforcing the command.
These elements are found even in what we call natural law. The phrase 1 law of nature ' involves a self-contradiction, when used to denote a mode of action or an order of sequence behind which there is conceived to be no intelligent and ordaining will. Physics derives the term ' law ' from juris- prudence, instead of jurisprudence deriving it from physics. It is first used of the relations of voluntary agents. Causation in our own wills enables us to see something besides mere antecedence and consequence in the world about us. Physical science, in her very use of the word 'law,' implicitly confesses that a supreme Will has set general rules which control the processes of the universe.
2. Law a general expression of will.
The characteristic of law is generality. It is addressed to substances or persons in classes. Special legislation is contrary to the true theory of law.
3. Law implies power to enforce.
It is essential to the existence of law, that there be power to enforce. Otherwise law becomes the expression of mere wish or advice. Since physical substances and forces have no intelligence and no power to resist, the four elements already mentioned exhaust the implications of the term • law ' as applied to nature. In the case of rational and free agents, how- ever, law implies in addition : (e) Duty or obligation to obey; and (/) Sanctions, or pains and penalties for disobedience.
4. Law expresses and demands nature.
The will which thus binds its subjects by commands and penalties is an expression of the nature of the governing power, and reveals the normal
141
142 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
relations of the subjects to that power. Finally, therefore, law ( g ) Is an expression of the nature of the lawgiver ; and ( h ) Sets forth the condition or conduct in the subjects which is requisite for harmony with that nature. Any so-called law which fails to represent the nature of the governing power soon becomes obsolete. All law that is permanent is a transcript of the facts of being, a discovery of what is and must be, in order to harmony between the governing and the governed ; in short, positive law is just and lasting only as it is an expression and republication of the law of nature.
II. The Law of God in Particular.
The law of God is a general expression of the divine will enforced by power. It has two forms : Elemental Law and Positive Enactment.
1. Elemental Laiv, or law inwrought into the elements, substances, and forces of the rational and irrational creation. This is twofold :
A. The expression of the divine will in the constitution of the material universe ; — this we call physical, or natural law. Physical law is not necessary. Another order of things is conceivable. Physical order is not an end in itself ; it exists for the sake of moral order. Physical order has therefore only a relative constancy, and God supplements it at times by miracle.
B. The expression of the divine will in the constitution of rational and free agents ; — this we call moral law. This elemental law of our moral nature, with which only we are now concerned, has all the characteristics mentioned as belonging to law in general. It implies : (a ) A divine Law- giver, or ordaining Will. ( b ) Subjects, or moral beings upon whom the law terminates. ( c ) General command, or expression of this will in the moral constitution of the subjects. ( d ) Power, enforcing the command, (e) Duty, or obligation to obey. (/) Sanctions, or pains and penalties for disobedience.
All these are of a loftier sort than are found in human law. But we need especially to emphasize the fact that this law ( g ) Is an expression of the moral nature of God, and therefore of God's holiness, the fundamental attribute of that nature ; and that it ( h ) Sets forth absolute conformity to that holiness, as the normal condition of man. This law is inwrought into man's rational and moral being. Man fulfills it, only when in his moral as well as his rational being he is the image of God.
The law of God, then, is simply an expression of the nature of God in the form of moral requirement, and a necessary expression of that nature in view of the existence of moral beings ( Ps. 19 : 7 ; c/. 1 ). To the existence of this law all men bear witness. The consciences even of the heathen tes- tify to it ( Rom. 2 : 14, 15 ). Those who have the written law recognize this elemental law as of greater compass and penetration ( Eom. 7 : 14 ; 8 : 4 ). The perfect embodiment and fulfillment of this law is seen only in Christ ( Eom. 10 : 4 ; Phil. 3 : 8, 9 ).
Each of the two last-mentioned characteristics of God's law is important in its implications. We treat of these in their order.
First, the law of God as a transcript of the divine nature. — If this be the
THE LAW OF GOD IN" PARTICULAR. 143
nature of the law, then certain common misconceptions of it are excluded. The law of God is
( a ) Not arbitrary, or the product of arbitrary will. Since the will from which the law springs is a revelation of God's nature, there can be no rashness or unwisdom in the law itself.
( b ) Not temporaiy, or ordained simply to meet an exigency. The law is a manifestation, not of temporary moods or desires, but of the essential nature of God.
( c ) Not merely negative, or a law of mere prohibition, — since positive conformity to God is the inmost requisition of law.
(d) Not partial, or addressed to one part only of man's being, — since likeness to God requires purity of substance in man's soul and body, as well as purity in all the thoughts and acts that proceed therefrom. As law proceeds from the nature of God, so it requires conformity to that nature in the nature of man.
( e ) Not outwardly published, — since all positive enactment is only the imperfect expression of this underlying and unwritten law of being.
(/) Not inwardly conscious, or limited in its scope by men's conscious- ness of it. Like the laws of our physical being, the moral law exists whether we recognize it or not.
(g ) Not local, or confined to place, — since no moral creature can escape from God, from his own being, or from the natural necessity that unlike- ness to God should involve misery and ruin.
( h ) Not changeable, or capable of modification. Since law represents the unchangeable nature of God, it is not a sliding scale of requirements which adapts itself to the ability of the subjects. God himself cannot change it without ceasing to be God.
Secondly, the law of God as the ideal of human nature. — A law thus identical with the eternal and necessary relations of the creature to the Creator, and demanding of the creature nothing less than perfect holiness, as the condition of harmony with the infinite holiness of God, is adapted to man's finite nature, as needing law ; to man's free nature, as needing moral law ; and to man's progressive nature, as needing ideal law.
The law of God is therefore characterized by :
(a) All-comprehensiveness. — It is over us at all times; it respects our past, our present, our future. It forbids every conceivable sin ; it requires every conceivable virtue ; omissions as well as commissions are condemned by it.
(&) Spirituality. — It demands not only right acts and words, but also right dispositions and states. Perfect obedience requires not only the intense and unremitting reign of love toward God and man, but conformity of the whole inward and outward nature of man to the holiness of God.
lc) Solidarity. — It exhibits in all its parts the nature of the one
144 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN".
Law-giver, and it expresses, in its least command, the one requirement of harmony with him.
Only to the first man, then, was the law proposed as a method of salva- tion. With the first sin, all hope of obtaining the divine favor by perfect obedience is lost. To sinners the law remains as a means of discovering and developing sin in its true nature, and of compelling a recourse to the mercy provided in Jesus Christ.
2. Positive Enactment, or the expression of the will of God in pub- lished ordinances. This is also two-fold :
A. General moral precepts. — These are written summaries of the ele- mental law ( Mat. 5 : 48 ; 22 : 37-40 ), or authorized applications of it to special human conditions (Ex. 20 : 1-17 ; Mat. chap. 5-8).
B. Ceremonial or special injunctions. — These are illustrations of the elemental law, or approximate revelations of it, suited to lower degrees of capacity and to earlier stages of spiritual training ( Ez. 20 : 25 ; Mat. 19 : 8 ; Mark 10 : 5 ). Though temporary, only God can say when they cease to be binding upon us in their outward form.
All positive enactments, therefore, wThether they be moral or ceremonial, are republications of elemental law. Their forms may change, but the sub- stance is eternal. Certain modes of expression, like the Mosaic system, may be abolished, but the essential demands are unchanging ( Mat. 5:17, 18 ; cf. Eph. 2:15). From the imperfection of human language, no posi- tive enactments are able to express in themselves the whole content and meaning of the elemental law. "It is not the purpose of revelation to disclose the whole of our duties. " Scripture is not a complete code of rules for practical action, but an enunciation of principles, with occasional pre- cepts by way of illustration. Hence we must supplement the positive enactment by the law of being — the moral ideal found in the nature of God.
ni. Relation of the Law to the Grace op God.
In human government, while law is an expression of the will of the governing power, and so of the nature lying behind the will, it is by no means an exhaustive expression of that will and nature, since it consists only of general ordinances, and leaves room for particular acts of command through the executive, as well as for ' ' the institution of equity, the faculty of discretionary punishment, and the prerogative of pardon. "
Applying now to the divine law this illustration drawn from human law, we remark :
( a ) The law of God is a general expression of God's will, applicable to all moral beings. It therefore does not exclude the possibility of special injunctions to individuals, and special acts of wisdom and power in creation and providence. The very specialty of these latter expressions of will prevents us from classing them under the category of law.
(6) The law of God, accordingly, is a partial, not an exhaustive, expression of God's nature. It constitutes, indeed, a manifestation of that attribute of holiness which is fundamental in God, and which man must
DEFINITION OF SIN. 145
possess in order to be in harmony with God. But it does not fully express God's nature in its aspects of personality, sovereignty, helpfulness, mercy.
(c) Mere law, therefore, leaves God's nature in these aspects of person- ality, sovereignty, helpfulness, mercy, to be expressed toward sinners in another way, namely, through the atoning, regenerating, pardoning, sancti- fying work of the gospel of Christ. As creation does not exclude miracles, so law does not exclude grace (Rom. 8:3 — "what the law could not do God" did).
( d ) Grace is to be regarded, however, not as abrogating law, but as republishing and enforcing it ( Rom. 3 : 31 — " we establish the law " ). By removing obstacles to pardon in the mind of God, and by enabling man to obey, grace secures the perfect fulfilment of law (Rom. 8 : 4 — "that the ordinance of the law might bo fulfilled in us " ). Even grace has its law (Rom. 8 :2 — "the law of the Spirit of life") ; another higher law of grace, the operation of individualizing mercy, overbears the "law of sin aud of death," — this last, as in the case of tho miracle, not being sus- pended, annulled, or violated, but being merged in, while it is transcended by, the exertion of personal divine will.
(c) Thus the revelation of grace, while it takes up and includes in itself the revelation of law, adds something different in kind, namely, the mani- festation of the personal love of the Lawgiver. Without grace, law has only a demanding aspect. Only in connection with grace does it become " the perfect law, the law of liberty" (James 1 :25). In fine, grace is that larger and completer manifestation of the divine nature, of which law constitutes the necessary but preparatory stage.
SECTION II. — NATURE OF SIN.
I. Definition of Sin.
Sin is lack of conformity to the moral law of God, either in act, disposi- tion, or state.
In explanation, we remark that ( a ) This definition regards sin as pred- icable only of rational and voluntary agents. ( b ) It assumes, however, that man has a rational nature below consciousness, and a voluntary nature apart from actual volition. ( c ) It holds that the divine law requires moral likeness to God in the affections and tendencies of the nature, as well as in its outward activities, (d) It therefore considers lack of conformity to the divine holiness in disposition or state as a violation of law, equally with the outward act of transgression.
Our treatment of Holiness, as belonging to the nature of God ( pages 75, 79, 80) ; of "Will, as not only the faculty of volitions, but also a permanent state of the soul (pages 132-134) ; and of Law as requiring the conformity of man's nature to God's holiness ( pages 142-141 ) ; has prepared us for the definition of sin as a state. The chief psychological defect of New School theology, next to its making holiness to be a mere form of love, is its ignor-
146 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN".
ing of the unconscious and subconscious elements in human character. To help our under standing of sin as an underlying and permanent state of the soul, we subjoin references to recent writers of note upon psychology and its relations to theology.
In adducing our Scriptural and rational proof of the definition of sin as a state, we desire to obviate the objection that this view leaves the soul wholly given over to the power of evil. While we maintain that this is true of man apart from God, we also insist that side by side with the evil bent of the human will there is always an immanent divine power which greatly counteracts the force of evil, and if not resisted leads the individ- ual soul — even when resisted leads the race at large — toward truth and salvation. This immanent divine power is none other than Christ, the eternal Word, the Light which lighteth every man ; see John 1 : 4, 9.
1. Proof.
As it is readily admitted that the outward act of transgression is properly denominated sin, we here attempt to show only that lack of conformity to the law of God in disposition or state is also and equally to be so denomi- nated.
A. From Scripture.
(a) The words ordinarily translated ' sin,' or used as synonyms for it, are as applicable to dispositions and states as to acts ( i"IXton and djuapria = a missing, failure, coming short [ sc. of God's will ] ).
( b ) The New Testament descriptions of sin bring more distinctly to view the states and dispositions than the outward acts of the soul ( 1 John 3 : 4 — 7] dfiapria ecrlv fj avofiia, where avofiia = , not "transgression of the law," but, as both context and etymology show, "lack of conformity to law" or "lawlessness" — Kev. Vers.).
( c ) Moral evil is ascribed not only to the thoughts and affections, but to the heart from which they spring ( we read of the "evil thoughts " and of the " evil heart "— Mat. 15 : 19 and Heb. 3 : 12 ).
( d ) The state or condition of the soul which gives rise to wrong desires and acts is expressly called sin ( Bom. 7 : 8 — "Sin . . . wrought in me . . . all manner of coveting " ).
(e) Sin is represented as existing in the soul, prior to the conscious- ness of it, and as only discovered and awakened by the law (Rom. 7:9, 10 — "when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died" — if sin *' revived," it must have had previous existence and life, even though it did not manifest itself in acts of conscious transgression ).
(/) The allusions to sin as a permanent power or reigning principle, not only in the individual but in humanity at large, forbid us to define it as a momentary act, and compel us to regard it as being primarily a settled depravity of nature, of which individual sins or acts of transgression are the workings and f raits ( Rom. 5 : 21 — "sin reigned in death " ; 6 : 12 — " let not therefore sin reign in your mortal body " ).
DEFINITION" OF SIN. 147
(g) The Mosaic sacrifices for sins of ignorance and of omission, and especially for general sinfulness, are evidence that sin is not to be limited to mere act, but that it includes something deeper and more permanent in the heart and the life (Lev. 1 : 3 ; 5 : 11 ; 12 : 8 ; of. Luke 2 : 24).
B. From the common judgment of mankind.
( a ) Men universally attribute vice as "well as virtue not only to con- scious and deliberate acts, but also to dispositions and states. Belief in something more permanently evil than acts of transgression is indicated in the common phrases, "hateful temper," " wicked pride," "bad character."
( b ) Outward acts, indeed, are condemned only when they are regarded as originating in, and as symptomatic of, evil dispositions. Civil law pro- ceeds upon this principle in holding crime to consist, not alone in the external act, but also in the evil motive or intent with which it is per- formed.
( c ) The stronger an evil disposition, or in other words, the more it connects itself with, or resolves itself into, a settled state or condition of the soid, the more blameworthy is it felt to be. This is shown by the distinction drawn between crimes of passion and crimes of deliberation.
( d ) This condemning sentence remains the same, even although the origin of the evil disposition or state cannot be traced back to any conscious act of the individual. Neither the general sense of mankind, nor the civil law in which this general sense is expressed, goes behind the fact of an existing evil will. Whether this evil will is the result of personal trans- gression or is a hereditary bias derived from generations passed, this evil will is the man himself, and upon him terminates the blame. We do not excuse arrogance or sensuality upon the ground that they are family traits.
( e ) When any evil disposition has such strength in itself, or is so com- bined with others, as to indicate a settled moral corruption in which no power to do good remains, this state is regarded with the deepest disappro- bation of all. Sin weakens man's power of obedience, but the can-not is a will-not, and is therefore condemnable. The opposite principle would lead to the conclusion that, the more a man weakened his powers by trans- gression, the less guilty he would be, until absolute depravity became absolute innocence.
C. From the experience of the Christian.
Christian experience is a testing of Scripture truth, and therefore is not an independent source of knowledge. It may, however, corroborate con- clusions drawn from the word of God. Since the judgment of the Christian is formed under the influence of the Holy Spirit, we may trust this more implicitly than the general sense of the world. We affirm, then, that just in proportion to his spiritual enlightenment and self -knowledge, the Chris- tian
( a ) Regards his outward deviations from God's law, and his evil incli- nations and desires, as outgrowths and revelations of a depravity of nature which lies below his consciousness ; and
148 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
( b ) Repents more deeply for this depravity of nature, which constitutes his inmost character and is inseparable from himself, than for what he merely feels or does.
In proof of these statements we appeal to the biographies and writings of those in all ages who have been by general consent regarded as most advanced in spiritual culture and discernment.
2. Inferences.
In the light of the preceding discussion, we may properly estimate the elements of truth and of error in the common definition of sin as ' the voluntary transgression of known law. '
( a ) Not all sin is voluntary as being a distinct and conscious volition ; for evil disposition and state often precede and occasion evil volition, and evil disposition and state are themselves sin. All sin, however, is voluntary as springing either directly from will, or indirectly from those perverse affections and desires which have themselves originated in will. 'Volun- tary ' is a term broader than ' volitional,' and includes all those permanent states of intellect and affection which the will has made what they are. Will, moreover, is not to be regarded as simply the faculty of volitions, but as primarily the underlying determination of the being to a supreme end.
( b ) Deliberate intention to sin is an aggravation of transgression, but it is not essential to constitute any given act or feeling a sin. Those evil inclinations and impulses which rise unbidden and master the soul before it is well aware of their nature, are themselves violations of the divine law, and indications of an inward depravity which in the case of each descen- dant of Adam is the chief and fontal transgression.
( c ) Knowledge of the sinf idness of an act or feeling is also an aggrava- tion of transgression, but it is not essential to constitute it a sin. Moral blindness is the effect of transgression, and, as inseparable from corrupt affections and desires, is itself condemned by the divine law.
( d ) Ability to fulfill the law is not essential to constitute the non-fulfil- ment sin. Inability to fulfill the law is a result of transgression, and, as consisting not in an original deficiency of faculty but in a settled state of the affections and will, it is itself condemnable. Since the law presents the holiness of God as the only standard for the creature, ability to obey can never be the measure of obligation or the test of sin.
II. The Essential PErNcrpnE op Sin.
The definition of sin as lack of conformity to the divine law does not exclude, but rather necessitates, an inquiry into the characterizing motive or impelling power which explains its existence and constitutes its guilt. Only three views require extended examination. Of these the first two constitute the most common excuses for sin, although not propounded for this purpose by their authors : Sin is due ( 1 ) to the human body, or ( 2 ) to finite weakness. The third, which we regard as the Scriptural view, considers sin as ( 3 ) the supreme choice of self, or selfishness.
In the preceding section on the Definition of Sin, we showed that sin is
THE ESSENTIAL PRINCIPLE OF SIN. 149
a state, and a state of the will. We now ask : "What is the nature of this state ? and we expect to show that it is essentially a selfish state of the will.
1. Sin as Sc?istcous7icss.
This view regards sin as the necessary product of man's sensuous nature — a result of the sovd's connection with a physical organism. This is the view of Schleiermacher and of Rotke. More recent writers, with John Fiske, regard moral evil as man's inheritance from a brute ancestry.
In refutation of this view, it will be sufficient to urge the following con- siderations :
( a ) It involves an assumption of the inherent evil of matter, at least so far as regards the substance of man's body. But this is either a form of dualism, and may be met with the objections already brought against that system, or it implies that God, in being the author of man's physical organism, is also the responsible originator of human sin.
( b ) In explaining sin as an inheritance from the brute, this theory ignores the fact that man, even though derived from a brute ancestry, is no longer brute, but man, with power to recognize and to realize moral ideals, and under no necessity to violate the law of his being.
( c ) It rests upon an incomplete induction of facts, taking account of sin solely in its aspect of self -degradation, but ignoring the worst aspect of it as self-exaltation. Avarice, envy, pride, ambition, malice, cruelty, revenge, self-righteousness, unbelief, enmity to God, are none of them fleshly sins, and upon this principle are incapable of explanation.
(d) It leads to absurd conclusions, — as, for example, that asceticism, by weakening the power of sense, must weaken the power of sin ; that man becomes less sinful as his senses fail with age ; that disembodied spirits are necessarily holy ; that death is the only Redeemer.
( e ) It interprets Scripture erroneously. In passages like Rom. 7:18 — ovk o'ikeI iv kfioi, tovt' egtiv ev Ty caput fiovt aya&dv — crdpf, or flesh, signifies, not man's body, but man's whole being when destitute of the Spirit of God. The Scriptures distinctly recognize the seat of sin as being in the soul itself, not in its physical organism. God does not tempt man, nor has he made man's nature to tempt him (James 1 : 13, 14).
(/) Instead of explaining sin, this theory virtually denies its existence, — for if sin arises from the original constitution of our being, reason may recognize it as misfortune, but conscience cannot attribute to it guilt.
2. Sin as Finiteness.
This view explains sin as a necessary result of the limitations of man's finite being. As an incident of imperfect development, the fruit of igno- rance and impotence, sin is not absolutely but only relatively evil — an element in human education and a means of progress. This is the view of Leibnitz and of Spinoza. Modem writers, as Schurman and Royce, have maintained that moral evil is the necessary background and condition of moral good.
150 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
We object to this theory that
( a ) It rests upon a pantheistic basis, as the sense-theory rests upon dualism. The moral is confounded with the physical ; might is identified with right. Since sin is a necessary incident of finiteness, and creatures can never be infinite, it follows that sin must be everlasting, not only in the universe, but in each individual soul.
( b ) So far as this theory regards moral evil as a necessary presupposition and condition of moral good, it commits the serious error of confounding the possible with the actual. What is necessary to goodness is not the actuality of evil, but only the possibility of evil.
( c ) It is inconsistent with known facts, — as for example, the follow- ing : Not all sins are negative sins of ignorance and infirmity ; there are acts of positive malignity, conscious transgressions, wilful and presumptuous choices of evil. Increased knowledge of the nature of sin does not of itself give strength to overcome it ; but, on the contrary, repeated acts of con- scious transgression harden the heart in evil. Men of greatest mental powers are not of necessity the greatest saints, nor are the greatest sinners men of least strength of will and understanding.
(d) Like the sense-theory of sin, it contradicts both conscience and Scripture by denying human responsibility and by transferring the blame of sin from the creature to the Creator. This is to explain sin, again, by denying its existence.
3. Sin as /Selfishness.
We hold the essential principle of sin to be selfishness. By selfishness we mean not simply the exaggerated self-love which constitutes the antith- esis of benevolence, but that choice of self as the supreme end which constitutes the antithesis of supreme love to God. That selfishness is the essence of sin may be shown as follows :
A. Love to God is the essence of all virtue. The opposite to this, the choice of self as the supreme end, must therefore be the essence of sin.
We are to remember, however, that the love to God in which virtue con- sists is love for that which is most characteristic and fundamental in God, namely, his holiness. It is not to be confounded with supreme regard for God's interests or for the good of being in general. Not mere benevolence, but love for God as holy, is the principle and source of holiness in man. Since the love of God required by the law is of this sort, it not only does not imply that love, in the sense of benevolence, is the essence of holiness in God, — it implies rather that holiness, or self-loving and self-affirming purity, is fundamental in the divine nature. From this self-loving and self-affirming purity, love properly so-called, or the self-communicating attribute, is to be carefully distinguished ( see pages 74, 75 ).
B. All the different forms of sin can be shown to have their root in selfishness, while selfishness itself, considered as the choice of self as a supreme end, cannot be resolved into any simpler elements.
( a ) Selfishness may reveal itself in the elevation to supreme dominion
THE ESSENTIAL PRINCIPLE OF SIN. 151
of any one of man's natural appetites, desires, or affections. Sensuality is selfishness in the form of inordinate appetite. Selhsh desire takes the forms respectively of avarice, ambition, vanity, pride, according as it is set upon property, power, esteem, independence. Selfish affection is falsehood or malice, according as it hopes to make others its voluntary servants, or regards them as standing in its way ; it is unbelief or enmity to God, accord- ing as it simply tiu-ns away from the truth and love of God, or conceives of God's holiness as positively resisting and punishing it.
( 6 ) Even in the nobler forms of unregenerate life, the principle of self- ishness is to be regarded as manifesting itself in the preference of lower ends to that of God's proposing. Others are loved with idolatrous affection because these others are regarded as a part of self. That the selfish ele- ment is present even here, is evident upon considering that such affection does not seek the highest interest of its object, that it often ceases when unreturned, and that it sacrifices to its own gratification the claims of God and his law.
( o ) It must be remembered, however, that side by side with the selfish will, and striving against it, is the power of Christ, the immanent God, imparting aspirations and impulses foreign to unregenerate humanity, and preparing the way for the sovd's surrender to truth and righteousness.
C. This view accords best with Scripture.
( a ) The law requires love to God as its all-embracing requirement. ( b ) The holiness of Christ consisted in this, that he sought not his own will or glory, but made God his supreme end. ( c ) The Christian is one who has ceased to live for self, (d) The tempter's promise is a promise of selfish independence, (e) The prodigal separates himself from his father, and seeks his own interest and pleasure. (/) The "man of sin" illustrates the nature of sin, in "opposing and exalting himself against all that is called God."
Sin, therefore, is not merely a negative thing, or an absence of love to God. It is a fundamental and positive choice or preference of self instead of God, as the object of affection and the supreme end of being. Instead of making God the centre of his life, surrendering himself unconditionally to God and possessing himself only in subordination to God's will, the sin- ner makes self the centre of his life, sets himself directly against God, and constitutes his own interest the supreme motive and his own will the supreme rule.
We may follow Dr. E. G. Robinson in saying that, while sin as a state is unlikeness to God, as a principle is opposition to God, and as an act is transgression of God's law, the essence of it always and everywhere is selfishness. It is therefore not something external, or the result of compul- sion from without ; it is a depravity of the affections and a perversion of the will, which constitutes man's inmost character.
152 ANTHROPOLOGY, ok the doctrine of man.
SECTION III. — UNIVERSALITY OF SIN.
We have shown that sin is a state, a state of the will, a selfish state of the will. We now proceed to show that this selfish state of the will is universal. We divide our proof into two parts. In the first, we regard sin in its aspect as conscious violation of law ; in the second, in its aspect as a bias of the nature to evil, prior to or underlying consciousness.
I. EVERY HUMAN BEING WHO HAS AKKIVED AT MORAL CONSCIOUSNESS HAS COMMITTED ACTS, OR CHERISHED DISPOSITIONS, CONTRARY TO THE DIVINE LAW.
1. Proof from Scripture.
The universality of transgression is :
( a ) Set forth in direct statements of Scripture.
( b ) Implied in declarations of the universal need of atonement, regen- eration, and repentance.
(c) Shown from the condemnation resting upon all who do not accept Christ.
(d) Consistent with those passages which at first sight seem to ascribe to certain men a goodness which renders them acceptable to God, where a closer examination will show that in each case the goodness supposed is a merely imperfect and fancied goodness, a goodness of mere aspiration and impulse due to preliminary workings of God's Spirit, or a goodness result- ing from the trust of a conscious sinner in God's method of salvation.
2. Proof from history, observation, and the common judgment of mankind.
(a) History witnesses to the universality of sin, in its accounts of the universal prevalence of priesthood and sacrifice.
( b ) Every man knows himself to have come short of moral perfection, and, in proportion to his experience of the world, recognizes the fact that every other man has come short of it also.
( c) The common judgment of mankind declares that there is an element of selfishness in every human heart, and that every man is prone to some form of sin. This common judgment is expressed in the maxims : ' ' No man is perfect"; "Every man has his weak side", or "his price"; and every great name in literature has attested its truth.
3. Proof from Christian experience.
( a ) In proportion to his spiritual progress does the Christian recognize evil dispositions within him, which btit for divine grace might germinate and bring forth the most various forms of outward transgression.
( b ) Since those most enlightened by the Holy Spirit recognize them- selves as guilty of unnumbered violations of the divine law, the absence of any consciousness of sin on the part of unregenerate men must be regarded as proof that they are blinded by persistent transgression.
THE UNIVERSALITY OF SIN. 153
II. Every mexiber of the human race, without exception, posses- ses A CORRUPTED NATURE, WHICH IS A SOURCE OF ACTUAL SIN, AND IS ITSELF SIN.
1. Proof from Scripture.
A. The sinful acts and dispositions of men are referred to, and explained by, a corrupt nature.
This corrupt nature ( a ) belongs to man from the first moment of his being ; ( b ) underlies man's consciousness ; ( c ) cannot be changed 1 ly man's own power ; ( d ) first constitutes him a sinner before God ; ( e ) is the common heritage of the race.
B. All men are declared to be by nature children of wrath ( Eph. 2:3). Here ' nature ' signifies something inborn and original, as distinguished from that which is subsequently acquired. The text implies that : ( a ) Sin is a nature, in the sense of a congenital depravity of the will. ( b ) This nature is guilty and condemnable, — since God's wrath rests only upon that which deserves it. ( c ) All men participate in this nature and in this con- sequent guilt and condemnation.
C. Death, the penalty of sin, is visited even upon those who have never exercised a personal and conscious choice ( Horn. 5 : 12-14 ). This text implies that (a) Sin exists in the case of infants prior to moral conscious- ness, and therefore in the nature, as distinguished from the personal activity. ( b ) Since infants die, this visitation of the penalty of sin upon them marks the ill-desert of that nature which contains in itself, though undeveloped, the germs of actual transgression. ( c ) It is therefore certain that a sinful, guilty, and condemnable nature belongs to all mankind.
2. Proof from Reason.
Three facts demand explanation : ( a ) The universal existence of sinful dispositions in every mind, and of sinful acts in every life. ( 6 ) The pre- ponderating tendencies to evil, which necessitate the constant education of good impulses, while the bad grow of themselves. ( c ) The yielding of the will to temptation, and the actual violation of the divine law, in the case of every human being so soon as he reaches moral consciousness.
Reason seeks an underlying principle which will reduce these multitudi- nous phenomena to unity. As we are compelled to refer common physical and intellectual phenomena to a common physical and intellectual nature, so we are compelled to refer these common moral phenomena to a common moral nature, and to find in it the cause of this universal, spontaneous, and all -controlling opposition to God and his law. The only possible solution of the problem is this, that the common nature of mankind is corrupt, or, in other words, that the human will, prior to the single volitions of the individual, is turned away from God and supremely set upon self- gratifi - cation. This unconscious and fundamental direction of the will, as the source of actual sin, must itself be sin ; and of this sin all mankind are partakers.
154 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
SECTION IV. —ORIGIN OF SIN IN THE PERSONAL ACT OF ADAM.
With regard to the origin of this sinful nature -which is common to the race, and which is the occasion of all actual trangressions, reason affords no light. The Scriptures, however, refer the origin of this nature to that free act of our first parents by which they turned away from God, cor- rupted themselves, and brought themselves under the penalties of the law.
I. The Scriptural Account op the Temptation and Fall in Gen- esis 3 : 1-7.
1. Its general character not mythical or allegorical, but historical.
We adopt this view for the following reasons : — ( a ) There is no inti- mation in the account itself that it is not historical. ( h ) As a part of a historical book, the presumption is that it is itself historical. ( c ) The later Scripture writers refer to it as a veritable history even in its details. ( d ) Particular features of the narrative, such as the placing of our first parents in a garden and the speaking of the tempter through a serpent- form, are incidents suitable to man's condition of innocent but untried childhood. ( e ) This view that the narrative is historical does not forbid our assuming that the trees of life and of knowledge were symbols of spiritual truths, while at the same time they were outward realities.
2. The course of the temptation, and the residting fall.
The stages of the temptation appear to have been as follows :
( a ) An appeal on the part of Satan to innocent appetites, together with an implied suggestion that God was arbitrarily withholding the means of their gratification ( Gen. 3:1). The first sin was in Eve's isolating herself and choosing to seek her own jjleasure without regard to God's will. This initial selfishness it was, which led her to listen to the tempter instead of rebuking him or flying from him, and to exaggerate the divine command in her response ( Gen. 3:3).
( b ) A denial of the veracity of God, on the part of the tempter, with a charge against the Almighty of jealousy and fraud in keeping his creatures in a position of ignorance and dependence ( Gen. 3 : 4, 5 ). This was fol- lowed, on the part of the woman, by positive unbelief, and by a conscious and presumptuous cherishing of desire for the forbidden fruit, as a means of independence and knowledge. Thus unbelief, pride, and lust all sprang from the self-isolating, self-seeking spirit, and fastened upon the means of gratifying it ( Gen. 3:6).
( c ) The tempter needed no longer to urge his suit. Having poisoned the fountain, the stream would naturally be evil. Since the heart and its desires had become corrupt, the inward dispositition manifested itself in act ( Gen. 3:6 — ' did eat ; and she gave also unto her husband with her '= who had been with her, and had shared her choice and longing ). Thus man fell inwardly, before the outward act of eating the forbidden fruit, — fell iu that one fundamental determination whereby he made supreme choice of self instead of God. This sin of the inmost nature gave rise to sins of the
DIFFICULTIES CONNECTED WITII THE FALL. 155
desires, and sins of the desires led to the outward act of transgression ( James 1 : 15 ).
II. Difficulties connected with the Fall considered as the per- sonal Act of Adam.
1. How could a holy being fall f
Here we must acknowledge that we cannot understand how the first unholy emotion could have found lodgment in a mind that was set supremely upon God, nor how temptation could have overcome a soul in which there were no unholy propensities to which it could appeal. The k' mere power of choice does not explain the fact of an unholy choice. The fact of natural desire for sensuous and intellectual gratification does not explain how this desire came to be inordinate. Nor does it throw light upon the matter, to resolve this fall into a deception of our first parents by Satan. Their yielding to such deception presupposes distrust of God and alienation from him. Satan's fall, moreover, since it must have been uncaused by temptation from without, is more difficult to explain than Adam's fall.
But sin is an existing fact. God cannot be its author, either by creating man's nature so that sin was a necessary incident of its development, or by withdrawing a supernatural grace which was necessary to keep man holy. Reason, therefore, has no other recourse than to accept the Scripture doc- trine that sin originated in man's free act of revolt from God — the act of a will which, though inclined toward God, was not yet confirmed in virtue and was still capable of a contrary choice. The original possession of such power to the contrary seems to be the necessary condition of probation and moral development. Yet the exercise of this power in a sinful direction can never be explained upon grounds of reason, since sin is essentially unreason. It is an act of wicked arbitrariness, the only motive of which is the desire to depart from God and to render self supreme.
2. How could Ood justly permit Satanic temptation f
We see in this permission not justice but benevolence.
(a) Since Satan fell without external temptation, it is probable tha man's trial would have been substantially the same, even though there had been no Satan to tempt him.
( 6 ) In this case, however, man's fall would perhaps have been without what now constitutes its single mitigating circumstance. Self-originated sin woidd have made man himself a Satan.
( c ) As, in the conflict with temptation, it is an advantage to objectify evil under the image of corruptible flesh, so it is an advantage to meet it as embodied in a personal and seducing spirit.
( b ) Such temptation has in itself no tendency to lead the soul astray. If the soul be holy, temptation may only confirm it in virtue. Only tho evil will, self-determined against God, can turn temptation into an occasion of ruin.
3. How could a penalty so great be justly connected with disobedi- ence to so slight a command f
156 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
To this question we may reply :
(a) So slight a command presented the best test of the spirit of obedience.
( 6 ) The external command was not arbitrary or insignificant in its sub- stance. It was a concrete presentation to the human will of God's claim to eminent domain or absolute ownership.
( c ) The sanction attached to the command shows that man was not left ignorant of its meaning or importance.
( d ) The act of disobedience was therefore the revelation of a will thor- oughly corrupted and alienated from God — a will given over to ingratitude, unbelief, ambition, and rebellion.
III. CONSEQTJENCES OF THE FALL, SO FAB AS RESPECTS ADAM.
1. Death. — This death was twofold. It was partly :
A. Physical death, or the separation of the soul from the body. — The seeds of death, naturally implanted in man's constitution, began to develop themselves the moment that access to the tree of life was denied him. Man from that moment was a dying creature.
But this death was also, and chiefly,
B. Spiritual death, or the separation of the soul from God. — In this are included : ( a ) Negatively, the loss of man's moral likeness to God, or that underlying tendency of his whole nature toward God which constituted his original righteousness. (&) Positively, the depraving of all those powers which, in their united action with reference to moral and religious truth, we call man's moral and religious nature ; or, in other words, the blinding of his intellect, the corruption of his affections, and the enslave- ment of his will.
In fine, man no longer made God the end of his life, but chose self instead. While he retained the power of self-determination in subordinate things, he lost that freedom which consisted in the power of choosing God as his ultimate aim, and became fettered by a fundamental inclination of his will toward evil. The intuitions of the reason were abnormally obscured, since these intuitions, so far as they are concerned with moral and religious truth, are conditioned upon a right state of the affections ; and — as a necessary result of this obscuring of reason — conscience, which, as the normal judiciary of the soul, decides upon the basis of the law given to it by reason, became perverse in its deliverances. Yet this inability to judge or act aright, since it was a moral inability springing ultimately from will, was itself hateful and condemnable.
2. Positive and formal exclusion from God's presence. — This included :
( a ) The cessation of man's former familiar intercourse with God, and the setting up of outward barriers between man and his Maker ( cherubim and sacrifice ).
( b ) Banishment from the garden, where God had specially manifested his presence. — Eden was perhaps a spot reserved, as Adam's body had
IMPUTATION" OF ADAM'S SIN" TO HIS POSTERITY. 157
been, to show what a sinless world would be. This positive exclusion from God's presence, with the sorrow and pain which it involved, may haveheen intended to illustrate to man the nature of that eternal death from which he now needed to seek deliverance.
SECTION V. — IMPUTATION OF ADAM'S SIN" TO HIS POSTERITY.
"We have seen that all mankind are sinners ; that all men are by nature depraved, guilty, and condemnable ; and that the transgression of our first parents, so far as respects the human race, was the first sin. We have still to consider the connection between Adam's sin and the depravity, guilt, and condemnation of the race.
(a) The Scriptures teach that the transgression of our first parents con- stituted their posterity sinners (Kom. 5:19 — "through the one man's disobedience the many were made sinners "), so that Adam's sin is imputed, reckoned, or charged to every member of the race of which he was the germ and head ( Kom. 5 : 16 — "the judgment came of one [ offence ] unto con- demnation " ). It is because of Adam's sin that we are born depraved and subject to God's penal inflictions (Eom. 5 : 12 — "through one man sin entered into the world, and death through sin " ; Eph. 2:3 — "by nature children of wrath "). Two questions demand answer, — first, how we can be responsible for a depraved nature which we did not personally and con- sciously originate ; and, secondly, how God can justly charge to our account the sin of the first father of the race. These questions are sub- stantially the same, and the Scriptures intimate the true answer to the problem when they declare that "in Adam all die" (1 Cor. 15:22) and " that death passed unto all men, for that all sinned " when "through one man sin entered into the world " ( Rom. 5 : 12 ). In other words, Adam's sin is the cause and ground of the depravity, guilt, and condemnation of all his posterity, simply because Adam and his posterity are one, and, by virtue of their organic unity, the sin of Adam is the sin of the race.
( b ) According as we regard this twofold problem from the point of view of the abnormal human condition, or of the divine treatment of it, we may call it the problem of original sin, or the problem of imputation. Neither of these terms is objectionable when its meaning is defined. By imputa- tion of sin we mean, not the arbitrary and mechanical charging to a man of that for which he is not naturally responsible, but the reckoning to a man of a guilt which is properly his own, whether by virtue of his individ- ual acts, or by virtue of his connection with the race. By original sin we mean that participation in the common sin of the race with which God charges us, in virtue of our descent from Adam, its first father and head.
( c ) There are two fundamental principles which the Scriptures already cited seem clearly to substantiate, and which other Scriptures corroborate. The first is that man's relations to moral law extend beyond the sphere of conscious and actual transgression, and embrace those moral tendencies and qualities of his being which he has in common with every other member
158 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
of the race. The second is, that God's moral government is a government which not only takes account of persons and personal acts, but also recog- nizes race responsibilities and inflicts race-penalties ; or, in other words, judges mankind, not simply as a collection of separate individuals, but also as an organic whole, which can collectively revolt from God and incur the curse of the violated law.
( d) In recognizing the guilt of race-sin, we are to bear in mind : ( 1 ) that actual sin, in which the personal agent reaffirms the underlying determina- tion of his will, is more guilty than original sin alone ; ( 2 ) that no human being is finally condemned solely on account of original sin ; but that all who, like infants, do not commit personal transgressions, are saved through the application of Christ's atonement ; ( 3 ) that our responsibility for inborn evil dis}>ositions, or for the depravity common to the race, can be maintained only upon the ground that this depravity was caused by an original and conscious act of free will, when the race revolted from God in Adam ; ( 4 ) that the doctrine of original sin is only the ethical interpreta- tion of biological facts — the facts of heredity and of universal congenital ills, which demand an ethical ground and explanation ; and ( 5 ) that the idea of original sin has for its correlate the idea of original grace, or the abiding presence and operation of Christ, the immanent God, in every member of the race, in spite of his sin, to counteract the evil and to prepare the way, so far as man will permit, for individual and collective salvation.
, ( e ) There is a race-sin, therefore, as well as a personal sin ; and that race-sin was committed by the first father of the race, when he comprised the whole race in himself. All mankind since that time have been born in the state into which he fell — a state of depravity, guilt, and condemnation. To vindicate God's justice in imjrating to us the sin of our first father, ' many theories have been devised, a part of which must be regarded as only attempts to evade the problem by denying the facts set before us in the Scriptures. Among these attempted explanations of the Scripture state- ments, we proceed to examine the six theories which seem most worthy of attention.
I. Theories of Imputation.
1. The Pelagian Theory, or Theory of Man's natural Innocence.
Pelagius, a British monk, propounded his doctrines at Eome, 409. They were condemned by the Council of Carthage, 418. Pelagianism, however, as opposed to Augustinianism, designates a complete scheme of doctrine with regard to sin, of which Pelagius was the most thorough representative, although every feature of it cannot be ascribed to his authorship. Socinians and Unitarians are the more modern advocates of this general scheme.
According to this theory, every human soul is immediately created by God, and created as innocent, as free from depraved tendencies, and as perfectly able to obey God, as Adam was at his creation. The only effect of Adam's sin upon his posterity is the effect of evil example ; it has in no way corrupted human nature ; the only corruption of human nature is that habit of sinning which each individual contracts by persistent transgression of known law.
ARM1MAN' THEORY OF IMPUTATION. L59
Adam's sin therefore injured only himself ; the sin of Adam is imputed only to Adam, — it is imputed in no sense to his descendants ; God imputes to each of Adam's descendants only those acts of sin which he has person- ally and consciously committed. Men can be saved by the law as well as by the gospel ; and some have actually obeyed God perfectly, and have thus been saved. Physical death is therefore not the penalty of sin, bat an original law of nature ; Adam would have died whether he had sinned or not ; in Rom. 5 : 12, " death passed unto all men, for that all sinned," signifies: " all incurred eternal death by sinning after Adam's example."
Of the Pelagian theory of sin, we may say :
A. It has never been recognized as Scriptural, nor has it been formu- lated in confessions, by any branch of the Christian church. Held only sporadically and by individxials, it has ever been regarded by the church at large as heresy. This constitutes at least a presumption against its truth.
B. It contradicts Scripture in denying : ( a ) that evil disposition and state, as well as evil acts, are sin ; (b) that such evil disposition and state are inborn in all mankind ; ( e ) that men universally are guilty of overt transgression so soon as they come to moral consciousness ; ( d ) that no man is able without divine help to fulfil the law ; ( e ) that all men, with- out exception, are dependent for salvation upon God's atoning, regenerat- ing, sanctifying grace ; (/) that man's present state of corruption, condemnation, and death, is the direct effect of Adam's transgression.
0. It rests upon false philosophical principles ; as, for example : ( a ) that the human will is simply the faculty of volitions ; whereas it is also, and chiefly, the faculty of self-determination to an ultimate end ; ( b ) that the power of a contrary choice is essential to the existence of will ; wnereas the will fundamentally determined to self-gratification has this power only with respect to subordinate choices, and cannot by a single volition reverse its moral state ; (c) that ability is the measure of obligation, — a principle which would diminish the sinner's responsibility, just in proportion to his progress in sin ; ( d ) that law consists only in positive enactment ; whereas it is the demand of perfect harmony with God, inwrought into man's moral nature ; ( e ) that each human soul is immediately created by God, and holds no other relations to moral law than those which are individual ; whereas all human souls are organically connected with each other, and together have a corporate relation to God's law, by virtue of their deriva- tion from one common stock.
2. The Arminian Theory, or Theory of voluntarily appropriated Depravity.
Arminius (1560-1609), professor in the University of Leyden, in South Holland, while formally accepting the doctrine of the Adamic unity of the race propounded both by Luther and Calvdn, gave a very different inter- pretation to it — an interpretation which verged toward Semi-Pelagianism and the anthropology of the Greek Church. The Methodist body is the modern representative of this view.
160 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
According to this theory, all men, as a divinely appointed sequence of Adam's transgression, are naturally destitute of original righteousness, and are exposed to misery and death. By virtue of the infirmity propagated from Adam to all his descendants, mankind are wholly unable without divine help perfectly to obey God or to attain eternal life. This inability, however, is physical and intellectual, but not voluntary. As matter of jus- tice, therefore, God bestows upon each individual from the first dawn of consciousness a special influence of the Holy Spirit, which is sufficient to counteract the effect of the inherited depravity and to make obedience possible, provided the human will cooperates, which it still has power to do.
The evil tendency and state may be called sin ; but they do not in them- selves involve guilt or punishment ; still less are mankind accounted guilty of Adam's sin. God imputes to each man his inborn tendencies to evil, only when he consciously and voluntarily appropriates and ratifies these in spite of the power to the contrary, which, in justice to man, God has specially communicated. In Rom. 5 : 12, " death passed unto all men, for that all sinned," signifies that physical and spiritual death is inflicted upon all men, not as the penalty of a common sin in Adam, but because, by divine decree, all suffer the consequences of that sin, and because all personally consent to their inborn sinfulness by acts of transgression.
With regard to the Arminian theory we remark :
A. We grant that there is a universal gift of the Holy Spirit, if by the Holy Spirit is meant the natural bight of reason and conscience, and the manifold impulses to good which struggle against the evil of man's nature. But we regard as wholly unscriptural the assumptions : ( a ) that this gift of the Holy Spirit of itself removes the depravity or condemnation derived from Adam's fall ; ( b ) that without this gift man would not be responsible for being morally imperfect ; and ( c ) that at the beginning of moral life men consciously appropriate their inborn tendencies to evil.
B. It contradicts Scripture in maintaining : ( a ) that inherited moral evil does not involve guilt ; ( b ) that the gift of the Spirit, and the regen- eration of infants, are matters of justice ; (c) that the effect of grace is simply to restore man's natural ability, instead of disposing him to use that abflity aright ; ( d ) that election is God's choice of certain men to be saved upon the ground of their foreseen faith, instead of being God's choice to make certain men believers ; ( e ) that physical death is not the just pen- alty of sin, but is a matter of arbitrary decree.
C. It rests upon false philosophical principles, as for example : ( a) That the will is simply the faculty of volitions. ( 6 ) That the power of contrary choice, in the sense of power by a single act to reverse one's moral state, is essential to will. ( c ) That previous certainty of any given moral act is incompatible with its freedom. ( d ) That ability is the measure of obli- gation, (e) That law condemns only volitional transgression. (/) That man has no organic moral connection with the race.
D. It renders uncertain either the universality of sin or man's responsi- bility for it. If man has full power to refuse consent to inborn depravity, then the universality of sin and the universal need of a Savior are merely
NEW SCHOOL THEORY OF IMPUTATION. 1G1
hypothetical. If sin, however, be universal, there must have been an absence of free consent ; and the objective certainty of man's sinning, according to the theory, destroys his responsibility.
3. The New School Tlieory, or Theory of uncondemnable Vitiosity.
This theory is called New School, because of its recession from the old Puritan anthropology of which Edwards and Bellamy in the last century were the expounders. The New School theory is a general scheme built up by the successive labors of Hopkins, Emmons, Dwigkt, Taylor, and Finney. It is held at present by New School Presbyterians, and by the larger part of the Congregational body.
According to this theoiy, all men are born with a physical and moral con- stitution which predisposes them to sin, and all men do actually sin so soon as they come to moral consciousness. This vitiosity of nature may be called sinful, because it unif omily leads to sin ; but it is not itself sin, since nothing is to be properly denominated sin but the voluntary act of trans- gressing known law.
God imputes to men only their own acts of personal transgression ; he does not impute to them Adam's sin ; neither original vitiosity nor physi- cal death are penal inflictions ; they are simply consequences which God has in his sovereignty ordained to mark his displeasure at Adam's trans- gression, and subject to which evils God immediately creates each human sold. In Pom. 5 : 12, "death passed unto all men, for that all sinned," signifies : "spiritual death passed on all men, because all men have actu- ally and personally sinned."
To the New School theory we object as follows :
A. It contradicts Scripture in maintaining or implying: (a) That sin consists solely in acts, and in the dispositions caused in each case by man's individual acts, and that the state which predisposes to acts of sin is not itself sin. ( b ) That the vitiosity which predisposes to sin is a part of each man's nature as it proceeds from the creative hand of God. ( c ) That physical death in the human race is not a penal consequence of Adam's transgression. ( d ) That infants, before moral consciousness, do not need Christ's sacrifice to save them. Since they are innocent, no penalty rests upon them, and none needs to be removed, (e) That we are neither condemned upon the ground of actual inbeing in Adam, nor justified upon the ground of actual inbeing in Christ.
B. It rests upon false philosophical principles, as for example : ( a ) That the soul is immediately created by God. (6 ) That the law of God consists wholly in outward command. ( c ) That present natural ability to obey the law is the measure of obligation. ( d ) That man's relations to moral law are exclusively individual. ( e ) That the will is merely the faculty of indi- vidual and personal choices. (/) That the will, at man's birth, has no moral state or character.
C. It impugns the justice of God .
( a ) By regarding him as the direct creator of a vicious nature which infallibly leads every human being into actual transgression. To maintain 11
162 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN".
that, in consequence of Adam's act, God brings it about that all men become sinners, and this, not by virtue of inherent laws of propagation, but by the direct creation in each case of a vicious nature, is to make God indirectly the author of sin.
( b ) By representing him as the inflicter of suffering and death upon millions of human beings who in the present life do not come to moral consciousness, and who are therefore, according to the theory, perfectly innocent. This is to make him visit Adam's sin on his posterity, while at the same time it denies that moral connection between Adam and his pos- terity which aloue could make such visitation just.
( c ) By holding that the probation which God appoints to men is a sepa- rate probation of each soul, when it first comes to moral consciousness and is least qualified to decide aright. It is much more consonant with our ideas of the divine justice, that the decision should have been made by the whole race, in one whose nature was pure and who perfectly understood God's law, than that heaven and hell should have been determined for each of us by a decision made in our own inexperienced childhood, under the influence of a vitiated nature.
D. Its limitation of responsibility to the evil choices of the individual and the dispositions caused thereby is inconsistent with the following facts :
( a ) The first moral choice of each individual is so undeliberate as not to be remembered. Put forth at birth, as the chief advocates of the New School theory maintain, it does not answer to their definition of sin as a voluntary transgression of known law. Responsibility for suck choice does not differ from responsibility for the inborn evil state of the will which manifests itself in that choice.
( b ) The uniformity of sinful action among men cannot be explained by the existence of a mere faculty of choices. That men should uniformly choose may be thus explained ; but that men should uniformly choose evil requires us to postulate an evil tendency or state of the will itself, prior to these separate acts of choice. This evil tendency or inborn determination to evil, since it is the real cause of actual sins, must itself be sin, and as such must be guilty and condemnable.
( c ) Power in the will to prevent the inborn vitiosity from developing itself is upon this theory a necessary condition of responsibility for actual sins. But the absolute uniformity of actual transgression is evidence that the will is practically impotent. If responsibility diminishes as the difficulties in the way of free decision increase, the fact that these difficulties are insu- perable shows that there can be no responsibility at all. To deny the guilt of inborn sin is therefore virtually to deny the guilt of the actual sin which springs therefrom.
4. The Federal Theory, or Theory of Condemnation by Covenant.
The Federal theory, or theory of the Covenants, had its origin with Cocceius (1603-1669), professor at Leyden, but was more fully elaborated by Turretin (1623-1687). It has become a tenet of the Reformed as distinguished from the Lutheran church, and in this country it has its main
FEDERAL THEORY OF IMPUTATION. 163
advocates in the Princeton school of theologians, of whom Dr. Charles Hodge was the representative.
According to this view, Adam was constituted by God's sovereign appoint- ment the representative of the whole human race. With Adam as their representative, God entered into covenant, agreeing to bestow upon them eternal life on condition of his obedience, but making the penalty of his disoln ilicn<v to be the corruption and death of all his posterity. In accord- ance with thf terms of this covenant, since Adam sinned, God accounts all his descendants as sinners, and condemns them because of Adam's trans- gression.
In execution of this sentence of condemnation, God immediately creates each soul of Adam's posterity with a corrupt and depraved nature, which infallibly leads to sin, and which is itself sin. The theory is therefore a theory of the immediate imputation of Adam's sin to his posterity, their corruption of nature not being the cause of that imputation, but the effect of it. In Rom. 5 : 12, " death passed unto all men, for that all sinned," signifies: "physical, spiritual, and eternal death came to all, because all were regarded and treated as sinners."
To the Federal theory we object :
A. It is extra-Scriptural, there being no mention of such a covenant with Adam in the account of man's trial. The assumed allusion to Adam's apostasy in Hosea 6 : 7, where the word " covenant " is used, is too preca- rious and too obviously metaphorical to afford the basis for a scheme of imputation (see Henderson, Com. on Minor Prophets, in toco). In Heb. 8:8 — "new covenant" — there is suggested a contrast, not with an Adamic, but with the Mosaic, covenant (c/. verse 9 ).
B. It contradicts Scripture, in making the first result of Adam's sin to be God's regarding and treating the race as sinners. The Scripture, on the contrary, declares that Adam's offense constituted us sinners ( Rom. 5 : 19 ). We are not sinners simply because God regards and treats us as such, but God regards us as sinners because we are sinners. Death is said to have " passed unto all men," not because all were regarded and treated as sinners, but "because all sinned " ( Rom. 5 : 12 ).
C. It impugns the justice of God by implying :
( a ) That God holds men resjjonsible for the violation of a covenant which they had no part in establishing. The assumed covenant is only a sovereign decree ; the assumed justice, only arbitrary will.
( b ) That upon the basis of this covenant God accounts men as sinners who are not sinners. But God jixdges according to truth. His condemna- tions do not proceed upon a basis of legal fiction. He can regard as responsible for Adam's transgression only those who in some real sense have been concerned, and have had part, in that transgression.
( c) That, after accounting men to be sinners who arc not sinners, God makes them sinners by immediately creating each human soul with a cor- rupt nature such as will correspond to his decree. This is not only to assume a false view of the origin of the soul, but also to make God directly
164 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
the author of sin. Imputation of sin cannot precede and account for cor- ruption ; on the contrary, corruption must precede and account for impu- tation.
5. Theory of Mediate Imputation, or Theory of Condemnation for Depravity.
This theory was first maintained by Placeus ( 1606-1655), professor of Theology at Saumur in France. Placeus originally denied that Adam's sin was in any sense imputed to his posterity, but after his doctrine was con- demned by the Synod of the French Reformed Church at Charenton in 1614, he published the view which now bears his name.
According to this view, all men are born physically and morally depraved ; this native depravity is the source of all actual sin, and is itself sin ; in strictness of speech, it is this native depravity, and this only, which God imputes to men. So far as man's physical nature is concerned, this inborn sinfulness has descended by natural laws of propagation from Adam to all his posterity. The soul is immediately created by God, but it becomes actively corrupt so soon as it is united to the body. Inborn sinfulness is the consequence, though not the penalty, of Adam's transgression.
There is a sense, therefore, in which Adam's sin may be said to be im- puted to his descendants, — it is imputed, not immediately, as if they had been in Adam or were so represented in him that it could be charged directly to them, corruption not intervening, — but it is imputed mediately, through and on account of the intervening corruption which resulted from Adam's sin. As on the Federal theory imputation in the cause of depravity, so on this theory depravity is the cause of imputation. In Bom. 5 : 12, " death passed unto all men, for that all sinned," signifies : "death physi- cal, spiritual, and eternal passed upon all men, because all sinned by pos- sessing a depraved nature."
The theory of Mediate Imputation is exposed to the following objections :
A. It gives no explanation of man's responsibility for his inborn depravity. No explanation of this is possible, which does not regard man's depravity as having had its origin in a free personal act, either of the individual, or of collective human nature in its first father and head. But this participation of all men in Adam's sin the theory expressly denies.
B. Since the origination of this corrupt nature cannot be charged to the account of man, man's inheritance of it must be regarded in the light of an arbitrary divine infliction — a conclusion which reflects upon the justice of God. Man is not only condemned for a sinfulness of which God is the author, but is condemned without any real probation, either individual or collective.
C. It contradicts those passages of Scripture which refer the origin of human condemnation, as well as of human depravity, to the sin of our first parents, and which represent universal death, not as a matter of divine sovereignty, but as a judicial infliction of penalty upon all men for the sin of the race in Adam ( Bom. 5 : 16, 18 ). It moreover does violence to the Scripture in its unnatural interpretation of "all sinned," in Bom. 5 : 12 —
AUGUSTINIAN" THEORY OF IMPUTATION. 165
words which imply the oneness of the race with Adam, and tho causative relation of Adam's sin to our guilt.
6. The Augustinian Theory, or Theory of Adam's Natural Headship.
This theory was first elaborated by Augustine (354-430), the great opponent of Pelagius ; although its central feature appears in tho writings of Tertullian (died about 220), Hilary (350), and Ambrose (374). It is frequently designated as the Augustinian view of sin. It was the view held by the Reformers, Zwingle excepted. Its principal advocates in this country are Dr. Shedd and Dr. Baird.
It holds that God imputes the sin of Adam immediately to all his poster- ity, in virtue of that organic unity of mankind by which the whole race at the time of Adam's transgression existed, not individually, but seminally, in him as its head. The total life of humanity was then in Adam ; the race as yet had its being only in him. Its essence was not yet individualized ; its forces were not yet distributed ; the powers which now exist in sepa- rate men were then unified and localized in Adam ; Adam's will was yet the will of the species. In Adam's free act, the will of the race revolted from God and the nature of the race corrupted itself. The nature which we now possess is the same nature that corrupted itself in Adam — " not the same in kind merely, but the same as flowing to us continuously from him."
Adam's sin is imputed to us immediately, therefore, not as something foreign to us, but because it is ours — we and all other men having existed as one moral person or one moral whole, in him, and, as the result of that transgression, possessing a nature destitute of love to God and prone to evil. In Rom. 5 : 12 — " death passed unto all men, for that all sinned," signifies: "death physical, spiritual, and eternal passed unto all men, because all sinned in Adam their natural head."
We regard this theory of the Natural Headship of Adam as the most sat- isfactory of the theories mentioned, and as furnishing the most important help towards the understanding of the great problem of original sin. In its favor may be urged the following considerations :
A. It puts the most natural interpretation upon Rom. 5 : 12-21. In verse 12 of this passage — " death passed unto all men, for that all sinned" — the great majority of commentators regard the word " sinned " as describ- ing a common transgression of the race in Adam. The death spoken of is, as the whole context shows, mainly though not exclusively physical. It has passed upon all — even upon those who have committed no conscious and personal transgression whereby to explain its infliction ( verse 14 ). The legal phraseology of the passage shows that this infliction is not a matter of sovereign decree, but of judicial penalty (verses 13, 14, 15, 16, 18 — "law," "transgression," "trespass," "judgment .... of one unto condemnation," "act of righteousness," "justification"). As the expla- nation of this universal subjection to penalty, we are referred to Adam's sin. By that one act ( "so," verse 12) — the "trespass of the one " man ( v. 15, 17 ), the " one trespass" ( v. 18 ) —death came to all men, because all [ not « have sinned ', but ] sinned ( ttAvtec y/iaprov — aorist of instantaneous
166 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
past action ) — that is, all sinned in " the one trespass " of "the one " man. Compare 1 Cor. 15 : 22 — "As in Adam all die " — where the contrast -with physical resurrection shows that physical death is meant ; 2 Cor. 5 : 14 — "one died for all, therefore all died." See Commentaries of Meyer, Bengel, Olshausen, Philippi, Wordsworth, Lange, Godet, Shedd. This is also recognized as the correct interpretation of Paul's words by Beyschlag, Bitschl, and Pfleiderer, although no one of these three accepts Paul's doc- trine as authoritative.
B. It permits whatever of truth there may be in the Federal theory and in the theory of Mediate Imputation to be combined with it, while neither of these latter theories can be justified to reason unless they are regarded as corollaries or accessories of the truth of Adam's Natural Headshi]). Only on this supposition of Natural Headship could God justly constitute Adam our representative, or hold us responsible for the depraved nature we have received from him. It moreover justifies God's ways, in postulating a real and a fair probation of our common nature as preliminary to imputation of sin — a truth which the theories just mentioned, in common with that of the New School, virtually deny, — while it rests upon correct philosophical principles with regard to will, ability, law, and accepts the Scriptural representations of the nature of sin, the penal character of death, the origin of the soul, and the oneness of the race in the transgression.
C. While its fundamental presupposition — a determination of the will of each member of the race prior to his individual consciousness — is an hypothesis difficult in itself, it is an hypothesis which furnishes the key to many more difficulties than it suggests. Once allow that the race was one in its first ancestor and fell in him, and light is thrown on a problem otherwise insoluble — the problem of our accountability for a sinful nature which we have not personally and consciously originated. Since we can- not, with the three theories first mentioned, deny either of the terms of this problem — inborn depravity or accountability for it, — we accept this solution as the best attainable.
D. This theory finds support in the conclusions of modern science : with regard to the moral law, as requiring right states as well as right acts ; with regard to the human will, as including subconscious and unconscious bent and determination ; with regard to heredity, and the transmission of evil character ; with regard to the unity and solidarity of the human race. The Augustinian theory may therefore be called an ethical or theological interpretation of certain incontestable and acknowledged biological facts.
E. We are to remember, however, that while this theory of the method of our union with Adam is merely a valuable hypothesis, the problem which it seeks to explain is, in both its terms, presented to us both by conscience and by Scripture. In connection with this problem a central fact is announced in Scripture, which we feel compelled to believe upon divine testimony, even though every attempted explanation should prove unsatisfactory. That central fact, which constitutes the substance of the Scripture doctrine of original sin, is simply this : that the sin of Adam is the immediate cause and ground of inborn depravity, guilt and condemna- tion to the whole human race.
OBJECTIONS TO THE AUGUSTINIAN" THEORY. 167
TJ. — Objections to the Augustinian Doctrine op Imputation.
The doctrine of Imputation, to which we have thus arrived, is met by its opponents with the following objections. In discussing them, we are to remember that a truth revealed in Scripture may have claims to our belief, in spite of difficidties to us insoluble. Yet it is hoped that examination will show the objections in question to rest either up >u false philosophical principles or upon misconceptions of the doctrine assailed.
A. That there can be no sin apart from and prior to consciousness. This we deny. The larger part of men's evil dispositions and acts are
imperfectly conscious, and of many such dispositions and acts the evil qual- ity is not discerned at all. The objection rests upon the assumption that law is confined to published statutes or to standards formally recognized by its subjects. A profounder view of law as identical with the constitu- ent principles of being, as binding the nature to conformity with the nature of God, as demanding right volitions only because these are manifestations of a right state, as having claims upon men in their corporate capacity, deprives this objection of all its force.
B. That man cannot be responsible for a sinful nature which he did not personally originate.
We reply that the objection ignores the testimony of conscience and of Scripture. These assert that we are responsible for what we are. The sin- ful nature is not something external to us, but is our inmost selves. If man's original righteousness and the new affection implanted in regener- ation have moral character, then the inborn tendency to evil has moral character ; as the former are commendable, so the latter is condemnable.
C. That Adam's sin cannot be imputed to us, since we cannot repent of it.
The objection has plausibility only so long as we fail to distinguish between Adam's sin as the inward apostasy of the nature from God, and Adam's sin as the outward act of transgression which followed and mani- fested that ajrostasy. "We cannot indeed repent of Adam's sin as our per- sonal act or as Adam's personal act, but regarding his sin as the apostasy of our common nature — an apostasy which manifests itself in our personal transgressions as it did in his, we can repent of it and do repent of it. In truth it is this nature, as self -corrupted and averse to God, for which the Christian most deeply repents.
D. That, if we be responsible for Adam's first sin, we must also be responsible not only for every other sin of Adam, but for the sins of our immediate ancestors.
We reply that the apostasy of human nature could occur but once. It occurred in Adam before the eating of the forbidden fruit, and revealed itself in that eating. The subsequent sins of Adam and of our immediate ancestors are no longer acts which determine or change the nature, — they only show what the nature is. Here is the truth and the limitation of the Scripture declaration that "the son shall not bear the iniquity of the father " (Ez. 18 : 20 ; c/. Luke 13 : 2, 3 ; John 9 : 2, 3 ). Man is not responsible
168 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
for the specifically evil tendencies communicated to him from his immedi- ate ancestors, as distinct from the nature he possesses ; nor is he respons- ible for the sins of those ancestors which originated these tendencies. But he is responsible for that original apostasy which constituted the one and final revolt of the race from God, and for the personal depravity and dis- obedience which in his own case has residted therefrom.
E. That if Adam's sin and condemnation can be ours by propagation, the righteousness and faith of the believer should be propagable also.
We reply that no merely personal qualities, whether of sin or righteous- ness, are communicated by propagation. Ordinary generation does not transmit personal guilt, but only that guilt which belongs to the whole species. So personal faith and righteousness are not propagable. " Origi- nal sin is the consequent of man's nature, whereas the parents' grace is a personal excellence; and cannot be transmitted " ( Burgesse ).
F. That, if all moral consequences are properly penalties, sin, considered as a sinful nature, must be the punishment of sin, considered as the act of our first parents.
But we reply that the impropriety of punishing sin with sin vanishes when we consider that the sin which is punished is our own, equally with the sin with which we are punished. The objection is valid as against the Federal theory or the theory of Mediate Imputation, but not as against the theory of Adam's Natural Headship. To deny that God, through the opera- tion of second causes, may punish the act of transgression by the habit and tendency which result from it, is to ignore the facts of every-day life, as well as the statements of Scripture in which sin is represented as ever repro- ducing itself, and with each reproduction increasing its guilt and punish- ment ( Bom. 6:19; James 1 : 15. )
G. That the doctrine excludes all separate probation of individuals since Adam, by making their moral life a mere manifestation of tendencies received from him.
We reply that the objection takes into view only our connection with the race, and ignores the complementary and equally important fact of each man's personal will. That personal will does more than simply express the nature ; it may to a certain extent curb the nature, or it may, on the other hand, add a sinful character and influence of its own. There is, in other words, a remainder of freedom, which leaves room for personal probation, in addition to the race-probation in Adam.
H. That the organic unity of the race in the transgression is a thing so remote from common experience that the preaching of it neutralizes all appeals to the conscience.
But whatever of truth there is in this objection is due to the self -isolating nature of sin. Men feel the unity of the family, the profession, the nation to which they belong, and, just in proportion to the breadth of their sym- pathies and their experience of divine grace, do they enter into Christ's feeling of unity with the race ( c/. Is. 6 : 5 ; Lam. 3 : 39-45 ; Ezra 9:6; Neh. 1:6). The fact that the self-contained and self-seeking recognize
CONSEQUENCES OF SIN" TO ADAMS POSTERITY. Ifi9
themselves as responsible only for their personal acts should not prevent our pressing upon men's attention the more searching standards oi' tho Scriptures. Only thus can the Christian find a solution for the dark prob- lem of a corruption which is inborn yet oondemnable ; only thus can tho unregenerate man be led to a full knowledge of the depth of his ruin and of his absolute dependence upon God for salvation.
I. That a constitution by which the sin of one individual involves in guilt and condemnation the nature of all men who descend from him is contrary to God's justice.
We acknowledge that no human theory can fully solve the mystery of imputation. But we prefer to attribute God's dealings to justice rather than to sovereignty. The following considerations, thoiigh partly hypo- thetical, may throw light upon the subject : (a) A probation of our com- mon nature in Adam, sinless as he was and with full knowledge of God's law, is more consistent with divine justice than a separate probation of each individual, with inexperience, inborn depravity, and evil example, all favor- ing a decision against God. ( o ) A constitution which made a common fall possible may have been indispensable to any provision of a common sal- vation. ( c ) Our chance for salvation as sinners under grace may be better than it would have been as sinless Adams under law. ( d ) A constitution which permitted oneness with the first Adam in the transgression cannot be unjust, since a like principle of oneness with Christ, the second Adam, secures our salvation. ( e ) There is also a 2:)hysical and natural union with Christ which antedates the fall and which is incident to man's creation. The immanence of Christ in humanity guarantees a continuous divine effort to remedy the disaster caused by man's free will, and to restore the moral union with God which the race has lost by the fall.
Thus our ruin and our redemption were alike wrought out without per- sonal act of ours. As all the natural life of humanity was in Adam, so all the spiritual life of humanity was in Christ. As our old nature was cor- rupted in Adam and propagated to us by physical generation, so our new nature was restored in Christ and communicated to its by tho regenerating work of the Holy Spirit. If then we are justified upon the ground of our inbeing in Christ, we may in like manner be condemned on the ground of our inbeing in Adam.
SECTION VI. —CONSEQUENCES OF SIN TO ADAM'S POSTERITY.
As the result of Adam's transgression, all his posterity are born in the same state into which he fell. But since law is the all-comprehending demand of harmony with God, all moral consequences flowing from trans- gression are to be regarded as sanctions of law, or expressions of the divine displeasure through the constitution of things which he has established. Certain of these consequences, however, are earlier recognized than others and are of minor scope ; it will therefore bo useful to consider them under the three aspects of depravity, guilt, and penalty.
170 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
I. Depravity.
By this we mean, on the one hand, the lack of original righteousness or of holy affection toward God, and, on the other hand, the corruption of the moral nature, or bias toward evil. That such depravity exists has been abundantly shown, both from Scripture and from reason, in our considera- tion of the universality of sin.
1. Depravity partial or total 9
The Scriptures represent human nature as totally depraved. The phrase "total depravity," however, is liable to misinterpretation, and should not be used without explanation. By the total depravity of universal humanity we mean :
A. Negatively, — not that every sinner is : ( a ) Destitute of conscience, — for the existence of strong impulses to right, and of remorse for wrong- doing, show that conscience is often keen ; ( b ) devoid of all qualities pleasing to men, and useful when judged by a human standard, — for the existence of such qualities is recognized by Christ ; ( c ) prone to every form of sin, — for certain forms of sin exclude certain others ; ( d) intense as he can be in his selfishness and opposition to God, — for he becomes worse every day.
B. Positively, — that every sinner is : ( a ) totally destitute of that love to God which constitutes the fundamental and all-inclusive demand of the law ; ( b ) chargeable with elevating some lower affection or desire above regard for God and his law ; ( c ) supremely determined, in his whole inward and outward life, by a preference of self to God ; ( d ) possessed of an aversion to God which, though sometimes latent, becomes active enmity, so soon as God's will comes into manifest conflict with his own ; ( e ) dis- ordered and corrupted in every faculty, through this substitution of self- ishness for supreme affection toward God ; (/) credited with no thought, emotion, or act of which divine holiness can fully approve ; ( g ) subject to a law of constant progress in depravity, which he has no recuperative energy to enable him successfully to resist.
2. Ability or inability ?
In opposition to the plenary ability taught by the Pelagians, the gracious ability of the Arminians, and the natural ability of the New School theolo- gians, the Scriptures declare the total inability of the sinner to turn him- self to God or to do that which is truly good in God's sight ( see Scripture proof below). A proper conception also of the law, as reflecting the holi- ness of God and as expressing the ideal of human nature, leads us to the conclusion that no man whose powers are weakened by either original or actual sin can of himself come up to that perfect standard. Yet there is a certain remnant of freedom left to man. The sinner can ( a ) avoid the sin against the Holy Ghost ; ( b ) choose the less sin rather than the greater ; ( c ) refuse altogether to yield to certain temptations ; ( d ) do outwardly good acts, though with imperfect motives ; ( e ) seek God from motives of self-interest.
But on the other hand the sinner cannot (a) by a single volition bring his character and life into complete conformity to God's law ; ( b ) change
CONSEQUENCES OF SIN TO ADAM'S TOSTERITY. 171
his fundamental preference for self ami sin to supreme love for God ; nor ( v ) do any act, however insignificant, whicli shall meet with God's approval or answer fully to the demands of law.
To the use of the term "natural ability " to designate merely the sinner's possession of all the constituent faculties of human nature, wo object upon the following grounds :
A. Quantitative lack. — The phrase "natural ability" is misleading, since it seems to imply that the existence of the mere powrers of intellect, affection, and will is a sufficient quantitative qualification for obedience to God's law, whereas these powers have been weakened by sin, and are nat- urally unable, instead of naturally able, to render back to God with interest the talent first bestowed. Even if the moral direction of man's faculties were a normal one, the effect of hereditary and of personal sin would render naturally impossible that large likeness to God which the law of absolute perfection demands. Man has not therefore the natural ability perfectly to obey God. He had it once, but he lost it with the first sin.
B. Qualitative lack. — Since the law of God requires of men not so much right single volitions as conformity to God in the whole inward state of the affections and will, the power of contrary choice in single volitions does not constitute a natural ability to obey God, unless man can by those single volitions change the underlying state of the affections and will. But this power man does not possess. Since God judges all moral action in connec- tion with the general state of the heart and life, natural ability to good involves not only a full complement of faculties but also a bias of the affec- tions and will toward God. Without this bias there is no possibility of right moral action, and where there is no such possibility, there can be no ability either natural or moral.
C. No such ability known. — In addition to the psychological argu- ment just mentioned, we may urge another from experience and observa- tion. These testify that man is cognizant of no such ability. Since no man has ever yet, by the exercise of his natural powers, turned himself to God or done an act truly good in God's sight, the existence of a natural ability to do good is a pure assumption. There is no scientific warrant for inferring the existence of an ability which has never manifested itself in a single instance since history began.
D. Practical evil of the belief. — The practical evil attending the preach- ing of natural ability furnishes a strong argument against it. The Script- ures, in their declarations of the sinner's inability and helplessness, aim to shut him up to sole dependence upon God for salvation. The doctrine of natural ability, assuring him that he is able at once to repent and turn to God, encourages delay by putting salvation at all times within his reach. If a single volition will secure it, he may be saved as easily to-morrow as to-day. The doctrine of inability presses men to immediate acceptance of God's offers, lest the day of grace for them pass by.
Let us repeat, however, that the denial to man of all ability, whether natural or moral, to turn himself to God or to do that which is truly good in God's sight, does not imply a denial of man's power to order his
172 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
external life in many particulars conformably to moral rules, or even to attain the praise of men for virtue. Man has still a range of freedom in acting out his nature, and he may to a certain limited extent act down upon that nature, and modify it, by isolated volitions externally conformed to God's law. He may choose higher or lower forms of selfish action, and may pursue these chosen courses with various degrees of selfish energy. Freedom of choice, within this limit, is by no means incompatible with complete bondage of the will in spiritual things.
II. Guilt.
1. Nature of guilt.
By guilt we mean desert of punishment, or obligation to render satis- faction to God's justice for self-determined violation of law. There is a reaction of holiness against sin, which the Scripture denominates ' ' the wrath of God " ( Rom. 1 : 18 ). Sin is in us, either as act or state ; God's punitive righteousness is over against the sinner, as something to be feared; guilt is a relation of the sinner to that righteousness, namely, the sinner's desert of punishment.
The following remarks may serve both for proof and for explanation :
A. Guilt is incurred only through self-determined transgression either on the part of man's nature or person. We are guilty only of that sin which we have originated or have had part in originating. Guilt is not, therefore, mere liability to punishment, without participation in the trans- gression for which the punishment is inflicted, — in other words, there is no such thing as constructive guilt under the divine government. We are accounted guilty only for what we have done, either personally or in our first parents, and for what we are, in consequence of such doing.
B. Guilt is an objective result of sin, and is not to be confounded with subjective pollution, or depravity. Every sin, whether of nature or per- son, is an offense against God (Ps. 51 : 4-6), an act or state of opposition to his will, which has for its effect God's personal wrath ( Ps. 7:11; John 3 : 18, 36 ), and which must be expiated either by punishment or by atone- ment ( Heb. 9 : 22 ). Not only does sin, as unlikeness to the divine purity, involve pollution, — it also, as antagonism to God's holy will, involves guilt. This guilt, or obligation to satisfy the outraged holiness of God, is explained in the New Testament by the terms "debtor " and " debt " ( Mat. 6 : 12 ; Luke 13 : 4 ; Mat. 5 : 21 ; Eom. 3 : 19 ; 6 : 23 ; Eph. 2:3). Since guilt, the objective result of sin, is entirely distinct from depravity, the subjective result, human nature may, as in Christ, have the guilt without the deprav- ity ( 2 Cor. 5 : 21 ), or may, as in the Christian, have the depravity without the guilt ( Uohn 1 : 7, 8).
0. Guilt, moreover, as an objective resu*lt of sin, is not to be confounded with the subjective consciousness of guilt (Lev. 5 : 17). In the condem- nation of conscience, God's condemnation partially and prophetically mani- fests itself ( 1 John 3 : 20 ). But guilt is primarily a relation to God, and only secondarily a relation to conscience. Progress in sin is marked by diminished sensitiveness of moral insight and feeling. As " the greatest of sins is to be conscious of none," so guilt may be great, just in proportion
CONSEQUENCES OF SIN TO ADAM'S POSTERITY. 173
to the absence of consciousness of it ( Ps. 19 : 12 ; 51 : 6 ; Eph. 4 : 18, 19
— a -!,'/ ;. //Hiir; j ). There is no evidence, however, that the voice of conscience can be completely or finally silenced. The time for repentance may pass, but not the time for remorse. Progress in holiness on the other hand, is marked by increasing apprehension of the depth and extent of our sinful- ness, while with this apprehension is combined, in a normal Christian expe- rience, the assurance that the guilt of our sin has been taken, and taken away, by Christ (John 1 : 29 ).
2. Degrees of guilt.
The Scriptures recognize different degrees of guilt as attaching to differ- ent kinds of sin. The variety of sacrifices under the Mosaic law, and the variety of awards in the judgment, are to be explained upon this principle.
Casuistry, however, has drawn many distinctions which lack Scriptural foundation. Such is the distinction between venial sins and mortal sins in the Boman Catholic Church, — every sin unpardoned being mortal, and all sins being venial, since Christ has died for all. Nor is the common distinc- tion between sins of omission and sins of commission more valid, since the very omission is an act of commission.
The following distinctions are indicated in Scripture as involving differ- ent degrees of guilt :
A. Sin of nature, and personal transgression.
Sin of nature involves guilt, yet there is greater guilt when this sin of nature reasserts itself in personal transgression ; for, while this latter includes in itself the former, it also adds to the former a new element, namely, the conscious exercise of the individual and personal will, by virtue of which a new decision is made against God, special evil habit is induced, and the total condition of the soul is made more depraved. Although we have emphasized the guilt of inborn sin, because this truth is most con- tested, it is to be remembered that men reach a conviction of their native depravity only through a conviction of their personal transgressions. For this reason, by far the larger part of our preaching upon sin should con- sist in applications of the law of God to the acts and dispositions of men's lives.
B. Sins of ignorance, and sins of knowledge.
Here guilt is measured by the degree of light possessed, or in other words, by the opportunities of knowledge men have enjoyed, and the powers with which they have been naturally endowed. Genius and privilege increase responsibility. The heathen are guilty, but those to whom the oracles of God have been committed are more guilty than they.
C. Sins of infirmity, and sins of presumption.
Here the guilt is measured by the energy of the evil will. Sin may be known to be sin, yet may be committed in haste or weakness. Though haste and weakness constitute a palliation of the offence which springs therefrom, yet they are themselves sins, as revealing an unbelieving and disordered heart. But of far greater guilt are those presumptuous choices of evil in which not weakness, but strength of will, is manifest.
174 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
D. Sin of incomplete, and sin of final, obduracy.
Here the guilt is measured, not by the objective sufficiency or insuf- ficiency of divine grace, but by the degree of unreceptiveness into which sin has brought the soul. As the only sin unto death which is described in Scripture is the sin against the Holy Spirit, we here consider the nature of that sin.
The sin against the Holy Spirit is not to be regarded simply as an isolated act, but also as the external symptom of a heart so radically and finally set against God that no power which God can consistently use will ever save it. This sin, therefore, can be only the culmination of a long course of self-hardening and self-depraving. He who has committed it must be either profoundly iudifferent to his own condition, or actively and bitterly hostile to God ; so that anxiety or fear on accomit of one's condition is evidence that it has not been committed. The sin against the Holy Spirit cannot be forgiven, simply because the soul that has committed it has ceased to be receptive of divine influences, even when those influences are exerted in the utmost strength which God has seen fit to employ in his spiritual administration.
m. Penalty.
1. Idea of penalty.
By penalty, we mean that pain or loss which is directly or indirectly inflicted by the Lawgiver, in vindication of his justice outraged by the violation of law.
In this definition it is implied that :
A. The natural consequences of transgression, although they constitute a part of the penalty of sin, do not exhaust that penalty. In all penalty there is a personal element — the holy wrath of the Lawgiver, — which nat- ural consequences but partially express.
B. The object of penalty is not the reformation of the offender or the ensuring of social or governmental safety. These ends may be incidentally secured through its infliction, but the great end of penalty is the vindica- tion of the character of the Lawgiver. Penalty is essentially a necessary reaction of the divine holiness against sin. Inasmuch, however, as wrong views of the object of penalty have so important a bearing upon our future studies of doctrine, we make fuller mention of the two erroneous theories which have greatest currency.
( a ) Penalty is not essentially reformatory. — By this we mean that the reformation of the offender is not its primary design, — as penalty, it is not intended to reform. Penalty, in itself, proceeds not from the love and mercy of the Lawgiver, but from his justice. "Whatever reforming influ- ences may in any given instance be connected with it are not parts of the penalty, but are mitigations of it, and they are added not in justice but in grace. If reformation follows the infliction of penalty, it is not the effect of the penalty, but the effect of certain benevolent agencies which have been provided to turn into a means of good what naturally would be to the offender only a source of harm.
CONSEQUENCES OF SIN TO ADAM'S POSTERITY. 175
That the object of penalty is not reformation appears from Scripture, where punishment is often referred to God's justice, but never to God's love ; from the intrinsic ill-desert of sin, to which penalty is correlative ; from the fact that punishment must be vindicative, in order to bo disciplin- ary, and just, in order to be reformatory ; from the fact that upon this theory punishment would not be just when the sinner was already reformed or could not be reformed, so that the greater the sin the less tho punish- ment must be.
(?>) Penalty is not essentially deterrent and preventive. — By this we mean that its primary design is not to protect society, by deterring men from the commission of like offences. Wo grant that this end is often secured in connection with punishment, both in family and civil govern- ment and under the government of God. But we claim that this is a merely incidental result, which God's wisdom and goodness have connected with tho infliction of penalty, — it cannot be the reason and ground for penalty itself. Some of the objections to the preceding theory apply also to this. But in addition to what has been said, we urge :
Penalty cannot be primarily designed to secure social and governmental safety, for the reason that it is never right to punish the individual simply for the good of society. No punishment, moreover, will or can do good to others that is not just and right in itself. Punishment does good, only when the person punished deserves punishment ; and that desert of pun- ishment, and not the good effects that will follow it, must be the ground and reason why it is inflicted. The contrary theory would imply that tho criminal might go free but for the effect of his punishment on others, and that man might rightly commit crime if only he were willing to bear the penalty.
2. The actual penalty of sin.
The one word in Scripture which designates the total penalty of sin is "death." Death, however, is twofold :
A. Physical death, — or the separation of the soul from the body, including all those temporal evils and sufferings which result from dis- turbance of the original harmony between body and soul, and which are the working of death in us. That physical death is a part of the penalty of sin, appears :
( a ) From Scripture.
This is the most obvious import of the threatening in Gen. 2 : 17 — " thou shalt surely die " ; c/. 3 : 19—" unto dust shalt thou return." Allusions to this threat in theO. T. confirm this interpretation : Num. 16 :29 — "visited after the visitation of all men," where tp3 = judicial visitation, or punish- ment ; 27 : 3 ( i/xx. — ci' iftapriav avrov ). The prayer of Moses in Ps. 90 : 7-9, 11, and the prayer of Hezekiah in Is. 38 : 17, 18, recognize plainly the penal nature of death. The same doctrine is taught in the N. T., as for example, John 8 : 44 ; Bom. 5 : 12, 14, 16, 17, where the judicial phrase- ology is to be noted ( of. 1 : 32 ) ; see 6 : 23 also. In 1 Pet. 4 : 6, physical death is spoken of as God's judgment against sin. In 1 Cor. 15 : 21, 22, the bodily resurrection of all believers, in Christ, is contrasted with the
176 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
bodily death of all men, in Adam. Rom. 4 : 24, 25 ; 6 : 9, 10 ; 8 : 3, 10, 11 ; Gal. 3 : 13, show that Christ submitted to physical death as the pen- alty of sin, and by his resurrection from the grave gave proof that the penalty of sin was exhausted and that humanity in him was justified. "As the resurrection of the body is a part of the redemption, so the death of the body is a part of the penalty. "
( b ) From reason.
The universal prevalence of suffering and death among rational creatures cannot be reconciled with the divine justice, except upon the supposition that it is a judicial infliction on account of a common sinfulness of nature belonging even to those who have not reached moral consciousness.
The objection that death existed in the animal creation before the Fall may be answered by saying that, but for the fact of man's sin, it would not have existed. We may believe that God arranged even the geologic his- tory to correspond with the foreseen fact of human apostasy ( of. Rom. 8 : 20-23 — where the creation is said to have been made subject to vanity by reason of man's sin ).
The translation of Enoch and Elijah, and of the saints that remain at Christ's second coming, seems intended to teach us that death is not a necessary law of organized being, and to show what would have happened to Adam if he had been obedient. He was created a "natural," " earthly " body, but might have attained a higher being, the "spiritual," "heavenly" body, without the intervention of death. Sin, however, has turned the normal condition of things into the rare exception ( cf. 1 Cor. 15 : 42-50 ). Since Christ endured death as the penalty of sin, death to the Christian becomes the gateway through which he enters into full communion with his Lord.
B. Spiritual death, — or the separation of the soul from God, including all that pain of conscience, loss of peace, and sorrow of spirit, which result from disturbance of the normal relation between the soul and God.
( a ) Although physical death is a part of the penalty of sin, it is by no means the chief part. The term ' death ' is frequently used in Scripture in a moral and spiritual sense, as denoting the absence of that which con- stitutes the true life of the soul, namely, the presence and favor of God.
( b ) It cannot be doubted that the penalty denounced in the garden and fallen upon the race is primarily and mainly that death of the soul which consists in its separation from God. In this sense only, death was fully visited upon Adam in the day on which he ate the forbidden fruit ( Gen. 2 : 17 ). In this sense only, death is escaped by the Christian ( John 11 : 26 ). For this reason, in the parallel between Adam and Christ ( Rom. 5 : 12-21), the apostle passes from the thought of mere physical death in the early part of the passage to that of both physical and spiritual death at its close (verse 21 — "as sin reigned in death, even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord " — where " eternal life " is more than endless physical existence, and " death " is more than death of the body ).
TIIE SALVATION OF INFANTS. 177
( o ) Eternal death may be regarded as the culmination and completion of spiritual death, and as essentially consisting in the correspondence of the outward condition with the inward state of the evil soul ( Acts 1 : 25 ). It would seem to be inaugurated by some peculiar repellent energy of the divine holiness ( Mat. 25 : 41 ; 2 Thess. 1:9), and to involve positive retri- bution visited by a personal God upon both the body and the soul of the evil-doer ( Mat. 10 :28; Heb. 10 : 31 ; Rev. 11 : 11).
SECTION VII. — THE SALVATION OF INFANTS.
The views which have been presented with regard to inborn depravity and the reaction of divine holiness against it suggest the question whether infants dying before arriving at moral consciousness are saved, and if so, in what way. To this question we reply as follows :
( a ) Infants are in a state of sin, need to be regenerated, and can be saved only through Christ.
( b ) Yet as compared with those who have personally transgressed, they are recognized as possessed of a relative innocence, and of a submissiveness and trustfulness, which may serve to illustrate the graces of Christian char- acter.
( c ) For this reason, they are the objects of special divine compassion and care, and through the grace of Christ are certain of salvation.
( d ) The descriptions of God's merciful provision as coextensive with the ruin of the Fall also lead us to believe that those who die in infancy receive salvation through Christ as certainly as they inherit sin from Adam.
( e ) The condition of salvation for adults is personal faith. Infants are incapable of fulfilling this condition. Since Christ has died for all, we have reason to believe that provision is made for their reception of Christ in some other way.
(/) At the final judgment, personal conduct is made the test of charac- ter. But infants are incapable of personal transgression. We have reason, therefore, to believe that they will be among the saved, since this rule of decision will not apply to them.
( g ) Since there is no evidence that children dying in infancy are regen- erated prior to death, either with or without the use of external means, it seems most probable that the work of regeneration may be performed by the Spirit in connection with the infant soul's first view of Christ in the other world. As the remains of natural depravity in the Christian are eradicated, not by death, but at death, through the sight of Christ and union with him, so the first moment of consciousness for the infant may be coincident with a view of Christ the Savior which accomplishes the entire sanctification of its nature.
While, in the nature of things and by the express declarations of Script- ure, we are precluded from extending this doctrine of regeneration at death
12
178 ANTHROPOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF MAN.
to any who have committed rjersonal sins, we are nevertheless warranted in the conclusion that, certain and great as is the guilt of original sin, no human soul is eternally condemned solely for this sin of nature, but that, on the other hand, all who have not consciously and wilfully transgressed are made partakers of Christ's salvation.
PAET YI.
SOTEKIOLOGT, OK THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION THKOUGH THE WORK OF OHKIST AND OF THE HOLY SPIRIT.
CHAPTER I. CHRISTOLOGY, OR THE REDEMPTION WROUGHT BY CHRIST.
SECTION" I.— HISTORICAL PREPARATION" FOR REDEMPTION".
Since God had from eternity determined to redeem mankind, the history of the race from the time of the Fall to the coming of Christ was providen- tially arranged to prepare the way for this redemption. The preparation was two-fold :
L. Negative Preparation, — in the history of the heathen world.
This showed ( 1 ) the true nature of sin, and the depth of spiritual igno- rance and of moral depravity to which the race, left to itself, must fall ; and ( 2 ) the powerlessness of human nature to preserve or regain an adequate knowledge of God, or to deliver itself from sin by philosophy or art.
II. Positive Preparation, — in the history of Israel.
A single people was separated from all others, from the time of Abraham, and was educated in three great truths : ( 1 ) the majesty of God, in his unity, omnipotence, and holiness ; ( 2 ) the sinfulness of man, and his moral helplessness ; ( 3 ) the certainty of a coming salvation. This education from the time of Moses was conducted by the use of three principal agencies :
A. Law. — The Mosaic legislation, (a) by its theophanies and miracles, cultivated faith in a personal and almighty God and Judge ; ( b ) by its commands and threatenings, wakened the sense of sin ; ( c ) by its priestly and sacrificial system, inspired hope of some way of pardon and access to God.
B. Prophecy. — This was of two kinds : (a) verbal, — beginning with the protevangelium in the garden, and extending to within four hundred years of the coming of Christ ; ( b ) typical, — in persons, as Adam, Mel- chisedek, Joseph, Moses, Joshua, David, Solomon, Jonah ; and iu acts, as Isaac's sacrifice, and Moses' lifting up the serpent in the wilderness.
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180 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION".
C. Judgment. — Repeated divine chastisements for idolatry culminated in the overthrow of the kingdom, and the captivity of the Jews. The exile had two principal effects : (a) religious, — in giving monotheism firm root in the heart of the people, and in leading to the establishment of the syna- gogue-system, by which monotheism was thereafter preserved and propa- gated ; (b) civil, — in converting the Jews from an agricultural to a trading people, scattering them among all nations, and finally imbuing them with the spirit of Roman law and organization.
Thus a people was made ready to receive the gospel and to propagate it throughout the world, at the very time when the world had become conscious of its needs, and, through its greatest philosophers and poets, was expressing its longings for deliverance.
SECTION II.— THE PERSON OF CHRIST.
The redemption of mankind from sin was to be effected through a Medi- ator who should unite in himself both the human nature and the divine, in order that he might reconcile God to man and man to God. To facilitate an understanding of the Scriptural doctrine under consideration, it will be desirable at the outset to present a brief historical survey of views respect- ing the Person of Christ.
L Historical Survey of Views respecting the Person of Christ.
1. The Ebionites ( JIKT = « poor ' ; A. D. 107 ? ) denied the reality of Christ's divine nature, and held him to be merely man, whether naturally or supernaturally conceived. This man, however, held a peculiar relation to God, in that, from the time of his baptism, an unmeasured fulness of the diw'ne Spirit rested upon him. Ebionism was simply Judaism within the pale of the Christian church, and its denial of Christ's godhood was occa- sioned by the apparent incompatibility of this doctrine with monotheism.
2. The Docetce (Soneo — 'to seem,' * to appear'; A. D. 70-170 ), like most of the Gnostics in the second century and the Manichees in the third, denied the reality of Christ's human body. This view was the logical sequence of their assumption of the inherent evil of matter. If matter is evil and Christ was pure, then Christ's human body must have been merely phantasmal. Docetism was simply pagan philosophy introduced into the church.
3. The Avians ( Arius, condemned at Nice, 325) denied the integrity of the divine nature in Christ. They regarded the Logos who united him- self to humanity in Jesus Christ, not as possessed of absolute godhood, but as the first and highest of created beings. This view originated in a mis- interpretation of the Scriptural accounts of Christ's state of humiliation, and in mistaking temporary subordination for original and permanent inequality.
4. The Apollinarians ( Apollinaris, condemned at Constantinople, 381) denied the integrity of Christ's human nature. According to this view,
THE TWO NATURES OF CHHJST. 181
Christ had no human iwc or wvevfta, other than that which was furnished by the divine nature. Christ had only the human aufia and V'-tv ; the place of the human »o»C or nvevih -was tilled by the divine Logos. Apollinarism is an attempt to construo the doctrine of Christ's person in the forms of the Platonic trichotomy.
5. The Nestorians ( Nestorms, removed from the Patriarchate of Con- stantinople, 431 ) denied the real union between the divine and the human natures in Christ, making it rather a moral than an organic one. They refused therefore to attribute to the resultant unity the attributes of each nature, and regarded Christ as a man in very near relation to God. Thus they virtually held to two natures and two persons, instead of two natures in one person.
6. The Eutychians (condemned at Chalcedon, 451) denied the dis- tinction and coexistence of the two natures, and held to a mingling of both into one, which constituted a tertium quid, or third nature. Since in this case the divine must overpower the human, it follows that the human was really absorbed into or transmuted into the divine, although the divine was not in all respects the same, after the union, that it was before. Hence the Eutychians were often called Monophysites, because they virtually reduced the two natures to one.
The foregoing survey would seem to show that history had exhausted the possibilities of heresy, and that the future denials of the doctrine of Christ's person must be, in essence, forms of the views already mentioned. All controversies with regard to the person of Christ must, of necessity, hinge upon one of three points : first, the reality of the two natures ; secondly, the integrity of the two natures ; thirdly, the union of the two natures in one person. Of these points, Ebionism and Docetism deny the reality of the natures ; Arianism and Apollinarianisrn deny their integrity ; while Nestorianism and Eutychianism deny their proper union. In opposition to all these errors, the orthodox doctrine held its ground and maintains it to this day.
7. The Orthodox doctrine ( promulgated at Chalcedon, 451 ) holds that in the one person Jesus Christ there are two natures, a human nature and a divine nature, each in its completeness and integrity, and that these two natures are organically and indissolubly united, yet so that no third nature Is formed thereby. In brief, to use the antiquated dictum, orthodox doc- trine forbids us either to divide the person or to confound the natures.
That this doctrine is Scriptural and rational, we have yet to show. We may most easily arrange our proofs by reducing the three points mentioned to two, namely : first, the reality and integrity of the two natures ; sec- ondly, the union of the two natures in one person.
II. The two Natures of Christ, —their Reality and Integrity.
1. The Humanity of Christ.
A. Its Keality. — This may be shown as follows :
( a ) He expressly called himself, and was called, " man."
182 SOTEKIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
( b ) He possessed the essential elements of human nature as at present constituted — a material body and a rational soul.
( c ) He was moved by the instinctive principles, and he exercised the active powers, which belong to a normal and developed humanity ( hunger, thirst, weariness, sleep, love, compassion, anger, anxiety, fear, groaning, weeping, prayer ).
(d) He was subject to the ordinary laws of human development, both in body and soul ( grew and waxed strong in spirit ; asked questions ; grew in wisdom and stature ; learned obedience ; suffered being tempted ; was made perfect through sufferings).
( e ) He suffered and died ( bloody sweat ; gave up his spirit ; his side pierced, and straightway there came out blood and water).
B. Its Integrity. We here use the term 'integrity' to signify, not merely completeness, but perfection. That which is perfect is, a fortiori, complete in all its parts. Christ's human nature was :
( a ) Supernaturally conceived ; since the denial of his supernatural con- ception involves either a denial of the purity of Mary, his mother, or a denial of the truthfulness of Matthew's and Luke's narratives.
( b ) Free, both from hereditary depravity, and from actual sin ; as is shown by his never offering sacrifice, never praying for forgiveness, teach- ing that all but he needed the new birth, challenging all to convict him of a single sin.
( c ) Ideal human nature, — f urnishing the moral pattern which man is progressively to realize, although within limitations of knowledge and of activity required by his vocation as the world's Redeemer.
( d ) A human nature that found its personality only in union with the divine nature, — in other words, a human nature impersonal, in the sense that it had no personality separate from the divine nature, and prior to its union therewith.
( e ) A human nature germinal, and capable of self-communication, — so constituting him the spiritual head and beginning of a new race, the second Adam from whom fallen man individually and collectively derives new and holy life.
The passages here alluded to abundantly confute the Docetic denial of Christ's veritable human body, and the Apollinarian denial of Christ's ver- itable human soul. More than this, they establish the reality and integrity of Christ's human nature, as possessed of all the elements, faculties, and powers essential to humanity.
2. The Deity of Christ.
The reality and integrity of Christ's divine nature have been sufficiently proved in a former chapter ( see pages 82-89 ). We need only refer to the evidence there given, that, during his earthly ministry, Christ :
( a ) Possessed a knowledge of his own deity.
THE TWO NATURES IN ONE PERSON. 183
(6) Exercised divine powers and prerogatives.
But this is to say, in other words, that there were, in Christ, a knowl- edge and a power such as belong only to God. The passages cited furnish a refutation of both the Ebionite denial of the reality, and the Arian denial of the integrity, of the divine nature in Christ.
III. The Union of the two Natures in one Person.
Distinctly as the Scriptures represent Jesus Christ to havo been possessed of a divine nature and of a human nature, each unaltered in essence and undivested of its normal attributes and powers, they with equal distinctness represent Jesus Christ as a single undivided personality in whom these two natures arc vitally and inseparably united, so that he is properly, not God and man, but the God-man. The two natures are bound together, not by the moral tie of friendship, nor by the spiritual tie which links the believer to his Lord, but by a bond unique and inscrutable, which constitutes them one person with a single consciousness and will, — this consciousness and will including within their possible range both the human nature and the divine.
1. Proof of this Union.
( a ) Christ uniformly speaks of himself, and is spoken of, as a single person. There is no interchange of 'I' and 'thou' between the human and the divine natures, such as we find between the persons of the Trinity ( John 17 : 23 ). Christ never uses the plural number in referring to him- self, unless it be in John 3 : 11 — "wo speak that we do know," — and even here "we" is more probably used as inclusive of the disciples. 1 John 1 :2 — "is come in the flesh" — is supplemented by John 1 : 11 — "became flesh " ; and these tests together assure us that Christ so came in human nature as to make that nature an element in his single personality.
( 6 ) The attributes and powers of both natures are ascribed to the one Christ, and conversely the works and dignities of the one Christ are ascribed to either of the natures, in a way inexplicable, except upon the principle that these two natures are organically and iudissolubly united in a single person ( examples of the former usage are Rom. 1 : 3 and 1 Pet. 3 : 18 ; of the latter, 1 Tim. 2 : 5 and Heb. 1 : 2, 3 ). Hence we can say, on the one hand, that the God-man existed before Abraham, yet was born iu the reign of Augustus Csessir, and that Jesus Christ wept, was weary, suffered, died, yet is the same yesterday, to-day, and forever ; on the other hand, that a divine Savior redeemed us upon the cross, and that the human Christ is present with his people even to the end of the world ( Eph. 1 : 23 ; 1 : 10 ; Mat. 28 : 20 ).
(c) The constant Scriptural representations of the infinite value of Christ's atonement and of the union of the human race with God which has been secured in him are intelligible only when Christ is regarded, not as a man of God, but as the God-man, in whom the two natures are so united that what each does has the value of both.
( d ) It corroborates this view to remember that the universal Christian
184 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
consciousness recognizes in Christ a single and undivided personality, and expresses this recognition in its services of song and prayer.
The foregoing proof of the union of a i^erfect human nature and of a perfect divine nature in the single person of Jesus Christ suffices to refute both the Nestorian separation of the natures and the Eutychian confound- ing of them. Certain modern forms of stating the doctrine of this union, however — forms of statement into which there enter some of the miscon- ceptions already noticed — need a brief examination, before we proceed to our own attempt at elucidation.
2. Modem misrepresentations of this Union.
A. Theory of an incomplete humanity. — Gess and Beecher hold that the immaterial part in Christ's humanity is only contracted and meta- morphosed deity.
The advocates of this view maintain that the divine Logos reduced him- self to the condition and limits of human nature, and thus literally became a human soul. The theory differs from Apollinarianism, in that it does not necessarily presuppose a trichotomous view of man's nature. While Apollinarianism, however, denied the human origin only of Christ's izvevpa, this theory extends the denial to his entire immaterial being, — his body alone being derived from the Virgin. It is held, in slightly varying forms, by the Germans, Hofmann and Ebrard, as well as by Gess ; and Henry Ward Beecher was its chief representative in America.
Against this theory we urge the following objections :
(a) It rests upon a false interpretation of the passage John 1 : 14 — 6 Xdyos cap% kyevero. The word adp§ here has its common New Testament meaning. It designates neither soul nor body alone, but human nature in its totality (c/. John 3 : 6 — to yeyevvq/uevov £« rijq capKJbq cap!- icriv ; Kom. 7 : 18 — ova oIkeI iv k/ioi, tovt' eotiv iv Ty caput, fiov, aya&dv ). That iyevero does not imply a transmutation of the Idyog into human nature, or into a human soul, is evident from icaipucEv which follows — an allusion to the Shechinah of the Mosaic tabernacle ; and from the parallel passage 1 John 4 : 2 — iv caput kXrjkv&oTa — where we are taught not only the oneness of Christ's person, but the distinctness of the constituent natures.
(6) It contradicts the two great classes of Scripture passages already referred to, which assert on the one hand the divine knowledge and power of Christ and his consciousness of oneness with the Father, and on the other hand the completeness of his human nature and its derivation from the stock of Israel and the seed of Abraham (Mat. 1 : 1-16 ; Heb. 2 : 16). Thus it denies both the true humanity, and the true deity, of Christ.
( e) It is inconsistent with the Scriptural representations of God's immu- tability, in maintaining that the Logos gives up the attributes of Godhead, and his place and office as second person of the Trinity, in order to contract himself into the limits of humanity. Since attributes and substance are correlative terms, it is impossible to hold that the substance of God is in Christ, so long as he does not possess divine attributes. As we shall see hereafter, however, the possession of divine attributes by Christ does not
THE TWO NATURES IN ONE PERSON. 185
necessarily imply his constant exercise of them. His humiliation indeed consisted in his giving up their independent exercise.
( d ) It is destructive of the whole Scriptural scheme of salvation, in that it renders impossible any experience of human naturo on the part of the divine, — for when God becomes man he ceases to be God ; in that it renders impossible any sufficient atonement on the part of human nature, — for mere humanity, even though its essence be a contracted and dormant deity, is not capable of a suffering which shall have infinite value ; in that it renders impossible any proper union of the human race with God in the person of Jesus Christ, — for where true deity and true humanity are both absent, there can be no union between the two.
B. Theory of a gradual incarnation — Dorner and Kothe hold that the union between the divine and the human natures is not completed by the incarnating act.
The advocates of this view maintain that the union between the two natures is accomplished by a gradual communication of the fulness of the divine Logos to the man Christ Jesus. This communication is mediated by the human consciousness of Jesus. Before the human consciousness begins, the personality of the Logos is not yet divine-human. The per- sonal union completes itself only gradually, as the human consciousness is sufficiently developed to appropriate the divine.
It is objectionable for the following reasons :
(a) The Scripture plainly teaches that that which was born of Mary was as completely Son of God as Son of man ( Luke 1 : 35 ) ; and that in the incarnating act, and not at his resurrection, Jesus Christ became the God-man (Phil. 2:7). But this theory virtually teaches the birth of a man who subsequently and gradually became the God-man, by consciously appropriating the Logos to whom he sustained ethical relations — relations with regard to which the Scripture is entirely silent. Its radical error is that of mistaking an incomplete consciousness of the union for an incomplete union.
( 6 ) Since consciousness and will belong to personality, as distinguished from nature, the hypothesis of a mutual, conscious, and voluntary appro- priation of divinity by humanity and of humanity by divinity, during the earthly life of Christ, is but a more subtle form of the Nestorian doctrine of a double personality. It follows, moreover, that as these two personal- ities do not become absolutely one until the resurrection, the death of the man Jesus Christ, to whom the Logos has not yet fully united himself, cannot possess an infinite atoning efficacy.
( c ) While this theory asserts a final complete union of God and man in Jesus Christ, it renders this union far more difficult to reason, by involving the merging of two persons in one, rather than the union of two natures in one person. We have seen, moreover, that the Scripture gives no coun- tenance to the doctrine of a double personality during the earthly life of Christ. The God-man never says : "I and the Logos are one " ; "he that hath seen me hath seen the Logos " ; "the Logos is greater than I " ; "I
186 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
go to the Logos." In the absence of all Scripture evidence in favor of this theory, we must regard the rational and dogmatic arguments against it as conclusive.
3. The real nature of this Union.
{a) Its great importance. — While the Scriptures represent the person of Christ as the crowning mystery of the Christian scheme ( Matt. 11 : 27 ; Col. 1 : 27 ; 2:2; 1 Tim. 3 : 16 ), they also incite us to its study ( John 17 : 3 ; 20 : 27 ; Luke 24 : 39 ; Phil. 3 : 8, 10 ). This is the more needful, since Christ is not only the central point of Christianity, but is Christianity itself — the embodied reconciliation and union between man and God. The following remarks are offered, not as fully explaining, but only as in some respects relieving, the difficulties of the subject.
( b ) The chief problems. — These problems are the following : 1. one personality and two natures ; 2. human nature without personality ; 3. relation of the Logos to the humanity during the earthly life of Christ ; 4. relation of the humanity to the Logos during the heavenly life of Christ. We may throw light on 1, by the figure of two concentric circles ; on 2, by remembering that two earthly parents unite in producing a single child ; on 3, by the illustration of latent memory, which contains so much more than present recollection ; on 4, by the thought that body is the manifes- tation of spirit, and that Christ in his heavenly state is not confined to place.
( c ) Reason for mysteiy. — The union of the two natures in Christ's person is necessarily inscrutable, because there are no analogies to it in our experi- ence. Attempts to illustrate it on the one hand from the union and yet the distinctness of soul and body, of iron and heat, and on the other hand from the union and yet the distinctness of Christ and the believer, of the divine Son and the Father, are one-sided and become utterly misleading, if they are regarded as furnishing a rationale of the union and not simply a means of repelling objection. The first two illustrations mentioned above lack the essential element of two natures to make them complete : soul and body are not two natures, but one, nor are iron and heat two substances. The last two illustrations mentioned above lack the element of single per- sonality : Christ and the believer are two persons, not one, even as the Son and the Father are not one person, but two.
[d) Ground of possibility. — The possibility of the union of deity and humanity in one person is grounded in the original creation of man in the divine image. Man's kinship to God, in other words, his possession of a rational and spiritual nature, is the condition of incarnation. Brute-life is incapable of union with God. But human nature is capable of the divine, in the sense not only that it lives, moves, and has its being in God, but that God may unite himself indissolubly to it and endue it with divine powers, while yet it remains all the more truly human. Since the moral image of God in human nature has been lost by sin, Christ, the perfect image of God after which man was originally made, restores that lost image by uniting himself to humanity and filling it with his divine life and love.
(e) No double personality. — This possession of two natures does not
THE TWO NATURES IN" ONE PERSON. 18?
involve n double personality in the God-man, for the reason that the Logos takes into union with himself, not an individual man with already devel- oped personality, but human nature which has had no separate existence before its union with tho divine. Christ's human nature is impersonal, in the sense that it attains self-consciousness and self-determination only in the personality of the God-man. Here it is important to mark the dis- tinction between nature and person. Nature is substance possessed in common ; the persons of the Trinity have one nature ; there is a common nut ure of mankind. Person is nature separately subsisting, with powers of consciousness and will. Since tho human nature of Christ has not and never had a separate subsistence, it is impersonal, and in the God-man the Logos furnishes the principle of personality. It is equally important to observe that self-consciousness and self-determination do not belong to nature as such, but only to personality. For this reason, Christ has not two consciousnesses and two wills, but a single consciousness and a single will. This consciousness and will, moreover, is never simply human, but is always theanthropic — an activity of the one personality which unites in itself the human and the divine ( Mark 13 : 32 ; Luke 22 : 42 ).
(/) Effect upon the human. — The union of the divine and the human natures makes the latter possessed of the powers belonging to the former ; in other words, the attributes of the divine nature are imparted to the human without passing over into its essence, — so that the human Christ even on earth had power to be, to know, and to do, as God. That this power was latent, or was only rarely manifested, was the result of the self- chosen state of humiliation upon which the God-man had entered. In this state of humiliation, the communication of the contents of his divine nature to the human was mediated by the Holy Spirit. The God-man, in his servant-form, knew and taught and performed only what the Spirit permitted and directed ( Mat. 3:16; John 3 : 34 ; Acts 1:2; 10 : 38 ; Heb. 9:14). But when thus permitted, he knew, taught, and performed, not, like the prophets, by power communicated from without, but by virtue of his own inner divine energy (Mat. 17 : 2 ; Mark 5 : 41 ; Luke 5 : 20, 21 ; 6 : 19 ; John 2 : 11, 24, 25 ; 3 : 13 ; 20 : 19 ).
(g) Effect upon the divine. — This communion of tho natures was such that, although the divine nature in itself is incapable of ignorance, weak- ness, temptation, suffering, or death, the one person Jesus Christ was capable of these by virtue of the union of the divine nature with a human nature in him. As the human Savior can exercise divine attributes, not in virtue of his humanity alone, but derivatively, by virtue of his possession of a divine nature, so the divine Savior can suffer and be ignorant as man, not in his divine nature, but derivatively, by virtue of his possession of a human nature. We may illustrate this from the connection between body and soul. The soul suffers pain from its union with the body, of which apart from the body it would be incapable. So the God-man, although in his divine nature impassible, was capable, through his union with human- ity, of absolutely infinite suffering.
(h) Necessity of the union. — The union of two natures in one person is necessary to constitute Jesus Christ a proper mediator between man and
188 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
God. His two-fold nature gives him fellowship with both parties, since it involves an equal dignity with God, and at the same time a perfect sympathy with man (Heb. 2 : 17, 18 ; 4 : 15, 16). This two-fold nature, moreover, enables him to present to both God and man proper terms of reconcilia- tion : being man, he can make atonement for man ; being God, his atone- ment has infinite value ; while both his divinity and his humanity combine to move the hearts of offenders and constrain them to submission and love (ITini. 2:5; Heb. 7 :25).
( i ) The union eternal. — The union of humanity with deity in the person of Christ is indissoluble and eternal. Unlike the avatars of the East, the incarnation was a permanent assumption of human nature by the second person of the Trinity. In the ascension of Christ, glorified humanity has attained the throne of the universe. By his Spirit, this same divine-human Savior is omnipresent to secure the progress of his kingdom. The final subjection of the Son to the Father, alluded to in 1 Cor. 15 : 28, cannot be other than the complete return of the Son to his original relation to the Father ; since, according to John 17 : 5, Christ is again to possess the glory which he had with the Father before the world was (c/. Heb. 1:8; 7:24,25).
(j) Infinite and finite in Christ. — Our investigation of the Scripture teaching with regard to the Person of Christ leads us to three important conclusions : 1. that deity and humanity, the infinite and the finite, in him are not mutually exclusive ; 2. that the humanity in Christ differs from his deity not merely in degree but also in kind ; and 3. that this difference in kind is the difference between the infinite original and the finite deriva- tive, so that Christ is the source of life, both physical and spiritual, for all men.
SECTION III. — THE TWO STATES OF CHRIST.
I. The State of Humiliation.
1. The nature of this humiliation.
We may dismiss, as unworthy of serious notice, the views that it consisted essentially either in the union of the Logos with human nature, — for this union with human nature continues in the state of exaltation ; or in the outward trials and privations of Christ's human life, — for this view casts reproach upon poverty, and ignores the power of the soul to rise superior to its outward circumstances.
"We may devote more attention to the
A. Theory ofThomasius, Delitzsch, and Crosby, that the humiliation consisted in the surrender of the relative divine attributes.
This theory holds that the Logos, although retaining his divine self- consciousness and his immanent attributes of holiness, love, and truth, surrendered his relative attributes of omniscience, omnipotence, and omni-
THE STATE OF HUMILIATION. 189
presence, in order to take to himself veritable human nature. According to this view, there are, indeed, two natures in Christ, but neither of these natures is infinite. Thoniasius and Delitzsch are the chief advocates of this theory in Germany. Dr. Howard Crosby has maintained a similar view in America.
We object to this view that :
( a ) It contradicts the Scriptures already referred to, in which Christ assorts his divine knowledge and power. Divinity, it is said, can give up its world-functions, for it existed without these before creation. But to give up divine attributes is to give up the substance of Godhead. Nor is it a sufficient reply to say that only the relative attributes are given up, while the immanent attributes, which chiefly characterize the Godhead, are retained ; for the immanent necessarily involve the relative, as the greater involve the less.
( b ) Since the Logos, in uniting himself to a human soul, reduces him- self to the condition and limitations of a human soul, the theory is virtually a theory of the coexistence of two human souls in Christ. But the union of two finite souls is more difficult to explain than the union of a finite and an infinite, — since there can be in the former case no intelligent guidance and control of the human element by the divine.
( c ) This theory fails to secure its end, that of making comprehensible the human development of Jesus, — for even though divested of the relative attributes of Godhood, the Logos still retains his divine self-consciousness, together with his immanent attributes of holiness, love, and truth. This is as difficult to reconcile with a purely natural human development as the possession of the relative divine attributes woidd be. The theory logically leads to a further denial of the possession of any divine attributes, or of any divine consciousness at all, on the part of Christ, and merges itself in the view of Gess and Beecher, that the Godhead of the Logos is actually transformed into a human soid.
B. Theory that the humiliation consisted in the surrender of the inde- pendent exercise of the divine attributes.
This theory, which we regard as the most satisfactory of all, may be more fully set forth as follows. The humiliation, as the Scriptures seem to show, consisted :
( a ) La that act of the preexistent Logos by which he gave up his divine glory with the Father, in order to take a servant-form. In this act, he resigned not the possession, nor yet entirely the use, but rather the inde- pendent exercise, of the divine attributes.
( b ) In the submission of the Logos to the control of the Holy Spirit and the Limitations of his Messianic mission, in his communication of the divine fulness of the human nature which he had taken into union with himself.
( c ) In the continuous surrender, on the part of the God-man, so far as his human nature was concerned, of the exercise of those divine powers with which it was endowed by virtue of its union with the divine, and in
190 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
the voluntary acceptance, which followed upon this, of temptation, suffer- ing, and death.
Each of these elements of the doctrine has its own Scriptural support. We must therefore regard the humiliation of Christ, not as consisting in a single act, but as involving a continuous self-renunciation, which began with the Kenosis of the Logos in becoming man, and which culminated in the self-subjection of the God-man to the death of the cross.
2. The stages of Christ's humiliation.
We may distinguish : ( a ) That act of the pre'incarnate Logos by which, in becoming man, he gave up the independent exercise of the divine attri- butes. ( 6 ) His submission to the common laws which regulate the origin of souls from a preexisting sinful stock, in taking his human nature from the Virgin, — a human nature which only the miraculous conception ren- dered pure. ( c ) His subjection to the limitations involved in a human growth and development, — reaching the consciousness of hissonship at his twelfth year, and working no miracles till after the baptism, (d) The subordination of himself, in state, knowledge, teaching, and acts, to the control of the Holy Spirit, — so living, not independently, but as a servant, (e ) His subjection, as connected with a sinful race, to temptation and suf- fering, and finally to the death which constituted the penalty of the law.
II. The State of Exaltation.
1. The nature of this exaltation.
It consisted essentially in : ( a ) A resumption, on the part of the Logos, of his independent exercise of divine attributes. ( b ) The withdrawal, on the part of the Logos, of all limitations in his communication of the divine fulness to the human nature of Christ. ( c ) The corresponding exercise, on the part of the human nature, of those powers which belonged to it by virtue of its union with the divine.
2. The stages of Christ's exaltation.
(a) The quickening and resurrection.
Both Lutherans and Bomanists distinguish between these two, making the former precede, and the latter follow, Christ's "preaching to the spir- its in prison." These views rest upon a misinterpretation of 1 Pet. 3 : 18- 20. Lutherans teach that Christ descended into hell, to proclaim his triumph to evil spirits. But this is to give kicfrpvi-ev the unusual sense of proclaiming his triumph, instead of his gospel. Bomanists teach that Christ entered the underworld to preach to Old Testament saints, that they might be saved. But the passage speaks only of the disobedient ; it can- not be pressed into the support of a sacramental theory of the salvation of Old Testament believers. The passage does not assert the descent of Christ into the world of spirits, but only a work of the pre'incarnate Logos in offering salvation, through Noah, to the world then about to perish.
( b ) The ascension and sitting at the right hand of God.
As the resurrection proclaimed Christ to men as the perfected and glori- fied man, the conqueror of sin and lord of death, the ascension proclaimed
THE PBOPHETIO OFFICE OB 0HRI8T. 191
him to the universe as the reinstated God, the possessor of universal dominion, the omnipresent object of worship and hearer of prayer. Dex- tra Dei ubique est.
SECTION IV. — THE OFFICES OF CHRIST.
The Scriptures represent Christ's offices as three in number, — prophetic, priestly, and kingly. Although these terms are derived from concrete human relations, they express perfectly distinct ideas. The prophet, the priest, and the king, of the Old Testament, were detached but designed prefigurations of him who should combine all these various activities in himself, and should furnish the ideal reality, of which they were the imperfect symbols.
I. The Prophetic Office of Christ.
1. The nature of Christ's prophetic work.
(a) Here we must avoid the narrow interpretation which would make the prophet a mere foreteller of future events. He was rather an inspired interpreter or revealer of the divine will, a medium of communication between God and men ( npoff/rr/g = not foreteller, but forteller, or forth- teller. Cf. Gen. 20 : 7, — of Abraham ; Ps. 105 : 15, — of the patriarchs ; Mat. 11 : 9,— of John the Baptist ; 1 Cor. 12 : 28, Eph. 2 : 20, and 3 : 5,— of N. T. expounders of Scripture).
( b ) The prophet commonly united three methods of fulfilling his office, — those of teaching, predicting, and miracle-working. In all these respects, Jesus Christ did the work of a prophet ( Deut. 18 : 15 ; cf. Acts 3 : 22 ; Mat. 13 :57; Luke 13 : 33 ; John 6 :14). He taught (Mat. 5-7), he uttered predictions (Mat. 24 and 25 ), he wrought miracles ( Mat. 8 and 9 ), while in his person, his life, his work, and his death, he revealed the Father (John 8 : 26; 14:9; 17 : 8 ).
2. TJie stages of Christ's prophetic work.
These are four, namely:
( a ) The preparatory work of the Logos, in enlightening mankind before the time of Christ's advent in the flesh. — All preliminary religious knowl- edge, whether within or without the bounds of the chosen people, is from Christ, the revealer of God.
( b ) The earthly ministry of Christ incarnate. — In his earthly ministry, Christ showed himself the prophet par excellence. While he submitted, like the Old Testament prophets, to the direction of the Holy Spirit, unlike them, he found the sources of all knowledge and power within himself. The word of God did not come to him, — he was himself the Word.
( c ) The guidance and teaching of his church on earth, since his ascen- sion.— Christ's prophetic activity is continued through the preaching of his apostles and ministers, and by the enhghtening influences of his Holy
192 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
Spirit ( John 16 : 12-14 ; Acts 1:1). The apostles unfolded the germs of doctrine put into their hands by Christ. The church is, in a derivative sense, a prophetic institution, established to teach the world by its preach- ing and its ordinances. But Christians are prophets, only as being pro- claimers of Christ's teaching ( Num. 11 : 29 ; Joel 2 : 28 ).
( d ) Christ's final revelation of the Father to his saints in glory ( John 16 : 25 ; 17 : 21, 26 ; cf. Is. 64 : 4 ; 1 Cor. 13 : 12).— Thus Christ's prophetic work will be an endless one, as the Father whom he reveals is infinite.
II. The Priestly Office of Chbist.
The priest was a person divinely appointed to transact with God on man's behalf. He fulfilled his office, first by offering sacrifice, and secondly by making intercession. In both these respects Christ is priest.
1. Christ's Sacrificial Work, or the Doctrine of the Atonement.
The Scriptures teach that Christ obeyed and suffered in our stead, to satisfy an immanent demand of the divine holiness, and thus remove an obstacle in the divine mind to the pardon and restoration of the guilty. This statement may be expanded and explained in a preliminary way as follows : —
( a ) The fundamental attribute of God is holiness, and holiness is not self-communicating love, but self-affirming righteousness. Holiness limits and conditions love, for love can will happiness only as happiness results from or consists with righteousness, that is, with conformity to God.
( b ) The universe is a reflection of God, and Christ the Logos is its life. God has constituted the universe, and humanity as a part of it, so as to express his holiness, positively by connecting happiness with righteous- ness, negatively by attaching unhappiness or suffering to sin.
( c ) Christ the Logos, as the Bevealer of God in the universe and in humanity, must condemn sin by visiting upon it the suffering which is its penalty ; while at the same time, as the Life of humanity, he must endure the reaction of God's holiness against sin which constitutes that penalty.
( d ) Our personality is not self-contained. We live, move, and have our being naturally in Christ the Logos. Our reason, affection, conscience, and will are complete only in him. He is generic humanity, of which we are the offshoots. "When his righteousness condemns sin, and his love vol- untarily endures the suffering which is sin's penalty, humanity ratifies the judgment of God, makes full propitiation for sin, and satisfies the demands of holiness.
( e ) While Christ's love explains his willingness to endure suffering for us, only his holiness furnishes the reason for that constitution of the uni- verse and of human nature which makes this suffering necessary. As respects us, his sufferings are substitutionary, since his divinity and his sinlessness enable him to do for us what we could never do for ourselves. Yet this substitution is also a sharing — not the work of one external to us, but of one who is the life of humanity, the soul of our soul and the life of our lif e, and so responsible with us for the sins of the race.
THE PRIESTLY OFFICE OF CHRIST. 193
(/) The historical work of tho incarnate Christ is not itself the atone- ment,— it is rather the revelation of the atonement. The suffering of the incarnate Christ is the manifestation in space and time of the eternal suf- fering of God on account of human sin. Yet without the historical work which was finished on Calvary, the age-long suffering of God could never have been made comprehensible to men.
( g ) The historical sacrifice of our Lord is not only the final revelation of the heart of God, but also the manifestation of the law of universal life — the law that sin brings suffering to all connected with it, and that we can overcome sin in ourselves and in the world only by entering into the fellowship of Christ's sufferings and Christ's victory, or, in other words, only by union with him through faith.
A. Scripture Methods of Kepresenting the Atonement. We may classify the Scripture representations according as they conform to moral, commercial, legal or sacrificial analogies.
( a ) Moral. — The atonement is described as
A provision originating in God's love, and manifesting this love to the universe ; but also as an example of disinterested love, to secure our deliverance from selfishness. — In these latter passages, Christ's death is referred to as a source of moral stimulus to men.
( o ) Commercial. — The atonement is described as
A ransom, paid to free us from the bondage of sin ( note in these pas- sages the use of avrit the preposition of price, bargain, exchange). — In these passages, Christ's death is represented as the price of our deliverance from sin and death.
( c ) Legal. — The atonement is described as
An act of obedience to the law which sinners had violated ; a penalty, borne in order to rescue the guilty ; and an exhibition of God's righteous- ness, necessary to the vindication of his procedure in the pardon and resto- ration of sinners. — In these passages the death of Christ is represented as demanded by God's law and government.
( d ) Sacrificial. — The atonement is described as
A work of priestly mediation, which reconciles God to men, — notice here that the term ' reconciliation ' has its usual sense of removing enmity, not from the offending, but from the offended party ; — & sin-offering, pre- sented on behalf of transgressors ; — a propitiation, which satisfies the demands of violated holiness; — and a substitution, of Christ's obedience and sufferings for ours. — These passages, taken together, show that Christ's death is demanded by God's attribute of justice, or holiness, if sin- ners are to be saved.
An examination of the passages referred to shows that, while the forms in which the atoning work of Christ is described are in part derived from moral, commercial, and legal relations, the prevailing language is that of sacrifice. A correct view of the atonement must therefore be grounded upon a proper interpretation of the institution of sacrifice, especially as found in the Mosaic system.
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B. The Institution of Sacrifice, more especially as found in the Mosaic system.
( a ) We may dismiss as untenable, on the one hand, the theory that sacrifice is essentially the presentation of a gift ( Hofmann, Baring- Gould ) or a feast ( Spencer ) to the Deity ; and on the other hand the theory that sacrifice is a symbol of renewed fellowship ( Keil ), or of the grateful offer- ing to God of the whole life and being of the worshiper ( Bahr ). Neither of these theories can explain the fact that the sacrifice is a bloody offering, involving the suffering and death of the victim, and brought, not by the simply grateful, but by the conscience-stricken soul.
( 5 ) The true import of the sacrifice, as is abundantly evident from both heathen and Jewish sources, embraced three elements, — first, that of satis- faction to offended Deity, or propitiation offered to violated holiness ; sec- ondly, that of substitution of suffering and death on the part of the innocent, for the deserved punishment of the guilty ; and, thirdly, community of life between the offerer and the victim. Combining these three ideas, we have as the total import of the sacrifice : Satisfaction by substitution, and substitution by incorporation. The bloody sacrifice among the heathen expressed the consciousness that sin involves guilt ; that guilt exposes man to the righteous wrath of God ; that without expiation of that guilt there is no forgiveness ; and that through the suffering of another who shares his life the sinner may expiate his sin.
( c ) In considering the exact purport and efficacy of the Mosaic sacri- fices, we must distinguish between their theocratical, and their spiritual, offices. They were, on the one hand, the appointed means whereby the offender could be restored to the outward place and privileges, as member of the theocracy, which he had forfeited by neglect or transgression ; and they accomplished this purpose irrespectively of the temper and spirit with which they were offered. On the other hand, they were symbolic of the vicarious sufferings and death of Christ, and obtained forgiveness and acceptance with God only as they were offered in true penitence, and with faith in God's method of salvation.
( d ) Thus the Old Testament sacrifices, when rightly offered, involved a consciousness of sin on the part of the worshiper, the bringing of a victim to atone for the sin, the laying of the hand of the offerer upon the victim's head, the confession of sin by the offerer, the slaying of the beast, the sprinkling or pouring-out of the blood upon the altar, and the consequent forgiveness of the sin and acceptance of the worshiper. The sin-offering and the scape-goat of the great day of atonement symbolized yet more dis- tinctly the two elementary ideas of sacrifice, namely, satisfaction and sub- stitution, together with the consequent removal of guilt from those on whose behalf the sacrifice was offered.
( e ) It is not essential to this view to maintain that a formal divine insti- tution of the rite of sacrifice, at man's exjmlsion from Eden, can be proved from Scripture. Like the family and the state, sacrifice may, without such formal incidcation, possess divine sanction, and be ordained of God. The well-nigh universal prevalence of sacrifice, however, together with the fact
SOCINIAN THEORY OF THE ATONEMENT. 195
that its nature, as a bloody offering, seems to preclude man's own invention of it, combines with, certain Scripture intimations to favor the view that it was a primitive divine appointment. From the time of Moses, there can be no question as to its divine authority.
(/) The New Testament assumes and presupposes the Old Testament doctrine of sacrifice. The sacrificial language in which its descriptions of Christ's work are clothed cannot be explained as an accommodation to Jewish methods of thought) since this terminology was iu large part in common use among the heathen, and Paul used it more than any other of the apostles in dealing with the Gentiles. To deny to it its Old Testament meaning, when used by New Testament winters to describe the work of Christ, is to deny any proper inspiration both in the Mosaic appointment of sacrifices and in the apostolic interpretations of them. We must there- fore maintain, as the result of a simple induction of Scripture facts, that the death of Christ is a vicarious offering, provided by God's love for the purpose of satisfying an internal demand of the divine holiness, and of removing an obstacle in the divine mind to the renewal and pardon of sinners.
C. Theories of the Atonement.
1st The Socinian, or Example Theory of the Atonement.
This theory holds that subjective sinfulness is the sole barrier between man and God. Not God, but only man, needs to be reconciled. The only method of reconciliation is to better man's moral condition. This can be effected by man's own will, through repentance and reformation. The death of Christ is but the death of a noble martyr. He redeems us, only as his human example of faithfvdness to truth and duty has a powerful influence upon our moral improvement. This fact the apostles, either consciously or unconsciously, clothed in the language of the Greek and Jewish sacrifices. This theory was fully elaborated by Lrelius Socinus and Faustus Socinus of Poland, in the 16th century. Its modem advocates are found in the Unitarian body.
To this theory we make the following objections :
( a ) It is based upon false philosophical principles, — as, for example, that will is merely the faculty of volitions ; that the foundation of virtue is in utility ; that law is an expression of arbitrary will ; that penalty is a means of reforming the offender ; that righteousness, in either God or man, is only a manifestation of benevolence.
( b ) It is a natural outgrowth from the Pelagian view of sin, and logi- cally necessitates a curtailment or surrender of every other characteristic doctrine of Christianity — inspiration, sin, the deity of Christ, justification, regeneration, and eternal retribution.
( c ) It contradicts the Scripture teachings, that sin involves objective guilt as well as subjective defilement ; that the holiness of God must punish sin ; that the atonement was a bearing of the punishment of sin for men ; and that this vicarious bearing of punishment was necessary, on the part of God, to make possible the showing of favor to the guilty.
196 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
( d ) It furnishes no proper explanation of the sufferings and death of Christ. The unrnartyrlike anguish cannot be accounted for, and the for- saking by the Father cannot be justified, upon the hypothesis that Christ died as a mere witness to truth. If Christ's sufferings were not propitia- tory, they neither furnish us with a perfect example, nor constitute a mani- festation of tbe love of God.
( e ) The influence of Christ's example is neither declared in Scripture, nor found in Christian experience, to be the chief result secured by his death. Mere example is but a new preaching of the law, which repels and condemns. The cross has power to lead men to holiness, only as it first shows a satisfaction made for their sius. Accordingly, most of the passages which represent Christ as an example also contain references to his propi- tiatory work.
(/) This theory contradicts the whole tenor of the New Testament, in making the life, and not the death, of Christ the most significant and important feature of his work. The constant allusions to the death of Christ as the source of our salvation, as well as the symbolism of the ordi- nances, cannot be explained upon a theory which regards Christ as a mere example, and considers his sufferings as incidents, rather than essentials, of his work.
2nd. The Bushnellian, or Moral Influence Theory of the Atonement.
This holds, like the Socinian, that there is no principle of the divine nature which is propitiated by Christ's death; but that this death is a mani- festation of the love of God, suffering in and with the sins of his creatures. Christ's atonement, therefore, is the merely natural consequence of his taking human nature upon him ; and is a suffering, not of penalty in man's stead, but of the combined woes and griefs which the living of a human life involves. This atonement has effect, not to satisfy divine justice, but so to reveal divine love as to soften human hearts and to lead them to repentance ; in other words, Christ's sufferings were necessary, not in order to remove an obstacle to the pardon of sinners which exists in the mind of I God, but in order to convince sinners that there exists no such obsta- cle. This theory, for substance, has been advocated by Bushnell, in America ; by Bobertson, Maurice, Campbell, and Young, in Great Britain ; by Sckleiermacher and Bitschl, in Germany.
To this theory we object as follows :
(a) While it embraces a valuable element of truth, namely, the moral influence upon men of the sufferings of the God-man, it is false by defect, in that it substitutes a subordinate effect of the atonement for its chief aim, and yet unfairly appropriates the name 'vicarious,' which belongs only to the latter. Suffering with the sinner is by no means suffering in his stead.
( b ) It rests upon false philosophical principles, — as, that righteousness is identical with benevolence, instead of conditioning it ; that God is sub- ject to an eternal law of love, instead of being himself the source of all law; that the aim of penalty is the reformation of the offender.
(c) The theory furnishes no proper reason for Christ's suffering. While it shows that the Savior necessarily suffers from his contact with human
GROTIAN THEORY OF THE ATONEMENT. 197
sin and sorrow, it gives no explanation of that constitution of the universe which makes suffering the oonsequenoe <>f sin, nut only to the sinner, but also to the innocent being who comes into connection with sin. The holi- ness of God, which is manifested in this constitution of things and which requires this atonement, is entirely ignored.
( d ) It contradicts the plain teachings of Scripture, that the atonement is necessary, not simply to reveal God's love, but to satisfy his justice ; that Christ's sufferings are propitiatory and penal ; and that the human conscience needs to be propitiated by Christ's sacrifice, before it can feel the moral influence of his sufferings.
(e ) It can be maintained, only by wresting from their obvious meaning those passages of Scripture which speak of Christ as suffering for our sins ; which represent his blood as accomplishing something for us in heaven, when presented there by our intercessor ; which declare forgiveness to be a remitting of past offences upon the ground of Christ's death ; and which describe justification as a pronouncing, not a making, just.
(/) This theory confounds God's method of saving men with men's experience of being saved. It makes the atonement itself consist of its effects in the believer's union with Christ and the purifying influence of that union upon the character and life.
( g ) This theory would confine the influence of the atonement to those who have heard of it, — thus excluding patriarchs and heathen. But the Scriptures represent Christ as being the Savior of all men, in the sense of securing them grace, which, but for his atoning work, could never have been bestowed consistently with the divine holiness.
3d. The Grotian, or Governmental Theoiy of the Atonement.
This theory holds that the atonement is a satisfaction, not to any inter- nal principle of the divine nature, but to the necessities of government. God's government of the universe cannot be maintained, nor can the divine law preserve its authority over its subjects, unless the pardon of offenders is accompanied by some exhibition of the high estimate which God sets upon his law, and the heinous guilt of violating it. Such an exhibition of divine regard for the law is furnished in the sufferings and death of Christ. Christ does not suffer the precise penalty of the law, but God graciously accepts his suffering as a substitute for the penalty. This bearing of substituted suffering on the part of Christ gives the divine law such hold upon the consciences and hearts of men, that God can pardon the guilty upon their repentance, without detriment to the interests of his government. The author of this theory was Hugo Grotius, the Dutch jur- ist and theologian ( 1583-1645 ). The theory is characteristic of the New England theology, and is generally held by those who accept the New School view of sin.
To this theory we urge the following objections :
(a) While it contains a valuable element of truth, namely, that the suf- ferings and death of Christ secure the interests of God's government, it is false by defect, in substituting for the chief aim of the atonement one which is only subordinate and incidental.
198 S0TEK10L0GY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
( b ) It rests upon false philosophical principles, — as, that utility is the ground of moral obligation ; that law is an expression of the 'will, rather than of the nature, of God ; that the aim of penalty is to deter from the com- mission of offences ; and that righteousness is resolvable into benevolence.
( c ) It ignores and virtually denies that immanent holiness of God of which the law with its threatened penalties, and the human conscience with its demand for punishment, are only finite reflections. There is some- thing back of government ; if the atonement satisfies government, it must be by satisfying that justice of God of which government is an expression.
( e ) The intensity of Christ's sufferings in the garden and on the cros s is inexplicable upon the theory that the atonement was a histrionic exhibi- tion of God's regard for his government, and can be explained only upon the view that Christ actually endured the wrath of God against human sin.
( d ) It makes that to be an exhibition of justice which is not an exercise of justice ; the atonement being, according to this theory, not an execution of law, but an exhibition of regard for law, which will make it safe to par- don the violators of law. Such a merely scenic representation can inspire respect for law, only so long as the essential unreality of it is unsuspected.
(/) The actual power of the atonement over the human conscience and heart is due, not to its exhibiting God's regard for law, but to its exhibit- ing an actual execution of law, and an actual satisfaction of violated holiness made by Christ in the sinner's stead.
(g) The theory contradicts all those passages of Scripture which repre- sent the atonement as necessary ; as propitiating God himself ; as being a revelation of God's righteousness ; as being an execution of the penalty of the law ; as making salvation a matter of debt to the believer, on the ground of what Christ has done ; as actually purging our sins, instead of making that purging possible ; as not simply assuring the sinner that God may now pardon him on account of what Christ has done, but that Christ has actually wrought out a complete salvation, and will bestow it upon all who come to him.
4th. The Irvingian Theory, or Theory of Gradually Extirpated De- pravity.
This holds that, in his incarnation, Christ took human nature as it was in Adam, not before the Fall, but after the Fall, — humau nature, therefore, with its inborn corruption and predisposition to moral evil ; that, notwith- standing the possession of this tainted and depraved nature, Christ, through the power of the Holy Spirit, or of his divine nature, not only kept his human nature from manifesting itself in any actual or personal sin, but gradually purified it, through struggle and suffering, until in his death he completely extirpated its original depravity, and reunited it to God. This subjective purification of human nature in the person of Jesus Christ con- stitutes his atonement, and men are saved, not by any objective propitiation, but only by becoming through faith partakers of Christ's new humanity. This theory was elaborated by Edward Irving, of London ( 1792-1834), and it has been held, in substance, by Menken and Dippel in Germany.
ANSELMIC THEORY OF THE ATONEMENT. l'J9
To this theory we offer the following objections :
( a ) While it embraces an important element of truth, namely, the fact of a new humanity in Christ of which all believers become partakers, it is chargeable with serious error in denying the objective atonement which makes the subjective application possible.
( b ) It rests upon false fundamental principles, — as, that law is identical with the natural order of the universe, and as such, is an exhaustive expres- sion of the will and nature of God ; that sin is merely a power of moral evil within the soul, instead of also involving an objective guilt and desert of punishment ; that penalty is the mere reaction of law against the trans- gressor, instead of being also the revelation of a personal wrath against sin ; that the evil taint of human nature can be extirpated by suffering its natural consequences, — penalty in this way reforming the transgressor.
( c ) It contradicts the express and implicit representations of Scripture, with regard to Christ's freedom from all taint of hereditary depravity ; mis- represents his life as a growing consciousness of the underlying corruption of his human nature, which culminated at Gethsemane and Calvary ; and denies the truth of his own statements, when it declares that he must have died on account of his own depravity, even though none were to be saved thereby.
(d) It makes the active obedience of Christ, and the subjective purifi- cation of his human nature, to be the chief features of his work, while the Scriptures make his death and passive bearing of penalty the centre of all, and ever regard him as one who is personally pure and who vicariously bears the punishment of the guilty.
(e) It necessitates the surrender of the doctrine of justification as a merely declaratory act of God ; and requires such a view of the divine holi- ness, expressed only through the order of nature, as can be maintained only upon principles of pantheism.
5th. The Anselmic, or Commercial Theory of the Atonement.
This theoiy holds that sin is a violation of the divine honor or majesty, and, as committed against an infinite being, deserves an infinite punish- ment ; that the majesty of God requires him to execute punishment, while the love of God pleads for the sparing of the guilty ; that this conflict of divine attributes is eternally reconciled by the voluntary sacrifice of the God-man, who bears in virtue of the dignity of his person the intensively infinite punishment of sin, which must otherwise have been suffered exten- sively and eternally by sinners ; that this suffering of the God-man presents to the divine majesty an exact equivalent for the deserved sufferings of the elect ; and that, as the residt of this satisfaction of the divine claims, the elect sinners are pardoned and regenerated. This view was first broached by Anselm of Canterbury (1033-1109) as a substitute for the earlier patris- tic view that Christ's death was a ransom paid to Satan, to deliver sinners from his power. It is held by many Scotch theologians, and, in this country, by the Princeton School.
200 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
To this theory we make the following objections :
( a ) While it contains a valuable element of truth, in its representation of the atonement as satisfying a principle of the divine nature, it conceives of this principle in too formal and external a manner, — making the idea of the divine honor or majesty more prominent than that of the divine holi- ness, in which the divine honor and majesty are grounded.
( b ) In its eagerness to maintain the atoning efficacy of Christ's passive obedience, the active obedience, quite as clearly expressed in Scripture, is insufficiently emphasized and well nigh lost sight of.
( c ) It allows disproportionate weight to those passages of Scripture which represent the atonement under commercial analogies, as the pay- ment of a debt or ransom, to the exclusion of those which describe it as an ethical fact, whose value is to be estimated not quantitatively, but qualitatively.
( d ) It represents the atonement as having reference only to the elect, I and ignores the Scripture declarations that Christ died for all.
( e ) It is defective in holding to a merely external transfer of the merit of Christ's work, while it does not clearly state the internal ground of that transfer, in the union of the believer with Christ.
6th. The Ethical Theory of the Atonement.
In propounding what we conceive to be the true theory of the atone- ment, it seems desirable to divide our treatment into two parts. No theory can be satisfactory which does not furnish a solution of the two problems : 1. What did the atonement accomplish ? or, in other words, what was the object of Christ's death ? The answer to this question must be a descrip- tion of the atonement in its relation to holiness in God. 2. What were the means used? or, in other words, how could Christ justly die ? The answer to this question must be a description of the atonement as arising from Christ's relation to humanity. We take up these two parts of the subject in order.
First, — the Atonement as related to Holiness in God.
The Ethical theory holds that the necessity of the atonement is grounded in the holiness of God, of which conscience in man is a finite reflection. There is an ethical principle in the divine nature, which demands that sin shall be punished. Aside from its results, sin is essentially ill-deserving. As we who are made in God's image mark our growth in purity by the increasing quickness with which we detect impurity, and the increasing hatred which we feel toward it, so infinite purity is a consuming fire to all iniquity. As there is an ethical demand in our nahires that not only others' wickedness, but our own wickedness, be visited with punishment, and a keen conscience cannot rest till it has made satisfaction to justice for its misdeeds, so there is an ethical demand of God's nature that penalty follow sin.
Punishment is the constitutional reaction of God's being against moral evil — the self-assertion of infinite holiness against its antagonist and
ETHICAL THEORY OF TUE ATONEMENT. 201
would-be destroyer. In God this demand is devoid of all passion, and is consistent with infinite benevolence. It is a demand that eunnot be evaded, since the holiness from which it springs is unchanging. The atonement is therefore a satisfaction of the ethical demand of the divine nature, by the substitution of Christ's penal sufferings for the punishment of the gtulty.
This substitution is unknown to mere law, and above and beyond the powers of law. It is an operation of grace. Grace, however, does not violate or suspend law, but takes it up into itself and fidfils it. The right- eousness of law is maintained, in that the source of all law, the judge and punisher, himself voluntarily submits to bear the penalty, and bears it in the human nature that has sinned.
Thus the atonement answers the ethical demand of the divine nature that sin be punished if the offender is to go free. The interests of the divine government are secured as a first subordinate result of this satisfac- tion to God himself, of whose nature the government is an expression ; while, as a second subordinate result, provision is made for the needs of human nature, — on the one hand the need of an objective satisfaction to its ethical demand of punishment for sin, and on the other the need of a manifestation of divine love and mercy that will affect the heart and move it to repentance.
Secondly, — the Atonement as related to Humanity in Christ.
The Ethical Theory of the atonement holds that Christ stands in such relation to humanity, that what God's holiness demands Christ is under obligation to pay, longs to pay, inevitably does pay, and pays so fnlly, in virtue of his two-fold nature, that every claim of justice is satisfied, and the sinner who accepts what Christ has done in his behalf is saved.
We have seen how God can justly demand satisfaction ; we now show how Christ can justly make it ; or, in other words, how the innocent can justly suffer for the guilty. The solution of the problem lies in Christ's union with humanity. The first result of that union is obligation to suffer for men ; since, being one with the race, Christ had a share in the respon- sibility of the race to the law and the justice of God. In him humanity was created ; at every stage of its existence humanity was upheld by his power ; as the immanent God he was the life of the race and of every member of it. Christ's sharing of man's life justly and inevitably sub- jected him to man's exposures and liabilities, and especially to God's condemnation on account of sin.
Christ's share in the responsibility of the race to the law and justice of God was not destroyed by his incarnation, nor by his purification in the womb of the virgin. In virtue of the organic unity of the race, each mem- ber of the race since Adam has been bom into the same state into which Adam fell. The consequences of Adam's sin, both to himself and to his posterity, are : ( 1 ) depravity, or the corruption of human nature ; ( 2 ) guilt, or obligation to make satisfaction for sin to the divine holiness ; ( 3 ) penalty, or actual endurance of loss or suffering visited by that holi- ness upon the guilty.
202 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION".
If Christ had been born into the world by ordinary generation, be too would have had depravity, guilt, penalty. But he was not so born. In the womb of the Virgin, the human nature which he took was purged from its depravity. But this purging away of depravity did not take away guilt, or penalty. There was still left the just exposure to the penalty of violated law. Although Christ's nature was purified, his obligation to suffer yet remained. He might have declined to join himself to humanity, and then he need not have suffered. He might have sundered his connection with the race, and then he need not have suffered. But once born of the Virgin, once possessed of the human nature that was under the curse, he was bound to suffer. The whole mass and weight of God's displeasure against the race fell on him, when once he became a member of the race.
Notice, however, that this guilt which Christ took upon himself by his union with humanity was : ( 1 ) not the guilt of personal sin — such guilt as belongs to every adult member of the race ; ( 2 ) not even the guilt of inherited depravity — such guilt as belongs to infants, and to those who have not come to moral consciousness ; but ( 3 ) solely the guilt of Adam's sin, which belongs, prior to personal transgression, and apart from inherited depravity, to every member of the race who has derived his life from Adam. This original sin and inherited guilt, but without the depravity that ordina- rily accompanies them, Christ takes, and so takes away. He can justly bear penalty, because he inherits guilt. And since this guilt is not his per- sonal guilt, but the guilt of that one sin in which "all sinned" — the guilt of the common transgression of the race in Adam, the guilt of the root-sin from which all other sins have sprang — he who is personally pure can vicariously bear the penalty due to the sin of all.
If it be asked whether this is not simply a suffering for his own sin, or rather for his own share of the sin of the race, we reply that his own share in the sin of the race is not the sole reason why he suffers ; it furnishes only the subjective reason and ground for the proper laying upon him of the sin of all. Christ's union with the race in his incarnation is only the outward and visible expression of a prior union with the race which began when he created the race. As "in him were all things created," and as "in him all things consist," or hold together (Col. 1 : 16, 17), it follows that he who is the life of humanity must, though personally pure, be involved in responsibility for all human sin, and "it was necessary that the Christ should suffer " ( Acts 17:3). This suffering was an enduring of the reaction of the divine holiness against sin and so was a bearing of penalty ( Is. 53 : 6 ; Gal. 3 : 13 ), but it was also the voluntary execution of a plan that antedated creation (Phil. 2 : 6, 7 ), and Christ's sacrifice in time showed what had been in the heart of God from eternity ( Heb. 9 : 14 ; Kev. 13 : 8 ).
The Atonement, then, on the part of God, has its ground ( 1 ) in the holiness of God, which must visit sin with condemnation, even though this condemnation brings death to his Son ; and ( 2 ) in the love of God, which itself provides the sacrifice, by suffering in and with his Son for the sins of men, but through that suffering opening a way and means of salvation.
The Atonement, on the part of man, is accomplished through ( 1 ) the solidarity of the race ; of which ( 2 ) Christ is the life, and so its repre-
ETHICAL THEORY OF THE ATONEMENT. 203
sentative and surety ; ( 3 ) justly yet voluntarily bearing its guilt and shame and condemnation as his own.
Christ therefore, as incarnate, rather revealed the atonement than made it. The historical work of atonement was finished upon the Cross, but that historical work only revealed to men the atonement made both before and since by the extra-mundane Logos. The eternal Love of God suffer- ing the necessary reaction of his own Holiness against the sin of his creatures and with a view to their salvation — this is the essence of the Atonement.
In favor of the Substitutionary or Ethical view of the atonement we may urge the following considerations :
(a) It rests upon correct philosophical principles with regard to the nature of will, law, sin, penalty, righteousness.
( 6 ) It combines in itself all the valuable elements in the theories before mentioned, while it avoids their inconsistencies, by showing the deeper principle upon which each of these elements is based.
( c ) It most fully meets the requirements of Scripture, by holding that the necessity of the atonement is absolute, since it rests upon the demands of immanent holiness, the fundamental attribute of God.
( d ) It shows most satisfactorily how the demands of holiness are met ; namely, by the propitiatory offering of one who is personally pure, but who by union with the human race has inherited its guilt and penalty.
( e ) It furnishes the only proper explanation of the sacrificial language of the New Testament, and of the sacrificial rites of the Old, considered as prophetic of Christ's atoning work.
(/) It alone gives proper place to the death of Christ as the central feature of his work, — set forth in the ordinances, and of chief power in Christian experience.
{g ) It gives us the only means of understanding the sufferings of Christ in the garden and on the cross, or of reconciling them with the divine justice.
( h ) As no other theory does, this view satisfies the ethical demand of human nature ; pacifies the convicted conscience ; assures the sinner that he may find instant salvation in Christ ; and so makes possible a new life of holiness, while at the same time it furnishes the highest incentives to such a life.
D. Objections to the Ethical Theory of the Atonement.
( a ) That a God who does not pardon sin without atonement must lack either omnipotence or love. — Wo answer, on the one hand, that God's omnipotence is the revelation of his nature, and not a matter of arbitrary will ; and, on the other hand, that God's love is ever exercised consistently with his fundamental attribute of holiness, so that while holiness demands the sacrifice, love provides it. Mercy is shown, not by trampling upon the claims of justice, but by vicariously satisfying them.
204 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OP SALVATION.
( b ) That satisfaction and forgiveness are mutually exclusive. — We answer that, since it is not a third party, but the Judge himself, who makes satisfaction to his own violated holiness, forgiveness is still optional, and may be offered upon terms agreeable to himself. Christ's sacrifice is not a pecuniary, but a penal, satisfaction. The objection is valid against the merely commercial view of the atonement, not against the ethical view of it.
(c ) That there can be no real propitiation, since the judge and the sacri- fice are one. — We answer that this objection ignores the existence of per- sonal relations within the divine nature, and the fact that the God-man is distinguishable from God. The satisfaction is grounded in the distinction of persons in the Godhead ; while the love in which it originates belongs to the unity of the divine essence.
( d ) That the suffering of the innocent for the guilty is not an execution of justice, but an act of manifest injustice. — We answer, that this is true only upon the supposition that the Son bears the penalty of our sins, not voluntarily, but cornpulsorily ; or upon the supposition that one who is personally innocent can in no way become involved in the guilt and penalty of others, — both of them hypotheses contrary to Scripture and to fact.
( e ) That there can be no transfer of punishment or merit, since these are personal. — We answer that the idea of representation and suretyship is common in human society and government ; and that such representa- tion and suretyship are inevitable, wherever there is community of life between the innocent and the guilty. When Christ took our nature, he could not do otherwise than take our responsibilities also.
(/) That remorse, as a part of the penalty of sin, could not have been suffered by Christ. — We answer, on the one hand, that it may not be essen- tial to the idea of penalty that Christ should have borne the identical pangs which the lost would have endured ; and, on the other hand, that we do not know how completely a perfectly holy being, possessed of super- human knowledge and love, might have felt even the pangs of remorse for the condition of that humanity of which he was the central conscience and heart.
(g) That the sufferings of Christ, as finite in time, do not constitute a satisfaction to the infinite demands of the law. — We answer that the infi- nite dignity of the sufferer constitutes his sufferings a full equivalent, in the eye of infinite justice. Substitution excludes identity of suffering ; it does not exclude equivalence. Since justice aims its penalties not so much at the person as at the sin, it may admit equivalent suffering, when this is endured in the very nature that has sinned.
( h ) That if Christ's passive obedience made satisfaction to the divine justice, then his active obedience was superfluous. — We answer that the active obedience and the passive obedience are inseparable. The latter is essential to the former ; and both are needed to secure for the sinner, on the one hand, pardon, and, on the other hand, that which goes beyond pardon, namely, restoration to the divine favor. The objection holds only against a superficial and external view of the atonement.
EXTENT OF THE ATONEMENT. 205
(i) That the doctrine is immoral in its practical tendencies, since Christ's obedience takes the place of onrs, and renders ours unnecessary. — We answer that the objection ignores not only the method by which the benefits of the atonement are appropriated, namely, repentance and faith, but also the regenerating and sanctifying power bestowed upon all who believe. Faith in the atonement does not induce license, but "works by love " ( Gal. 5 : 6 ) and " cleanses the heart " ( Acts 15 : 9 ).
(j ) That if the atonement requires faith as its complement, then it does not in itself furnish a complete satisfaction to God's justice. — We answer that faith is not the ground of our acceptance with God, as the atonenn is, and so is not a work at all ; faith is only the medium of appropriation. We are saved not by faith, or on account of faith, but only through faith. It is not faith, but the atonement which faith accepts, that satisfies the justice of God.
E. The Extent of the Atonement.
The Scriptures represent the atonement as having been made for all men, and as sufficient for the salvation of all. Not the atonement therefore is limited, but the application of the atonement through the work of the Holy Spirit.
Upon this principle of a universal atonement, but a special application of it to the elect, we must interpret such passages as Eph. 1 : 4, 7 ; 2 Tim. 1:9, 10 ; John 17 : 9, 20, 24 — asserting a special efficacy of the atone- ment in the case of the elect ; and also such passages as 2 Pet. 2 : 1 ; 1 John 2:2; Tim. 2 : 6 ; 4 : 10 ; Tit. 2 : 11— asserting that the death of Christ is for all.
If it be asked in what sense Christ is the Savior of all men, we reply : ( a ) That the atonement of Christ secures for all men a delay in the execution of the sentence against sin, and a space for repentance, together with a continuance of the common blessings of life which have been for- feited by transgression.
( b ) That the atonement of Christ has made objective provision for the salvation of all, by removing from the divine mind every obstacle to the pardon and restoration of sinners, except their wilful opposition to God and refusal to turn to him.
( c ) That the atonement of Christ has procured for all men the powerful incentives to repentance presented in the Cross, and the combined agency of the Christian church and of the Holy Spirit, by which these incentives are brought to bear upon them.
Christ is specially the Savior of those who believe, in that he exerts a special power of his Spirit to procure their acceptance of his salvation. This is not, however, a part of his work of atonement ; it is the application of the atonement, and as such is hereafter to be considered.
2. Christ's Intercessory Work.
The Priesthood of Christ does not cease with his work of atonement, but continues forever. In the presence of God he fulfils the second office of the priest, namely that of intercession.
206 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION".
A. Nature of Christ's Intercession. — This is not to be conceived of either as an external and vocal petitioning, nor as a mere figure of speech for the natural and continuous influence of his sacrifice ; but rather as a special activity of Christ in securing, upon the ground of that sacrifice, "whatever of blessing comes to men, whether that blessing be temporal or spiritual.
B. Objects of Christ's Intercession. — We may distinguish (a) that general intercession which secures to all men certain temporal benefits of his atoning work, and ( b ) that special intercession which secures the divine acceptance of the persons of believers and the divine bestowment of all gifts needful for their salvation.
C. Relation of Christ's Intercession to that of the Holy Spirit. — The Holy Spirit is an advocate within us, teaching us how to pray as we ought; Christ is an advocate in heaven, securing from the Father the answer of our prayers. Thus the work of Christ and of the Holy Spirit are com- plements to each other, and parts of one whole.
D. Relation of Christ's Intercession to that of saints. — All true inter- cession is either directly or indirectly the intercession of Christ. Chris- tians are organs of Christ's Spirit. To suppose Christ in us to offer prayer to one of his saints, iu stead of directly to the Father, is to blaspheme Christ, and utterly misconceive the nature of prayer.
III. The Kingly Office of Christ.
This is to be distinguished from the sovereignty which Christ originally possessed in virtue of his divine nature. Christ's kingship is the sover- eignty of the divine-human Redeemer, which belonged to him of right from the moment of his birth, but which was fully exercised only from the time of his entrance upon the state of exaltation. By virtue of this kingly office, Christ rules all things in heaven and earth, for the glory of God and the execution of God's purpose of salvation.
( a ) With respect to the universe at large, Christ's kingdom is a king- dom of power ; he upholds, governs, and judges the world.
( b ) With respect to his militant church, it is a kingdom of grace ; he founds, legislates for, administers, defends, and augments his church on earth.
( c ) With respect to his church triumphant, it is a kingdom of glory ; he rewards his redeemed people with the full revelation of himself, upon the completion of his kingdom in the resurrection and the judgment.
CHAPTER II.
THE RECONCILIATION OF MAN TO GOD, OR THE
APPLICATION OF REDEMPTION THROUGH
THE WORK OF THE HOLY SPIRIT.
SECTION I. —THE APPLICATION" OF CHRIST'S REDEMPTION" IN" ITS PREPARATION.
( a ) In this Section we treat of Election and Calling ; Section Second beiug devoted to the Application of Christ's Redemption in its Actual Beginning, — namely, in Union with Christ, Regeneration, Conversion, and Justification ; while Section Third has for its subject the Application of Christ's Redemption in its Continuation, — namely, in Sanctification and Perseverance.
( b ) In treating Election and Calling as applications of Christ's redemp- tion, we imply that they are, in God's decree, logically subsequent to that redemption. In this we hold the Sublapsarian view, as distinguished from the Supralapsarianism of Beza and other hyper-Calvinists, which regarded the decree of individual salvation as preceding, in the order of thought, the decree to permit the Fall. In this latter scheme, the order of decrees is as follows : 1. the decree to save certain, and to reprobate others ; 2. the decree to create both those who are to be saved and those who are to be reprobated ; 3. the decree to permit both the former and the latter to fall ; 4. the decree to provide salvation only for the former, that is, for the elect.
( c ) But the Scriptures teach that men as sinners, and not men irrespec- tive of their sins, are the objects of God's saving grace in Christ ( John 15 : 9 ; Rom. 11 : 5, 7 ; Eph. 1 : 4-6 ; 1 Pet. 1:2). Condemnation, moreover, is an act, not of sovereignty, but of justice, and is grounded in the guilt of the condemned ( Rom. 2 : 6-11 ; 2 Tbess. 1 : 5-10 ). The true order of the decrees is therefore as follows : 1. the decree to create ; 2. the decree to permit the Fall ; 3. the decree to provide a salvation in Christ sufficient for the needs of all ; 4. the decree to secure the actual acceptance of this sal- vation on the part of some, — or, in other words, the decree of Electiou.
(d) Those Sublapsarians who hold to the Anselmic view of a limited
Atonement, make the decrees 3. and 4., just mentioned, exchange places, —
the decree of election thus preceding the decree to provide redemption.
The Scriptural reasons for preferring the order here given have been
already indicated in our treatment of the extent of the Atonement ( page
205).
207
208 CHRISTOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF REDEMPTION".
I. Election.
Election is that eternal act of God, by which in his sovereign pleasure, and on account of no foreseen merit in them, he chooses certain out of the number of sinful men to be the recipients of the special grace of his Spirit, and so to be made voluntary partakers of Christ's salvation.
1. Proof of the Doctrine of Election.
A. From Scripture.
We here adopt the words of Dr. Hovey : "The Scriptures forbid us to find the reasons for election in the moral action of man before the new birth, and refer us merely to the sovereign will and mercy of God ; that is, they teach the doctrine of personal election." Before advancing to the proof of the doctrine itself, we may claim Scriptural warrant for three pre- liminary statements (which we also quote from Dr. Hovey), namely :
First, that "God has a sovereign right to bestow more grace upon one subject than upon another, — grace being unmerited favor to sinners."
Secondly, that " God has been pleased to exercise this right in dealing with men."
Thirdly, that "God has some other reason than that of saving as many as possible for the way in which he distributes his grace. "
The Scripture passages which directly or indirectly support the doctrine of a particular election of individual men to salvation may be arranged as follows :
( a ) Direct statements of God's purpose to save certain individuals :
( b ) In connection with the declaration of God's foreknowledge of these persons, or choice to make them objects of his special attention and care ;
( c ) With assertions that this choice is matter of grace, or unmerited favor, bestowed in eternity past :
( d ) That the Father has given certain persons to the Son, to be his peculiar possession :
( e ) That the fact of believers being united thus to Christ is due wholly to God :
(/) That those who are written in the Lamb's book of life, and they only, shall be saved :
( g ) That these are allotted, as disciples, to certain of God's servants :
( h ) Are made the recipients of a special call of God :
( i ) Are born into God's kingdom, not by virtue of man's will, but of God's will :
(,; ) Receiving repentance, as the gift of God :
( k ) Faith, as the gift of God :
( I ) Holiness and good works, as the gift of God.
These passages furnish an abundant and conclusive refutation, on the one hand, of the Lutheran view that election is simply God's determina-
ELECTION". 209
tion from eternity to provide an objective salvation for universal humanity; and, on the other hand, of the Armiuian view that election is God's deter- mination from eternity to save certain individuals upon the ground of their foreseen faith.
B. From Reason.
( a ) What God does, he has eternally purposed to do. Since ho bestows special regenerating grace on some, he must have eternally purposed to bestow it, — in other words, must have chosen them to eternal life. Thus tho doctrine of election is only a special application of tho doctrine of decrees.
( h ) This purpose cannot be conditioned upon any merit or faith of those who are chosen, since there is no such merit, — faith itself being God's gift and foreordained by him. Since man's faith is foreseen only as the result of God's work of grace, election proceeds rather upon fore- seen unbelief. Faith, as the effect of election, cannot at the same time be the cause of election.
( c. ) The depravity of the human will is such that, without this decree to bestow special divine influences upon some, all, without exception, would have rejected Christ's salvation after it was offered to them ; and so all, without exception, must have perished. Election, therefore, may be viewed as a necessary consequence of God's decree to provide an objective redemption, if that redemption is to have any subjective result in human salvation.
(d) The doctrine of election becomes more acceptable to reason when we remember : first, that God's decree is eternal, and in a certain sense is contemporaneous with man's belief in Christ ; secondly, that God's decree to create involves the decree of all that in the exercise of man's freedom will follow ; thirdly, that God's decree is the decree of him who is all in all, so that our willing and doing is at the same time the working of him who decrees our willing and doing. The whole question turns upon the initiative in human salvation : if this belongs to God, then in spite of dif- ficulties we must accept the doctrine of election.
2. Objections to the Doctrine of Election.
(a) It is unjust to those who are not included in this purpose of salva- tion.— Answer : Election deals, not simply with creatures, but with sinful, guilty, and condemned creatures. That any should be saved, is matter of pure grace, and those who are not included in this purpose of salvation suffer ouly the due reward of their deeds. There is, therefore, no injustice in God's election. We may better praise God that he saves any, than charge him with injustice because he saves so few.
(h) It represents God as partial in his dealings aud a respecter of per- sons.— Answer : Since there is nothing in men that determines God's choice of one rather than another, the objection is invalid. It would equally apply to God's selection of certain nations, as Israel, and certain individuals, as Cyras, to be recipients of special temporal gifts. If God is not to be
210 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
regarded as partial in not providing a salvation for fallen angels, he cannot be regarded as partial in not providing regenerating influences of his Spirit for the whole race of fallen men.
(c) It represents God as arbitrary. — Answer: It represents God, not as arbitrary, but as exercising the free choice of a wise and sovereign will, in ways and for reasons which are inscrutable to us. To deny the possibility of such a choice is to deny God's personality. To deny that God has reasons for his choice is to deny his wisdom. The doctrine of election finds these reasons, not in men, but in God.
( d ) It tends to immorality, by representing men's salvation as inde- pendent of their own obedience. — Answer : The objection ignores the fact that the salvation of believers is ordained only in connection with their regeneration and sanctification, as means ; and that the certainty of final triumph is the strongest incentive to strenuous conflict with sin.
(e) It inspires pride in those who think themselves elect. — Answer: This is possible only in the case of those who pervert the doctrine. On the contrary, its proper influence is to humble men. Those who exalt themselves above others, upon the ground that they are special favorites of God, have reason to question their election.
(/) It discourages effort for the salvation of the impenitent, whether on their own part or on the part of others. — Answer : Since it is a secret decree, it cannot hinder or discourage such effort. On the other hand, it is a ground of encouragement, and so a stimulus to effort ; for, without election, it is certain that all would be lost ( cf. Acts 18 : 10 ). "While it humbles the sinner, so that he is willing to cry for mercy, it encourages him also by showing him that some will be saved, and ( since election and faith are inseparably connected ) that he will be saved, if he will only believe. While it makes the Christian feel entirely dependent on God's power, in his efforts for the impenitent, it leads him to say with Paul that he "endures all things for the elects' sake, that they also may attain the salvation that is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory " ( 2 Tim. 2 : 10 ).
( g ) The decree of election implies a decree of reprobation. — Answer : The decree of reprobation is not a positive decree, like that of election, but a permissive decree to l^ave the sinner to his self-chosen rebellion and its natural consequences of punishment.
II. Cai/ling.
Calling is that act of God by which men are invited to accept, by faith, the salvation provided by Christ. — The Scriptures distinguish between :
( a ) The general, or external, call to all men through God's providence, word, and Spirit.
(6) The special, efficacious call of the Holy Spirit to the elect.
Two questions only need special consideration :
A. Is God's general call sincere ?
This is denied, upon the ground that such sincerity is incompatible, first, with the inability of the sinner to obey ; and secondly, with the
UNION" WITH CHRIST. 211
design of God to bestow only upon the elect the special grace without which they will not obey.
(a) To the first objection we reply that, since this inability is not a physical but a moral inability, consisting simply in the settled perversity of an evil will, there can be no insincerity in offering salvation to all, espe- cially when the offer is in itself a proper motive to obedience.
( b ) To the second, we reply that the objection, if true, would equally hold against God's foreknowledge. The sincerity of God's general call is no more inconsistent with his determination that some shall be permitted to reject it, than it is with foreknowledge that some will reject it.
B. Is God's special call irresistible ?
We prefer to say that this special call is efficacious, — that is, that it infal- libly accomplishes its purpose of leading the sinner to the acceptance of salvation. This implies two things :
( a ) That the operation of God is not an outward constraint upon the human will, but that it accords with the laws of our mental constitution. We reject the term 'irresistible,' as implying a coercion and compulsion which is foreign to the nature of God's working in the soul.
( b ) That the operation of God is the originating cause of that new dis- position of the affections, and that new activity of the will, by which the sinner accepts Christ. The cause is not in the response of the will to the presentation of motives by God, nor in any mere cooperation of the will of man with the will of God, but is an almighty act of God in the will of man, by which its freedom to choose God as its end is restored and rightly exer- cised ( John 1 : 12, 13). For further discussion of the subject, see, in the next section, the remarks on Regeneration, with which this efficacious call is identical.
SECTION II. — THE APPLICATION OF CHRIST'S REDEMPTION IN ITS ACTUAL BEGINNING
Under this head we treat of Union with Christ, Regeneration, Conversion (embracing Repentance and Faith), and Justification. Much confusion and error have arisen from conceiving these as occurring in chronological order. The order is logical, not chronological. As it is only " in Christ " that man is " a new creature " (2 Cor. 5 :17) oris "justified" (Acts 13 :39), union with Christ logically precedes both regeneration and justification J and yet, chronologically, the moment of our union with Christ is also the moment when we are regenerated and justified. So, too, regeneration and conversion are but the divine and human sides or aspects of the same fact, although regeneration has logical precedence, and man turns only as God turns him.
I. Union with Christ.
The Scriptures declare that, through the operation of God, there is con" stituted a union of the soid with Christ different in kind from God's natural
212 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION".
and providential concursus with all spirits, as well as from all unions of mere association or sympathy, moral likeness, or moral influence, — a union of life, in which the human spirit, while then most truly possessing its own individuality and personal distinctness, is interpenetrated and energized by the Spirit of Christ, is made inscrutably but indissolubly one with him, and so becomes a member and partaker of that regenerated, believing, and justified humanity of which he is the head.
1. Scripture Representations of this Union.
A. Figurative teaching. It is illustrated :
( a ) From the union of a building and its foundation.
( 6 ) From the union between husband and wife.
( e ) From the union between the vine and its branches.
( d ) From the union between the members and the head of the body.
( e ) From the union of the race with the source of its life in Adam.
B. Direct statements.
( a ) The believer is said to be in Christ.
( b ) Christ is said to be in the believer.
( c ) The Father and the Son dwell in the believer.
( d ) The believer has Life by pax-taking of Christ, as Christ has life by partaking of the Father.
( e ) All believers are one in Christ.
(/) The believer is made partaker of the divine nature.
( g ) The believer is made one spirit with the Lord.
2. Nature of this Union.
We have here to do not only with a fact of life, but with a unique rela- tion between the finite and the infinite. Our descriptions must therefore be inadequate. Yet in many respects we know what this union is not ; in certain respects we can positively characterize it.
A. Negatively. — It is not :
( a ) A merely natural union, like that of God with all human spirits, — as held by rationalists.
( b ) A merely moral union, or union of love and sympathy, like that between teacher and scholar, friend and friend, — as held by Socinians and Arminians.
( c ) A union of essence, which destroys the distinct personality and sub- sistence of either Christ or the humau spirit, — as held by many of the mystics.
( d ) A union mediated and conditioned by participation of the sacra- ments of the church, — as held by Eomanists, Lutherans, and High-Church Episcopalians.
UNION WITH CHRIST. 213
B. Positively. — It is :
( a ) An organic union, — in "which we become members of Christ and partakers of his humanity.
( b ) A vital union, — in which Christ's life becomes the dominating prin- ciple within us.
( o ) A spiritual union, — that is, a union whose source and author is the Holy Spirit.
( d ) An indissoluble union, — that is, a union which, consistently with Christ's promise and grace, can never be dissolved.
( c ) An inscrutable union, — mystical, however, only in the sense of sur- passing in its intimacy and value any other union of souls which we know.
3. Consequences of this Union as respects the Believer.
We have seen that Christ's union with humanity, at the incarnation, involved him in all the legal liabilities of the race to which he united him- self, and enabled him so to assume the penalty of its sin as to make for all men a full satisfaction to the divine justice, and to remove all external obstacles to man's return to God. An internal obstacle, however, still remains — the evil affections and will, and the consequent guilt, of the individual soul. This last obstacle also Christ removes, in the case of all his people, by uniting himself to them in a closer and more perfect manner than that in which he is united to humanity at large. As Christ's union with the race secures the objective reconciliation of the race to God, so Christ's union with believers secures the subjective reconciliation of believers to God.
The consequences of union with Christ may be summarily stated as follows :
( a ) Union with Christ involves a change in the dominant affection of the soul. Christ's entrance into the sold makes it a new creature, in the sense that the ruling disposition, which before was sinful, now becomes holy. This change we call Regeneration.
(b) Union with Christ involves a new exercise of the soid's powers in repentance and faith ; faith, indeed, is the act of the soul by which, under the operation of God, Christ is received. This new exercise of the soul's powers we call Conversion ( Repentance and Faith ). It is the obverse or human side of Regeneration.
( c ) Union with Christ gives to the believer the legal standing and rights of Christ. As Christ's union with the race involves atonement, so the believer's union with Christ involves Justification. The believer is enti- tled to take for his own all that Christ is, and all that Christ has done ; and this because he has within him that new lif e of humanity which suffered in Christ's death and rose from the grave in Christ's resurrection, — in other words, because he is virtually one person with the Redeemer. In Christ the believer is prophet, priest, and king.
214 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
(d) Union with Christ secures to the believer the continuously trans- forming, assimilating power of Christ's life, — first, for the soul ; secondly, for the body, — consecrating it in the present, and in the future raising it up in the likeness of Christ's glorified body. This continuous influence, so far as it is exerted in the present life, we call Sanctiftcation, the human side or aspect of which is Perseverance.
(e) Union with Christ brings about a fellowship of Christ with the believer, — Christ takes part in all the labors, temptations, and sufferings of his people; a fellowship of the believer with Christ, — so that Christ's whole experience on earth is in some measure reproduced in him ; a fellow- ship of all believers with one another, — furnishing a basis for the spiritual unity of Christ's people on earth, and for the eternal communion of heaven. The doctrine of Union with Christ is therefore the indispensable prepara- tion for Ecclesiology , and for Eschatology.
II. Regeneration.
Eegeneration is that act of God by which the governing disposition of the soid is made holy, and by which, through the truth as a means, the first holy exercise of this disposition is secured.
Eegeneration, or the new birth, is the divine side of that change of heart which, viewed from the human side, we call conversion. It is God's turn- ing the soul to himself, — conversion being the soul's turning itself to God, of which God's turning it is both the accompaniment and cause. It will be observed from the above definition, that there are two aspects of regener- ation, in the first of which the soul is passive, in the second of which the soul is active. God changes the governing disposition, — in this change the soul is simply acted upon. God secures the initial exercise of this disposi- tion in view of the truth, — in this change the soul itself acts. Yet these two parts of God's operation are simultaneous. At the same moment that he makes the soul sensitive, he pours in the light of his truth and induces the exercise of the holy disposition he has imparted.
1. Scripture Representations.
(a) Regeneration is a change indispensable to the salvation of the sinner.
( b ) It is a change in the inmost principle of life.
( c ) It is a change in the heart, or governing disposition.
( d ) It is a change in the moral relations of the soul.
( e ) It is a change wrought in connection with the use of truth as a
means.
(/) It is a change instantaneous, secretly wrought, and known only in its results.
( g ) It is a change wrought by God.
( h ) It is a change accomplished through the union of the soul with Christ.
REGENERATION". 215
2. Necessity of Regeneration.
That all men without exception need to be changed in moral character, is manifest, not only from Scripttire passages already cited, but from the fol- lowing rational considerations :
( a ) Holiness, or conformity to the fundamental moral attribute of God, is the indispensable condition of securing the divine favor, of attaining peace of conscience, and of preparing the soul for the associations and employments of the blest.
( b ) The condition of universal humanity as by nature depraved, and, when arrived at moral consciousness, as guilty of actual transgression, is precisely the opposite of that holiness without which the sold cannot exist in normal relation to God, to self, or to holy beings.
( c ) A radical internal change is therefore requisite in every human soul — a change in that which constitutes its character. Holiness cannot be attained, as the pantheist claims, by a merely natural growth or develop- ment, since man's natural tendencies are wholly in the direction of selfish- ness. There must be a reversal of his inmost dispositions and principles of action, if he is to see the kingdom of God.
3. The Efficient Cause of Regeneration.
Three views only need be considered, — all others are modifications of these. The first view puts the efficient cause of regeneration in the human will ; the second, in the truth considered as a system of motives ; the third, in the immediate agency of the Holy Spirit.
A. The human will, as the efficient cause of regeneration.
This view takes two forms, according as the will is regarded as acting apart from, or in conjunction with, special influences of the truth applied by God. Pelagians hold the former ; Arminians the latter.
( a ) To the Pelagian view, that regeneration is solely the act of man, and is identical with self-reformation, we object that the sinner's depravity, since it consists in a fixed state of the affections which determines the settled character of the volitions, amounts to a moral inability. Without a renewal of the affections from which all moral action springs, man will not choose holiness nor accept salvation.
( b ) To the Arminian view, that regeneration is the act of man, cooper- ating with divine influences applied through the truth (synergistic the- ory ), we object that no beginning of holiness is in this way conceivable. For, so long as man's selfish and perverse affections are unchanged, no choosing God is possible but such as proceeds from supreme desire for one's own interest and happiness. But the man thus supremely bent on self-gratification cannot see in God, or his service, anything productive of happiness ; or, if he could see in them anything of advantage, his choice of God and his service from such a motive would not be a holy choice, and therefore could not be a beginning of holiness.
216 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
B. The truth, as the efficient cause of regeneration.
According to this view, the truth as a system of motives is the direct and immediate cause of the change from unholiness to holiness. This view is objectionable for two reasons :
( a ) It erroneously regards motives as wholly external to the mind that is influenced by them. This is to conceive of them as mechanically con- straining the will, and is indistinguishable from necessitarianism. On the contrary, motives are compounded of external presentations and internal dispositions. It is the soul's affections which render certain suggestions attractive and others repugnant to us. In brief, the heart makes the motive.
( b ) Only as truth is loved, therefore, can it be a motive to holiness. But we have seen that the aversion of the sinner to God is such that the truth is hated instead of loved, and a thing that is hated, is hated more intensely, the more distinctly it is seen. Hence no mere power of the truth can be regarded as the efficient cause of regeneration. The contrary view implies that it is not the truth which the sinner hates, but rather some element of error which is mingled with it.
C. The immediate agency of the Holy Spirit, as the efficient cause of regeneration.
In ascribing to the Holy Spirit the authorship of regeneration, we do not affirm that the divine Spirit accomplishes his work without any accom- panying instrumentality. We simply assert that the power which regen- erates is the power of God, and that although conjoined with the use of means, there is a direct operation of this power upon the sinner's heart which changes its moral character. We add two remarks by way of further explanation :
( a ) The Scriptural assertions of the indwelling of the Holy Spirit and of his mighty power in the soul forbid us to regard the divine Spirit in regeneration as coming in contact, not with the soul, but only with the truth. The phrases, "to energize the truth," "to intensify the truth," " to illuminate the truth," have no proper meaning ; since even God cannot make the truth more true. If any change is wrought, it must be wrought, not in the truth, but in the soul.
( b ) Even if truth could be energized, intensified, illuminated, there would still be needed a change in the moral disposition, before the soul could recognize its beauty or be affected by it. No mere increase of light can enable a blind man to see ; the disease of the eye must first be cured before external objects are visible. So God's work in regeneration must be performed within the soul itself. Over and above all influence of the truth, there must be a direct influence of the Holy Spirit upon the heart. Although wrought in conjunction with the presentation of truth to the intellect, regeneration differs from moral suasion in being an immediate act of God.
4. The Instrumentality used in Regeneration.
A. The Roman, English and Lutheran churches hold that regeneration is accomplished through the instrumentality of baptism. The Disciples, or followers of Alexander Campbell, make regeneration include bajDtism,
REGENERATION. 217
as well as repentance anil faith. To the view that baptism is a means of regeneration we urge the following objections :
( a ) The Scriptures represent baptism to be not the means but only the sign of regeneration, and therefore to presuppose and follow regeneration. For this reason only believers — that is, persons giving credible evidence of being regenerated — were baptized (Acts 8 : 12). Not external baptism, but the conscientious turning of the soul to God which baptism symbolizes, saves us ( 1 Pet. 3 : 21 — eweifyoeos ayadfjq kncpuTTjfM ). Texts like John 3 : 5, Acts 2 : 38, Col. 2 : 12, Tit. 3 : 5, are to be explained upon the princi- ple that regeneration, the inward change, and baptism, the outward sign of that change, were regarded as only different sides or aspects of the same fact, and either side or aspect might therefore be described in terms derived from the other.
( b ) Upon this view, there is a striking incongruity between the nature of the change to be wrought and the means employed to produce it. The change is a spiritual one, but the means are physical. It is far more rational to suppose that, in changing the character of intelligent beings, God uses means which have relation to their intelligence. The view we are considering is part and parcel of a general scheme of mechanical rather than moral salvation, and is more consistent with a materialistic than with a spiritual philosophy.
B. The Scriptural view is that regeneration, so far as it secures an activity of man, is accomplished through the instrumentality of the truth. Although the Holy Spirit does not in any way illuminate the truth, he does illuminate the mind, so that it can perceive the truth. In conjunc- tion with the change of man's inner disposition, there is an appeal to man's rational nature through the truth. Two inferences may be drawn :
(a) Man is not wholly passive at the time of his regeneration. He is passive only with respect to the change of his ruling disposition. With respect to the exercise of this disposition, he is active. Although the effi- cient power which secures this exercise of the new disposition is the power of God, yet man is not therefore unconscious, nor is he a mere machine worked by God's fingers. On the other hand, his whole moral nature under God's working is alive and active. We reject the "exercise-system," which regards God as the direct author of all man's thoughts, feelings, and volitions, not only in its general tenor, but in its special application to regeneration.
( 6 ) The activity of man's mind in regeneration is activity in view of the truth. God secures the initial exercise of the new disposition which he has wrought in man's heart in connection with the use of truth as a means. Here we perceive the link between the efficiency of God and the activity of man. Only as the sinner's mind is brought into contact with the truth, does God complete his regenerating work. And as the change of inward disposition and the initial exercise of it are never, so far as we know, separated by any interval of time, we can say, in general, that Christian work is successful only as it commends the truth to every man's conscience in the sight of God ( 2 Cor. 4:2).
218 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
5. The Nature of the Change wrought in Regeneration.
A. It is a change in which the governing disposition is made holy. This implies that :
(a) It is not a change in the substance of either body or soul. Eegen- eration is not a physical change. There is no physical seed or germ implanted in man's nature. Eegeneration does not add to, or subtract from, the number of man's intellectual, emotional or voluntary faculties. But regeneration is the giving of a new direction or tendency to powers of affection which man possessed before. Man had the faculty of love before, but his love was supremely set on self. In regeneration the direc- tion of that faculty is changed, and his love is now set supremely upon God.
( b ) Begeneration involves an enlightenment of the understanding and a rectification of the volitions. But it seems most consonant with Scripture and with a correct psychology to regard these changes as immediate and necessary consequences of the change of disposition already mentioned, rather than as the primary and central facts in regeneration. The taste for truth logically precedes perception of the truth, and love for God logically precedes obedience to God; indeed, without love no obedience is possible. Beverse the lever of affection, and this moral locomotive, without further change, will move away from sin, and toward truth and God.
(c) It is objected, indeed, that we know only of mental substance and of mental acts, and that the new disposition or state just mentioned, since it is not an act, must be regarded as a new substance, and so lack all moral quality. But we reply that, besides substance and acts, there are habits, tendencies, proclivities, some of them native and some of them acquired. They are voluntary, and have moral character. If we can by repeated acts originate sinful tendencies, God can surely originate in us holy ten- dencies. Such holy tendencies formed a part of the nature of Adam, as he came from the hand of God. As the result of the Fall, we are born with tendencies toward evil for which we are responsible. Begeneration is a restoration of the original tendencies toward God which were lost by the Fall. Such holy tendencies ( tastes, dispositions, affections ) are not only not unmoral — they are the only possible springs of right moral action. Only in the restoration of them does man become truly free.
B. It is an instantaneous change, in a region of the soul below con- sciousness, and is therefore known only in its results.
(a) It is an instantaneous change. — Begeneration is not a gradual work. Although there may be a gradual work of God's providence and Spirit, preparing the change, and a gradual recognition of it after it has taken place, there must be an instant of time when, under the influence of God's Spirit, the disposition of the soul, just before hostile to God, is changed to love. Any other view assumes an intermediate state of indeci- sion which has no moral character at all, and confounds regeneration either with conviction or with sanctification.
( b ) This change takes place in the region of the soul below conscious- ness. — It is by no means true that God's work in regeneration is always
CONVERSION. 219
recognized by the subject of it. On the other hand, it is never directly perceived at all. The working of God in the human soul, since it contra- venes no law of man's being, but rather puts him in the full and normal possession of his own powers, is secret and inscrutable. Although man is conscious, he is not conscious of God's regenerating agency.
( c ) This change, however, is recognized indirectly in its results. — At the moment of regeneration, the soul is conscious only of the truth and of its own exercises with reference to it. That God is the author of its new affection is an inference from the new character of the exercises which it prompts. The human side or aspect of regeneration is Conversion. This, and the Sanctification which follows it ( including the special gifts of the Holy Spirit ), are the sole evidences in any particular case that regenera- tion is an accomplished fact.
III. Conversion.
Conversion is that voluntary change in the mind of the sinner, in which be turns, on the one hand, from sin, and on the other hand, to Christ. The former or negative element in conversion, namely, the turning from sin, we denominate repentance. The latter or positive element in conver- sion, namely, the turning to Christ, we denominate faith.
( a ) Conversion is the human side or aspect of that fundamental spirit- ual change which, as viewed from the divine side, we call regeneration. It is simply man's turning. The Scriptures recognize the voluntary activ- ity of the human soul in this change as distinctly as they recognize the causative agency of God. While God turns men to himself ( Ps. 85 : 4 ; Song 1:4; Jer. 31 : 18 ; Lam. 5 : 21 ), men are exhorted to turn themselves to God ( Prov. 1 : 23 ; Is. 31 : 6 ; 59 : 20 ; Ez. 14 : 6 ; 18 : 32 ; 33 : 9, 11 ; Joel 2 : 12-14 ). While God is represented as the author of the new heart and the new spirit ( Ps. 51 : 10 ; Ez. 11 : 19 ; 36 : 26 ), men are commanded to make for themselves a new heart and a new spirit (Ez. 18 : 31 ; 2 Cor. 7:1; c/. PhiL 2 : 12, 13 ; Eph. 5 : 14).
( b ) This twofold method of representation can be explained only when we remember that man's powers may be interpenetrated and quickened by the divine, not only without destroying man's freedom, but with the result of making man for the first time truly free. Since the relation between the divine and the human activity is not one of chronological succession, man is never to wait for God's working. If he is ever regenerated, it must be in and through a movement of his own will, in which he turns to God as unconstrainedly and with as little consciousness of God's operation upon him, as if no such operation of God were involved in the change. And in preaching, we are to press upon men the claims of God and their duty of immediate submission to Christ, with the certainty that they who do so submit will subsequently recognize this new and holy activity of their own wills as due to a working within them of divine power.
( c ) From the fact that the word ' conversion ' means simply • a turning,' every turning of the Christian from sin, subsequent to the first, may, in a subordinate sense, be denominated a conversion ( Luke 22 : 32 ). Since
220 80TEUIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
regeneration is not complete sanctiflcation, and the change of governing disjwsition is not identical with complete purification of the nature, such subsequent turnings from sin are necessary consequences and evidences of the first ( cf. John 13 : 10). But they do not, like the first, imply a change in the governing disposition, — they are rather new manifestations of a disposition already changed. For this reason, conversion proper, like the regeneration of which it is the obverse side, can occur but once. The phrase ' second conversion, ' even if it does not imply radical misconception of the nature of conversion, is misleading. We prefer, therefore, to describe these subsequent experiences, not by the term 'conversion,' but by such phrases as 'breaking off, forsaking, returning from, neglects or transgressions,' and 'coming back to Christ, trusting anew in him.' It is with rejientance and faith, as elements in that first and radical change by which the soul enters upon a state of salvation, that we have now to do.
1. Repentance.
Repentance is that voluntary change in the mind of the sinner ia which he turns from sin. Being essentially a change of mind, it involves a change of view, a change of feeling, and a change of purpose. We may therefore analyze repentance into three constituents, each succeeding term of which includes and implies the one preceding :
A. An intellectual element, — change of view — recognition of sin as involving personal guilt, defilement, and helplessness (Ps. 51 : 3, 7, 11). If unaccompanied by the following elements, this recognition may mani- fest itself in fear of punishment, although as yet there is no hatred of sin. This element is indicated in the Scripture phrase iwiyvuacg afiapriag (Rom. 3 : 20 ; cf. 1 : 32 ).
B. An emotional element, — change of feeling — sorrow for sin as com- mitted against goodness and justice, and therefore hateful to God, and hateful in itself ( Ps. 51 : 1, 2, 10, 14 ). This element of repentance is indi- cated in the Scripture word fterafii^ofiai. If accompanied by the following element, it is a \vitti Kara Qeov, If not so accompanied, it is a Mmf tov k6o/iov = remorse and despair ( Mat. 27 : 3 ; Luke 18 : 23 ; 2 Cor. 7 : 9, 10 ).
O. A voluntary element, — change of purpose — inward turning from sin and disposition to seek pardon and cleansing ( Ps. 51 : 5, 7, 10 ; Jer. 25 : 5 ). This includes and implies the two preceding elements, and is therefore the most important aspect of repentance. It is indicated in the Scripture term fierdvoia (Acts 2 : 38 ; Rom. 2:4).
In broad distinction from the Scriptural doctrine, we find the Romanist view, which regards the three elements of repentance as the following : ( 1 ) contrition ; ( 2 ) confession ; ( 3 ) satisfaction. Of these, contrition is the only element properly belonging to repentance ; yet from this contri- tion the Romanist excludes all sorrow for sin of nature. Confession is con- fession to the priest ; and satisfaction is the sinner's own doing of outward penance, as a temporal and symbolic submission and reparation to violated law. This view is false and pernicious, in that it confounds repentance with its outward fruits, conceives of it as exercised rather toward the church
CONVERSION". 221
than toward God, and regards it as a meritorious ground, iustead of a mere condition, of pardon.
In further explanation of the Scripture representations, we remark :
(a) That repentance, in each and all of its aspects, is wholly an inward act, not to be confounded with the change of life which proceeds from it.
True repentance is indeed manifested and evidenced by confession of sin before God (Luke 18:13), and by reparation for wrongs done to men ( Luke 19 : 8 ). But these do not constitute repentance ; they are rather fruits of repentance. Between ' repentance ' and ' fruit worthy of repent- ance,' Scripture plainly distinguishes (Mat. 3:8).
(b) That repentance is only a negative condition, and not a positive means of salvation.
This is evident from the fact that repentance is no more than the sinner's present duty, and can furnish no offset to the claims of the law on account of past transgression. The truly penitent man feels that his repentance has no merit. Apart from the positive element of conversion, namely, faith in Christ, it would be only sorrow for guilt unremoved. This very sorrow, moreover, is not the mere product of human will, but is the gift of God.
(c) That true repentance, however, never exists except in conjunction with faith.
Sorrow for sin, not simply on account of its evil consequences to the transgressor, but on account of its intrinsic hatefulness as opposed to divine holiness and love, is practically impossible without some confidence in God's mercy. It is the Cross which first makes us truly penitent ( cf. John 12 : 32, 33 ). Hence all true preaching of repentance is implicitly a preach- ing of faith (Mat. 3 : 1-12 ; cf. Acts 19 : 4), and repentance toward God involves faith in the Lord Jesus Christ (Acts 20 : 21 ; Luke 15 : 10, 24; 19:8, 9; cf. Gal. 3:7).
(d) That, conversely, wherever there is true faith, there is true repent- ance also.
Since repentance and faith are but different sides or aspects of the same act of turning, faith is as inseparable from repentance as repentance is from faith. That must be an unreal faith where there is no repentance, just as that must be an unreal repentance where there is no faith. Yet because the one aspect of his change is more prominent in the mind of the convert than the other, we are not hastily to conclude that the other is absent. Only that degree of conviction of sin is essential to salvation, which carries with it a forsaking of sin and a trustful surrender to Christ.
2. Faith.
Faith is that voluntary change in the mind of the sinner in which he turns to Christ. Being essentially a chauge of mind, it involves a change of view, a change of feeling, and a change of purpose. We may therefore analyze faith also into three constituents, each succeeding term of which includes and implies the preceding :
A. An intellectual element ( notifia, credere Denm ), — recognition of the truth of God's revelation, or of the objective reality of the salvation
222 SOTERIOLOGT, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION".
provided by Christ. This includes not only a historical belief in the facts of the ScrijDture, but an intellectual belief in the doctrine taught therein as to man's sinfulness and dependence upon Christ.
B. An emotional element ( assensus, credere Deo ), — assent to the revelation of God's power and grace in Jesus Christ, as applicable to the present needs of the soul. Those in whom this awakening of the sensibili- ties is unaccompanied by the fundamental decision of the will, which con- stitutes the next element of faith, may seem to themselves, and for a time may appear to others, to have accepted Christ.
Saving faith, however, includes also :
C. A voluntary element (fiducia, credere in Deum ), — trust in Christ as Lord and Savior ; or, in other words — to distinguish its two aspects :
( a ) Surrender of the soul, as guilty and defiled, to Christ's governance.
( b ) Reception and appropriation of Christ, as the source of pardon and spiritual life.
The passages already referred to refute the view of the Romanist, that saving faith is simply implicit assent to the doctrines of the church ; and the view of the Disciple or Campbellite, that faith is merely intellectual belief in the truth, on the presentation of evidence.
In further explanation of the Scripture representations, we remark :
( a ) That faith is an act of the affections and will, as truly as it is an act of the intellect.
It has been claimed that faith and unbelief are purely intellectual states, which are necessarily determined by the facts at any given time presented to the mind ; and that they are, for this reason, as destitute of moral quality and as far from being matters of obligation, as are our instinctive feelings of pleasure and pain. But this view unwarrantably isolates the intellect, and ignores the fact that, in all moral subjects, the state of the affections and will affects the judgment of the mind with regard to truth. In the intellectual act the whole moral nature expresses itself. Since the tastes determine the opinions, faith is a moral act, and men are responsible for not believing.
( b ) That the object of saving faith is, in general, the whole truth of God, so far as it is objectively revealed or made known to the soul ; but, in par- ticular, the person and work of Jesus Christ, which constitutes the centre and substance of God's revelation (Acts 17 : 18 ; 1 Cor. 1 : 23 ; Col. 1 : 27 ; Rev. 19:10).
The patriarchs, though they had no knowledge of a personal Christ, were saved by believing in God so far as God had revealed himself to them ; and whoever among the heathen are saved, must in like manner be saved by casting themselves as helpless sinners upon God's plan of mercy, dimly shadowred forth in nature and providence. But such faith, even among the patriarchs and heathen, is implicitly a faith in Christ, and would become explicit and conscious trust and submission, whenever Christ were made known to them ( Mat. 8 : 11, 12 ; John 10 : 16 ; Acts 4 : 12 ; 10 : 31, 34, 35, 44; 16:31).
CONVERSION". 223
(c) That the ground .of faith is the external word of promise. The ground of assurance, on the other hand, is the inward witness of the Spirit that we fulfil the conditions of the promise ( Rom. 4 : 20, 21 ; 8 : 16 ; Eph. 1 : 13 ; 1 John 4 : 13 ; 5:10). This witness of the Spirit is not a new reve- lation from God, but a strengthening of faith so that it becomes conscious and indubitable.
True faith is possible without assurance of salvation. But if Alexander's view were correct, that the object of saving faith is the proposition : "God, for Christ's sake, now looks with reconciling love on me, a sinner," no one could believe, without being at the same time assured that he was a saved person. Upon the true view, that the object of saving faith is not a propo- sition, but a person, we can perceive not only the simplicity of faith, but the possibility of faith even where the soul is destitute of assurance or of joy. Hence those who already believe are urged to seek for assurance (Heb. 6:11; 2 Peter 1:10).
(d) That faith necessarily leads to good works, since it embraces the whole truth of God so far as made known, and appropriates Christ, not only as an external Savior, but as an internal sanctifying power (Heb. 7 : 15, 16 ; Gal. 5:6).
Good works are the proper evidence of faith. The faith which does not lead men to act upon the commands and promises of Christ, or, in other words, does not lead to obedience, is called in Scripture a "dead," that is, an unreal, faith. Such faith is not saving, since it lacks the voluntary ele- ment— actual appropriation of Christ (James 2 : 14-26).
( e ) That faith, as characteristically the inward act of reception, is not to be confounded with love or obedience, its fruit.
Faith is, in the Scriptures, called a work, only in the sense that man's active powers are engaged in it. It is a work which God requires, yet which God enables man to perform ( John 6 : 29 — ipyov tov Qeov. Cf. Rom. 1 : 17 — iiKaioavvrj 0f oil). As the gift of God and as the mere taking of unde- served mercy, it is expressly excluded from the category of works upon the basis of which man may claim salvation ( Rom. 3 : 28 ; 4 : 4, 5, 16 ). It is not the act of the full soul bestowing, but the act of an empty soul receiv- ing. Although this reception is prompted by a drawing of heart toward God inwrought by the Holy Spirit, this drawing of heart is not yet a con- scious and developed love: such love is the result of faith (Gal. 5:6) What precedes faith is an unconscious and undeveloped tendency or dispo-- sition toward God. Conscious and developed affection toward God, or love proper, must always follow faith and be the product of faith. So, too, obedience can be rendered only after faith has laid hold of Christ, and with him has obtained the spirit of obedience (Rom. 1 :5 — vnaKorjv irhreuc = "obedience resulting from faith "). Hence faith is not the procuring cause of salvation, but is only the instrumental cause. The procuring cause is the Christ, whom faith embraces.
(/) That faith is susceptible of increase.
This is evident, whether we consider it from the human or from the divine side. As an act of man, it has an intellectual, an emotional, and a voluntary
224 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OP SALVATION.
element, each of which is capable of growth. As a work of God in the soul of man, it can receive, through the presentation of the truth and the quick- ening agency of the Holy Spirit, continually new accessions of knowledge, sensibility, and active energy. Such increase of faith, therefore, we are to seek, both by resolute exercise of our own powers, and above all, by direct application to the source of faith in God ( Luke 17:5).
IV. Justification.
1. Definition of Justification.
By justification we mean that judicial act of God by which, on account of Christ, to whom the sinner is united by faith, he declares that sinner to be no longer exposed to the penalty of the law, but to be restored to his favor. Or, to give an alternative definition from which all metaphor is excluded : Justification is the reversal of God's attitude toward the sinner, because of the sinner's new relation to Christ. God did condemn ; he now acquits. He did repel ; he now admits to favor.
Justification, as thus defined, is therefore a declarative act, as distin- guished from an efficient act ; an act of God external to the sinner, as dis- tinguished from an act within the sinner's nature and changing that nature ; a judicial act, as distinguished from a sovereign act ; an act based upon and logically presupposing the sinner's union with Christ, as distinguished from an act which causes and is followed by that union with Christ.
2. Proof of the Doctrine of Justification.
A. Scripture proofs of the doctrine as a whole are the following :
B. Scripture use of the special words translated "justify " and "justifi- cation" in the Septuagint and in the New Testament.
( a ) SiKai6u — uniformly, or with only a single exception, signifies, not to make righteous, but to declare just, or free from guilt and exposure to pun- ishment. The only O. T. passage where this meaning is questionable is Dan. 12 : 3. But even here the proper translation is, in all probability, not 'they that turn many to righteousness,' but 'they that justify many,' i. e., cause many to be justified. For the Hiphil force of the verb, see Girdle- stone, O. T. Syn., 257, 258, and Delitzsch on Is. 53 : 11 ; cf. James 5 :19, 20.
In Rom. 6:7 — b yap anodavuv 6e6maitJTai dvcd rf/c. cifiapriac = ' he that once died with Christ was acquitted from the service of sin considered as a pen- ality.' In 1 Cor. 4:4 — oiidev yap kfiavrC) ovvoida. d/M' ova iv rovrtf dtdiKaiu/ia = ' I am conscious of no fault, but that does not in itself make certain God's acquittal as respects this particular charge.' The usage of the epistle of James does not contradict this ; the doctrine of James is that we are justi- fied only by such faith as makes us faithful and brings forth good works. "He uses the word exclusively in a judicial sense ; he combats a mistaken view of tt'igtic, not a mistaken view of fiinaibu"; see James 2 : 21, 23, 24, and Cremer, N. T. Lexicon, Eng. trans., 182, 183. The only N. T. passage where this meaning is questionable is Rev. 22 : 11 ; but here Alf ord, with X, a and B, reads dinaioovvrjv iroirjoaTu.
(6) diKaiuotg — is the act, in process, of declaring a man just, — that is, acquitted from guilt and restored to the divine favor ( Rom. 4 : 25 ; 5 : 18 .
JUSTIFICATION". 225
(c) iucalbtfia — is the act, as already accomplished, of declaring a man just, — that is, no longer exposed to penalty, but restored to God's favor (Rom. 5 : 16, 18; cf. 1 Tim. 3 : 16). Hence, in other connections, 6cnaU,>/ta has the meaning of statute, legal decision, act of justice ( Luke 1:6; Rom. 2:26; Heb. 9:1).
(rf) cimioavvt] — is the state of one justified, or declared just ( Rom. 8: 10 ; 1 Cor. 1 : 30). In Rom. 10 : 3, Paul inveighs against ryv Uinv StKaioowrjv as insufficient and false, and in its place would put ->> rov Geov 6iKaioavvr/v, — that is, a JtKaioovvj} -which God not only recpiires, but provides ; which is not only acceptable to God, but proceeds from God, and is appropriated by faith, — hence called dinaioavvr) nioTios or £«■ Tn'orewc. "The primary significa- tion of the word, in Paul's writings, is therefore that state of the believer which is called forth by God's act of acquittal, — the state of the believer as justified," that is, freed from punishment and restored to the divine favor.
Since this state of acquittal is accompanied by changes in the character and conduct, diKatoavvrj comes to mean, secondarily, the moral condition of the believer as resulting from this acquittal and inseparably connected with it ( Rom. 14 : 17 ; 2 Cor. 5 : 21 ). This righteousness arising from justifica- tion becomes a prmciple of action ( Mat. 3 : 15 ; Acts 10 : 35 ; Rom. 6 : 13, 18). The term, however, never loses its implication of a justifying act upon which this principle of action is based.
It is worthy of special observation that, in the passages cited above, the terms "justify" and "justification" are contrasted, not with the process of depraving or corrupting, but with the outward act of condemning ; and that the expressions used to explain and illustrate them are all derived, not from the inward operation of purifying the soul oi infusing into it righteousness, but from the procedure of courts in their judgments, or of offended persons in their forgiveness of offenders. We conclude that these terms, wherever they have reteience to the sinner's relation to God, signify a declarative and judicial act of God, external to the sinner, and not an efficient and sovereign act of God changing the sinner's nature and making him subjectively righteous.
3. Elements of Justification.
These are two :
A. Remission of punishment.
( a ) God acquits the ungodly who believe in Christ, and declares them just. This is not to declare them innocent, — that would be a judgment contrary to truth. It declares that the demands of the law have been satis- fied with regard to them, and that they are now free from its condemnation.
(6) This acquital, in so far as it is the act of God as judge or executive, administering law, may be denominated pardon. In so far as it is the act ol God as a father personally injured and grieved by sin, yet showing grace to the sinner, it is denominated forgiveness.
( c) In an earthly tribunal, there is no acquittal for those who are proved to be transgessors, — for such there is only conviction and punishment. But in God's government there is remission of punishment for believers, even though they are confessedly offenders ; and, in justification, God declares this remission.
226 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION".
( d ) The declaration that the sinner is no longer exposed to the penalty of law, has its ground, not in any satisfaction of the law's demand on the part of the sinner himself, but solely in the bearing of the penalty by Christ, to whom the sinner is united by faith. Justification, in its first element, is therefore that act by which God, for the sake of Christ, acquits the transgressor and suffers him to go free.
B. Eestoration to favor.
(a) Justification is more than remission or acquittal. These would leave the sinner simply in the position of a discharged criminal, — law requires a positive righteousness also. Besides deliverance from punish- ment, justification implies God's treatment of the sinner as if he were, and had been, personally righteous. The justified person receives not only remission of penalty, but the rewards promised to obedience.
( b ) This restoration to favor, viewed in its aspect as the renewal of a broken friendship, is denominated reconciliation ; viewed in its aspect as a renewal of the soul's true relation to God as a father, it is denominated adoption.
( c ) In an earthly pardon there are no special helps bestowed upon the pardoned. There are no penalties, but there are also no rewards ; law can- not claim anything of the discharged, but then they also can claim nothing of the law. But what, though greatly needed, is left unprovided by human government, God does provide. In justification, there is not only acquittal, but approval ; not only pardon, but promotion. Kemission is never sepa- rated from restoration.
( d ) The declaration that the sinner is restored to God's favor, has its ground, not in the sinner's personal character or conduct, but solely in the obedience and righteousness of Christ, to whom the sinner is united by faith. Thus Christ's work is the procuring cause of our justification, in both its elements. As we are acquitted on account of Christ's suffering of the penalty of the law, so on account of Christ's obedience we receive the rewards of law.
4. Relation of Justification to God's Law and Holiness.
A. Justification has been shown to be a forensic term. A man may, indeed, be conceived of as just, in either of two senses : (a) as just in moral character, — that is, absolutely holy in nature, disposition, and con- duct ; (6) as justin relation to law, — or as free from all obligation to suffer penalty, and as entitled to the rewards of obedience.
So, too, a man may be conceived of as justified, in either of two senses : ( a) made just in moral character ; or, ( b ) made just in his relation to law. But the Scriptures declare that there does not exist on earth a just man, in the first of these senses ( Eccl. 7 : 20). Even in those who are renewed in moral character and united to Christ, there is a remnant of moral depravity.
If, therefore, there be any such thing as a just man, he must be just, not in the sense of possessing an unspotted holiness, but in the sense of being delivered from the penalty of law, and made partaker of its rewards. If there be any such thing as justification, it must be, not an act of God
JUSTIFICATION. 227
which renders the sinner absolutely holy, but an act of God which declares the sinner to be free from legal penalties and entitled to legal rewards.
B. The difficult feature of justification is the declaration, on the part of God, that a sinner whose remaining sinfulness seems to necessitate the vin- dicative reaction of God's holiness against him, is yet free from such reaction of holiness as is expressed in the penalties of the law.
The fact is to be accepted on the testimony of Scripture. If this testimony be not accepted, there is no deliverance from the condemnation of law. But the difficulty of conceiving of God's declaring the sinner no longer exposed to legal penalty is relieved, if not removed, by the three-fold consideration :
( a ) That Christ has endured the penalty of the law in the sinner's stead.
( b ) That the sinner is so united to Christ, that Christ's life already con- stitutes the dominating principle within him.
(c) That this life of Christ is a power in the soul which will gradually, but infallibly, extirpate all remaining depravity, until the whole physical and moral nature is perfectly conformed to the divine holiness.
5. Relation of Justification to Union with Christ and the Work of the Spirit.
A. Since the sinner, at the moment of justification, is not yet com- pletely transformed in character, we have seen that God can declare him just, not on account of what he is in himself, but only on account of what Christ is. The ground of justification is therefore not, ( a) as the Romanists hold, a new righteousness and love infused into us, and now constituting our moral character ; nor, ( b ) as Osiander taught, the essential righteous- ness of Christ's divine nature, which has become ours by faith ; but ( c ) the satisfaction and obedience of Christ, as the head of a new humanity, and as embracing in himself all believers as his members.
As Adam's sin is imputed to us, not because Adam is in us, but because we were in Adam ; so Christ's righteousness is imputed to us, not because Christ is in us, but because we are in Christ, — that is, joined by faith to one whose righteousness and life are infinitely greater than our power to appropriate or contain. In this sense, we may say that we are justified through a Christ outside of us, as we are sanctified through a Christ within us. Edwards : " The justification of the believer is no other than his being admitted to communion in, or participation of, this head and surety of all believers."
B. The relation of justification to regeneration and sanctification, more- over, delivers it from the charges of externality and immorality. God does not justify ungodly men in their ungodliness. He pronounces them just only as they are united to Christ, who is absolutely just, and who, by his Spirit, can make them just, not only in the eye of the law, but in moral character. The very faith by which the sinner receives Christ is an act in which he ratifies all that Christ has done, and accepts God'a judgment against sin as his own (John 16 : 11).
Justification is possible, therefore, because it is always accompanied by regeneration and union with Christ, and is followed by sanctification. But
228 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
this is a very different thing from the Romanist confounding of justification and sanctification, as different stages of the same process of making the sinner actually holy. It holds fast to the Scripture distinction between justification as a declarative act of God, and regeneration and sanctification as those efficient acts of God by which justification is accompanied and fol- lowed.
6. Relation of Justification to Faith.
A. We are justified by faith, rather than by love or by any other grace : (a) not because faith is itself a work of obedience by which we merit justification, — for this would be a doctrine of justification by works ; ( b ) nor because faith is accepted as an equivalent of obedience, — for there is no equivalent except the perfect obedience of Christ ; ( c ) nor because faith is the germ from which obedience may spring hereafter, — for it is not the faith which accepts, but the Christ who is accepted, that renders such obedience possible ; but ( d ) because faith, and not repentance, or love, or hope, is the medium or instrument by which we receive Christ and are united to him. Hence we are never said to be justified Ata Tvioriv, = on account of faith, but only 6ta irioTeus, = through faith, or £k niareu^, = by faith. Or, to express the same truth in other words, while the grace of God is the efficient cause of justification, and the obedience and suffer- ings of Christ are the meritorious or procuring cause, faith is the mediate or instrumental cause.
B. Since the ground of justification is only Christ, to whom we are united by faith, the justified person has peace. If it were anything in ourselves, our peace must needs be proportioned to our holiness. The practical effect of the Eomanist mingling of works with faith, as a joint ground of justification, is to render all assurance of salvation impossible. ( Council of Trent, 9th chap.: "Every man, by reason of his own weak- ness and defects, must be in fear and anxiety about his state of grace. Nor can any one know, with infallible certainty of faith, that he has received forgiveness of God. " ). But since justification is an instantaneous act of God, complete at the moment of the sinner's first believing, it has no degrees. Weak faith justifies as perfectly as strong faith ; although, since justification is a secret act of God, weak faith does not give so strong assurance of salvation.
C. Justification is instantaneous, complete, and final : instantaneous, since otherwise there would be an interval during which the soul was neither approved nor condemned by God ( Mat. 6 : 24 ) ; complete, since the soul, united to Christ by faith, becomes partaker of his complete satis- faction to the demands of law ( Col. 2 : 9, 10 ) ; and final, since the union with Christ is indissoluble ( John 10 :28, 29). As there are many acts of sin in the life of the Christian, so there are many acts of pardon following them. But all these acts of pardon are virtually implied in that first act by which he was finally and forever justified ; as also successive acts of repentance and faith, after such sins, are virtually implied in that first repentance and faith which logically preceded justification.
SANCTIFICATION. 229
7. Advice to Inquirers demanded by a Scriptural View of Justification.
(a) Where conviction of sin is yet lacking, our aim should be to show the sinner that he is under God's condemnation for his past sins, and that no future obedience can ever secure his justification, since this obedience, even though perfect, coidd not atone for the past, and even if it could, he is unable, without God's help, to render it.
( 6 ) Where conviction of sin already exists, our aim should be, not, in the first instance, to secure the performance of external religious duties, such as prayer, or Scripture-reading, or uniting with the church, but to induce the sinner, as his first and all-inclusive duty, to accept Christ as his only and sufficient sacrifice and Savior, and, committing himself and the matter of his salvation entirely to the hands of Christ, to manifest this trust and submission by entering at once upon a life of obedience to Christ's commands.
SECTION" III. — THE APPLICATION OF CHRIST'S REDEMPTION IN ITS CONTINUATION.
Under this head we treat of Sanctification and of Perseverance. These two are but the divine and the human sides of the same fact, and they bear to each other a relation similar to that which exists between Begeneration and Conversion.
I. Sanoteficatton.
1. Definition of Sanctification.
Sanctification is that continuous operation of the Holy Spirit, by which the holy disposition imparted in regeneration is maintained and strength- ened.
This definition implies:
(a) That, although in regeneration the governing disposition of the soul is made holy, there still remain tendencies to evil which are unsubdued.
( b ) That the existence in the believer of these two opposing principles gives rise to a conflict which lasts through life.
( c ) That in this conflict the Holy Spirit enables the Christian, through increasing faith, more fully and consciously to appropriate Christ, and thus progressively to make conquest of the remaining sinfulness of his nature.
2. Explanations and Scripture Proof. (a) Sanctification is the work of God.
( b ) It is a continuous process.
( c ) It is distinguished from regeneration as growth from birth, or as the strengthening of a holy disposition from the original importation of it.
( d ) The operation of God reveals itself in, and is accompanied by, intel- ligent and voluntary activity of the believer in the discovery and mortifica- tion of sinful desires, and in the bringing of the whole being into obedience to Christ and conformity to the standards of his word.
230 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF SALVATION.
( e ) The agency through which God effects the sanctiflcation of the believer is the indwelling Spirit of Christ.
(/) The mediate or instrumental cause of sanctiflcation, as of justifica- tion, is faith.
{g) The object of this faith is Christ himself, as the head of a new humanity and the source of truth and life to those united to him.
(h) Though the weakest faith perfectly justifies, the degree of sanctiflca- tion is measured by the strength of the Christian's faith, and the persist- ence with which he apprehends Christ in the various relations which the Scriptures declare him to sustain to us.
(«') From the lack of persistence in using the means appointed for Christian growth — such as the word of God, prayer, association with other believers, and jDersonal effort for the conversion of the ungodly — sanctifl- cation does not always proceed in regular and unbroken course, and it is never completed in this life.
(j ) Sanctiflcation, both of the soul and of the body of the believer, is completed in the life to come, — that of the former at death, that of the latter at the resurrection.
3. Erroneous Vieivs refuted by these Scripture Passages.
A. The Antinomian, — which holds that, since Christ's obedience and sufferings have satisfied the demands of the law, the believer is free from obligation to observe it.
To this view we urge the following objections :
( a ) That since the law is a transcript of the holiness of God, its demands as a moral rule are unchanging. Only as a system of penalty and a method of salvation is the law abolished in Christ's death.
( b ) That the union between Christ and the believer secures not only the bearing of the penalty of the law by Christ, but also the impartation of Christ's spirit of obedience to the believer, — in other words, brings him into communion with Christ's work, and leads him to ratify it in his own experience.
( c ) That the freedom from the law of which the Scriptures speak, is therefore simply that freedom from the constraint and bondage of the law, which characterizes those who have become one with Christ by faith.
To sum up the doctrine of Christian freedom as opposed to Antinomian- ism, we may say that Christ does not free us, as the Antinomian believes, from the law as a rule of life. But he does free us ( 1 ) from the law as a system of curse and penalty ; this he does by bearing the curse and penalty himself. Christ frees us ( 2 ) from the law with its claims as a method of salvation ; this he does by making his obedience and merits ours. Christ frees us ( 3 ) from the law as an outward and foreign compulsion ; this he does by giving to us the spirit of obedience and sonship, by which the law is progressively realized within.
SANCTIFICATION. 231
B. The Perfectionist, — which holds that tho Christian may, in this life, become perfectly free from sin. This view was held by John Wesley in England, and by Mahan and Finney in America.
In reply, it will bo sufficient to observe :
( a ) That the theory rests upon false conceptions : first, of the law, — as a sliding-scale of requirement graduated to the moral condition of creatures, instead of being the unchangeable reflection of God's holiness ; secondly, of sin, — as consisting only in voluntary acts instead of embracing also those dispositions and states of the soul which are not conformed to the divine holiness ; thirdly, of the human will, — as able to choose God supremely and persistently at every moment of life, and to fulfil at every moment the obligations resting upon it, instead of being corrupted and enslaved by the Fall.
( b ) That the theory finds no support in, but rather is distinctly contra- dicted by, Scripture.
First, the Scriptures never assert or imply that the Christian may in this life live without sin ; passages like 1 John 3 : 6, 9, if interpreted consist- ently with the context, set forth either the ideal standard of Corinthians living or the actual state of the believer so far as respects his new nature.
Secondly, the apostolic admonitions to the Corinthians and Hebrews show that no such state of complete sanctification had been generally attained by the Christians of the first century.
Thirdly, there is express record of sin committed by the most perfect characters of Scripture — as Noah, Abraham, Job, David, Peter.
Fourthly, the word rfAewe, as applied to spiritual conditions already attained, can fairly be held to signify only a relative perfection, equivalent to sincere piety or maturity of Christian judgment.
Fifthly, the Scriptures distinctly deny that any man on earth lives with- out sin.
Sixthly, the declaration : " ye were sanctified " ( 1 Cor. 6 : 11 ), and the designation : " saints " ( 1 Cor. 1:2), applied to early believers, are, as the whole epistle shows, expressive of a holiness existing in germ and automa- tion ; the expressions deriving their meaning not so much from what these early believers were, as from what Christ was, to whom they were united by faith.
( c ) That the theory is disapproved by the testimony of Christian expe- rience.— In exact proportion to the soul's advance in holiness does it shrink from claiming that holiness has been already attained, and humble itself before God for its remaining apathy, ingratitude, and unbelief.
Perfectionism is best met by proper statements of the nature of the law and of sin ( Ps. 119 : 96 ). While we thus rebuke spiritual pride, however, we should be equally careful to point out the inseparable connection between justification and sanctification, and their equal importance as together mak-
232 SOTERIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRIHE OF SALVATION.
ing up the Biblical idea of salvation. While we show no favor to those who would make sanctiflcation a sudden and paroxysmal act of the human will, we should hold forth the holiness of God as the standard of attainment, and the faith in a Christ of infinite fulness as the medium through which that standard is to be gradually but certainly realized in us ( 2 Cor. 3 : 18 ).
II. Peksevebance.
The Scriptures declare that, in virtue of the original purpose and contin- uous operation of God, all who are united to Christ by faith will infallibly continue in a state of grace and will finally attain to everlasting life. This voluntary continuance, on the part of the Christian, in faith and well-doing we call perseverance. Perseverance is, therefore, the human side or aspect of that spiritual process which, as viewed from the divine side, we call sanc- tiflcation. It is not a mere natural consequence of conversion, but involves a constant activity of the human will from the moment of conversion to the end of life.
1. Proof of the Doctrine of Perseverance.
A. From Scripture,— as John 10 : 28, 29 ; Eom. 11 : 29 ; PhiL 1:6; 2 Thess. 3 :3 ; 2 Tim. 1 : 12 ; 1 Pet. 1:5; Rev. 3 : 10.
B. From Reason.
(a) It is a necessary inference from other doctrines, — such as election, union with Christ, regeneration, justification, sanctiflcation.
( b ) It accords with analogy,— God's preserving care being needed by, and being granted to, his spiritual, as well as his natural, creation.
( c ) It is implied in all assurance of salvation, — since this assurance is given by the Holy Spirit, and is based not upon the known strength of human resolution, but upon the purpose and operation of God.
2. Objections to the Doctrine of Perseverance.
These objections are urged chiefly by Arminians and by Romanists.
A. That it is inconsistent with human freedom. — Answer : It is no more so than is the doctrine of Election or the doctrine of Decrees.
B. That it tends to immorality. — Answer : This cannot be, since the doctrine declares that God will save men by securing their perseverance in holiness.
C. That it leads to indolence. — Answer : This is a perversion of the doctrine, continuously possible only to the unregenerate ; since, to the regenerate, certainty of success is the strongest incentive to activity in the conflict with sin.
D. That the Scripture commands to persevere and warnings against apostasy show that certain, even of the regenerate, will fall away. — Answer :
( a ) They show that some, who are apparently regenerate, will fall away.
( b ) They show that the truly regenerate, and those who are only appar- ently so, are not certainly distinguishable in this life.
PERSEVERANCE. 233
( c ) They show the fearful consequences of rejecting Christ, to those who have enjoyed special divine influences, but who are only apparently regenerate.
( d ) They show what the fate of the truly regenerate would be, in case they should not persevere.
(c) They show that the perseverance of the truly regenerate may be secured by these very commands and warnings.
(/) They do not show that it is certain, or possible, that any truly regenerate person will fall away.
E. That we have actual examples of such apostasy. — Wo answer :
(a) Such are either men once outwardly reformed, like Judas and Ananias, but never renewed in heart ;
( 6 ) Or they are regenerate men, who, like David and Peter, have fallen into temporary sin, from which they will, before death, be reclaimed by God's discipline.
PART YIL
ECCLESIOLOGY, OE THE DOOTEINE OF THE CHURCH.
CHAPTER I. THE CONSTITUTION" OF THE CHURCH, OR CHURCH POLITY.
I. Definition or the Chueoh.
( a ) The church of Christ, in its largest signification, is the whole com- pany of regenerate persons in all times and ages, in heaven and on earth ( Mat. 16 : 18 ; Eph. 1 : 22, 23 ; 3 : 10 ; 5 : 24, 25 ; Col. 1 : 18 ; Heb. 12 : 23 ). In this sense, the church is identical with the spiritual ingdom of God ; both signify that redeemed humanity in which God in Christ exercises actual spiritual dominion ( John 3:3, 5 ).
( b ) The church, in this large sense, is nothing less than the body of Christ — the organism to which he gives spiritual life, and through which he manifests the fulness of his power and grace. The church therefore cannot be defined in merely human terms, as an aggregate of individuals associated for social, benevolent, or even spiritual purposes. There is a transcendent element in the church. It is the great company of persons whom Christ has saved, in whom he dwells, to whom and through whom he reveals God (Eph. 1 : 22, 23 ).
( c ) The Scriptures, however, distinguish between this invisible or uni- versal church, and the individual church, in which the universal church takes local and temporal form, and in which the idea of the church as a whole is concretely exhibited.
( d ) The individual church may be defined as that smaller company of regenerate persons, who, in any given community, unite themselves volun- tarily together, in accordance with Christ's laws, for the purpose of secur- ing the complete establishment of his kingdom in themselves and in the world.
(e) Besides these two significations of the term 'church,' there are properly in the New Testament no others. The word end.?io(a is indeed used in Acts 7 : 38 ; 19 : 32, 39 ; Heb. 2 : 12, to designate a popular assem- bly ; but since this is a secular use of the term, it does not here concern us. In certain passages, as for example Acts 9:31 (Untyo'ia, sing., Nabc),
ORGANIZATION OF THE CHURCH. 235
1 Cor. 12 : 28, Phil. 3 : 6, and 1 Tim. 3 : 15, huthjeia appears to be used either as a generic or as a collective term, to denote simply the body of indepen- dent local churches existing in a given region or at a given epoch. But since there is no evidence that these churches were bound together in any outward organization, this use of the term eKK^aia cannot be regarded as adding any new sense to those of ■ the universal church ' and ' the local church ' already mentioned.
The prevailing usage of the N. T. gives to the term huthiaia tho second of these two significations. It is this local church only which has definite and temporal existence, and of this alone we henceforth treat. Our defini- tion of the individual church implies the two following particulars :
A. The church, like the family and the state, is an institution of divine appointment. This is plain : (a) from its relation to the church universal, as its concrete embodiment ; ( b ) from the fact that its necessity is grounded in the social and religious nature of man ; ( c ) from the Script- ure,— as for example, Christ's command in Mat. 18 : 17, and the designa- tion 'church of God,' applied to individual churches ( 1 Cor. 1:2).
B. The church, unlike the family and the state, is a voluntary society. (a) This results from the fact that the local church is the outward expres- sion of that rational and free life in Christ which characterizes the church as a whole. In this it differs from those other organizations of divine appointment, entrance into which is not optional. Membership in the church is not hereditary or comptUsory. ( b ) The doctrine of the church, as thus defined, is a necessary outgrowth of the doctrine of regeneration. As this fundamental spiritual change is mediated not by outward appli- ances, but by inward and conscious reception of Christ and his truth, union with the church logically follows, not precedes, the soul's spiritual union with Christ.
II. Organization of the Church. 1. The fact of organization.
Organization may exist without knowledge of writing, without written records, lists of members, or formal choice of officers. These last are the proofs, reminders, and helps of organization, but they are not essential to it. It is however not merely informal, but formal, organization in the church, to which the New Testament bears witness.
That there was such organization is abundantly shown from ( a ) its stated meetings, ( b ) elections, and ( c ) officers ; ( d ) from the designations of its ministers, together with ( e ) the recognized authority of the minister and of the church; (/) from its discipline, (g) contributions, (A) letters of commendation, (i) registers of widows, (j) uniform customs, and (k) ordinances ; ( I ) from the order enjoined and observed, ( m ) the qualifi- cations for membership, and ( n ) the common work of the whole body.
As indicative of a developed organization in the N. T. church, of which only the germ existed before Christ's death, it is important to notice the progress in names from the Gospels to the Epistles. In the Gospels, the word "disciples " is the common designation of Christ's followers, but it is
236 ECCLESIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH.
not once found in the Epistles. In the Epistles, there are only " saints," " brethren," " churches." A consideration of the facts here referred to is sufficient to evince the unscriptural nature of two modern theories of the church :
A. The theory that the church is an exclusively spiritual body, destitute of all formal organization, and bound together only by the mutual relation of each believer to his indwelling Lord.
The church, upon this view, so far as outward bonds are concerned, is only an aggregation of isolated units. Those believers who chance to gather at a particular place, or to live at a particular time, constitute the church of that place or time. This view is held by the Friends and by the Plymouth Brethren. It ignores the tendencies to organization inherent in human nature ; confounds the visible with the invisible church ; and is directly opposed to the Scripture representations of the visible church as comprehending some who are not true believers.
B. The theory that the form of church organization is not definitely prescribed in the New Testament, but is a matter of expediency, each body of believers being permitted to adopt that method of organization which best suits its circumstances and condition.
The view under consideration seems in some respects to be favored by Neander, and is often regarded as incidental to his larger conception of church history as a progressive development. But a proper theory of development does not exclude the idea of a church organization already complete in all essential particulars before the close of the inspired canon, so that the record of it may constitute a providential example of binding authority upon all subsequent ages. The view mentioned exaggerates the differences of practice among the N. T. churches ; underestimates the need of divine direction as to methods of church union ; and admits a principle of ' church powers, ' which may be historically shown to be subversive of the very existence of the church as a spiritual body.
2. The nature of this organization.
The nature of any organization may be determined by asking, first : who constitute its members ? secondly : for what object has it been formed ? and, thirdly : what are the laws which regulate its operations ?
A. They only can properly be members of the local church, who have previously become members of the church universal, — or, in other words, have become regenerate persons.
From this limitation of membership to regenerate persons, certain results follow :
( a ) Since each member bears supreme allegiance to Christ, the church as a body must recognize Christ as the only lawgiver. The relation of the individual Christian to the church does not supersede, but furthers and expresses, his relation to Christ.
(6) Since each regenerate man recognizes in every other a brother in Christ, the several members are upon a footing of absolute equality ( Mat. 23:8-10).
ORGANIZATION OF THE CHURCH. 237
( c ) Since each local church is directly subject to Christ, there is no jurisdiction of one church over another, but all are on an equal footing, and all are independent of interference or control by the civil power.
B. The sole object of the local church is the glory of God, in the com- plete establishment of his kingdom, both in the hearts of believers and in the world. This object is to be promoted :
(a) By united worship, — including prayer and religious instruction; ( b ) by mutual watchcare and exhortation ; ( c ) by common labors f or the reclamation of the impenitent world.
C. The law of the church is simply the will of Christ, as expressed in the Scriptures and interpreted by the Holy Spirit. This law respects :
(a) The qualifications for membership. — These are regeneration and baptism, i. e. , spiritual new birth and ritual new birth ; the surrender of the inward and of the outward life to Christ ; the spiritual entrance into communion with Christ's death and resurrection, and the formal i^rofession of this to the world by being buried with Christ and rising with him in baptism.
( 6 ) The duties imposed on members. — In discovering the will of Christ from the Scriptures, each member has the right of private judgment, being directly responsible to Christ for his use of the means of knowledge, and for his obedience to Christ's commands when these are known.
3. The genesis of this organization.
(a) The church existed in germ before the day of Pentecost, — otherwise there would have been nothing to which those converted upon that day could have been "added" (Acts 2 : 47). Among the apostles, regenerate as they were, united to Christ by faith and in that faith baptized (Acts 19 : 4 ), under Christ's instruction and engaged in common work for him, there were already the beginnings of organization. There was a treasurer of the body (John 13 : 29), and as a body they celebrated for the first time the Lord's Supper (Mat. 26 : 26-29 ). To all intents and purposes they consti- tuted a church, although the church was not yet fully equipped for its work by the outpouring of the Spirit ( Acts 2 ), and by the appointment of pastors and deacons. The church existed without officers, as in the first days suc- ceeding Pentecost.
( b ) That provision for these offices was made gradually as exigencies arose, is natural when we consider that the church immediately after Christ's ascension was under the tutelage of inspired apostles, and was to bo pre- pared, by a process of education, for independence and self-government. As doctrine was communicated gradually yet infallibly, through the oral and written teaching of the apostles, so we are warranted in believing that the church was gradually but infallibly guided to the adoption of Christ's own plan of church organization and of Christian work. The same promise of the Spirit which renders the New Testament an unerring and sufficient rule of faith, renders it also an unerring and sufficient rule of practice, for the church in all places and times.
238 ECCLESIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OP THE CHURCH.
( c ) Any number of believers, therefore, may constitute themselves into a Christian church, by adopting for their rule of faith and practice Christ's law as laid down in the New Testament, and by associating themselves together, in accordance with it, for his worship and service. It is impor- tant, where practicable, that a council of churches be previously called, to advise the brethren proposing this union as to the desirableness of consti- tuting a new and distinct local body ; and, if it be found desirable, to recognize them, after its formation, as being a church of Christ. But such action of a council, however valuable as affording ground for the fellowship of other churches, is not constitutive, but is simply declaratory ; and, without such action, the body of believers alluded to, if formed after the N. T. example, may notwithstanding be a true church of Christ. Still further, a band of converts, among the heathen or providentially precluded from access to existing churches, might rightfully appoint one of their number to baptize the rest, and then might organize, de novo, a New Testament church.
III. GOVERNMENT OP THE CHURCH.
1. Nature of this government in general.
It is evident from the direct relation of each member of the church, and so of the church as a whole, to Christ as sovereign and lawgiver, that the government of the church, so far as regards the source of authority, is an absolute monarchy.
In ascertaining the will of Christ, however, and in applying his com mands to providential exigencies, the Holy Spirit enlightens one member through the counsel of another, and as the result of combined deliberation, guides the whole body to right conclusions. This work of the Spirit is the foundation of the Scripture injunctions to unity. This unity, since it is a unity of the Spirit, is not an enforced, but an intelligent and willing - sunity. While Christ is sole king, therefore, the government of the church so far as regards the interpretation and execution of his will by the body, is an absolute democracy, in which the whole body of members is intrusted with the duty and responsibility of carrying out the laws of Christ a, expressed in his word.
A. Proof that the government of the church is democratic or congre- gational.
( a ) From the duty of the whole church to preserve unity in its action.
( b ) From the responsibility of the whole church for maintaining pure doctrine and practice.
( c ) From the committing of the ordinances to the charge of the whole church to observe and guard. As the church expresses truth in her teach- ing, so she is to express it in symbol through the ordinances.
( d ) From the election by the whole church, of its own officers and dele- gates. In Acts 14 : 23, the literal interpretation of xeiP0T0VV<^avT£Q is not to be pressed. In Titus 1:5, " when Paul empowers Titus to set presiding officers over the communities, this circumstance decides nothing as to the
GOVERNMENT OF THE CHURCH. 239
mode of choice, nor is a choice by the community itself thereby necessarily excluded. "
( e ) From the power of the whole church to exercise discipline. Pas- sages which show the right of the whole body to exclude, show also the right of the whole body to admit, members.
B. Erroneous views as to church government refuted by the foregoing passages.
( a ) The world-church theory, or the Romanist view. — This holds that all local churches are subject to the supreme authority of the bishop of Rome, as the successor of Peter and the infallible vicegerent of Christ, and, as thus united, constitute the one and only church of Christ on earth. We reply :
First, — Christ gave no such supreme authority to Peter. Mat. 16 : 18, 19, simply refers to the personal position of Peter as first confessor of Christ and preacher of his name to Jews and Gentiles. Hence other apostles also constituted the foundation ( Eph. 2 : 20 ; Rev. 21 : 14 ). On one occa- sion, the counsel of James was regarded as of equal weight with that of Peter (Acts 15 : 7-30), while on another occasion Peter was rebuked by Paul ( Gal. 2 : 11 ), and Peter calls himself only a fellow-elder (1 Pet. 5:1).
Secondly, — If Peter had such authority given him, there is no evidence that he had power to transmit it to others.
Thirdly, — There is no conclusive evidence that Peter ever was at Rome, much less that he was bishop of Rome.
Fourthly, — There is no evidence that he really did so appoint the bishops of Rome as his successors.
Fifthly, — If Peter did so appoint the bishops of Rome, the evidence of continuous succession since that time is lacking.
Sixthly, — There is abundant evidence that a hierarchical form of church government is corrupting to the church and dishonoring to Christ.
( b ) The national-church theory, or the theory of provincial or national churches. — This holds that all members of the church in any province or nation are bound together in provincial or national organization, and that this organization has jurisdiction over the local churches. We reply :
First, — the theory has no support in the Scriptures. There is no evi- dence that the word etcuX/jota in the New Testament ever means a national church organization. 1 Cor. 12 : 28, Phil. 3 : 6, and 1 Tim. 3 : 15, may be more naturally interpreted as referring to the generic church. In Acts 9 : 31, inKhjaia is a mere generalization for the local churches then and there existing, and implies no sort of organization among them.
Secondly, — It is contradicted by the intercourse which the New Testa- ment churches held with each other as independent bodies, — for example at the Council of Jerusalem (Acts. 15 : 1-35)
Thirdly, — It has no practical advantages over the Congregational polity, but rather tends to formality, division, and the extinction of the principles of self-government and direct responsibility to Christ.
240 ECCLESIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH.
Fourthly, — It is inconsistent with itself, in binding a professedly spiritual church by formal and geographical lines.
Fifthly, — It logically leads to the theory of Komanism. If two churches need a superior authority to control them and settle their differences, then two countries and two hemispheres need a common ecclesiastical govern- ment,— and a world-church, under one visible head, is Romanism.
2. Officers of the Church.
A. The number of offices in the church is two : — first, the office of bishop, presbyter, or pastor ; and, secondly, the office of deacon.
(a) That the appellations 'bishop,' 'presbyter,' and 'pastor' designate the same office and order of persons, may be shown from Acts 20 : 28 — knioadirovQ iroifiaiveiv ( c/. 17 — irpeofivTEpovg) j Phil. 1 : 1 ; 1 Tim. 3 : 1, 8 ; Titus 1:5, 7 ; 1 Pet. 5:1, 2 — irpeo(5vTkpov(; .... TrapaKaAu 6 avfnrpea(ivTepog .... woifiavare noifiviov .... ETrcoKoirovvTE<;. Conybeare and Howson : "The terms 'bishop' and 'elder' are used in the New Testament as equivalent, — the former denoting ( as its meaning of overseer implies ) the duties, the latter the rank, of the office. " See passages quoted in Gieseler, Church History, 1 : 90, note 1 — as, for example, Jerome : " Apud veteres iidem episcopi et presbyteri, quia illud nomen dignitatis est, hoc setatis. Idem est ergo presbyter qui episcopus."
(6) The only plausible objection to the identity of the presbyter and the bishop is that first suggested by Calvin, on the ground of 1 Tim. 5 : 17. But this text only shows that the one office of presbyter or bishop involved two kinds of labor, and that certain presbyters or bishops were more suc- cessful in one kind than in the other. That gifts of teaching and ruling belonged to the same individual, is clear from Acts 20 : 28-31 ; Eph. 4 : 11 ; Heb. 13 : 7 ; 1 Tim. 3 : 2 — kiziaKoiTov 6i.6anTiii6v.
( c ) In certain of the N. T. churches there appears to have been a plu- rality of elders ( Acts 20 : 17 ; Phil. 1:1; Tit. 1:5). There is, however, no evidence that the number of elders was uniform, or that the plurality which frequently existed was due to any other cause than the size of the churches for which these elders cared. The N. T. example, while it per- mits the multiplication of assistant pastors according to need, does not require a plural eldership in every case ; nor does it render this eldership, where it exists, of coordinate authority with the church. There are indica- tions, moreover, that, at least iu certain churches, the pastor was one, while the deacons were more than one, in number.
B. The duties belonging to these offices.
( a ) The pastor, bishop, or elder is :
First, — a spiritual teacher, in public and private ;
Secondly, — administrator of the ordinances ;
Thirdly, — superintendent of the discipline, as well as presiding officer at the meetings, of the church.
GOVERNMENT OF THE CHURCH. 241
( b ) The deacon is helper to the pastor and the chnrch, in both spiritual and temporal things.
First, — relieving the pastor of external labors, informing him of the condition and wants of the church, and forming a bond of union between pastor and people.
Secondly, — helping the church, by relieving the poor and sick and ministering in an informal way to the church's spiritual needs, and by performing certain external duties connected with the service of the sanctuary.
C. Ordination of officers.
( a ) What is ordination ?
Ordination is the setting apart of a person divinely called to a work of special ministration in the church. It does not involve the communication of power, — it is simply a recognition of powers previously conferred by God, and a consequent formal authorization, on the part of the church, to exercise the gifts already bestowed. This recognition and authorization should not only be expressed by the vote in which the candidate is approved by the church or the council which represents it, but should also be accompanied by a special service of admonition, prayer, and the laying- on of hands (Acts 6: 5, 6; 13:2, 3; 14:23; 1 Tim. 4:14; 5:22).
Licensure simply commends a man to the churches as fitted to preach. Ordination recognizes him as set apart to the work of preaching and administering ordinances, in some particular church or in some designated field of labor, as representative of the church.
Of his call to the ministry, the candidate himself is to be first persuaded ( 1 Cor. 9 : 16 ; 1 Tim. 1:12); but, secondly, the church must be per- suaded also, before he can have authority to minister among them ( 1 Tim. 3:2-7; 4 : 14 ; Titus 1 : 6-9.
( b ) Who are to ordain ?
Ordination is the act of the church, not the act of a privileged class in the church, as the eldership has sometimes wrongly been regarded, nor yet the act of other churches, assembled by their representatives in council. No ecclesiastical authority higher than that of the local church is recognized in the New Testament. This authority, however, has its limits ; and since the church has no authority outside of its own body, the candidate for ordination should be a member of the ordaining church.
Since each church is bound to recognize the presence of the Spirit in other rightly constituted churches, and its own decisions, in like manner, are to be recognized by others, it is desirable in ordination, as in all important steps affecting other churches, that advice be taken before the candidate is inducted into office, and that other churches be called to sit with it in council, and if thought best, assist in setting the candidate apart for the ministry.
It is always to be remembered, however, that the power to ordain rests with the church, and that the church may proceed without a Council, or
242 ECCLESIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH.
even against the decision of the Council. Such ordination, of course, would give authority only within the bounds of the individual church. Where no immediate exception is taken to the decision of the Council, that decision is to be regarded as virtually the decision of the church by which it was called. The same rule applies to a Council's decision to depose from the ministry. In the absence of immediate protest from the church, the decis- ion of the Council is rightly taken as virtually the decision of the church.
In so far as ordination is an act performed by the local church with the advice and assistance of other rightly constituted churches, it is justly regarded as giving formal permission to exercise gifts and administer ordi- nances within the bounds of such churches. Ordination is not, therefore, to be repeated upon the transfer of the minister's pastoral relation from one church to another. In every case, however, where a minister from a body of Christians not Scripturally constituted assumes the pastoral rela- tion in a rightly organized church, there is peculiar propriety, not only in the examination, by a Council, of his Christian experience, call to the ministry, and views of doctrine, but also in that act of formal recognition and authorization which is called ordination.
3. Discipline of the Church.
A. Kinds of discipline. — Discipline is of two sorts, according as offences are private or public. ( a ) Private offences are to be dealt with according to the rule in Mat. 5 : 23, 24; 18 : 15-17.
( b ) Public offences are to be dealt with according to the rule in 1 Cor. 5 : 3-5, 13, and 2 Thess. 3 : 6.
B. Belation of the pastor to discipline. — ( a ) He has no original author- ity; ( b ) but is the organ of the church, and ( c ) superintendent of its labors for its own purification and for the reclamation of offenders ; and therefore ( d ) may best do the work of discipline, not directly, by consti- tuting himself a special policeman or detective, but indirectly, by securing proper labor on the part of the deacons or brethren of the church.
IV. Belation of Local Churches to one another.
1. The general nature of this relation is that of fellowship between equals. — Notice here :
(a) The absolute equality of the churches. — No church or council of churches, no association or convention or society, can relieve any single church of its direct responsibility to Christ, or assume control of its action.
(6) The fraternal fellowship and cooperation of the churches. — No church can properly ignore, or disregard, the existence or work of other churches around it. Every other church is presumptively possessed of the Spirit, in equal measure with itself. There must therefore be sympathy and mutual furtherance of each other's welfare among churches, as among individual Christians. Upon this principle are based letters of dismission, recognition of the pastors of other churches, and all associational unions, or unions for common Christian work.
RELATION" OF LOCAL CHURCHES TO ONE ANOTHER. 243
2. This fellowship involves the duty of special consultation with regard to matters affecting the common interest.
(a) The duty of seeking advice. — Since the order and good repute of each is valuable to all the others, cases of grave importance and difficulty in internal discipline, as well as the question of ordaining members to the min- istry, should be submitted to a council of churches called for the purpose.
(b) The duty of taking advice. — For the same reason, each church should show readiness to receive admonition from others. So long as this is in the nature of friendly reminder that the church is guilty of defects from the doctrine or practice enjoined by Christ, the mutual acceptance of whose commands is the basis of all church fellowship, no church can justly refuse to have such defects pointed out, or to consider the Scripturalness of its own proceeding. Such admonition or advice, however, whether coming from a single church or from a council of churches, is not itself of bind- ing authority. It is simply in the nature of moral suasion. The church receiving it has still to compare it with Christ's laws. The ultimate decis- ion rests entirely with the church so advised or asking advice.
3. This fellowship may be broken by manifest departures from, the faith or practice of the Sci'iptures, on the part of any church.
In such case, duty to Christ requires the churches, whose labors to reclaim a sister church from error have proved unavailing, to withdraw their fellow- ship from it, until such time as the erring church shall return to the path of duty. In this regard, the law which applies to individuals applies to churches, and the polity of the New Testament is congregational rather than independent.
CHAPTER II.
THE ORDINANCES OF THE CHURCH.
By the ordinances, we mean those outward rites which Christ has appointed to be administered in his church as visible signs of the saving truth of the gospel. They are signs, in that they vividly express this truth and confirm it to the believer.
In contrast with this characteristically Protestant view, the Romanist regards the ordinances as actually conferring grace and producing holiness. Instead of being the external manifestation of a preceding union with Christ, they are the physical means of constituting and maintaining this union. With the Romanist, in this particular, sacramentalists of every name substantially agree. The Papal Church holds to seven sacraments or ordinances: — ordination, confirmation, matrimony, extreme unction, pen- ance, baptism, and the eucharist. The ordinances prescribed in the N. T. , however, are two and only two, viz. : — Baptism and the Lord's Supper.
I. Baptism.
Christian Baptism is the immersion of a believer in water, in token of his previous entrance into the communion of Christ's death and resurrection, — or, in other words, in token of his regeneration through union with Christ.
1. Baptism an Ordinance of Christ.
A. Proof that Christ instituted an external rite called baptism.
(a) From the words of the great commission ; (b) from the injunctions of the apostles; (c) from the fact that the members of the New Testament churches were baptized believers ; ( d ) from the universal practice of such a rite in Christian churches of subsequent times.
B. This external rite intended by Christ to be of universal and per- petual obligation.
(a) Christ recognized John the Baptist's commission to baptize as derived immediately from heaven.
( b ) In his own submission to John's baptism, Christ gave testimony to the binding obligation of the ordinance (Mat. 3 : 13-17). John's baptism was essentially Christian baptism (Acts 19 : 4), although the full signifi- cance of it was not understood until after Jesus' death and resurrection ( Mat. 20 : 17-23 ; Luke 12 : 50 ; Rom. 6 : 3-6 ).
(c) In continuing the practice of baptism through his disciples (John 4 : 1, 2 ), and in enjoining it upon them as part of a work which was to last
244
BAPTISM. 245
to the end of the world ( Mat. 28 : 19, 20 ), Christ manifestly adopted and appointed baptism as the invariable law of his church.
(d) The analogy of the ordinance of the Lord's Supper also leads to the conclusion that baptism is to be observed as an authoritative memorial of Christ and his truth, until his second coming.
(e) There is no intimation whatever that the command of baptism is limited, or to be limited, in its application, — that it has been or ever is to be repealed ; and, until some evidence of such limitation or repeal is pro- duced, the statute must be regarded as universally binding.
2. The Mode of Baptism.
This is immersion, and immersion only. This appears from the follow- ing considerations :
A. The command to baptize is a command to immerse. — We show this :
(a) From the meaning of the original word /3airTi(u. That this is to immerse, appears:
First, — from the usage of Greek writers — including the church Fathers, when they do not speak of the Christian rite, and the authors of the Greek version of the Old Testament.
Secondly, — every passage where the word occurs in the New Testament either requires or allows the meaning 'immerse.'
Thirdly, — the absence of any use of the word in the passive voice with •water' as its subject confirms our conclusion that its meaning is "to immerse." Water is never said to be baptized upon a man.
( 6 ) From the use of the verb jianri^u with prepositions :
First, — with tic (Mark 1 : 9 — where 'lopdavrjv is the element into which the person passes in the act of being baptized ).
Secondly, — with h ( Mark 1 :5, 8 ; cf. Mat. 3 : 11. John 1 : 26, 31, 33 ; cf. Acts 2 : 2, 4). In these texts, iv is to be taken, not instrumentally, but as indicating the element in which the immersion takes juace.
( c ) From circumstances attending the administration of the ordinance ( Mark 1:10 — avaftaivuv ek tuv v6a-og ; John 3 : 23 — Mara nolla ; Acts 8 : 38, 39 — Ka.Tt[ir]aav e\q to vdup .... aveftqeav in tov vdarog).
(d) From figurative allusions to the ordinance.
( e ) From the testimony of church history as to the practice of the early church.
(/) From the doctrine and practice of the Greek church.
The prevailing usage of any word determines the sense it bears, when found in a command of Christ. We have seen, not only that the prevail- ing usage of the Greek language determines the meaning of the word ' baptize ' to be ' immerse,' but that this is its fundamental, constant, and only meaning. The original command to baptize is therefore a command to immerse.
246 ECCLESIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH.
B. No church has the right to modify or dispense with this command of Christ. This is plain :
( a ) From the nature of the church. Notice :
First, — that, besides the local church, no other visible church of Christ is known to the New Testament. Secondly, — that the local church is not a legislative, but is simply an executive, body. Only the authority which originally imposed its laws can amend or abrogate them. Thirdly, — that the local church cannot delegate to any organization or council of churches any power which it does not itself rightfully possess. Fourthly, — that the opposite principle puts the church above the Scriptures and above Christ, and would sanction all the usurpations of Rome.
( b ) From the nature of God's command :
First, — as forming a part, not only of the law, but of the fundamental law, of the church of Christ. The power claimed for a church to change it is not only legislative but constitutional. Secondly, — as expressing the wisdom of the Lawgiver. Power to change the command can be claimed for the church, only on the ground that Christ has failed to adapt the ordinance to changing circumstances, and has made obedience to it unneces- sarily difficult and humiliating. Thirdly, — as providing in immersion the only adequate symbol of those saving truths of the gospel which both of the ordinances have it for their office to set forth, and without which they become empty ceremonies and forms. In other words, the church has no right to change the method of administering the ordinance, because such a change vacates the ordinance of its essential meaning. As this argument, however, is of such vital importance, we present it more fully in a special discussion of the Symbolism of Baptism.
3. The Symbolism of Baptism.
Baptism symbolizes the previous entrance of the believer into the com- munion of Christ's death and resurrection, — or, in other words, regenera- tion through union with Christ.
A. Expansion of this statement as to the symbolism of baptism. Bap- tism, more particularly, is a symbol :
( a ) Of the death and resurrection of Christ.
(b) Of the purpose of that death and resurrection, — namely, to atone for sin, and to deliver sinners from its penalty and power.
(c) Of the accomplishment of that purpose in the person baptized, — who thus professes his death to sin and resurrection to spiritual life.
(d) Of the method in which that purpose is accomplished, — by union with Christ, receiving him and giving one's self to him by faith.
(e) Of the consequent union of ail believers in Christ.
(/) Of the death and resurrection of the body, — which will complete the work of Christ in us, and which Christ's death and resurrection assure to all his members.
BAPTISM. 247
B. Inferences from tho passages referred to :
(a) The central truth set forth by baptism is the death and resurrection of Christ, — and our own death and resurrection only as connected with that.
(b) The correlative truth of tho believer's death and resurrection, set forth in baptism, implies, first, — confession of sin and humiliation on account of it, as deserving of death; secondly, — declaration of Christ's death for sin, and of the believer's acceptance of Christ's substitutionary work ; thirdly, — acknowledgment that the soul has become partaker of Christ's life, and now lives only in and for him.
( c ) Baptism symbolizes purification, but purification in a peculiar and divine way, — namely, through the death of Christ and the entrance of the soul into communion with that death. The radical defect of sprinkling or pouring as a mode of administering the ordinance, is that it does not point to Christ's death as the procuring cause of our purification.
( d) In baptism we show forth the Lord's death as the original sour oecf holiness and life in our souls, just as in the Lord's Supper we show forth the Lord's death as the source of all nourishment and strength after this life of holiness has been once begun. As the Lord's Supper symbolizes the sanctifying power of Jesus' death, so baptism symbolizes its regener- ating power.
( e ) There are two reasons, therefore, why nothing but immersion will satisfy the design of the ordinance : first, — because nothing else can sym- bolize the radical nature of the change effected in regeneration — a change from spiritual death to spiritual life ; secondly, — because nothing else can set forth the fact that this change is due to the entrance of the soul into communion with the death and resurrection of Christ.
(/) To substitute for baptism anything which excludes all symbolic reference to the death of Christ, is to destroy the ordinance, just as substi- tuting for the broken bread and poured out wine of the communion some form of administration which leaves out all reference to the death of Christ would be to destroy the Lord's Supper, and to celebrate an ordinance of human invention.
4. The Subjects of Baptism.
The proper subjects of baptism are those only who give credible evidence that they have been regenerated by the Holy Spirit, — or, in other words, have entered by faith into the communion of Christ's death and resurrection.
A. Proof that only persons giving evidence of being regenerated are proper subjects of baptism :
( a ) From the command and example of Christ and his apostles, which show :
First, that those only are to be baptized who have previously been made disciples.
Secondly, that those only are to be baptized who have previously repented and believed.
248 ECCLESIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH.
( b ) From the nature of the church — as a company of regenerate persons.
(c) From the symbolism of the ordinance, — as declaring a previous spiritual change in him who submits to it.
B. Inferences from the fact that only persons giving evidence of being regenerate are proper subjects of baptism :
( a ) Since only those who give credible evidence of regeneration are proper subjects of baptism, baptism cannot be the means of regeneration. It is the appointed sign, but is never the condition, of the forgiveness of sins.
Passages like Mat. 3 : 11 ; Mark 1:4; 16 : 16; John 3:5; Acts 2 : 38 ; 22 : 16 ; Eph. 5 : 26 ; Titus 3:5; and Heb. 10 : 22, are to be explained as par- ticular instances "of the general fact that, in Scripture language, a single part of a complex action, and even that part of it which is most obvious to the senses, is often mentioned for the whole of it, and thus, in this case, the whole of the solemn transaction is designated by the external symbol. " In other words, the entire change, internal and external, spiritual and ritual, is referred to in language belonging strictly only to the outward aspect of it. So the other ordinance is referred to by simply naming the visible "breaking of bread," and the whole transaction of the ordination of ministers is termed the " imposition of hands " ( ef. Acts 2 : 42 ; 1 Tim. 4:14).
( b ) As the profession of a spiritual change already wrought, baptism is primarily the act, not of the administrator, but of the person baptized.
Upon the person newly regenerate the command of Christ first ter- minates ; only upon his giving evidence of the change within him does it become the duty of the church to see that he has opportunity to follow Christ in baptism. Since baptism is primarily the act of the convert, no lack of qualification on the part of the administrator invalidates the bap- tism, so long as the proper outward act is performed, with intent on the part of the person baptized to express the fact of a preceding spiritual renewal ( Acts 2 : 37, 38).
( c ) As intrusted with the administration of the ordinances, however, the church is, on its part, to require of all candidates for baptism credible evi- dence of regeneration.
This follows from the nature of the church and its duty to maintain its own existence as an institution of Christ. The church which cannot restrict admission into its membership to such as are like itself in character and aims must soon cease to be a church by becoming indistinguishable from the world. The duty of the church to gain credible evidence of regenera- tion in the case of every person admitted into the body involves its right to require of candidates, in addition to a profession of faith with the lips, some satisfactory proof that this profession is accompanied by change in the conduct. The kind and amount of evidence which would have justified the reception of a candidate in times of persecution may not now constitute a sufficient proof of change of heart.
BAPTISM. 249
(d) As the outward expression of the inward change by which the believer enters into the kingdom of God, baptism is the first, in point of time, of all outward duties.
Regeneration and baptism, although not holding to each other the rela- tion of effect and cause, are both regarded in the New Testament as essen- tial to the restoration of man's right relations to God and to his people. They jiroperly constitute parts of one whole, and are not to be unnecessarily separated. Baptism should follow regeneration with the least possible delay, after the candidate and the church have gained evidence that a spiritual change has been accomplished within him. No other duty and no other ordinance can properly precede it.
( e ) Since regeneration is a work accomplished once for all, the baptism which symbolizes this regeneration is not to be repeated.
Even where the persuasion exists, on the part of the candidate, that at the time of baptism he was mistaken in thinking himself regenerated, the ordinance is not to be administered again, so long as it has once been sub- mitted to, with honest intent, as a profession of faith in Christ. We argue this from the absence of any reference to second baptisms in the New Tes- tament, and from the grave practical difficulties attending the opposite view. In Acts 19 : 1-5, we have an instance, not of rebaptism, but of the baptism for the first time of certain persons who had been wrongly taught with regard to the nature of John the Baptist's doctrine, and so had igno- rantly submitted to an outward rite which had in it no reference to Jesus Christ and expressed no faith in him as a Savior. This was not John's baptism, nor was it in any sense true baptism. For this reason Paul com- manded them to be "baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus."
(/) So long as the mode and the subjects are such as Christ has enjoined, mere accessories are matters of individual judgment.
The use of natural rather than of artificial baptisteries is not to be elevated into an essential. The formula of baptism prescribed by Christ is "into the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit."
C. Infant Baptism.
This we reject and reprehend, for the following reasons :
(a) Infant baptism is without warrant, either express or implied, in the Scripture.
First, — there is no express command that infants should be baptized. Secondly, — there is no clear example of the baptism of infants. Thirdly, — the passages held to imply infant baptism contain, when fairly interpreted, no reference to such a practice. In Mat. 19 : 14, none would have ' forbid- den,' if Jesus and his disciples had been in the habit of baptizing infants. From Acts 16 : 15, cf. 40, and Acts 16 : 33, cf. 34, Neander says that we cannot infer infant baptism. For 1 Cor. 16 : 15 shows that the whole family of Stephanas, baptized by Paul, were adults (1 Cor. 1 : 16). It is impossible to suppose a whole heathen household baptized upon the faith of its head. As to 1 Cor. 7 : 14, Jacobi calls this text "a sure testimony against infant baptism, since Paul would certainly have referred to the
250 ECCLESIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH.
baptism of children as a proof of their holiness, if infant baj)tism had been practised." Moreover, this passage •would in that case equally teach the baptism of the unconverted husband of a believing wife. It plainly proves that the children of Christian parents were no more baptized and had no closer connection with the Christian church, than the unbelieving partners of Christians.
(o) Infant baptism is expressly contradicted :
First, — by the Scriptural prerequisites of faith and repentance, as signs of regeneration. In the great commission, Matthew speaks of baptizing disciples, and Mark of baptizing believers ; but infants are neither of these. Secondly, — by the Scriptural symbolism of the ordinance. As we should not bury a person before his death, so we should not symbolically bury a person by baptism until he has in spirit died to sin. Thirdly, — by the Scriptural constitution of the church. The church is a company of persons whose union with one another presupposes and expresses a previous con- scious and voluntary union of each with Jesus Christ. But of this conscious and voluntary union with Christ infants are not capable. Fourthly, — by the Scriptural prerequisites for participation in the Lord's Supper. Parti- cipation in the Lord's Supper is the right only of those who can discern the Lord's body ( 1 Cor. 11 : 29). No reason can be assigned for restrict- ing to intelligent communicants the ordinance of the Supper, which would not equally restrict to intelligent believers the ordinance of Baptism.
( c ) The rise of infant baptism in the history of the church is due to sacramental conceptions of Christianity, so that all arguments in its favor from the writings of the first three centuries are equally arguments for baptismal regeneration.
(d) The reasoning by which it is supported is unscriptural, unsound, and dangerous in its tendency :
First, — in assuming the power of the church to modify or abrogate a command of Christ. This has been sufficiently answered above. Secondly, — in maintaining that infant baptism takes the place of circumcision under the Abrahamic covenant. To this we reply that the view contradicts the New Testament idea of the church, by making it a hereditary body, in which fleshly birth, and not the new birth, qualifies for membership. "As the national Israel typified the spiritual Israel, so the circumcision which immediately followed, not preceded, natural birth, bids us baptize children, not before, but after spiritual birth." Thirdly, — in declaring that baptism belongs to the infant because of an organic connection of the child with the parent, which permits the latter to stand for the former and to make profession of faith for it, — faith already existing germinally in the child by virtue of this organic union, and certain for the same reason to be developed as the child grows to maturity. ' ' A law of organic connection as regards character subsisting between the parent and the child, — such a connection as induces the conviction that the character of the one is actually included in the character of the other, as the seed is formed in the capsule." We object to this view that it unwarrantably confounds the personality of the child with that of the parent ; practically ignores the necessity of the Holy
THE LORD'S SUPPER. 251
Spirit's regenerating influenoes in the case of children of Christian parents ; and presumes in such children a gracious state which facts conclusively show not to exist.
(e) The lack of agreement among pedobaptists as to the warrant for infant baptism and as to the relation of baptized infants to the church, together with the manifest decline of the practice itself, are arguments against it.
The propriety of infant baptism is variously argued, says Dr. Bushnell, upon the ground of "natural innocence, inherited depravity, and federal holiness ; because of the infant's own character, the parent's piety, and the church's faith ; for the reason that the child is an heir of salvation already,
and in order to make it such No settled opinion on infant baptism
and on Christian nurture has ever been attained to."
(/) The evil effects of infant baptism are a strong argument against it :
First, — in forestalling the voluntary act of the child baptized, and thus practically preventing his personal obedience to Christ's commands.
Secondly, — in inducing superstitious confidence in an outward rite as possessed of regenerating efficacy.
Thirdly, — in obscuring and corrupting Christian truth with regard to the sufficiency of Scripture, the connection of the ordinances, and the inconsistency of an impenitent life with church-membership.
Fourthly, — in destroying the church as a spiritual body, by merging it in the nation and the world.
Fifthly, — in putting into the place of Christ's command a commandment of men, and so admitting the essential principle of all heresy, schism, and false religion.
n. The Lord's Supper.
The Lord's Supper is that outward rite in which the assembled church eats bread broken and drinks wine poured forth by its appointed represen- tative, in token of its constant dej)endence on the once crucified, now risen Savior, as source of its spiritual life ; or, in other words, in token of that abiding communion of Christ's death and resurrection through which the life begun in regeneration is sustained and perfected.
1. TJie Lord's Supper an ordinance instituted by Christ.
( a ) Christ appointed an outward rite to be observed by his disciples in remembrance of his death. It was to be observed after his death ; only after his death could it completely fulfil its purpose as a feast of commem- oration.
( b ) From the apostolic injunction with regard to its celebration in the church until Christ's second coming, we infer that it was the original inten- tion of our Lord to institute a rite of perpetual and universal obligation.
(c) The uniform practice of the N. T. chnrches, and the celebration of such a rite in subsequent ages by almost all churches professing to be
252 ECCLESIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH.
Christian, is best explained upon the supposition that the Lord's Supper is an ordinance established by Christ himself.
2. The Mode of administering the Lord's Supper.
(a) The elements are bread and wine.
(6) The communion is of both kinds, — that is, communicants are to partake both of the bread and of the wine.
( c) The partaking of these elements is of a festal nature.
( d) The communion is a festival of commemoration,— not simply bring- ing Christ to our remembrance, but making proclamation of his death to the world.
( e ) It is to be celebrated by the assembled church. It is not a solitary observance on the part of individuals. No "showing forth" is possible except in company.
(/) The responsibility of seeing that the ordinance is properly adminis- tered rests with the church as a body ; and the pastor is, in this matter, the proper representative and organ of the church. In cases of extreme exigency, however, as where the church has no pastor and no ordained minister can be secured, it is comjaetent for the church to appoint one from its own number to administer the ordinance.
(g) The frequency with which the Lord's Supper is to be administered is not indicated either by the N. T. precept or by uniform N. T. example. We have instances both of its daily and of its weekly observance. With respect to this, as well as with respect to the accessories of the ordinance, the church is to exercise a sound discretion.
3. The Symbolism of the Lord's Supper.
The Lord's Supper sets forth, in general, the death of Christ as the sustaining power of the believer's Life.
A. Expansion of this statement.
( a ) It symbolizes the death of Christ for our sins.
( b ) It symbolizes our personal appropriation of the benefits of that death.
( c ) It symbolizes the method of this appropriation, through union with Christ himself.
(d) It symbolizes the continuous dependence of the believer for all spiritual life upon the once crucified, now living, Savior, to whom he is thus united.
( e ) It symbolizes the sanctificatiou of the Christian through a spiritual reproduction in him of the death and resurrection of the Lord.
(/) It symbolizes the consequent union of Christians in Christ, their head.
(g ) It symbolizes the coming joy and perfection of the kingdom of God.
THE lord's supper. 253
B. Inferences from this statement.
( a ) The connection between the Lord's Supper and Baptism consists in this, that they both and equally are symbols of the death of Christ. In Baptism, we show forth the death of Christ as the procuring cause of our new birth into the kingdom of God. In the Lord's Supper, wo show forth the death of Christ as the sustaining power of our spiritual life after it has once begun. In the one, we honor the sanctifying power of the death of Christ, as in the other we honor its regenerating power. Thus both are parts of one whole,— setting before us Christ's death for men in its two great purposes and results.
( b ) The Lord's Supper is to be often repeated,— as symbolizing Christ's constant nourishment of the soul, whose new birth was signified in Baptism.
(c) The Lord's Supper, like Baptism, is the symbol of a previous state of grace. It has in itself no regenerating and no sanctifying power, but is the symbol by which the relation of the believer to Christ, his sanctifier, is vividly expressed and strongly confirmed.
(d) The blessing received from participation is therefore dependent upon, and proportioned to, the faith of the communicant.
( e ) The Lord's Supper expresses primarily the fellowship of the believer, not with his brethren, but with Christ, his Lord.
4. Erroneous vieius of the Lord's Siqiper.
A. The Romanist view, — that the bread and wine are changed by priestly consecration into the very body and blood of Christ ; that this con- secration is a new offering of Christ's sacrifice ; and that, by a physical partaking of the elements, the communicant receives saving grace from God. To this doctrine of " transubstantiation" we reply :
( a ) It rests upon a false interpretation of Scripture. In Mat. 26 : 26, " this is my body " means : "this is a symbol of my body." Since Christ was with the disciples in risible form at the institution of the Supper, he could not have intended them to recognize the bread as being his literal body. "The body of Christ is present in the bread, just as it had been in the passover lamb, of which the bread took the place " (John 6 : 53 contains no reference to the Lord's Supper, although it describes that spiritual union with Christ which the Supper symbolizes; ef. 63. In 1 Cor. 10 : 16, 17, mivuiav tov aufiarog tov Xptarov is a figurative expression for the spiritual partaking of Christ. In Mark 8 : 33, we are not to infer that Peter was actually " Satan," nor does 1 Cor. 12 : 12 prove that we are all Christs. Cf. Gen. 41:26; 1 Cor. 10:4).
( h ) It contradicts the evidence of the senses, as well as of all scientific tests that can be applied. If we cannot trust our senses as to the unchanged material qualities of bread and wine, we cannot trust them when they report to us the words of Christ.
( c ) It involves the denial of the completeness of Christ's past sacrifice, and the assumption that a human priest can repeat or add to the atonement
254 ECCLESIOLOGY, OB THE DOCTKINE OP THE CHUKCH.
made by Christ once for all (Heb. 9 : 28 — ana^ irpooevex&elg). The Lord's Supper is never called a sacrifice, nor are altars, priests, or consecrations ever spoken of, in the New Testament. The priests of the old dispensation are expressly contrasted with the ministers of the new. The former "ministered about sacred things," i. e., performed sacred rites and waited at the altar; but the latter "preach the gospel" (1 Cor. 9 : 13, 14).
(d) It destroys Christianity by externalizing it. Eomanists make all other service a mere appendage to the communion. Physical and magical salvation is not Christianity, but is essential paganism.
B. The Lutheran and High Church view, — that the communicant, in partaking of the consecrated elements, eats the veritable body and drinks the veritable blood of Christ in and with the bread and wine, although the elements themselves do not cease to be material. To this doctrine of " consubstantiation " we object :
(a) That the view is not required by Scripture. — All the passages cited in its support may be better interpreted as referring to a partaking of the elements as symbols. If Christ's body be ubiquitous, as this theory holds, we partake of it at every meal, as really as at the Lord's Supper.
( b ) That the view is inseparable from the general sacramental system of which it forms a part. — In imposing physical and material conditions of receiving Christ, it contradicts the doctrine of justification only by faith ; changes the ordinance from a sign, into a means, of salvation ; involves the necessity of a sacerdotal order for the sake of properly consecrating the elements ; and logically tends to the Eomanist conclusions of ritualism and idolatry.
( c ) That it holds each communicant to be a partaker of Christ's veritable body and blood, whether he be a believer or not, — the result, in the absence of faith, being condemnation instead of salvation. Thus the whole char- acter of the ordinance is changed from a festival occasion to one of mystery and fear, and the whole gospel method of salvation is obscured.
5. Prerequisites to Participation in the Lord's Supper.
A. There are prerequisites. This we argue from the fact :
( a ) That Christ enjoined the celebration of the Supper, not upon the world at large, but only upon his disciples ; ( b ) that the apostolic injunc- tions to Christians, to separate themselves from certain of their number, imply a limitation of the Lord's Supper to a narrower body, even among professed believers ; (c) that the analogy of Baptism, as belonging only to a specified class of persons, leads us to believe that the same is true of the Lord's Supper.
B. The prerequisites are those only which are expressly or implicitly laid down by Christ and his apostles.
(a) The church, as possessing executive but not legislative power, is charged with the duty, not of framing rules for the administering and guarding of the ordinance, but of discovering and applying the rules given
the lord's supper. 255
it in the New Testament. No church has a right to establish any terms of communion ; it is responsible only for making known the terms established by Christ and his apostles, (b) These terms, however, are to be ascer- tained" not only from the injunctions, but also from tho precedents, of the New Testament. Since the apostles were inspired, New Testament prece- dent is the " common law " of the church.
C. On examining the New Testament, we find that the prerequisites to participation in the Lord's Supper are four, namely :
First, — Regeneration.
The Lord's Supper is the outward expression of a life in the believer, nourished and sustained by the life of Christ. It cannot therefore be par- taken.of by one who is "dead through .... trespasses and sins." We give no food to a corpse. The Lord's Supper was never offered by the apostles to unbelievers. On the contrary, the injunction that each com- municant "examine himself " implies that faith which will enable the com- municant to "discern the Lord's body" is a prerequisite to participation.
Secondly, — Baptism.
In proof that baptism is a prerequisite to the Lord's Supper, we urge the following considerations :
( a ) The ordinance of baptism was instituted and administered long before the Supper.
(b) The apostles who first celebrated it had, in all probability, been baptized.
( c ) The command of Christ fixes the place of baptism as first in order after discipleship.
( d ) All the recorded cases show this to have been the order observed by the first Christians and sanctioned by the apostles.
( e ) The symbolism of the ordinances requires that baptism should pre- cede the Lord's Supper. The order of the facts signified must be expressed
in the order of the ordinances which signify them ; else the world is taught that sanctification may take place without regeneration. Birth must come before sustenance — inascimur, pascimur.' To enjoy ceremonial privileges, there must be ceremonial qualifications. As none but the circumcised could eat the passover, so before eating with the Christian family must come adoption into the Christian family.
(/) The standards of all evangelical denominations, with unimportant exceptions, confirm the view that this is the natural interpretation of the Scripture requirements respecting the order of the ordinances.
( g ) The practical results of the opposite view are convincing proof that the order here insisted on is the order of nature as well as of Scripture. The admission of unbaptized persons to the communion tends always to, and has frequently resulted in, the disuse of baptism itself, the obscuring of the truth which it symbolizes, the transformation of Scripturally consti-
256 ECCLESIOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OP THE CHURCH.
tuted churches into bodies organized after methods of human invention, and the complete destruction of both church and ordinances as Christ originally constituted them.
Thirdly, — Church membership.
( a ) The Lord's Supper is a church ordinance, observed by churches of Christ as such. For this reason, membership in the church naturally pre- cedes communion. Since communion is a family rite, the participant should first be a member of the family.
( b ) The Lord's Supper is a symbol of church fellowship. Excommu- nication implies nothing, if it does not imply exclusion from the commun- ion. If the Supper is simply communion of the individual with Christ, then the church has no right to exclude any from it.
Fourthly, — An orderly walk.
Disorderly walking designates a course of life in a church member whbh is contrary to the precepts of the gospel. It is a bar to participation in the Lord's Supper, the sign of church fellowship. With Arnold, we may class disorderly walking under four heads : —
( a ) Immoral conduct.
( b ) Disobedience to the commands of Christ.
( c ) Heresy, or the holding and teaching of false doctrine.
( d ) Schism, or the promotion of division and dissension in the church. — This also requires exclusion from church fellowship, and from the Lord's Supper which is its appointed sign.
D. The local church is the judge whether these prerequisites are ful- filled in the case of persons desiring to partake of the Lord's Supper. — This is evident from the following considerations :
( a ) The command to observe the ordinance was given, not to individu- als, but to a company.
( b ) Obedience to this command is not an individual act, but is the joint act of many.
( c ) The regular observance of the Lord's Supper cannot be secured, nor the qualifications of persons desiring to participate in it be scrutinized, unless some distinct organized body is charged with this responsibility.
( d ) The only organized body known to the New Testament is the local church, and this is the only body, of any sort, competent to have charge of the ordinances. The invisible church has no officers.
( e ) The New Testament accounts indicate that the Lord's Supper was observed only at regular appointed meetings of local churches, and was observed by these churches as regularly organized bodies.
(/) Since the duty of examining the qualifications of candidates for baptism and for membership is vested in the local church and is essential to its distinct existence, the analogy of the ordinances would lead us to
TUF lord's SUPPER. 257
believe that the scrutiny of qualifications for participation in the Lord's Supper rests with the same body.
(// ) This euro that only proper persona are admitted to tho ordinances should be shown, not by open or forcible debarring of tho unworthy at the time of tho celebration, but by previous public instruction of the congre- gation, and, if needful in the case of persistent offenders, by subsequent private and friendly admonition.
E. Special objections to open communion.
The advocates of this view claim that baptism, as not being an indispen- sable term of salvation, cannot properly be made an indispensable term of
commnuii in.
In addition to what has already been said, wo reply :
( a ) This view is contrary to tho belief and practice of all but an insig- nificant fragment of organized Christendom.
{b) It assumes an unscriptural inequality between the two ordinances. The Lord's Supper holds no higher rank in Scripture than does Baptism. The obligation to commune is no more binding than the obligation to pro- fess faith by being baptized. Open communion, however, treats baptism as if it were optional, while it insists upon communion as indispensable.
( c ) It tends to do away with baptism altogether. If the highest privi- lege of church member ship may be enjoyed without baptism, baptism loses its place and importance as the initiatory ordinance of the church.
( d ) It tends to do away with all discipline. When Christians offend, the church must withdraw its fellowship from them. But upon the prin- ciple of open communion, such withdrawal is impossible, since the Lord's Supper, the highest expression of church fellowship, is open to every person who regards himself as a Christian.
( e ) It tends to do away with the visible church altogether. For no visible church is possible, unless some sign of membership be required, in addition to the signs of membership in the invisible church. Open com- munion logically leads to open church membership, and a church member- si tip open to all, without reference to tho qualifications required in Scripture, or without examination on the part of the church as to the existence of these qualifications in those who unite with it, is virtually an identification of the church with the world, and, without protest from Scripturally constituted bodies, would finally result in its actual extinction.
PAET Yin.
ESCHATOLOGY, OE THE DOCTKINE OF FINAL THINGS.
Neither the individual Christian character, nor the Christian church as a whole, attains its destined perfection in this life (Horn. 8 :24). This per- fection is reached in the world to come ( 1 Cor. 13 : 10 ). As preparing the way for the kingdom of God in its completeness, certain events are to take place, such as death, Christ's second coming, the resurrection of the body, the general judgment. As stages in the future condition of men, there is to be an intermediate and an ultimate state, both for the righteous and for the wicked. We discuss these events and states in what appears from Scripture to be the order of their occurrence.
I. Physical Death.
Physical death is the separation of the soul from the body. We distin- guish it from spiritual death, or the separation of the soul from God ; and from the second death, or the banishment from God and final misery of the reunited soul and body of the wicked.
Although physical death falls upon the unbeliever as the original penalty of sin, to all who are united in Christ it loses its aspect of penalty, and becomes a means of discipline and of entrance into eternal life.
To neither saint nor sinner is death a cessation of being. This we main- tain, against the advocates of annihilation :
1. Upon rational grounds.
(«) The metaphysical argument. — The soul is simple, not compounded. Death, in matter, is the separation of parts. But in the soul there are no parts to be separated. The dissolution of the body, therefore, does not necessarily work a dissolution of the soul. But, since there is an immate- rial principle in the brute, and this argument taken by itself might seem to prove the immortahty of the animal creation equally with that of man, we pass to consider the next argument.
( b ) The teleological argument. — Man, as an intellectual, moral, and religious being, does not attain the end of his existence on earth. His development is imjjerfect here. Divine wisdom will not leave its work incomplete. There must be a hereafter for the full growth of man's powers, and for the satisfaction of his aspirations. Created, unlike the brute, with infinite capacities for moral progress, there must be an immortal existence in which those capacities shall be brought into exercise. Though the wicked forfeit all claim to this future, we have here an argument from God's love and wisdom to the immortality of the righteous. 258
PHYSICAL DEATH. 259
( c) The ethical argument— Man is not, in this world, adequately pun- ished for his evil deeds. Our sense of justice leadens to believe that God's moral administration will l>e vindicated in a life to come. Mere extinction of being would not be a sufficient penally, nor would it permit degrees of punishment corresponding to degrees of guilt. This is therefore an argu- ment from God's justice to the immortality of the wicked. The guilty con- science demands a state after death for punishment.
(d) The historical argument. — Tho popular belief of all nations and ages shows that the idea of immortality is natural to the human mind. It is not sufficient to say that this indicates only such desire for continued earthly existence as is necessary to self-preservation ; for multitudes expect a life beyond death without desiring it, and multitudes desire a heavenly i f e without caring for the earthly. This testimony of man's nature to immortality may be regarded as the testimony of the God who made the nature.
We conclude our statement of these rational proofs with the acknowledg- ment that they rest upon the presupposition that there exists a God of truth, wisdom, justice, and love, who has made man in his image, and who desires to commune with his creatures. We acknowledge, moreover, that these proofs give us, not an absolute demonstration, but only a balance of proba- bility, in favor of man's immortality. We turn therefore to Scripture for the clear revelation of a fact of which reason furnishes us little more than a presumption.
2. Upon scriptural grounds.
(a) The account of man's creation, and the subsequent allusions to it in Scripture, show that, while the body was made corruptible and subject to death, the soul was made in the image of God, incorruptible and immortal.
( 6 ) The account of the curse in Genesis, and the subsequent allusions to it in Scripture, show that, while the death then incurred includes the dis- solution of the body, it does not include cessation of being on the part of the sold, but only designates that state of the soul which is the opposite of true life, viz., a state of banishment from God, of unholiness, and of misery.
( e ) The Scriptural expressions, held by anniliilationists to imply cessa- tion of being on the part of the wicked, are used not only in connections where they cannot bear this meaning (Esther 4:16), but in connections where they imply the opposite.
(d) The passages held to prove the annihilation of the wicked at death cannot have this meaning, since the Scriptures foretell a resurrection of the unjust as well as of the just ; and a second death, or a misery of the reunited sold and body, in the case of the wicked.
( e ) The words used in Scripture to denote tho place of departed spirits have in them no implication of annihilation, and the allusions to the condi- tion of the departed show that death, to the writers of the Old and the New
260 ESCHATOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF FINAL THINGS.
Testaments, although it was the termination of man's earthly existence was not an extinction of his being or his consciousness.
(/) The terms and phrases which have been held to declare absolute cessation of existence at death are frequently metaphorical, and an exami- nation of them in connection with the context and with other Scriptures is sufficient to show the untenableness of the literal interpretation put upon them by the annihilationists, and to prove that the language is merely the language of appearance.
( g ) The Jewish belief in a conscious existence after death is proof that the theory of annihilation rests upon a misinterpretation of Scripture. That such a belief in the immortality of the soul existed among the Jews is abundantly evident : from the knowledge of a future state possessed by the Egyptians ( Acts 7 : 22 ) ; from the accounts of the translation of Enoch and of Elijah ( Gen. 5 : 24 ; cf. Heb. 11:5. 2 K. 2 : 11 ) ; from the invocation of the dead which was practised, although forbidden by the law ( 1 Sam. 28 : 7-14 ; cf. Lev. 20 : 28 ; Deut. 18 : 10, 11 ) ; from allusions in the O. T. to resurrection, future retribution, and life beyond the grave ( Job 19 : 25-27 ; Ps. 16 : 9-11 ; Is. 26 : 19 ; Ez. 37 : 1-14 ; Dan. 12 : 2, 3, 13 ) ; and from distinct declarations of such faith by Philo and Josephus, as well as by the writers of the N. T. (Mat. 22 :31, 32 ; Acts 23 :6 ; 26 : 6-8 ; Heb. 11 : 13-16 ).
( h ) The most impressive and conclusive of all proofs of immortality, however, is afforded in the resurrection of Jesus Christ, — a work accom- plished by his own power, and demonstrating that the spirit lived after its separation from the body ( John 2 : 19, 21 ; 10 : 17, 18 ). By coming back from the tomb, he proves that death is not annihilation ( 2 Tim. 1 : 10).
II. The Intermediate State.
The Scriptures affirm the conscious existence of both the righteous and the wicked, after death, and prior to the resurrection. In the intermediate state the soul is without a body, yet this state is for the righteous a state of conscious joy, and for the wicked a state of conscious suffering.
That the righteous do not receive the spiritual body at death, is plain from 1 Thess. 4 : 16, 17 and 1 Cor. 15 :52, where an interval is intimated between Paul's time and the rising of those who slept. The rising was to occur in the future, "at the last trump." So the resurrection of the wicked had not yet occurred in any single case ( 2 Tim. 2:18 — it was an error to say that the resurrection was "past already " ) ; it was yet future (John 5:28-30 — "the hour Cometh " — ipxerai upa, not nal vvv eariv — " now is," as in verse 25 ; Acts 24 : 15 — " there shall be a resurrection " — avaaraaiv /xelleiv sceo-Sat ) . Christ was the firstfrmts ( 1 Cor. 15 : 20, 23 ). If the saints had received the spiritual body at death, the patriarchs would have been raised before Christ.
1. Of the righteous, it is declared :
(a) That the soul of the believe*-, at its separation from the body, enters the presence of Christ.
( b ) That the spirits of departed believers are with God.
THE INTERMEDIATE STATE. ~,;1
(c ) That believers at death enter paradise.
( d ) That their state, immediately after death, is greatly to be preferred to that of faithful ami successful laborers for Christ here.
( e ) That departed saints are truly alive and conscious. (/) That they are at rest and blessed. 2. Of the wicked, it is declared :
(a) That they are in prison, — that is, are under constraint and guard (1 Peter 3: 19 — fofcuo}).
(6) That they are in torment, or conscious suffering (Luke 10:23 — ev fiaodvoig ).
( c ) That they are under punishment ( 2 Pet. 2:9 — KoXn^o/xevovr ).
The passages cited enable us properly to estimate two opposite errors.
A. They refute, on the one hand, the view that the souls of both right- eous and wicked sleep between death and the resurrection.
This view is based upon the assumption that the possession of a physical organism is indispensable to activity and consciousness — an assumption which the existence of a God who is pure spirit ( John 4 : 24 ), and the existence of angels who are probably pure spirits ( Heb. 1 : 14 ), show to be erroneous. Although the departed are characterized as ' spirits ' ( Eccl. 12 : 7 ; Acts 7 : 59 ; Heb. 12 : 23 ; 1 Pet. 3 : 19 ), there is nothing in this ' absence from the body ' ( 2 Cor. 5:8) inconsistent with the activity and conscious- ness ascribed to them in the Scriptures above referred to. When the dead are spoken of as ■ sleeping ' ( Dan. 12 :2 ; Mat. 9 : 24 ; John 11 : 11 ; 1 Cor. 11 : 30 ; 15 : 51 ; 1 Thess. 4 : 14 ; 5 : 10 ), we are to regard this as simply the language of appearance, and as Literally applicable only to the body.
B. The passages first cited refute, on the other hand, the view that the suffering of the intermediate state is purgatorial.
According to the doctrine of the Koman Catholic church, "all who die at peace with the church, but are not perfect, pass into purgatory." Here they make satisfaction for the sins committed after baptism by suffering a longer or shorter time, according to the degree of then- guilt. The church on earth, however, has power, by prayers and the sacrifice of the Mass, to shorten these sufferings or to remit them altogether. But we urge, in reply, that the passages referring to suffering in the intermediate state give no indication that any true believer is subject to this suffering, or that the church has any power to relieve from the consequences of sin, either in this world or in the world to come. Only God can forgive, and the church is simply empowered to declare that, upon the fulfilment of the appointed conditions of repentance and faith, he does actually forgive. This theory, moreover, is inconsistent with any proper view of the completeness of Christ's satisfaction ( Gal. 2 : 21 ; Heb. 9 : 28 ) ; of justification through faith alone (Bom. 3 :28) ; and of the condition after death, of both righteous and wicked, as determined in this life ( EccL 11 : 3 ; Mat. 25 : 10 ; Luke 16 : 26 ; Heb. 9 : 27 ; Bev. 22 : 11 ).
262 ESCHATOLOG Y, OR THE DOCTRINE OF FINAL THINGS.
We close our discussion of this subject with a single, but an important, remark, — this, namely, that while the Scriptures represent the intermediate state to be one of conscious joy to the righteous, and of conscious pain to the wicked, they also represent this state to be one of incompleteness. The perfect joy of the saints, and the utter misery of the wicked, begin only with the resurrection and general judgment.
III. The Second Coming of Chkist.
While the Scriptures represent great events in the history of the individ- ual Christian, like death, and great events in the history of the church, like the outpouring of the Spirit at Pentecost and the destruction of Jerusalem, as comings of Christ for deliverance or judgment, they also declare that these partial and typical comings shall be concluded by a final, triumphant return of Christ, to punish the Avicked and to complete the salvation of his people.
1. The nature of this corning.
Although without doubt accompanied, in the case of the regenerate, by inward and invisible influences of the Holy Spirit, the second advent is to be outward and visible. This we argue :
( a ) From the objects to be secured by Christ's return. These are partly external ( Rom. 8 : 21, 23 ). Nature and the body are both to be glorified. These external changes may well be accompanied by a visible manifestation of him who ' makes all things new ' ( Rev. 21 : 5 ).
( b ) From the Scriptural comparison of the manner of Christ's return with the manner of his departure (Acts 1:11) — see Commentary of Hackett, in loco : — " bv Tp6nuv= visibly, and in the air. The expression is never employed to affirm merely the certainty of one event as compared with another. The assertion that the meaning is simply that, as Christ had departed, so also he would return, is contradicted by every passage in which the phrase occurs. "
( c ) From the analogy of Christ's first coming. If this was a literal and visible coming, we may expect the second coming to be Literal and visible also.
2. The time of Christ's coming.
( a ) Although Christ's prophecy of this event, in the twenty-fourth chap- ter of Matthew, so connects it with the destruction of Jerusalem that the apostles and the early Christians seem to have hoped for its occurrence during their life-time, yet neither Christ nor the apostles definitely taught when the end should be, but rather declared the knowledge of it to be reserved in the counsels of God, that men might ever recognize it as possibly at hand, and so might live in the attitude of constant expectation.
( b ) Hence we find, in immediate connection with many of these predic- tions of the end, a reference to intervening events and to the eternity of God, which shows that the prophecies themselves are expressed in a large way which befits the greatness of the divine plans.
TIJE SECOND COMING OF CHRIST. 263
( c ) In this wo discern a striking parallel between the predictions of Christ's first, and the predictions of his second, advent. In both cases the event was more distant and moro grand than those imagined to whom tho prophecies first came. Under both dispensations, patient waiting for Christ was intended to discipline the faith, and to cnlargo the conceptions, of God's true servants. The fact that every age since Christ ascended has had its Chiliasts and Second Adventists should turn our thoughts away from carious and fruitless prying into the time of Christ's coming, and set us at immediate and constant endeavor to be ready, at whatsoever hour he may appear.
3. The precursors of Christ's coming.
( a ) Through the preaching of the gospel in all the world, tho kingdom of Christ is steadily to enlarge its boundaries, until Jews and Gentiles alike become possessed of its blessings, and a millennial period is introduced in which Christianity generally prevails throughout the earth.
( b ) There will be a corresponding development of evil, either extensive or intensive, whose true character shall be manifest not only in deceiving many professed followers of Christ and in persecuting true believers, but in constituting a personal Antichrist as its representative and object of worship. This rapid growth shall continue until the millennium, during which evil, in the person of its chief, shall be temporarily restrained.
( c ) At the close of this millennial period, evil will again be permitted to exert its utmost power in a final conflict with righteousness. This spir- itual struggle, moreover, will be accompanied and symbolized by political convulsions, and by fearful indications of desolation in the natural world.
4. Relation of Christ's second coming to the millennium.
The Scripture foretells a period, called in the language of prophecy " a thousand years," when Satan shall be restrained and the saints shall reign with Christ on the earth. A comparison of the passages bearing on this subject leads us to the conclusion that this millennial blessedness and dominion is prior to the second advent. One passage only seems at first sight to teach the contrary, viz. : Kev. 20 :4-10. But this supports tho theory of a premillennial advent only when the passage is interpreted with the barest literalness. A better view of its meaning will be gained by considering :
( a ) That it constitutes a part, and confessedly an obscure part, of ono of the most figurative books of Scripture, and therefore ought to be inter- preted by the plainer statements of the other Scriptures.
( 6 ) That the other Scriptures contain nothing with regard to a resurrec- tion of the righteous which is widely separated in time from that of the wicked, but rather declare distinctly that the second coming of Christ is immediately connected both with the resurrection of the just and the unjust and with the general judgment.
( c ) That the literal interpretation of the passage — holding, as it does, to a resurrection of bodies of flesh and blood, and to a reign of the risen
264 ESCHATOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF FINAL THINGS.
saints in the flesh, and in the world as at present constituted — is inconsist- ent with other Scriptural declarations with regard to the spiritual nature of the resurrection-body and of the coming reign of Christ.
( d ) That the literal interpretation is generally and naturally connected with the expectation of a gradual and necessary decline of Christ's kingdom upon earth, until Christ comes to bind Satan and to introduce the millen- nium. This view not only contradicts such passages as Dan. 2 : 34, 35, and Mat. 13 : 31, 32, but it begets a passive and hopeless endurance of evil, whereas the Scriptures enjoin a constant and aggressive warfare against it, upon the very ground that God's power shall assure to the church a gradual but constant progress in the face of it, even to the time of the end.
( e) We may therefore best interpret Eev. 20 : 4-10 as teaching in highly figurative language, not a preliminary resurrection of the body, in the case of departed saints, but a period in the later days of the church militant when, under special influence of the Holy Ghost, the spirit of the martyrs shall appear again, true religion be greatly quickened and revived, and the members of Christ's churches become so conscious of their strength in Christ that they shall, to an extent unknown before, triumph over the powers of evil both within and without. So the spirit of Elijah appeared again in John the Baptist ( Mai. 4:5; cf. Mat. 11 : 13, 14 ). The fact that only the spirit of sacrifice and faith is to be revived is figuratively indicated in the phrase: "The rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand years should be finished " = the spirit of persecution and unbelief shall be, as it were, laid to sleep. Since resurrection, like the coming of Christ and the judgment, is twofold, first, spiritual (the raising of the soul to spiritual life), and secondly, physical (the raising of the body from the grave ), the words in Eev. 20 : 5 — "this is the first resurrection " — seem intended distinctly to preclude the literal interpretation we are combating. In short, we hold that Eev. 20 : 4-10 does not describe the events commonly called the second advent and resurrection, but rather describes great spirit- ual changes in the later history of the church, which are typical of, and preliminary to, the second advent and resurrection, and therefore, after the prophetic method, are foretold in language literally applicable only to those final events themselves (cf. Ez. 37 : 1-14 ; Luke 15 : 32 ).
IV. The Eestjkrection.
"While the Scriptures describe the impartation of new life to the soul in regeneration as a spiritual resurrection, they also declare that, at the second coming of Christ, there shall be a resurrection of the body, and a reunion of the body to the sovd from which, during the intermediate state, it has been separated. Both the just and the unjust shall have part in the resur- rection. To the just, it shall be a resurrection unto lif e ; and the body shall be a body like Christ's — a body fitted for the uses of the sanctified spirit To the unjust, it shall be a resurrection unto condemnation ; and analogy would seem to indicate that, here also, the outward form will fitly represent the inward state of the soul — being corrupt and deformed as is the soul which inhabits it. Those who are living at Christ's coming shall receive spiritual bodies without passing through death. As the body after corrup-
TIIE RESURRECTION. 265
tiou and dissolution, so the outward world after destruction by fire, shall be rehabilitated and fitted i'<>r the abode of the saiuts.
Upon the subject of the resurrection, our positive information is derived wholly from the word of God. Further discussion of it may be most naturally arranged in a series of answers to objections. The objections commonly urged against the doctrine, as above propounded, may be reduced to two :
1. The cxcgctical objection, — that it rests upon a literalizing of meta- phorical language, and has no sufficient support in Scripture. To this wo answer :
( a ) That, though the phrase " resurrection of the body " does not occur in the New Testament, the passages which describe the event indicate a physical, as distinguished from a spiritual, change (John 5 :28, 29 ; Phil. 3 : 21 ; 1 Thess. 4 : 13-17 ). The phrase " spiritual body " ( 1 Cor. 15 : 44 ) is a contradiction in terms, if it be understood as signifying 'a body which is simple spirit. ' It can only be interpreted as meaning a material organism, perfectly adapted to be the outward expression and vehicle of the purified soul. The purely spiritual interpretation is, moreover, expressly excluded by the apostolic denial that "the resurrection is past already" ( 2 Tim. 2:18), and by the fact that there is a resurrection of the unjust, as well as of the just (Acts 24 : 15 ).
( b ) That the redemption of Christ is declared to include the body as weU as the soul(Eom. 8:23; 1 Cor. 6:13-20). The indwelling of the Holy Spirit has j:>ut such honor upon the frail mortal tenement which he has made his temple, that God would not permit even this wholly to perish ( Rom. 8 : 11 — oca to evoikovv avrov nvcvfia iv vfj.lvf i. e., because of his indwell- ing Spirit, God will raise up the mortal body ). It is this belief which forms the basis of Christian care for the dead (Phil. 3 :21 ; of. Mat. 22 :32).
( c ) That the nature of Christ's resurrection, as Hteral and physical, determines the nature of the resurrection in the case of believers ( Luke 24 : 36 ; John 20 : 27 ). As, in the case of Christ, the same body that was laid in the tomb was raised again, although possessed of new and surpris- ing powers, so the Scriptures intimate, not simply that the saints shall have bodies, but that these bodies shall be in some proper sense an out- growth or transformation of the very bodies that slept in the dust ( Dan. 12 :2 ; 1 Cor. 15 : 53, 54). The denial of the resurrection of the body, in the ease of beUevers, leads naturally to a denial of the reality of Christ's resurrection ( 1 Cor. 15 : 13 ).
( d ) That the accompanying events, as the second coming and the judg- ment, since they are themselves literal, imply that the resurrection is also literal.
2. The scientific objection. — This is threefold :
( a ) That a resurrection of the particles which compose the body at death is impossible, since they enter into new combinations, and not unfre- quently become parts of other bodies which the doctrine holds to be raised at the same time.
266 ESCHATOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF FINAL THINGS.
We reply that the Scripture not only does not compel us to hold, but it distinctly deuies, that all the particles which exist in the body at death are present in the resurrection-body ( 1 Cor. 15 :37 — oh to au/ia to -yevqoo/xevov ; 50 ). The Scripture seems only to indicate a certain physical connection between the new and the old, although the nature of this connection is not revealed. So long as the physical connection is maintained, it is not neces- sary to suppose that even a germ or particle that belonged to the old body exists in the new.
( & ) That a resurrection-body, having such a remote physical connection with the present body, cannot be recognized by the inhabiting soul or by other witnessing spirits as the same with that which was laid in the grave.
To this we reply that bodily identity does not consist in absolute same- ness of particles during the whole history of the body, but in the organizing force, which, even in the flux and displacement of physical particles, makes the old the basis of the new, and binds both together in the unity of a single consciousness. In our recognition of friends, moreover, we are not wholly dependent, even in this world, upon our perception of bodily form ; and we have reason to believe that in the future state there may be methods of communication far more direct and intuitive than those with which we are familiar here.
( c ) That a material organism can only be regarded as a hindrance to the free activity of the spirit, and that the assumption of such an organism by the soul, which, during the intermediate state, had been separated from the body, would indicate a decline in dignity and power rather than a progress.
"We reply that we cannot estimate the powers and capacities of matter, when brought by God into complete subjection to the spirit. The bodies of the saints may be more ethereal than the air, and capable of swifter motion than the light, and yet be material in their substance. That the soul, clothed with its spiritual body, will have more exalted powers and enjoy a more complete felicity than would be possible while it maintained a purely spiritual existence, is evident from the fact that Paul represents the culmination of the soul's blessedness as occurring, not at death, but at the resurrection of the body.
We may sum up our answers to objections, and may at the same time throw light upon the doctrine of the resurrection, by suggesting four prin- ciples which should govern our thinking with regard to the subject, — these namely: 1. Body is in continual flux ; 2. Since matter is but the manifesta- tion of God's mind and will, body is plastic in God's hands ; 3. The soul in complete union with God may be endowed with the power of God ; 4. Soul determines body, and not body soul, as the materialist imagines.
V. The Last Judgment.
While the Scriptures rej)resent all punishment of individual transgressors and all manifestations of God's vindicatory justice in the history of nations as acts or processes of judgment, they also intimate that these temporal judgments are only partial and imperfect, and that they are therefore to be concluded with a final and complete vindication of God's righteousness.
• THE LAST JUDGMENT. 267
This will be accomplished by making known to tho universe the characters of all men, and by awarding to them corresponding destinies.
1. Tlic nature of the final judgment.
The final judgment is not a spiritual, invisible, endless process, identical with God's providence in history, but is an outward and visible event, occurring at a definite period in the future. This we argue from the fol- lowing considerations :
(a) The judgment is something for which the evil are "reserved" (2 Peter 2 : -i, 9 ) ; something to be expected in the future (Acts 24 : 25 ; Heb. 10 : 27 ) ; something after death ( Heb. 9 : 27 ) ; something for which the resurrection is a preparation ( John 5 :29 ).
( b ) The accompaniments of the judgment, such as the second coming of Christ, the resurrection, and the outward changes of the earth, are events which have an outward and visible, as well as an inward and spiritual, aspect. We are compelled to interpret the predictions of the last judgment upon the same principle.
( c ) God's justice, in the historical and imperfect work of judgment, needs a final outward judgment as its vindication. " A perfect justice must judge, not only moral units, but moral aggregates ; not only the particulars of life, but the life as a whole. " The crime that is hidden and triumphant here, and the goodness that is here maligned and oppressed, must be brought to light and fitly recompensed. " Otherwise man is a Tantalus — longing but never satisfied " ; and God's justice, of which his outward administration is the expression, can only be regarded as approximate.
2. The object of the final judgment.
The object of the final judgment is not the ascertainment, but the mani- festation, of character, and the assignment of outward condition corre- sponding to it.
(a) To the omniscient Judge, the condition of all moral creatures is already and fully known. The last day will be only "the revelation of the righteous judgment of God."
( b ) In the nature of man, there are evidences and preparations for this final disclosure. Among these may be mentioned the law of memory, by which the soul preserves the records of its acts, both good and evil (Luke 16 : 25 ) ; the law of conscience, by which men involuntarily anticipate punishment for their own sins ( Rom. 2 : 15, 16 ; Heb. 10 : 27 ) ; the law of character, by which every thought and deed makes indelible impress upon the moral nature (Heb. 3 :8, 15).
( e ) Single acts and words, therefore, are to be brought into the judg- ment only as indications of the moral condition of the soul. This manifes- tation of all hearts will vindicate not only God's past dealings, but his determination of future destinies.
268 ESCHATOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF FINAL THINGS.
3. The Judge in the final judgment.
God, in the person of Jesus Christ, is to be the judge. Though God is the judge of all ( Heb. 12 : 23 ), yet this judicial activity is exercised through Christ, at the last day, as well as in the present state ( John 5 : 22, 27 ).
This, for three reasons :
( a ) Christ's human nature enables men to understand both the law and the love of God, and so makes intelligible the grounds on which judgment is passed.
(&) The perfect hiiman nature of Christ, united as it is to the divine, ensures all that is needful in true judgment, viz.: that it be both merciful and just.
( c ) Human nature, sitting upon the throne of judgment, will afford con- vincing proof that Christ has received the reward of his sufferings, and that humanity has been perfectly redeemed. The saints shall "judge the world " only as they are one with Christ.
4. The subjects of the final judgment.
The persons upon whose characters and conduct this judgment shall be passed are of two great classes :
( a ) All men — each possessed of body as well as soul, — the dead having been raised, and the living having been changed.
(6) All evil angels, — good angels appearing only as attendants and ministers of the Judge.
5. The grounds of the final judgment. These will be two in number :
(a) The law of God, — as made known in conscience and in Scripture.
(6) The grace of Christ (Rev. 20:12), — those whose names are found " written in the book of life " being approved, simply because of their union with Christ and participation in his righteousness. Their good works shall be brought into judgment only as j>roofs of this relation to the Redeemer. Those not found " written in the book of life " will be judged by the law of God, as God has made it known to each individual.
VI. The Final States of the Righteous and of the Wicked.
1. Of the righteous.
The final state of the righteous is described as eternal life (Mat. 25 : 46 ), glory ( 2 Cor. 4 : 17 ), rest ( Heb. 4:9), knowledge ( 1 Cor. 13 :8-10 ), holi- ness ( Rev. 21 : 27 ), service ( Rev. 22 : 3 ), worship ( Rev. 19 : 1 ), society (Heb. 12 : 23 ), communion with God ( Rev. 21 : 3 ).
Summing up all these, we may say that it is the fulness and perfection of holy life, in communion with God and with sanctified spirits. Although there will be degrees of blessedness and honor, proportioned to the capacity
FINAL STATES OF THE RIGIITEOUS AND OF THE WICKED. 269
and fidelity of each soul (Luke 19:17, 10 ; 1 Cor. 3:14, 15), each will receive as great a measure of reward as it can contain ( 1 Cor. 2:9), and this final state, once entered upon, will be unchanging in kind and endless in duration ( Rev. 3 : 12 ; 22 : 15 ).
With regard to heaven, two questions present themselves, namely :
( a ) Is heaven a place, as well as a state ?
We answer that this is probable, for the reason that the presence of Christ's human body is essential to heaven, and that this body must be confined to place. Since deity and humanity are indissolubly united in Christ's single person, wo cannot regard Christ's human soul as limited to place without vacating his person of its divinity. But we cannot conceive of his human body as thus omnipresent. As the new bodies of the saints are confined to place, so, it would seem, must be the body of their Lord. But, though heaven be the place where Christ manifests his glory through the human body which he assumed in the incarnation, our ruling concep- tion of heaven must be something higher even than this, namely, that of a state of holy communion with God.
( b ) Is this earth to be the heaven of the saints ? We answer :
First,— that the earth is to be piirified by fire, and perhaps prepared to be the abode of the saints,— although this last is not rendered certain by the Scriptures.
Secondly, — that this fitting-up of the earth for man's abode, even if it were declared in Scripture, would not render it certain that the saints are to be confined to these narrow limits (John 14 : 2 ). It seems rather to be intimated that the effect of Christ's work will be to bring the redeemed into union and intercourse with other orders of intelligence, from comnmnion with whom they are now shut out by sin ( Eph. 1 : 20 ; Col. 1 : 20 ).
2. Of the wicked.
The final state of the wicked is described under the figures of eternal fire (Mat. 25 :41 ) ; the pit of the abyss ( Rev. 9 : 2, 11 ) ; outer darkness ( Mat. 8 : 12 ) ; torment ( Rev. 14 : 10, 11 ) ; eternal punishment ( Mat. 25 : 46) ; wrath of God ( Rom. 2:5); second death ( Rev. 21 : 8 ) ; eternal destruc- tion from the face of the Lord ( 2 Thess. 1:9); eternal sin ( Mark 3 : 29 ).
Summing up all, we may say that it is the loss of all good, whether physical or spiritual, and the misery of an evil conscience banished from God and from the society of the holy, and dwelling under God's positive curse forever. Here we are to remember, as in the case of the final state of the righteous, that the decisive and controlling element is not the outward, but the inward. If hell be a place, it is only that the outward may corres- pond to the inward. If there be outward torments, it is only because these will be fit, though subordinate, accompaniments of the inward state of the soul.
In our treatment of the subject of eternal punishment we must remember that false doctrine is often a reaction from the unscriptural and repulsive over-statements of Christian apologists. We freely concede : 1. that future
270 ESCHATOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF FINAL THINGS.
punishment does not necessarily consist of physical torments, — it may be wholly internal and spiritual ; 2. that the pain and suffering of the future are not necessarily due to positive inflictions of God, — they may result entirely from the soul's sense of loss, and from the accusations of con- science ; and 3. that eternal punishment does not necessarily involve end- less successions of suffering, — as God's eternity is not mere endlessness, so we may not be forever subject to the law of time.
In order, however, to meet opposing views, and to forestall the common objections, we proceed to state the doctrine of future punishment in greater detail :
A. The future punishment of the wicked is not annihilation. — In our discussion of Physical Death, we have shown that, by virtue of its original creation in the image of God, the human soul is naturally immortal ; that neither for the righteous nor the wicked is death a cessation of being ; that on the contrary, the wicked enter at death upon a state of conscious suffer- ing which the resurrection and the judgment only augment and render permanent. It is plain, moreover, that if annihilation took place at death, there coidd be no degrees in future punishment, — a conclusion itself at variance with express statements of Scripture.
There are two forms of the annihilation theory which are more plausible, and which in recent times find a larger number of advocates, namely :
( a ) That the powers of the wicked are gradually weakened, as the natural result of sin, so that they finally cease to be. — We reply, first, that moral evil does not, in this present life, seem to be incompatible with a constant growth of the intellectual powers, at least in certain directions, and we have no reason to believe the fact to be different in the world to come ; secondly, that if this theory were true, the greater the sin, the speedier would be the relief from punishment.
( b ) That there is for the wicked, certainly after death, and possibly between death and the judgment, a positive punishment proportioned to their deeds, but that this punishment issues in, or is followed by, annihila- tion.— We reply first, that upon this view, as upon any theory of annihila- tion, future punishment is a matter of grace as well as of justice — a notion for which Scripture affords no warrant ; secondly, that Scripture not only gives no hint of the cessation of this punishment, but declares in the strongest terms its endlessness.
Since neither one of these two forms of the annihilation theory is Scriptural or rational, we avail ourselves of the evolutionary hypothesis as throwing light upon the problem. Death is not degeneracy ending in extinction, nor punishment ending in extinction, — it is atavism that returns, or tends to return, to the animal type. As moral development is from the brute to man, so abnormal development is from man to the brute.
B. Punishment after death excludes new probation and ultimate restora- tion of the wicked. — Some have maintained the ultimate restoration of all human beings, by appeal to such passages as the following : Mat. 19 : 28 ; Acts 3:21; Eph. 1 : 9, 10.
FINAL STATES OF THE HIQHTEOUS AND OF THE WICK HI). 271
( a ) These passages, as obscure, are to be interpreted in the light of those plainer ones which we have already cited. Tims interpreted, they foretell only the absolute triumph of the divine kingdom, and the subjec- tion of all evil to God.
(ft) A second probation is not needed to vindicate the justice or the love of God, since Christ, the immanent God, is already in this world present with every human soul, quickening the conscience, giving to each man his opportunity, and making every decision between right and wrong a true probation. In choosing evil against their better judgment even the heathen unconsciously reject Christ. Infants and idiots, as they have not consciously sinned, are, as we may believe, saved at death by having Christ revealed to them and by the regenerating influence of his Spirit.
( c ) The advocates of universal restoration are commonly the most stren- uous defenders of the inalienable freedom of the human will to make choices contrary to its past character and to all the motives which are or can be brought to bear upon it. As a matter of fact, we find in this world that men choose sin in spite of infinite motives to the contrary. Upon the theory of human freedom just mentioned, no motives which God can use will certainly accomplish the salvation of all moral creatures. The soul which resists Christ here may resist him forever.
(d) Upon the more correct view of the will which we have advocated, the case is more hopeless still. Upon this view, the sinful soul, in its very sinning, gives to itself a sinful bent of intellect, affection, and will ; in other words, makes for itself a character, which, though it does not render neces- sary, yet does render certain, apart from divine grace, the continuance of sinfid action. In itself it finds a self-formed motive to evil strong enoiigh to prevail over all inducements to holiness which God sees it wise to bring to bear. It is in the next world, indeed, subjected to suffering. But suffer- ing has in itself no reforming power. Unless accompanied by special renewing influences of the Holy Spirit, it only hardens and embitters the soul. We have no Scripture evidence that such influences of the Spirit are exerted, after death, upon the still impenitent ; but abundant evidence, on the contrary, that the moral condition in which death finds men is their condition forever.
( e ) The declaration as to Judas, in Mat. 26 : 24, could not be true upon the hypothesis of a final restoration. If at any time, even after the lapse of ages, Judas be redeemed, his subsequent infinite duration of blessedness must outweigh all the finite suffering through which he has passed. The Scripture statement that "good were it for that man if he had not been born " must be regarded as a refutation of the theory of universal restora- tion.
C. Scripture declares this future punishment of the wicked to be eternal. It does this by its use of the terms au'ov, aluvioc- — Some, however, maintain that these terms do not necessarily imply eternal duration. We reply :
(a) It must be conceded that these words do not etymologically neces- sitate the idea of eternity ; and that, as expressing the idea of " age-long," they are sometimes used in a limited or rhetorical sense.
272 ESCHATOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF FINAL THINGS.
( b ) They do, however, express the longest possible duration of -which the subject to which they are attributed is capable ; so that, if the soul is immortal, its punishment must be without end.
( c ) If, when used to describe the future punishment of the wicked, they do not declare the endlessness of that punishment, there are no words in the Greek language which could express that meaning.
( d) In the great majority of Scripture passages where they occur, they have unmistakably the signification "everlasting." They are used to express the eternal duration of God, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit ( Rom. 16 : 26 ; 1 Tim. 1 : 17 ; Heb. 9 :14 ; Rev. 1 : 18 ) ; the abiding pres- ence of the Holy Spirit with all true believers ( John 14 : 17 ) ; and the endlessness of the future happiness of the saints ( Mat. 19 : 29 ; John 6 : 54, 58; 2 Cor. 9:9).
( e ) The fact that the same word is used in Mat. 25 : 46 to describe both the sufferings of the wicked and the happiness of the righteous shows that the misery of the lost is eternal, in the same sense as the life of God or the blessedness of the saved.
(/) Other descriptions of the condemnation and suffering of the lost, excluding, as they do, all hope of repentance or forgiveness, render it cer- tain that aluv and aluviog, in the passages referred to, describe a punish- ment that is without end.
(g) While, therefore, we grant that we do not know the nature of eternity, or its relation to time, we maintain that the Scripture representa- tions of future punishment forbid both the hypothesis of annihilation, and the hypothesis that suffering will end in restoration. "Whatever eternity may be, Scripture renders it certain that after death there is no forgive- ness.
D. This everlasting punishment of the wicked is not inconsistent with God's justice, but is rather a revelation of that justice.
( a ) We have seen in oiu' discussion of Penalty ( pages 652-656 ) that its object is neither reformatory nor deterrent, but simply vindicatory ; in other words, that it primarily aims, not at the good of the offender, nor at the welfare of society, but at the vindication of law. We have also seen ( pages 269, 291 ) that justice is not a form of benevolence, but is the expres- sion and manifestation of God's holiness. Punishment, therefore, as the inevitable and constant reaction of that holiness against its moral opposite, cannot come to an end until guilt and sin come to an end.
( b ) But guilt, or ill-desert, is endless. However long the sinner may be punished, he never ceases to be ill-deserving. Justice, therefore, which gives to all according to then* deserts, cannot cease to punish. Since the reason for punishment is endless, the punishment itself must be endless. Even past sins involve an endless guilt, to which endless punishment is simply the inevitable correlate.
( c ) Not only eternal guilt, but eternal sin, demands eternal punish- ment. So long as moral creatures are opposed to God, they deserve pun-
FINAL STATES OF THE RIGHTEOUS AND OF THE WICKED. 273
islmient. Since wo cannot measure the power of the depraved will to resist God, we cannot deny the possibility of endless sinning. Sin tends ever- more to reproduce itself. The Scriptures speak of an " eternal sin " ( Hark 3 : 20 ). But it is just in God to visit endless sinning with endless punish- ment. Sin, moreover, is not only an act, but also a condition or state, of the soul ; this state is impure and abnormal, involves misery ; this misery, as appointed by God to vindicate law and holiness, is punishment ; this punishment is the necessary manifestation of God's justice. Not the punishing, but the not-punishing, would impugn his justice ; for if it is just to punish sin at all, it is just to punish it as long as it exists.
( d ) The actual facts of human life and the tendencies of modern science show that this principle of retributive justice is inwrought into the elements and forces of the physical and moral universe. On the one hand, habit begets fixity of character, and in the spiritual world sinful acts, often repeated, produce a permanent state of sin, which the sold, unaided, cannot change. On the other hand, organism and environment are correlated to each other; and in the spiritual world, the selfish and impure find sur- roundings corresponding to their nature, while the surroundings react upon them and confirm their evil character. These principles, if they act in the next life as they do in this, will ensure increasing and unending pun- ishment.
(e) As there are degrees of human guilt, so future punishment may admit of degrees, and yet in all those degrees be infinite in duration. The doctrine of everlasting punishment does not imply that, at each instant of the future existence of the lost, there is infinite pain. A line is infinite in length, but it is far from being infinite in breadth or thickness. "An iulinite series may make only a finite sum ; and infinite series may differ infinitely in their total amount." The Scriptures recognize such degrees in future punishment, while at the same time they declare it to be endless ( Luke 12 :47, 48 ; Eev. 20 : 12, 13 ).
(/) We know the enormity of sin only by God's own declarations with regard to it, and by the sacrifice which he has made to redeem us from it. As committed against an infinite God, and as having in itself infinite possi- bilities of evil, it may itself be infinite, and may deserve infinite punish- ment. Hell, as well as the Cross, indicates God's estimate of sin.
E. This everlasting punishment of the wicked is not inconsistent with God's benevolence. — It is maintained, however, by many who object to eternal retribution, that benevolence requires God not to inflict punish- ment upon his creatures except as a means of attaining some higher good. We reply :
(a) God is not only benevolent but holy, and holiness is his ruling attribute. The vindication of God's holiness is the primary and sufficient object of punishment. This constitutes a good which fully justifies the infliction.
( b ) In this life, God's justice does involve certain of his creatures in sufferings which are of no advantage to the individuals who suffer ; as in
.274 ESCHATOLOGY, OR THE DOCTRINE OF FINAL THINGS.
the case of penalties which do not reform, and of afflictions which only harden and embitter. If this be a fact here, it may be a fact hereafter.
( c ) The benevolence of God, as concerned for the general good of the universe, requires the execution of the full penalty of the law upon all who reject Christ's salvation. The Scriptures intimate that God's treatment of human sin is matter of instruction to all moral beings. The self-chosen ruin of the few may be the salvation of the many.
( d ) The present existence of sin and punishment is commonly admitted to be in some way consistent with God's benevolence, in that it is made the means of revealing God's justice and mercy. If the temporary existence of sin and punishment lead to good, it is entirely possible that their eternal existence may lead to yet'greater good.
( e ) As benevolence in God seems in the beginning to have permitted moral evil, not because sin was desirable in itself, but only because it was incident to a system which provided for the highest possible freedom and holiness in the creature ; so benevolence in God may to the end permit the existence of sin and may continue to punish the sinner, undesirable as these things are in themselves, because they are incidents of a system which pro- vides for the highest possible freedom and holiness in the creature through eternity.
F. The proper preaching of the doctrine of everlasting punishment is not a hindrance to the success of the gospel, but is one of its chief and indispensable auxiliaries. — It is maintained by some, however, that, because men are naturally repelled by it, it cannot be a part of the preacher's message. We reply :
( a ) If the doctrine be true, and clearly taught in Scripture, no fear of consequences to ourselves or to others can absolve us from the duty of preaching it. The minister of Christ is under obligation to preach the whole truth of God ; if he does this, God will care for the results.
( b ) All preaching which ignores the doctrine of eternal punishment just so far lowers the holiness of God, of which eternal punishment is an expres- sion, and degrades the work of Christ, which was needful to save us from it. The success of such preaching can be but temporary, and must be fol- lowed by a disastrous reaction toward rationalism and immorality.
( c ) The fear of future punishment, though not the highest motive, is yet a jjroper motive, for the renunciation of sin and the turning to Christ. It must therefore be appealed to, in the hope that the seeking of salvation which begins in fear of God's anger may end in the service of faith and love.
( d ) In preaching this doctrine, while we grant that the material images used in Scripture to set forth the sufferings of the lost are to be spiritually and not literally interpreted, we should still insist that the misery of the soul which eternally hates God is greater than the physical pains which are used to symbolize it. Although a hard and mechanical statement of the truth may only awaken opposition, a solemn and feeling presentation of it upon proper occasions, and in its due relation to the work of Christ and the offers of the gospel, cannot fail to accomplish God's purpose in preaching, and to be the means of saving some who hear.
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