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STUDIES IN THEOLOGY 



A Critical Introduction to the New Testament. 

By Arthur Samuel Peakb, D.D. 

Faith and its Psychology. 

By the Rev. William R. Inoe, D.D. 

Philosophy and Religion. 

By the Rev. Hastings Easbdall, D.Litt. (Oxon.), D.C.L. 
(Durham), F.B.A. 

Revelation and Inspiration. 

By the Rev. James Orb, D.D. 

Christianity and Modern Social Issues. 

By William Cunninoham, F.B.A., D.D., D.Se. 

A Critical Introduction to the Old Testament. 

By the Rev. Gboeoe Buchanan Qkav, D.D., D.Litt. 

History of Christian Thought from the Apostolic Age 
to the Reformation. 

By Herbert B. Workman, D.Litt. 

History of Christian Thought from the Reformation 
to Kant. 
By A. C. M«GirrERT, Ph.D., D.D. 

History of Christian Thought since Kant. 
By the Rev. Edward Caldwell Moore, D.D. 

The Christian Hope : A Study in the Doctrine of the 
Last Things. 
By W. Adams Brown, Ph. D. , D.D. 

The Theology of the Gospels. 

By James Moffatt, D.D., D.Litt. 

The Text and Canon of the New Testament. 

By Alexander Souter, D.Litt. 



THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 



' I wrote with my pencil in my Common Prayer Book — 

Vita ordinanda. 
Biblia legenda. 
Theologiae opera danda. 
Serviendum et laetandum. 
Sorupulis obsistendum.' 

De. Johnson. 



THE THEOLOGY OP 
THE GOSPELS 



BY 



JAMES MOFFATT, D.D., D. LiTT. 

VAXES PROFESSOR OF NEW TESTAMENT GREEK AND EXEGESIS 
MANSFIELD COLLEGE, OXFORD 




LONDON: DUCKWORTH & CO. 

3 HENRIETTA ST., COVENT GARDEN 

1912 
S 



All rights reserved 



-^J? 



TO 

MY COLLEAGUES IN MANSFIELD 



PREFACE 

The bulk of the following pages formed the sub- 
stance of a course of lectures which I had the honour 
of dehvering under the Alexander Robertson Trust 
in the University of Glasgow, during January and 
February of this year. In working over the materials 
afresh for the purpose of publication I have made 
considerable additions to the argument at various 
points, but, even so, the volume is not a classified 
survey of the various theological and religious con- 
ceptions which may be found within the compass 
of the gospels. My aim has been different. What 
these pages attempt to do is to present a study of 
the central and salient features in the theology o'^ 
the gospels, taking theology in its stricter rathe,. 
than in its wider sense. The standpoint for estimat- 
ing the characteristic position of the gospels in the 
development of primitive Christian reflection is 
determined by the message and personality of 
Jesus. The gospels voice the faith of Jesus Christ 
in different keys, but the theme of their fugue-hke 
variations is never forgotten amid all their windings, 
and it ought to be dominant in any study of their 
symphonies. Angelology and almsgiving, for 
example, enter into the reUgipus scope of the gospels, 
but such notes only sound in relation to the con- 
trolling theme which uses them in its larger chords. 
When Paul spoke to the Athenians, he took his 



X THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 

text from an inscription on some local altar, to an 
unhnoum god. He began by assuring his audience 
that he could tell them what they were worshipping 
in devout ignorance, and tried in this way to get a 
hearing for the gospel of Jesus. According to a 
Greek bishop of the tenth century, who wrote a 
commentary on Acts, the inscription dated from a 
complaint of Pan that the Athenians had neglected 
to acknowledge him. Consequently, after winning 
a victory over the Persians with the help of Pan, 
they erected an altar to him, and in order to guard 
against any similar danger in other directions if 
they neglected a god who was unknown to them, 
" they erected that altar with the inscription to an 
unknown god, meaning " in case there is some other 
god whom we do not know, be this erected by us 
in his honour, that he may be gracious to us though 
he is not worshipped by us owing to our ignorance." ' 
It is not clear where QJcumenius got this story about 
the origin of the Athenian altar, but it supplies an 
apt setting for the argument of the apostle's address. 
Paul did not mean that Jesus was a divine being 
who was required to make their pantheon complete. 
His point was that the rehgion which he preached 
in the name of Jesus was one which left no such 
blank spaces in the universe, no tracts of experience 
where human life was exposed to unknown powers 
of Ufe and death, over which the God of Jesus did 
not avail to exercise control. Unluckily he was 
interrupted before he could develop his argument, 
but his epistles show how he would probably have 
worked out the relations of the Christian God to 
the universe of men and things. Now this also is 
the motive which underUes the theology of the 



PREFACE xi 

gospels ; as the tradition develops, even prior to 
the cUmax of the Fourth gospel, we can feel the 
instinctive desire to present Jesus as adequate to 
all the needs of the human soul, and to state His 
revelation in such a way as to cover the entire 
experience of believing men. The messianic cate- 
gories naturally tended at first to make the range 
of this interest rehgious rather than cosmic, — ^if we 
may use an antithesis which is convenient but not 
accurate. So far as apocalyptic took account of the 
universe, it had a short and sharp solution. Yet 
even within the earher phases of the synoptic 
theology it is possible to detect the implicit convic- 
tion that faith in Jesus Christ has cleared up the 
rehgious situation of men and made the world an 
intelhgible unity. The genesis of this conviction 
Ues in the faith of Jesus Himself. The interest of 
the gospels, in the aspect of their theological develop- 
ment, is the deepening appreciation of the signifi- 
cance which attaches to His personality ; from one 
side and another they witness consciously and 
unconsciously to the behef that Jesus is Lord of 
all powers visible and invisible, and that to worship 
the God and Father of the Lord Jesus Christ is to 
be freed for ever from that ignorance of the world 
which haunts men with a variety of superstitious 
fears. 

It is in the light of this fundamental and charac- 
teristic motive that the theology of the gospels 
reveals its vital unity amid the variations which 
catch the eye upon the surface of their pages. The 
differences between them are Uttle, compared to 
the difference between them and what followed or 
preceded them. Any text-book of the New Testa- 



xii THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS 

ment theology provides some account of the Jewish 
presuppositions and environment of Jesus, then an 
outline of His teaching on the basis of what are 
considered to be the authentic materials extant in 
the synoptic sources or traditions, tliirdly an appre- 
ciation of the apostolic theology which has blended 
with the preaching of Jesus in the records, and finally, 
a special section on the Fourth gospel which dis- 
criminates the characteristic theology of that 
writing from the synoptic tradition, on the one 
hand, and Paulinism upon the other, with an attempt, 
depending for its positive results upon the author's 
critical position, to distinguish what (if any) are 
the authentic sayings and thoughts of Jesus which 
may be embedded in the Johannine interpretation. 
It is a method of procedure which has its own 
advantages, but I have no intention of handling the 
materials on such lines. This is not a handbook 
to the gospels, nor a study of the teaching of Jesus, 
nor an outhne of Christian dogma. The following 
pages contain no more than a group of studies, and 
they are grouped in order to be as far as possible 
genetic and compact. Whether this attempt to 
reset the salient data is pronounced successful or 
not, I am convinced that it is more suitable to the 
plan of the present series than the conventional 
arrangement of the text-books. The index at the 
end of the volume and the outline of contents pre- 
fixed to each chapter, will enable the reader to find 
any topic or passage without loss of time. 

JAMES MOFFATT. 
Oxford, July 1, 1912. 



CONTENTS 

CHAPTER I 

PAOK 
THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLO&Y, . . .1 

Instinctive objection to the association of theology and the 

gospels. 
Various reasons for this feeling. 
In what sense theology is organic to the gospels. 
Different senses in which the four gospels are theological. 
The problem of tendency and interpretation : 

(i) Practical. 
(ii) Speculative. 
Further problems : 
(o) Is there a theology of the gospels as distinct from 
the rest of the New Testament ? 
The relation of Paulinism to the gospels. j 

(6) Is the theology of the gospels a unity ? The synoptic 

gospels and the Fourth. 
(c) Is the canonical text of the gospels free from later 

doctrinal modification 1 
{d) Was the theology of the gospels affected by the 
passage from Aramaic into Greek ? 

The common element in the theology of the gospels. 
Distinctive features of the gospels as gospels. 
Specific character of their ' theology. 

CHAPTER II 

THE ESCHATOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS, . . . .41 

How far is the theology an eschatology ? 
Recent research into this question. 



xiv THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 

TAGB 

The problem synoptic rather than Johaniime. 
Definition of apocalyptic element, in view of — 

(a) Sayings which involve that the 'kingdom' was in a 

sense present, as well as future, for Jesus^ 

(b) Significance of prayer, in this connection. 

(c) Significance of the ethical teaching of Jesus, in rela- 

tion to his eschatology. 
Meaning of the 'kingdom,' present and future; the 
antinomy presented by the evidence of the gospels on 
this point 

Solutions of the antinomy : — 

(i) The influence of the apostolic church. The 

' tendency ' solution, 
(ii) Varying emphasis on eschatology at different 
periods in the life of Jesus. The 'biogi'aphical' 
solution, 
(iii) Element of pictorial language in the teaching 
of Jesus. The ' literary ' solution. 
Transmutation of eschatology by Jesus. 

CHAPTER III 

THE GOD OF JESUS, . ... .85 

Practical interests of the teaching of Jesus about God : 
(n) The Fatherhood and providence. 

Not a justification of idleness or recklessness. 
(6) The Fatherhood and the kingdom. 

Relation to the divine purpose, 
(c) Relation to the miracles. 
God and nature. 
The transcendental and the immanent God. 
The divine presence mediated through Christ. 
Jesus and current Jewish titles of God. 
His avoidance of the term ' Holy,' and its significance. 
The ' righteousness ' of God as the Father, involving love. 

Farther implications of this : 

(i) The self-sacrifice of the divine love, 
(ii) Unique manifestation of this in the person and 
vocation of the Son. 



CONTENTS 

iii) The relation of the Father to human sin. 

(iv) The severity and majesty of God as Father. 
The function of the Son in the Father's 
order of judgment, penitence, and for- 
giveness. 



CHAPTER IV 

THE PERSON OF JESDS, . . . . 127 

The coming of Jesus an epoch. 
Significance of his personality in the light of 

(a) His divine sonship : 

Development of the tradition, through the birth- 
stories to the Fourth gospel. 
{b] The ' Servant of yahveh ' prophecies : 

Directions of this influence, 
(c) The ' Son of man ' tradition : 

Linguistic problem connected with this title. 

Synoptic data and their significance. 
{d) The • Son of David ' title, 
(e) The ' Beloved ' as a messianic title. 
(/) The ' Lord ' as a divine title. 
{g) The synoptic category of ' Wisdom.' 
(h) The Johannine category of the Logos. 

Belief in Jesus as the Christ ; inner development. 

The common elements of the christology of the first three 

gospels and the Fourth. 
Summary. 

CHAPTER V 

THE SPIRIT OF JESUS, 177 

Meaning of the ' Spirit ' in connection with Jesus. 
Only two references in his teaching : 

(i) The Holy Spirit and his own vocation, 
(ii) The Spirit in the witness of the disciples before hostile 
tribunals. 



xvi THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 

When did Jesus impart the Spirit to the disciples? 

View of the Fourth gospel. 

Development of the conception in the Fourth gospel : 

(a) The Paraclete. 

(6) The Spirit of truth. 

(c) In relation to baptism. 

(d) In relation to the Lord's Supper. 

(e) In relation to the person of Christ. 

The synoptic and the Johannine views. 
Conclusion. 

BIBUOGEAPHY, . . . .211 

INDEX, . . ... 215 



THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 

CHAPTER I 

THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 

' The theology of the gospels ! ' some will exclaim 
in dismay, ' and we verily thought the gospels were 
a refuge from theology ! ' This is an attitude 
towards the religion of Jesus Christ and its records 
with which it is often impossible not to feel a certain 
sympathy. To be deep in the history of the church, 
and especially of its creeds, is for many just persons 
to acquire a more or less legitimate suspicion of 
theology in connection with the vital religion which 
breathes upon them as they turn back to the simple 
pages of the gospels. They know, or think they 
know, what theology has been and done ; in a number 
of cases its services to Christianity seem to have 
been accompanied by results which are irrelevant, 
if not positively injurious, to such faith in the living 
Christ as the gospels commend ; its associations 
have been so generally with intellectualism and 
formahsm, with a stereotyped presentation of the 
Christian reUgion in the phraseology and categories 
of some philosophical system, which rapidly became 
a source of embarrassment to ordinary people, that 
it is not altogether surprising to catch a persistent 
sense of reUef in the popular conviction that the 



2 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

gospels at any rate leave no room for the intrusion 
of theology, and at the same time to detect a 
corresponding sense of resentment when that con- 
viction is challenged or modified. Nearly forty 
years ago a German critic published a rather bitter 
and despairing monograph upon what he called 
Die Ghristlichkeit der heutigen Theologies His thesis 
was that theology had invariably played the traitor 
to Christianity, that no theology could be called 
Christian, and that theology had, in fact, destroyed 
the Christian religion. The spirit of this protest 
is shared by many who would not agree with its 
arguments or objects. So far as the New Testament 
is concerned, they would be perfectly wilhng to 
let Paul's theology go, but they would claim the 
gospels as documents of reUgion and not of theology, 
documents of the faith in its pure, pre-theological 
phase. Theology is the theory of a religion ; it 
stands to personal faith as the theory of aesthetics 
stands to poetry, as botany to hfe in the field or 
garden. Theology is hstening to what man has to 
say about God ; personal rehgion, on the other 
hand, is man listening to God, and this is what the 
gospels mean. To speak of ' the theology of the 
gospels ' is a contradiction in terms. 

Nevertheless, it is reasonable to speak of the 
theology of the gospels. There is theology behind 
even their most spontaneous pages, and they do 
not cease on that account to be gospels. We may 
even add, it is because they mirror an experience 
which tends to become conscious of its issues in 
history and nature, that they are gospels. 

1 A second edition of F. Overbeclc's essay (1879) was issued in 
1903. 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 3 

The reluctance to admit this is based upon an 
antipathy to theology in general, which is not 
unintelhgible, and which is by no means confined 
to the place of the unlearned. Theologies have 
tended to iasist upon the acceptance of doctrines 
as if they possessed some virtue in themselves which 
enabled them to become practically a substitute 
for the Ufe of personal experience which they in- 
terpret. Is it so with the theology of the gospels ? 
Upon the contrary, the reverse is the case. Such 
a tendency may be felt, it is true, within the theology 
of the Fourth gospel, but the motto for all the 
four gospels might be found not unfairly in the 
words used by the writer of the Fourth to define 
his purpose : These are written that you may believe 
that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that 
believing you may have life in his Name?- They are 
interpretations of Christ, written from faith and 
for faith, in order to inspire and instruct Christian 
life within the churches ; they are not documents 
which interpose doctrines between the soul and 
Jesus. From one point of view it is hardly adequate 
or even accurate to speak about ' the testimony ' of 
the gospels. That phrase suggests a subject or 
person who is in need of testimony, whose character 
and claims require to be authenticated before a 
suspicious and uncertain audience. Now, it is 
true that there is an apologetic element in the 
gospels which corresponds to this idea. They are 
written in several instances with a view to objections 
felt by the Jewish, Jewish - Christian, or Greek 
world of the day; there was the Jewish faith 
with an uncrucified messiah, for example, and the 

^ John XX. 31. 



4 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

Greek with no messiah at all. But fundamentally 
their audience is one of those who believe already, 
and the doubts and uncertainties which they essay 
to remove are occasioned by the relation of human 
faith to Christ. Their best apologetic is the positive 
confession of their faith. So far as they introduce 
doctrines, it is to confirm that faith by drawing out 
its basis in the person of Christ, and by thus proving 
it is more than a pious intuition. The underlying 
principle is that personal belief in Christ carries 
with it convictions of His relation to God and the 
world which are organic to the rehgious experience. 
Even their theology, such as it is, may be said to 
be implicit rather than explicit, for the most part, 
until we come to the Fourth gospel, where a special 
interpretation of the person of Christ, semi-philo- 
sophic, semi-mystical, lies on the surface of the 
record as well as of the prologue. In the synoptic 
gospels what we see are beliefs in action, or actions 
which involve certain beliefs. Jesus does not teach 
any summa theologiae. He acts for God and teaches 
about God with an underived note of authority. 
His presence sets in motion a common life which is 
determined by His revelation of God's character 
and purpose, and the churches in which and for which 
the gospels were written were not schools of 
theology, but communities organised for the worship 
of God and the service of His kingdom in the Spirit 
of Jesus Christ. Nevertheless, the most elementary 
and spontaneous experience of the Christian religion, 
then as now, involved what may be termed without 
inaccuracy dogmatic or theological conceptions. 
When Paul reminded the Christians of Corinth 
that the first principles of their faith included a 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 5 

belief that Christ had died for their sins according 
to the scriptures of the Old Testament, he was not 
expressing a Pauline theologumenon, but a belief 
without which there would have been no Christianity 
at all. It is difficult even for the simple piety 
which with a sure instinct finds its way to the direct 
and vital passages of revelation in the gospels, to 
ignore the fact that the religion of Jesus does involve 
a theology of some kind.^ It meets us on the very 
threshold of Matthew and Luke, to say nothing of 
John. 2 Even in what is sometimes regarded as 
the most human and realistic of the gospels the 
reader comes upon a divine voice and vision at the 
baptism, the personality of Satan, and the environ- 
ment of unclean spirits in disease, before he reaches 
the end of the first chapter in Mark. Something 
has to be made of all this. We must come to terms 
with the problems started by designations like 
The Son of God, the Son of man, the Logos, and the 
Spirit. Whether these are retained or dropped, 
in either case there is a pronouncement upon Jesus 
and early Christianity which has to justify itself 
before the criticism of the records and the larger 
criticism of the Christian consciousness. 

There is also a natural impatience and suspicion 
of theology not ojily as irrelevant if not injurious to 
the Christian heart, but as an invasion of the rights 
which belong to the mind. Christian theology has 
sometimes been presented in ways which threaten 

1 'The word "God" is a Theology in itself (Newman, The Idea 
of a Universal/, p. 26). 

2 A theology implies a philosophy, in the sense that it presupposes 
some theory of knowledge and therefore of personality. The Fourth 
gospel, from this point of View, has a much more articulate theology 
than its predecessors. 



6 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

to foreclose the inquiry and activity of thought by 
elevating the phraseology of some particular age 
to a position of finality. How does the study of 
the theology of the gospels bear upon this objection ? 
In the first instance, it reveals a rich and flexible 
variety of conceptions which proves that the primitive 
church was not committed to any stereotyped theory 
of the person of Christ in relation to God and the 
world. In the second instance, the gospels afford 
a standard and a spirit for that revision and re- 
adjustment of Christian theology which is from 
time to time the duty of the living Church. The 
gospels are a refuge from theologies which have 
ceased to represent the Christian experience with 
adequate fulness and accuracy. But they are not a 
refuge from theology, except when theology either 
lifts some transient element to a position of primacy 
or imposes upon the gospels the schemes of a later 
fashion in philosophy. 

The former danger is always with us. The 
theology of the gospels, like the theology of any 
age or movement, is related to the contemporary 
conceptions of the world and of God ; it is moulded 
and coloured by current ideas of nature and the 
supernatural, otherwise it would have been un- 
intelhgible and ineffective for its period. But it 
embodies classic and fundamental elements to which 
these are not essential, and for which fresh expressions 
can be found, more consonant with the advance of 
knowledge and experience. This means more than 
the fact of current cosmic and psychological behefs 
entering into the minds of those who transmitted 
the tradition of Jesus ; it means that they formed 
part of the religious world of Jesus Himself. The 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 7 

theology of Christianity is not simply a transcript 
of everything that Jesus thought and said about the 
world. There are elements even in His teaching, e.g. 
on demonology and eschatology, which have not 
passed over into our world. The Fourth gospel, 
with its characteristic attitude of reticence to both 
of these elements, is enough to show that they are 
not vital to the fundamental beliefs of Christianity, 
and that they may be dropped or modified without 
loss to the faith. The varying emphasis of even 
the synoptic gospels upon certain aspects of the 
person of Jesus indicates that the theology of the 
gospels was already conscious of the problem 
which vexes modem theology with regard to the 
christological issue, and that it anticipates the lines 
along which that problem is to be met. 

The second of the two dangers which have been 
just mentioned is equally perennial. There is a 
vivid expression of it in one of Pascal's private 
letters to a novice of Port-Royal.^ He quotes from 
Mark xiii. 14-15 : When you see the abominable 
thing in the 'place where it ought not to he, then let 
no one turn hack to his house to take anything away. 
' Mais cette parole est etonnante. II me semble que 
cela predit parfaitement le temps ou nous sommes, 
oii la corruption de la morale est aux maisons de 
saintete, et dans les livres des theologiens et des 
rehgieux ab. elle ne devrait pas etre.' The whole 
chapter seems to him a prediction of the contemporary 
degradation of the Christian religion in the Roman 
church and in the French world alike. ' Ce chapitre 
de I'Evangile, que je voudrais lire avec vous tout 
entier, finit par une exhortation a veiller et a prier 

1 Pensies de Pascal {ii. Havet), ii. pp, 341-2. 



8 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

pour eviter tous ces malheurs, et en effet il est bien 
juste que la priere soit continuelle quand le peril 
est continuel.' If Pascal's suspicion of theology 
was justified in the seventeenth century, it has been 
more than justified since then, outside as well as 
inside the church of Rome. It has prompted the 
movement ' Back to Christ ' from the formulas and 
speculations which had usurped the place of Jesus 
in the minds of His people, or, in Lessing's neat 
antithesis, from the Christian religion to the reUgion 
of Christ. One drawback to this movement has 
been that in casting back to Christ, or rather to the 
Jesus of history, modems have often taken back a 
Christ of their own creation, a conception of Jesus 
which is tacitly read into the gospels. And this 
error is bound up with another, with the failure to 
see that the very contact with the Jesus of the 
gospels involves a theological reconstruction^ — a 
reconstruction, doubtless, in which the fundamental 
and vital factor is the life of Christ, not any doctrine 
about His person, but still a reconstruction which 
calls out the thoughts of faith, ' thoughts of things 
which,' in Sir Thomas Browne's phrase, ' thoughts 
but tenderly touch.' 

From the standpoint of modern theology ^ 
Christocentric views may be as logically superseded 

1 In the sense that Christianity cannot remain a religion of intui- 
tions, without reflection upon its relation to life and nature. Cf. 
Caird's Evolution of Theology in the Greek Philosophers, i. 6 f. ('It 
has never been, and can never he, a religion of simple faith ; or, if it 
ever relapses into such a faith, it immediately begins to lose its 
spiritual character, and to assimilate itself to religions that are lower 
in the scale'). 

2 Cf. Troeltsch, Die Bedeutung der Gesohichtlichkeit Jesu fur den 
Glauben, 1911, pp. 15 f. 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 9 

as geocentric conceptions in cosmology or anthropo- 
centric ideas in metaphysics, but the theology of the 
gospels represents the religious interpretations and 
experiences of men within the apostolic church 
for whom the world had been transformed by the 
revelation of God in Jesus Christ, and to whom the 
worship and service of God had become a new 
reality through the Spirit of the Lord. The data 
and materials of this theology lie in the divine 
revelation made through Jesus Christ. It is the 
character and purpose of Christ, His personality, 
EQs disclosure of the divine nature in word and deed, 
the experiences to which His Spirit gave rise — it is 
these that form the staple of any theology which 
we find within the gospels.^ Its subject and object 
is faith as a moral decision evoked by the call and 
claim of Jesus as God's Son. A theologian ought 
therefore to feel at home in the study of the gospels, 
not because he can forget for a little that he is a 

1 To the age in which the gospel traditions arose the Old Testa- 
ment was a rich source of proof for the Christian attitude to Judaism, 
Jesus, and the future. The evangelists drew upon it as a Christian 
book, inspired by the Spirit of God, and their use of it went much 
further than the appeal to prophecies of Christ. But (i) Jesus Him- 
self drew upon the deeper ideals and prophecies, and (ii) the attempt 
to explain large sections of the gospel narratives and fundamental 
conceptions of Christ's teaching as no more than the reproduction of 
Old Testament passages does not carry us very far. TertuUian's 
' Lex radix evangelii ' is an epigram rather than a historical estimate, 
and as for the narratives, Wellhausen's comment (on Mark iv. 38) 
holds good : ' This story is not the echo of the story of Jonah. It is 
rarely the case that the gospel stories owe their origin to Old Testa- 
ment prototypes. . . . What was known and handed down about 
Jesus really did not agree with what the Old Testament contained 
about the messiah and what the Jews expected of him ; it was only 
with difficulty that one could show how the contradiction s disappeared 
before the eyes of the enlightened.' 



10 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [ch. 

theologian, but because he is breathing in their 
pages an atmosphere charged with the fresh experi- 
ences and intuitions which are essential to any 
theology which deserves the name of Christian.^ 
He will first of all put himself into their attitude 
towards Jesus Christ, not because that involves the 
adoption of a first-century view of the world, but 
because it is a religious attitude which is determined 
by the Spirit of the Lord within the Church. Before 
we can safely reason from the gospels we have to 
share their position towards the great personahty 
behind and above them. No inferences from 
their contents are valid apart from a sense of the 
redeeming facts and truths which inspire them, 
and which are larger than any contemporary elements 
in the records or in the historical setting which 
they presuppose. The amoimt of relativity in 
the theology of the gospels only looks formidable 
when they are approached along the avenue of 
mechanical preconceptions or hyper-sceptical pre- 
judices. 

M. Anatole France quotes the defiant retort of 
a modem Frenchman, M. Charles Maurras, when 
some one cited against him a saying from the gospels : 
' Je ne me soucie pas de savoir ce que quatre Juifs 
obscurs ont pense de J6sus-Christ ! ' ^ The authors 
of the gospels were obscure ; at least, their person- 
alities are obscure to us at the present day, with 
the exception of Luke. But some of the greatest 
truths of religion have come from the pen of 
anonymous writers ; the gospels in this respect are 
on the same plane as the larger part of the Old 

1 Cf. Father Tyrrell's Medicevalism, p. 129. 

2 In The English Remeio (April 1910), p. 45. 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY H 

Testament. Besides, to reflect a theology is not 
the same thing as to be a theologian. Nor do the 
gospels represent three or four writers each of 
whom is engaged in reproducing a conception of 
Christ from his devout ego ; what they voice is 
the common faith as it was held in various circles of 
the apostohc church, and this common faith rests 
upon the thoughts of Jesus Christ, upon His con- 
victions of God, His judgments of men, His attitude 
to the world. Through the idealisation of the 
records, through their tacit corrections and avowed 
predilections, through categories which are only 
partially adequate, through misconceptions and 
exaggerations, through the refraction of con- 
temporary interests and preoccupations, a theology 
shines which is not wholly obscure, and through the 
theology a Figure which is still less obscure. 

It is important to keep in view the range and 
organic character of these variations in the develop- 
ment of the theology of the gospels. The climax of 
the Fourth gospel is the appeal of the risen Christ : 
Be not faithless hut believing, and the reply of Thomas 
(the last words addressed to Christ by a disciple) 
expresses the end at which the writer conceives faith 
will arrive under the growing revelation of God in 
Christ : My Lord and my God. What the theology 
of the gospels mirrors is the process, or rather the 
processes, of experience and reflection which ripened 
faith into this fundamental conviction of the Church. 
The Fourth gospel puts back into the life and teach- 
ing of Jesus on earth convictions and experiences 
of His spiritual significance which only dawned in 
their fulness upon the Church after the resurrec- 
tion. This is a source of endless perplexity to the 



12 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

historical critic. It is not a feature which is wholly 
absent even from the synoptic gospels, but the 
extent to which it prevails in the Fourth gospel 
constitutes a problem by itself. The plus of preach- 
ing, which enters into the synoptic record as a 
product of the early church's testimony, becomes 
in the Fourth gospel at several points a surplus 
of religious and theological reflection, which often 
obscures and sometimes resets the historical outlines 
of the ministry and teaching of Jesus as these can 
be unravelled in the sources of the first three gospels. 
But the theological continuity between the Fourth 
gospel and its predecessors is not so difficult to 
trace once the former is regarded as primarily an 
interpretation of faith in the historical manner. 

The theology of Mark, for example, is not a 
description of how a genial humanitarian Jesus went 
about doing good, unconscious of any specific divine 
functions. Mark's gospel is the story of Jesus as 
a supernatural figure, compelling homage from the 
invisible world of demons, and exercising the powers 
of divine forgiveness and authority on earth as 
Son of God and Son of man. Mark, as Wellhausen 
observes, is not writing de vita et morihus Jesu. He 
essays indeed to make His personaUty vivid, but 
that personality has a divine vocation which supplies 
the controlling interest of the story : Jesus is the 
Christ, the Son of God. In this respect the Christo- 
logy of Mark is not so distant from the essential 
features even of the Fourth gospel. It is possible 
to feel this affinity, apart from the special argument 
of J. Weiss {Das dlteste Evangdium, pp. 97 f.), that 
Mark's use of the titles ' Son of man ' and ' Son of 
God ' proves his acceptance of the PauUne idea of 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 13 

Jesus as a Man descended from heaven. Mark, 
like Paul and the author of the Fourth gospel, 
does not explain how the divine being took flesh ; 
in this respect his christology is less developed than 
that of Matthew or Luke, but the fundamental 
conception of the person of Christ is already present 
in his gospel, and present as the dominant feature 
of the story. 

Matthew's theology is at once more precisely 
messianic and more definitely Christian — in the 
sense that Jesus as the Son of God is more than 
messiah. As the Son of the Father and as the Lord 
of men. He occupies a place which does not depend 
on any arguments from prophecy. Faith in BQm 
is made more explicit. Some of the most perplexing 
antinomies in Matthew's gospel spring out of the 
juxtaposition of sayings which imply a long 
perspective for the kingdom and eschatological 
predictions of the most pronounced type, of Jewish- 
Christian sections and catholic apergus ; there is 
also a noticeable reserve in the use of the exorcism 
traditions, which bulk so largely in the Marcan 
estimate. But it is in the sphere of ethics rather 
than of theology proper that Matthew's gospel 
differs from that of his predecessor.^ The theological 
characteristics are also due in the main to the rabbinic 
methods of the author, which tend to present the 
christology in a less naive and popular form than 
Mark's narrative. 

1 The author has a twofold object in view : to explain to Jewish 
Christians how God's kingdom, which Jesus had inaugurated, was so 
different from the traditional theocracy of expectation, and to re- 
assure Gentile Christians who were perplexed by its apparent limita- 
tion to Israel. See B. "Weiss, Die Qwellen der Synoptischen Ueher- 
liffenmg, pp. 234 f. 



14 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

Luke's theology is as catholic as Matthew's in 
spirit and more so in expression. The wider rela- 
tion of Jesus to humanity shimmers through the 
Jewish environment. He is the son of Adam, not of 
Abraham or David, in the genealogy, and as the Son 
of God He occupies a place which is more intelligible 
than Matthew or even Mark represents, to non- 
Jewish readers. In the accounts of the resurrection 
Luke is distinctly realistic ; more than once there is 
a materiahsing of the story, which contrasts with 
Matthew. But the theological estimate, even with 
its increasing emphasis on the Spirit, is essentially 
true to that of his predecessors, while in several 
respects it forms a development in the direction of 
the Fourth gospel. Keim insists that metaphysics 
are beginning already to attach themselves to the 
personality of Jesus ; so far as this means that Jesus 
is not ceasing to occupy a unique position towards 
God even while the messianic character is becoming 
a less important category, it is accurate. 

There are varieties of interpretation here, which 
evince a certain maturing of faith, but they are neither 
casual nor irresponsible. A survey of such variations 
is apt to leave the impression that the theological 
aspect of the tradition, if not the historical, is due 
mainly if not entirely to speculative interests 
operating within a world of heterogeneous messianic 
and Hellenic ideas about the Son of God. It is 
necessary therefore to recollect two facts : in the 
first place, that these interpretations of Jesus as the 
Christ arose from the instinctive desire to represent, 
in terms of current thought, the person of One 
whom the churches worshipped as their Lord ; 
and in the second place, that this desire was also 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 15 

motived repeatedly by practical exigencies. The 
former aspect is more generally recognised than the 
second, but both need to be considered fairly in 
order to appreciate the genesis of the theology of 
the gospels. The setiological motive led to the 
preservation and the shaping of traditions about the 
rites and laws and future of the society which owed 
its origin to the faith of Jesus. The apologetic 
aspect of that motive, as in the case of Matthew and 
the Fourth gospel especially, sharpened interest in 
the anti-Jewish or rather anti-Pharisaic attitude of 
Jesus. Finally, the internal controversies of the 
early church, especially the trouble over the Law, 
inevitably affected the christology, and started 
fresh attempts to present in historical form the 
relation of Jesus to Israel and to the world outside 
Israel. In addition to all this, there was the 
influence of contemporary history, which must have 
affected in particular the tradition of the eschatologi- 
cal sayings. ' The transmission of sayings as to the 
future, and the actual unfolding of that future, 
went on side by side. It seems inevitable that the 
latter should affect the former.' ^ All this does not 
rule out tendency, conscious as well as unconscious, 
from the gospels. What it does is to emphasise 
the practical, reUgious motive in many of the 
modifications which the tradition presents, and to 
bring out the fact that such variations were not 
idiosyncrasies of the authors. They point back 
not to four obscure Jews but to what may be termed 
communal instincts — communal instincts which 
ultimately rest upon an inherent behef in Jesus as 
the Christ. A study of the gospels from the 
1 H. B. Sharman, The Teaching of Jesus about the Future, p. 138 



16 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

historical or from the hterary standpoint would 
require to estimate the genesis and growth of such 
tendencies, to assign the midrashic element its 
proper value, and to distinguish the sections where 
some religious idea is presented in historical form, 
where a miracle has grown out of a parable or a 
reUgious belief in the course of tradition, for example, 
or where some incident is symbohc. The theological 
appreciation of the gospels cannot entirely dispense 
with such methods of treatment, but its primary 
concern is with what the writers believed about 
Jesus rather than with the exact forms in which 
they happened to express that belief. No doubt, 
it is the beliefs which have sometimes created the 
history. But the beliefs, however naively expressed, 
were not floating in the air ; they are organic to the 
substantial faith without which there would not 
have been any gospels at all, and that faith was 
not created by any crisis, practical or speculative, 
through which the primitive church had to pass. 
The theology of the gospels has been shaped by 
the exigencies and experiences of the apostohc age, 
but it was not their simple product. In one aspect, 
it is the reflection of the very faith which enabled 
the early Christians to be Christians. In another 
aspect, it suggests that the creative genius of the 
Founder is not to be overlooked in estimating the 
records drawn up by His adherents. When the 
gospels contain sayings which appear to suit some 
crisis or situation in the apostohc age, it does not 
necessarily follow that they arose from that period 
or have been shaped to harmonise with it. Tendency 
in the church was not more creative than Jesus. ' Of 
course, there are numerous instances of hysteron- 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 17 

proteron in the gospels — the merest suggestion of 
practical aim or purpose leads to a hysteron-proteron, 
and the gospels follow practical aims — ^yet it by 
no means follows that saying after saying must have 
been coloured and corrected in accordance with the 
circumstances of later times.' ^ This is a sound canon. 
It apphes particularly to the references to persecution, 
but it has a wider range, and it must be allowed 
to qualify any inferences that may be drawn as to 
the presence and extent of tendency in the recorded 
speeches of Jesus throughout the synoptic tradition. 
At the same time, there is a speculative back- 
ground to the theology of the gospels. There were 
christologies, messianic ^ and in a sense Hellenic, 
before the gospels, before even Christianity, and 
the special views of the gospels are sometimes 
expressed either in terms of these or with a more or 
less conscious reference to them. It is necessary, 
however, for our present purpose to restrict the 
theology of the gospels to the rehgious ideas of 
Jesus and the evangehsts, so far as they were 
conscious of their range and origin. There is a 
misty hinterland behind conceptions Uke the Son of 
man, the Logos, the incarnation, and the last judg- 
ment, which involves researches into comparative 
rehgion beyond the pale of Judaism. All such con- 
ceptions we shall take as they were used by Jesus 

1 Hamack, The Sayings of Jesus, p. 204. 

2 The interpretation of the Old Testament, allegorical and other- 
wise, depends on the principle that Christ was the end of the divine 
revelation in Judaism, and that the law and the prophets were there- 
fore to be read in the Ught of the end. The theology of the gospels 
contains, amid its uses of the Old Testament, a substantially correct 
estimate of the preceding literature of Judaism ; it is employed to 
illustrate rather than to prove the Christian belief in Jesus. 

B 



18 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

and the authors of the gospels, without discussing 
e.g. the rise of the animistic view which lies behind 
the faith in demons and angels and the Spirit, or 
even the relation between the Oriental avatar idea 
and the Fourth gospel's christology. Still further, it 
is irrelevant to the central problems of the theology 
of the gospels to enter into detailed discussion of 
the affinities between Pharisaic Judaism and the 
religion of Jesus, or to give explicit resumes of the 
difference between His teaching and contemporary 
scribism. It is sufficient to keep the latter before 
one's mind. The relation of Jesus to the Law, 
for exanjple, is an outcome of His consciousness as 
messiah, and in these pages it is noticed simply 
from that standpoint ; otherwise it falls under the 
category of His ethical praxis rather than of His 
theology. The latter is concerned with the inner 
principles of His religion, which determined the 
course of His career and His attitude to questions 
like those of divorce, the sabbath, and the temple. 

The theology of the gospels was a cause as well as 
an effect, however. It marks the rise of a creative 
genius on the soil of Judaism, and it entered Lato the 
history of the Christian Church. To understand the 
gospels we ought to study their influence as well as 
their environment and origin, and in a manual of 
New Testament theology or a history of dogma 
this consideration is borne in mind. Here space 
forbids more than a glance at the most important 
movement in the theology of the period, namely, 
the religious system of Paul. The relation between 
this and the gospels is one of interaction. It is 
now recognised that the tendency to minimise 
Paul's interest in and acquaintance with the hfe of 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 19 

Jesus has been carried beyond what the data of his 
epistles warrant. In that sense, the primitive 
tradition of Jesus which underhes the synoptic 
gospels had an effect on Paulinism. Jesus was 
something more to Paul than a figure round which a 
floating christology crystallised. But the theology 
of the gospels is not the theology of Paul ; the 
sources of the synoptic writings, Mark in its primitive 
form and Q, cannot be dated earlier than the 
Pauline movement, and it is the effect of Paulinism 
upon the gospels, not vice versa, which has to be 
considered. 

(a) This raises the first of the prehminary problems 
regarding the critical use of the gospels for the 
purpose of ascertaining their theology : Is there a 
theology of the gospels apart from the rest of the 
New Testament ? Were they merely transcripts of 
the teaching of Jesus, upon which the epistles were 
comments, it would be at once possible to answer 
such a question in the affirmative. But the gospels 
are products of the apostolic age, and their origin 
is significant for any appreciation of their contents. 
It is impracticable, on the other hand, to treat them 
as no more than products of the apostolic faith, 
imcontroUed by any definite gospel of Jesus behind 
them. What the theologian has to do is to de- 
termine the extent to which the tendencies and 
interests of the primitive church affected the tradi- 
tion at any given point, and this involves intricate 
questions of historical and Uterary criticism, many 
of which are still unanswered. There is the prob- 
lem of the parables, for example. How far has 
the conception of the Church moulded the con- 
ception of the Reign in the parabolic traditions of 



20 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [ch. 

Matthew and even of Mark ? Have later associa- 
tions of the Church been carried over into the 
primitive words of Jesus upon the Reign of God in 
more parables than those of the drag-net and the 
tares ? Or has the hypothesis of the equivalence of 
Church and Kingdom in Paul been exaggerated ? 
AgaLu, is a section like Mark viii. 27-x. 45 (as Bacon 
and Wellhausen independently argue) substantially 
a projection of later Christian views into the original 
tradition, an unhistorical expansion of the Christian 
credo that the Christ must suffer ? Here also, we 
may suspect, there is exaggeration. The occurrence of 
several logia in the passage which are vouched for 
by Q, and the presence of undoubtedly historical 
incidents in the narrative, help to confirm the 
impression that this section on the Christ and the 
cross is not out of keeping in the main with the 
situation of Jesus and His disciples. Similarly it 
is impossible to regard the predictions of the 
resurrection or the declarations of the messianic 
vocation as purely apostolic ; without some basis 
in the teaching and life of Jesus their form and 
existence in the tradition are not expUcable. Thus 
the term Son of man, in its messianic sense, is not 
wholly due to the pious reverence of the early 
Christians, who were responsible for attaching 
divine significance to a name which in the original 
Aramaic upon the lips of Jesus meant no more 
than ' man ' or ' some one,' or a self-designation. 
This we shall see later on. Meantime it is enough 
to point out that such problems meet the theologian 
as he proceeds to use the gospels for his special 
purposes, and that they forbid us to take the 
documents either as pure products of tendency 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 21 

or as uncoloured transcripts of some original and 
authoritative teaching. Before any one of them 
was written Paul had thought and taught. It is 
true that the theology of the early church embraced 
a variety of types which cannot be reduced to Jewish 
and Gentile Christianity respectively, much less to 
the influence of the great apostle ; but he was the 
first theologian of the Church, his letters present a 
fairly clear outline of his views, and his influence 
therefore has to be taken primarily into account as 
a factor in the evolution of the religious conceptions 
which the four gospels voice, in so far as these 
cannot be traced back with certainty to the teaching 
of Jesus Himself. 

With regard to the Fourth gospel, the relation 
is comparatively clear. By the time it was composed 
the great Pauline struggle with the Jewish Christians 
had been long since fought and won. The writer 
practically assumes the freedom of Christians from 
the Law — while the Law was given through Moses, 
grace and truth came through Jesus Christ, — the world- 
wide range of Christ's mission, and the supersession 
of Judaism as a religious system. In its christology, 
as well as in its conceptions of the Spirit, of the 
union between the believer and Christ, of freedom, 
of glory, and even of faith, the Fourth gospel bears 
ample traces of the PauHne theology. In almost 
every instance the writer has modified or expanded 
what he has taken over ; his theology is not simply 
a development of Paulinism, but Paulinism is one 
of its most important presuppositions. ' Upon one 
side, we may characterise what is essential and 
original in the Johannine view by saying that it 
represents a synthesis of the primitive apostolic 



22 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [oh. 

tradition with Paulinism,' "■ although we must add 
that some conceptions which are apparently due 
to the latter may have been anticipated in the 
former or elsewhere. 

The problem of the relation of PauUnism to the 
synoptic gospels comes to a head in the criticism 
of Mark, where one critic alleges that to understand 
Mark the reader must forget all about PauUnism,^ 
while others only differ in the extent to which they 
assign the operation of Pauline influences upon the 
narrative and teaching of the gospel. Once or 
twice there are water-marks of the evangelist's 
Pauline environment, for example in the connota- 
tion of the term gospel, in the determinism of the 
parabolic theory (iv. 10-12), which is upon the whole 
more likely to have come from the Pauline view of 
Israel's rejection than from any eschatological 
theory upon the part of Jesus, and also in the 
symbolic allusion to the rending of the veil of the 
temple. But the characteristic features of the 
gospel hardly show any impact of conscious or 
radical PauUnism ; the universalism e.g. is prophetic 
rather than Pauline ; and the use of non-Pauline terms 
like the Son of man proves that the author adhered 
to the primitive tradition rather than to the Pauline 
soteriology. I share the opinion of those who 

1 A. Titius, Die Johanneische Anschauung unter dem Gesichts- 
pttnkt der Seligkeit, p. 2. 

2 Wernle, Die Synoptische Frage, pp. 199 f. ' The specific features 
of Paulinism are entirely absent from Mark. . . The Christology 
contradicts that of Paul in almost every point.' This position is 
more easily held by those who, like Wernle, still believe in a Petrine 
tradition behind Mark. The best examination of the problem is 
by the great French critic Lagrange in his edition of Mark (pp. 
cxl.-ol.). 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 23 

conclude that the so-called Paulinism of Mark 
does not amount to very much after all.^ The 
gospel is in the main undogmatic ; so far as it is 
dogmatic it is not specifically Pauline. 

As for Q, it is generally recognised that, so far 
as its characteristic features can be made out, it 
was not stamped with Paulinism. The Palestinian 
circles in which it origiaated represented a type of 
primitive theology which in all hkehhood lay out- 
side the direct influence of the apostle's teaching. 
The character of Matthew's gospel, with the Jewish- 
Christian tiDge of certain strata, naturally marks it 
off from Paulinism ; as a matter of fact, it is anti- 
Pauline tendency which is usually discovered ^ in this 
gospel by those who bring it into any relation to 
the apostle. Luke's friendship with Paul places his 
work in a different category. The narrative of the 
Lord's Supper, for example (even ia its shorter 
form), and the occasional use of Pauline phrases 
and terms (e.g. in xxi. 34-6), betray the writer's 
affinity with Paulinism, but the remarkable thing 
is that there are so few specifically Pauline ideas 
wrought into the texture of a gospel whose author 
stood within the Pauline circle. The atmosphere 
of the primitive church can be felt ; ' PauliniBm ' 
as a doctrine of the person of Jesus Christ is con- 

1 Cf. Menzies, The Earliest Gospel, p. 39. 

' Imagined, sometimes. Thus Professor Bacon {Beginnings of 
Gospel Story, p. 132) comments severely upon Matthew's version of 
Christ's answer to the rich young ruler: to make obedience to the 
commandments the condition of entrance into life eternal, he declares, 
is ' a photographic revelation of that Jewish-Christian legalism against 
which Paul hrought to bear all the powers of his logic and of his life. ' 
Who wrote, Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing, 
hut the keeping of the commandments of God ? 



24 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [cH. 

spicuously absent. A scrutiny of the very passages 
where Pauhne influence is most likely to have been 
present discloses the fact that ' Luke has not appro- 
priated any specific doctrine of Paul, but only made 
his own in all their generality the gains of the great 
apostle's life-work — freedom from the law, and the 
assurance that salvation is open to all.' ^ There are 
occasional traces of Pauline language as well as 
thought, e.g. in viii. 12, x. 8 (cf. 1 Cor. x. 27), and 
XX. 38 (=Rom. vi. 10, xiv. 7-8), but Luke could be 
a friend of Paul without sharing his specific theology, 
and an analysis of the Third gospel turns the 
' could be ' into ' was.' 

(6) The foregoing discussion has already opened 
up a further query : Is it feasible, and if so in what 
sense, to speak about a theology of the four gospels ? 
Even the three sjnaoptic gospels have their special 
characteristics, and then there is the famihar problem 
of the differences between the general synoptic 
theology and the Johannine. 

As for the former problem, the exhaustive and 
intricate processes of synoptic criticism are apt to 
engross us till we forget to view 

' The parts 
As parts, but with a feeling of the whole.' 

Important as their characteristics are for the 
study of primitive religion in the apostolic churches, 
their common characteristic is more important still. 
We raise questions, more or less vital, about the 
gospels, but the gospels have only one question to 
put to us : What think ye of Christ ? — and they put 

1 Sohmiedel, Encyclopaedia Biblica, p. 1841. 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 25 

it, sure of what the answer ought to be. No amount 
of discrepancies and idiosyncrasies should be allowed 
to obscure this predominating interest, especially 
as all three have a close literary connection. Besides 
some special sources which underlie the First and 
the Third gospels respectively, Mark's gospel, either 
in its present form or in an earlier shape, has 
been employed by Matthew and Luke, both of 
whom also seem to have drawn, in different ways, 
upon an earUer collection of the sayings of Jesus, 
to which the convenient term Q is usually appUed. 
Critics are still divided upon the question whether 
Mark used Q, or vice versa, or even whether there 
was any literary connection between them. For 
the purpose of discovering the theology of the 
gospels, however, such points are of subordinate 
importance. It would be more relevant if we 
could be sure of the precise contents and therefore 
of the theological colour of Q, particularly in 
relation to the apocalyptic eschatology. But even 
this is still uncertain. What is certain, as we have 
already seen, is that the tendency to magnify the 
person of Jesus Christ, which is the characteristic 
feature of the Fourth gospel, is already present in 
the synoptic tradition from the first. It is well 
marked in the structure of Matthew and Luke 
even as compared with the earlier Mark. The 
most casual reader can hardly miss alterations in 
one or both of the later sjmoptic gospels which 
were plainly due to the growing reverence for Jesus 
as the Christ. Not only is there a disposition, as 
it has been said, to spare the twelve — to soften one 
or two sayings and incidents which appeared to 
reflect upon the memory and reputation of the 



26 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

Church's early leaders — and, on the other hand, 
to bring their importance into more relief, but the 
religious value of Jesus to the Church appears to 
have operated to some extent in the direction of 
toning down expressions which seemed too frankly 
human, and of altering others in order to convey 
an impression of Christ's person more consonant 
with the pietas of the apostolic church. Thus 
both Matthew and Luke suppress the flash of anger 
which Jesus showed in the synagogue at Capernaum 
(Mark iii. 5), and His indignation, later on, at the 
disciples who tried to prevent the mothers from 
bringing their children for a blessing (Mark x. 14). 
There are repeated instances of this tendency, but 
such phenomena are neither numerous nor important 
enough to justify the hypothesis that the synoptic 
gospels represent a gradual apotheosis of Jesus in 
the faith of the early church. Whether we postulate 
an earlier form of Mark or not, both of the main 
traditions or sources which underlie the synoptic 
gospels attest a primitive belief in Jesus as the 
Christ ; they presuppose a confession of faith 
which reaches back prior to Paul, and the essential 
characteristics of their christology point to their 
independence of the contemporary PauUne theology. 
To quote only one instance of a synoptic implicate 
for a Johannine theologumenon : the conception 
of Christ as chosen by a pre-temporal act of God 
for His mission on earth is not confined to the Fourth 
gospel ; it appears, in a messianic form, in the 
synoptic view of God's good pleasure as shown in 
the election of the messiah to carry out the divine 
purpose of revelation on earth. Thus a passage 
like the adapted quotation in Matt. xii. 18 (Behold 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 27 

my Son, whom I adopted, my Beloved, in whom my 
soul took delight) is exactly parallel to the Johannine 
description of Christ as Him whom the Father con- 
secrated and sent into the world. What is emphasised 
in the Fourth gospel is in the backgroimd of the 
synoptic theology ; still, it is there. 

Such conceptions of God and Christ or of the 
world we are accustomed to term ' Johaimine,' 
since they are presented in a document which the 
second century associated with the authorship of 
John. But this presentation is only their final and 
classical form. The ' Johannine ' theology embodies 
conceptions like those of the Logos and of the 
Spirit which had been already current, in incipient 
forms, throughout not only Egyptian and Hellenistic 
circles but even the earlier theology of Paul and the 
synoptic gospels, and the less isolated we make 
them the more characteristic they become. The 
stamp of comparative originaUty is upon Johannine 
conceptions like those of light and truth and glory. 
Nevertheless, even such ideas presuppose an 
atmosphere of common interest and sympathy. 
They are typical of a mode of thought at the close 
of the first century, which had been growing for 
decades in certain circles, and which renders explicit 
and coherent a number of earlier intuitions of the 
primitive Christian rehgion within as well as without 
the first three gospels. 

It is certainly the case that the element of inter- 
pretation is considerably larger in the Fourth gospel 
than in the first three. In the dialogues and even 
in the prayers of Christ there are deliberate arguments 
and statements about the relation between God and 
Christ, between Christ and men, between the world 



28 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

and God. The object of the book is, no doubt, 
practical and spiritual, but the predominant con- 
ception is that of the supreme value which attaches 
to the person of Christ as the incarnate Logos through 
whom the divine reality has entered this unsub- 
stantial world, and in whom the beheving man 
attains to life eternal. At first sight it does 
appear as though theology had prevailed over faith. 
We may feel that the doctrinal significance of Christ's 
person, cosmological and mysterious, has Ufted an 
Alexandrian theosophy ^ into the place formerly 
occupied by the simpler self-revelation of Jesus 
in word and deed. This is not the fitnal impression 
of the book, however. There are other elements 
which modify such a verdict. At the same time, 
it is not unreasonable to forecast, from the trend 
of recent criticism, that some of the historical 
sections in the synoptic tradition will be found 
closer to the Johannine stories than has hitherto 
been imagined. One or two of the synoptic miracles, 
for example, show the same creative pressure of 
tendency as the Johannine — the naive dramatisation 
of a behef in an anecdote, the symbohc story, or the 
passage of a parable into a miracle. As an offset 
to this, we may count not only the recognition of 



1 KreyenbiiU [Evangdium d. Wahrheit, i. 383 f.) asserts tliat in 
the prologue it is Plato whom we hear, not Philo, and that if there 
is any allusion to the latter it is by way of polemic. It is true that 
John's Logos is not a vice-god or a subordinate divine power, but the 
Philonic background of the Fourth gospel's theology is unmistakable. 
Where the gospel reminds us of Plato is in the dialogues as much as 
in the prologue ; the dialectic, which aims at confounding the 
opponents and which develops arguments in narrative form, recalls 
the Platonic method even more than the prologue recalls the Platonic 
.spirit. 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 29 

superior historical traditions in the Fourth gospel 
(as e.g. the date of Christ's death), but — what is 
more important for our present purpose — the 
perception of so-called ' Johannine ' conceptions 
present, though as a rule in more or less undeveloped 
form, within the synoptic theology. The loss, from 
the standpoint of historicity, is counterbalanced 
by a gain theologically. 

To sum up, the reUgious view of Jesus Christ 
which the synoptic gospels represent, under all 
their idiosyncrasies and characteristic categories, 
carries with it presuppositions which led not 
uimaturally to the later estimate of His person in 
the pages of the Fourth gospel. The latter's 
christology was not simply the attempt of an 
independent thinker to restate, in terms of the 
Logos idea, a conception of Christ which Paul had 
been primarily responsible for domiciling within 
the faith of primitive Christianity. The germs of it 
may be found within the theology of the synoptic 
gospels. The more consistently we refuse to 
harmonise at any cost the theological as well as the 
historical contents of the four gospels, the better 
we shall be able to reahse that their authors might 
have protested with justice, though we or an angel 
from heaven were to 'preach any gospel other than 
what we preached to you, let him he anathema. That 
was indeed the passionate protest of one whose 
theology was distinctive, if anything was distinctive 
in early Christian thought, and it might be argued 
that the author of the Fourth gospel, for example, 
like Paul, was more revolutionary than perhaps he 
realised. A great thinker, like a great reformer, 
will sometimes claim, in all good faith, that he is 



30 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

only reproducing what is common to himself and 
his age, although in reahty, as events prove, he is 
less conservative than he imagines. But while the 
plane of thought in the Fourth gospel is obviously 
different from that which characterises the general 
strata of the first three, it is the same Jesus who is 
behind and above all four. There are traits common 
to the Fourth gospel and its predecessors, and 
these are not confined to the use of similar language 
nor to the occasional presence of elements native 
to the earher church's behef which are preserved 
amid the distinctive and original ideas of that gospel 
itself. It is through the latter, not outside of them, 
that historical criticism can detect features which 
mark a line of continuity between the first three 
gospels and the Fourth in point of their theology. 

(c) The fact that within the compass of the 
gospels there are instances of changes introduced 
by a later writer for the sake of doctrine raises the 
further question : May not the text of the canonical 
gospels have been modified or amplified at certain 
points in the interests of later Christian belief ? 
The abstract possibility of this is not to be denied. 
The text of the gospels was probably more liable 
to corruption and change of this kind during the 
early period than later, when they came to be 
safeguarded by their ecclesiastical position, and it 
is just in the earlier period that it is naturally difficult 
to obtain evidence for such changes from the textual 
phenomena of the manuscripts. 

Four characteristic instances in which such a 
process has been legitimately suspected are (i) 
the eUmination, for harmonising purposes, of this 
day have I begotten thee, in favour of in thee am I 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 31 

well 'pleased, in the text of Luke iii. 22 ; (ii) the 
insertion, in whole or part, of the rock-saying in 
Matt. xvi. 18-19 ; (iii) the expansion of the original 
text of Matt, xxviii. 19, as given by Eusebius, into 
the trinitarian form of the canonical text ; and (iv) 
the alteration in the text of John i. 13, which turns 
it into a witness for the dogma of the virgin-birth. 
These are only specimens of this hypothesis, but 
they are typical. Each has to be considered on 
its merits.^ 

(i) The special reading preserved by D (also, a b o 
ff ^ 1 r) might be due to the desire of approximating 
the bath-qol verbally to Ps. ii. 7, or it may be taken 
to reflect the original form of the saying, which was 
afterwards altered owing to a sense of discrepancy 
between this impartation of the Spirit (as con- 
stituting Jesus God's Son) and the story of the 
virgin-birth in the same gospel or the narrative of 
the baptism in Mark and Matthew. The latter view 
(so e.g. Blass, Spitta, Usener, Pfleiderer, Zahn, 
Wemie, Conybeare ; see the present writer's 
Introduction to the Literature of the N.T., p. 269) 
seems upon the whole more likely, whatever may 
have been the original significance attached to the 
phrase or its relation to the foregoing section of the 
gospel.^ The reading is vouched for as early as 
Justin Martyr, and its remarkably wide prevalence 
in the second and third centuries is a factor in its 
favour. In this case there is reason to suspect 



1 Further instances of such primitive readings, altered subsequently 
for theological purposes, in Zahn's Introduction to N. 2*. , iii. 38 f . 

2 On the question of its presence in Q, cf. Salmon's Human 
Element in the Oospels, pp. 56 f., and Harnack's Sayings of Jesus, 
pp. 310 f. 



32 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

that the alteration was due to a dootrmal interest, 
which found the Lucan text, Thou art my Son, to-day 
have I begotten thee, inconvenient and misleading. 

(ii) The entire Matthean passage, xvi. 18-19, is one 
of the author's Jewish-Christian insertions, in which 
it is extremely difficult to conjecture what, if any, 
was the origiaal basis (cf . the present writer's Intro- 
duction, pp. 252 f.). The hypothesis that one if 
not both of the verses must be the work of a second- 
century editor, who used some apocryphal logion 
in the interest of the Petrine supremacy, has 
been developed recently by M. Guignebert in his 
Primaute de Pierre et la venue de Pierre d, Home 
(Paris, 1909). Unfortunately, there is no textual 
evidence here to support the conjecture ; it is 
purely a question of internal evidence, which is 
apt to be decided upon presuppositions about the 
likeUhood of Jesus mentioning the church at all, 
or about the ecclesiastical functions which are 
assigned to Peter. The latter are probably more 
than the ordinary Protestant interpretation admits, 
but they are far from justifying the later 
Roman interpretation ; the absence of the sajdng 
from the Petrine gospel of Mark, its omission by 
Luke, and its deliberate correction by the author of 
the Fourth gospel, are sufficient to indicate the 
importance attached to it by the early church, if 
it did exist in the original text of Matthew. 

(iii) There is an equal lack of MSS. evidence in 
support of the contention that Matt, xxviii. 19 
originally ran as follows : — Go ye therefore and make 
disciples of all nations [in my name], teaching them 
to observe whatsoever I have commanded you. Here, 
as in the case of (ii), the Syriac versions are unfor- 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 33 

timately defective, but this Eusebian form of the 
text, which omitted the baptismal formula, must 
have been current at an early date ; it is doubtful, 
to judge from Apol. i. 61, whether Justin knew the 
canonical form, and the latter is more Ukely to be 
an expansion of the former than vice versa. The 
absence of anything equivalent in the Lucan tradition 
or even in the appendix to Mark (xvi. 15 f.) also 
teUs in favour of the view that the shorter form of 
the text was original (cf. Prof. Lake's statement 
in Hastings' Encyclopcedia of Religion and Ethics, 
ii. pp. 379 f.), and that the longer form emanated 
from the same circles or at any rate from the same 
hturgical and ecclesiastical motives as gave rise to 
xvi. 18 f. But the evidence does not amount upon 
the whole to much more than a possibility. ^ 

(iv) Both early patristic evidence and evidence 
from the Latin versions support the singular read- 
ing of John i. 13 : Who was horn. The canonical 
plural reading is actually described by Tertulhan 
as a gnostic corruption of the text (see especially 
Zahn's note on John i. 13). ^ Li reahty, the singular 
was probably an early modification of the plural in 
the interests of the growing dogma of the virgin- 
birth, but even if that reading were adopted it 

1 It is the connection of the threefold name with baptism, rather 
than the occurrence of the former, that is the main difficulty. The 
threefold name, which forms the basis for the later triuitarian 
speculations, exists already in Panlinism ; whether the form of 2 Cor. 
xiii. 14 was due, as Harnack conjectures, to anti-Jewish controversy, 
and whether the alternative form of God, Christ, and the angels 
(cf. Luke ix. 26 ; 1 Tim. v. 21) was a less developed stage, we have 
no means of determining exactly. 

2 It is also read by Blass, and by Eesch (ParalUltexte zu Johannes, 
pp.57f.). 

C 



34 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [CH. 

would not follow that it implied such a dogma. 
It would rule out a mother as well as a father. The 
context simply implies that the children of the 
Father owe their position to His love and choice 
through Jesus. There is no evidence, on the other 
hand, to suggest that the Word became flesh by the 
descent of the Spirit at the baptism. The mode of 
the incarnation is left undetermined, and the 
christology of the gospel, like that of Paul, enters 
into no speculation whatever upon the subject. 
The Son was sent ; for religious purposes, that 
thought sufficed. What i. 13, in the singular as 
well as in the plural reading, asserts is the sole 
activity of God, as opposed to human initiative. 
The plural reading, in the light of the context, 
implies that to be bom of God is to have faith, 
and that this is due wholly to divine influence 
(You did not choose me, it was I who chose you) — 
a characteristic note of the Fourth gospel. No 
satisfactory reason can be assigned for the change 
of the singular into the plural, whereas not only 
dogmatic but even grammatical reasons (the imme- 
diately preceding avTov) would explain the reverse 
process. 

It is probable that such alteration of the canonical 
texts must have gone further than is commonly 
supposed, or than the present state of the texts 
enables us to determine. But it is to be noted that 
in these four test cases the doctrinal alteration is 
generally in the hne of sharpening an interest 
already present, not for the purpose of introducing 
some novel dogma. The question is one of emphasis 
rather than of addition. The messianic endowment 
of Jesus as Son of God at the baptism, the association 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 35 

of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, the virgin-birth, 
and even the leading position of Peter in some 
circles of the early church, are vouched for, inde- 
pendently of these additions and expansions. From 
the theological point of view, they mark not the 
incorporation of fresh elements so much as the 
evolution of elements which were already present 
in the primitive theology of the gospels them- 
selves. 

{d) Finally, there is the minor question of language. 
The passage of the tradition in its pre-canonical 
stages from the vernacular Aramaic to the written 
Greek in which our gospels and most of their sources 
were composed, cannot have been without some 
effect upon the contents of the tradition at several 
points. ' Whereas Jesus spoke in Aramaic, the 
most concrete and unmetaphysical of languages, he 
is reported in Greek, the most metaphysical.' ^ But 
it is almost entirely in the Fourth gospel that this 
semi-metaphysical tinge appears ; when we attempt 
to translate the synoptic sajangs back from Greek 
to Aramaic the results are rarely of importance, 
so far as regards theology. There is nothing about 
Himself or God in the canonical gospels which Jesus 
could not have said intelhgibly in Aramaic. He 
could even have called Himself Son of man in that 
language without the risk of being misunderstood 
(see below. Chapter iv.). The appearance of the 
written gospels in Greek, after the earHer Aramaic 
tradition, which was for the most part oral, had 
nothing hke the significance for their theology 
which the later adoption of terms like ova-ia and 

1 Matthew Arnold, lAteratwre and Dogma (popular ed., 1883), 
p. in. 



36 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

persona had for the development of christology in 
the Church. Christianity as we know it has come 
to us through the Greek gospels, and for the purpose 
of their theology it is seldom necessary to take 
special account of the Aramaic backgroxmd behind 
any term or saying. 

As a matter of fact, it is better here and elsewhere 
in the criticism of the gospels to stand back from 
the trees in order to see the forest. Detailed 
exegesis of the gospels has its own function ; elaborate 
research into the Aramaic substratum, the minutiae 
of the hterary variants between the gospels, and 
the special features which differentiate one from 
the other, is an indispensable discipline. But the 
common faith is larger and deeper than such 
characteristics and idiosyncrasies. They are usually 
eddies or currents in the river. They are differences 
of the second and third degree, seldom if ever of the 
first. The significant thing, for the theology of the 
gospels, is the attitude to Christ which they pre- 
suppose and illustrate in different ways, the fimda- 
-mental conviction that with Jesus a new relationship 
to Giod has been effected and inaugurated. It is 
uncritical to reach this common postulate by the 
path of harmonising ; the gospels show how it 
developed gradually and how various aspects of it 
appealed to different circles in the early church. 
But it is equally irrelevant to allow the mind to 
become absorbed in the pursuit of exegetical details 
till it loses the perspective of the whole. The 
open secret of our religion, says a later writer •• (quoting 
from some early Christian hymn) , is admittedly great 

' 1 Tim. iii. 16. 



I.] THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 37 

— He who was 

Manifested in the flesh. 

Vindicated by the Spirit, 

Seen by angels. 

Preached among the nations of men. 

Believed on throughout the world, 

Taken up to heavenly glory. 

The theology of the gospels, unlike Pauhnisni, 
has no place for the doctrine of Christ's revelation 
to angehc beings after the resurrection,^ but it 
corresponds to the remaining features of this primitive 
confession ; the modem distinction between the 
historical and the supernatural in the vocation of 
Christ is ignored, and the essential fact of Christianity 
is found in the person of Jesus Christ. By common 
confession that was the distinctive note of the new 
reHgion, which was struck by all, whether they were 
writing a hymn or a gospel. The mystery or open 
secret was the personality of Christ. This was 
what distinguished the gospels from Judaism and 
Hellenism alike, and it is a difference which is 
immensely greater than any differences between 
one gospel and another. As early as the second 
century it had become common in some circles to 
suppose that when Paul mentioned my gospel and 
spoke of the brother whose praise in the gospel^ was 
widespread throughout the churches, he was 
referring to a written gospel, and specifically to the 
gospel of Luke. The significance of this error 
lies in its witness to a particular contemporary 
application of the term 'gospel.' From denoting 

1 Cf. the Ascension of Isaiah, x, 
» 2 Cor. viii. 18. 



38 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

the message of Jesus as the Christ, i.e. the Christian 
religion, it had begun to centre upon the acts and 
words of Jesus, and then, by a natural evolution, 
upon the written records of the Lord's life. The 
epistles preached Christ, but they were not gospels. 
The term was restricted to the books which described 
what Jesus began both to do and to teach until the day 
on which he was received up.^ It is right to emphasise 
the importance of this singular limitation for the 
history of the Church, if for no other reason than that 
it indicates ' to what an extent the communication of 
the words and deeds of the Lord must have formed 
from the very first the main content of the glad 
tidings, when the two were denoted by the same 
name and no other. '^ The epistles and the gospels 
alike sprang out of the Gospel, but it was only 
the latter forra of early Christian composition which 
drew to itself the sacred name, and this is all the 
more striking as there was nothing in the original 
meaning of the Greek term or in the literary structure 
of the four books to set the process in motion. 

Such an estimate of the gospels helps to deter- 
mine the sense of what ' theology ' means in con- 
nection with them. By ' theology ' the pre-Christian 
Greeks meant some account of the divine beings or 
being, and this general sense of the term, as the 
conception or definition of the God worshipped in 
any given religion, reappears, for example, in 
Hooker.^ ' The whole drift of the Scripture of 
God, what is it but only to teach Theology ? 
Theology, what is it but the science of things divine ? ' 

1 Acts i. 1. 

2 Harnack, The Constitution and Law of the Church, p. 308. 

3 Eccles. Polity, Book III. viii. 11. 



1.1 THE GOSPELS AND THEIR THEOLOGY 39 

Among some of the Greek theologians, however, 
the term came to have a more restricted range ; 
it was confined to the ascription of a divine nature 
to Christ, and consequently tended to become a 
technical expression for that aspect of christology 
which the Logos idea of the Fourth gospel popularised. 
It would be unbalanced to hold that the gospels are 
theological in the latter rather than in the former 
sense of the term. 'Theologia deum docet, a deo 
docetur, ad deum ducit ' — ^that is true of the gospels ; 
even in the Fourth gospel it is the conception of 
God which is still dominant, though the person of 
the Son has assumed a larger prominence, relatively 
to the Father, than in the synoptic tradition. At 
the same time, the fundamental interest of the 
gospels, from the theological point of view, is the 
divine significance of Jesus, just as there is also 
a concentration upon His personality which equally 
prevents us from describing or from treating the 
theology of the gospels as a general account of things 
divine upon the basis of Christianity. The Fourth 
gospel does extend its survey more definitely to the 
relations of God through Christ to the imiverse as 
well as to men, but even this cosmic extension has 
its limitations, and it is far from making the person 
of Christ subsidiary or supplementary .^ We shall 
proceed therefore to discuss first the God of Jesus ; 
this opens up into the question of the person 
of Jesus, since the revelation of God is mediated 

1 ' The centre of gravity in theology can never be shifted from the 
person of Christ. The Jesus whom we call Master is at once the 
historical Jesus of Nazareth and that ideal form which becomes more 
and more glorious as man's moral capacity increases' (Cheyne in 
Expositor, sixth series, vol. iii. pp. 270-1). 



40 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [ch. 

by His life as well as by His teaching ; finally, we 
shall trace the evolution of the conception of the 
Spirit of God in relation to Jesus, which, in the 
Fourth gospel, furnishes a standpoint for inter- 
preting the theology of the gospels in general. 
Before entering upon any of these topics, however, 
it is essential to face the eschatological problem 
in the tradition, not simply because this happens 
to be a matter of special interest at the present 
day, but also because everything depends upon the 
answer which we give to the question : Is the 
theology of the gospels an eschatology pure and 
simple ? 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 41 



CHAPTER II 

THE ESCHATOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 

In the fifth book of the Prelude Wordsworth de- 
scribes how, after reading Don Quixote on a summer 
day beside the sea, he dreamed a dream. He seemed 
to watch a Bedouin Arab riding up to him with a stone 
under one arm and a brilhant shell in the other hand. 
When the dreamer held up the shell to his ear he 

' Heard that instant in an unknown tongue 
Which yet I understood, articulate sounds, 
A loud prophetic blast of harmony ; 
An ode, in passion uttered, which foretold 
Destruction to the children of the earth 
By deluge now at hand.' 

The rigorous and vigorous eschatological theory of 
the gospels, as presented by a critic like Schweitzer, 
puts a similar alternative before the mind : the 
story of Jesus is either a stone, meaningless and 
unimpressive, or a shell in which you hear only a 
loud prediction of imminent doom. The theology 
of the gospels is an eschatology or it is nothing. 
What Jesus was and taught is unintelUgible except 
in the light of His intense passion for setting astir 
forces that would deluge the world with all the 
woes which usher in the last act of bhss in the 
supernatural drama of the universe. 

Schweitzer's book, Von Reimarus zu Wrede, is 



42 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [ch. 

brilliantly written. It has had the further advan- 
tages of a generous notice from Dr. Sanday and an 
exceptionally good rendering into Enghsh.^ For 
these reasons many people have been led to regard 
him as more representative than he really is, and 
by scoring points, as it is not difficult to do, against 
several of his extreme positions, to imagine that 
they have succeeded in dismissing the claims of 
the eschatological theory which he champions. As 
a matter of fact, that theory is more persuasively, 
because more moderately, presented by two of his 
predecessors, Otto SchmoUer and J. Weiss, the 
former in a prize essay on ' The Doctrine of the 
Kingdom of God in the New Testament Writings ' 
(1891), which anticipated the issues of the modem 
eschatological movement, the latter in the second 
edition of his monograph on ' The Preaching of 
Jesus about the Kingdom of God ' (1900). Words- 
worth closes his dream by telling how the Arab 
finally said he intended to bury the shell which had 
sounded the prophecy of doom. This is the proper 
fate for the rigid eschatological theory of the gospels ; 
we have no use as historical critics or as Christians 
for an interpretation of Jesus, however brilliant, 
which will not allow us to hear any notes in His 
teaching and mission except those of imminent 
and inevitable catastrophe. But there are elements 
in the tradition of the gospels which remain even 
after Schweitzer's shell is buried, elements which 
render the precise basis and range of the eschato- 
logical outlook in the theology of the synoptic 
gospels a real and a baffling problem. 

1 The Quest of the Historical Jesus (1910), by ReT. W. Montgomery. 
Cf. further Dr. Sanday's Life of Christ in Recent Research. 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS 43 

The problem may be put sharply by throwing 
two words ^ of Jesus into juxtaposition. Verily I 
say to you, There are some of those standing here who 
shall not taste of death till they see the kingdom of 
God arrive with power. Set that beside this : So 
is the kingdom of Ood, as if a man should cast seed on 
the earth ; and should sleep and rise night and day, 
and the seed should spring up and grow, he knows not 
how. The earth bears fruit of herself ; first the blade, 
then the ear, then the full corn in the ear. But when 
the fruit is ripe, straightway he putteth forth the sickle 
because the harvest is come. Here there is a climax 
in view, a cUmax which has a messianic ring about 
it, but which need not be unauthentic on that 
aecoimt. The parables contained ' the mystery 
of the kingdom,' and part of that mystery was the 
new and starthng conception of the relation of 
Jesus to it. The contrast between the two sayings 
is not that the one contemplates an abrupt crisis, 
while the other looks forward to a long gradual 
process of evolution ; it is that the denouement is 
in the one case an event in the immediate future 
which is identified with the real arrival of the kingdom 
of God, while in the other it is the end of an inward 
development in which the kingdom is regarded as 
present through the ministry of Jesus. The gospels 
contain, sayings which belong, some to the one group, 
some to the other. The problem is to determine 
how both are psychologically possible for Jesus, 
and to what extent the one has affected the other 
during the course of tradition prior to the canonical 
gospels. Which element is the more hkely to have 
been accentuated in the apostolic age ? Is either, 
1 Mark ix. 1 and iv. 26-29. 



44 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

in whole or in large measure, due to the tendencies 
and interests of the later church in which and for 
which the gospels were drawn up ? These are the 
kind of questions which are started by the presence 
of the eschatological stratum in the text of the first 
three gospels. 

The first three, because there is no real problem of 
eschatology in the theology of the Fourth gospel. 
There are problems, but not of eschatology proper 
as in the criticism of the synoptists. There is an 
outlook now and then upon the end, but the dominant 
interests lie elsewhere, in the eternal hfe which 
becomes the present experience of those who put 
their faith in the living Christ. In the synoptic 
gospels it is still possible to trace the primitive 
tradition that Jesus expected His return as messiah 
during the course of the present generation, although 
He did not know the exact date of this outward 
crisis in the affairs of men. It is probable that 
the influence of the imminent fall of Jerusalem 
helped to intensify this expectation in some 
Palestinian circles of the church, but it was not 
created by the turn of events. The incorporation 
of the small apocalyptic fly-leaf is an incidental 
proof not only of their outlook upon the situation, 
but of the basis which that outlook must have had 
in the authentic teaching of Jesus Himself. Matthew 
and Luke show here and there how the churches 
met in various ways the need of a wider horizon 
for the prospects of the Christian faith, chiefly by 
laying deeper stress on the religious motives and 
interests of the eschatological passion which Jesus 
had voiced, upon His absolute confidence that His 
death would further the interests of the kingdom, 



n.] THE ESGHATOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 45 

His calm conviction that the estabhshment of the 
kingdom depended on the will of God, not on any 
circmnstances of human arrangement or enterprise, 
and His beUef that in the realisation of the Father's 
good purpose for men He was destined to have a 
commanding place. But, even with this alteration 
of emphasis, the gospels preserve sayings of Jesus 
which must have seemed pei'plesdng to the 
widening consciousness of what was involved in the 
Christian enterprise. These sayings survive because 
they had come down from authentic tradition ; 
probably they were not felt to be so strange as they 
seem to a modern reader, but at any rate it was not 
till later that another evangehst reinterpreted the 
faith in a form which was not bound up with 
eschatological or apocalyptic categories. He did 
not look forward to see the glory of Christ ; he had 
seen it, he saw it, in the Lord's hfe and spirit of 
self-sacrifice. The Coming One had come. It was 
no longer a question of anticipating a glory of 
dramatic interposition from the clouds of heaven ; 
in the person of Jesus the Son all that was glorious 
and divine was manifested.^ In the Fourth gospel 
the emphasis is shifted from the return to the 
resurrection of Christ. He had indeed returned 
to the hfe of His followers in fuller measure than 
before, and the Spirit, His alter ego, meant His Kving 
presence in their hearts as an inspiring and revealing 
power. Life eternal is not an eschatological boon 
but the immediate experience of faith. The judg- 

1 In the synoptic tradition this glorifying occurs once, during the 
life of Jesus, at the transfiguration, when the imminence of His death 
is represented as eliciting a special mark of approval from God (of. 
the Lucan version, ix. 32). 



46 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [ch. 

ment is not a dramatic catastrophe at the close of 
the present age so much as a process of inward 
discrimination conditioned by the attitude adopted 
by men to the person of Christ.^ It is through the 
resurrection that the real victory has been gained^ 
over the world — a victory of Christ as the giver of 
eternal life over death and the flesh. All this 
transmutation of the primitive tradition is presented 
in a gospel which claims that such spiritual con- 
ceptions are the larger truth into which the Spirit 
of Christ had initiated His Church ; in modem 
phraseology, it is asserted that they are an 
organic development of the gospel for which Jesus 
stood. 

How far, and how, can this claim be justified ? 
The answer to such questions depends upon a 
critical estimate of the sj^optic tradition. It is 
not enough to show that traces of what may be 
termed (though inadequately) a spiritualisation of 
the eschatological data can be detected already in 
the earlier synoptic writers. The essential point 
is to ascertain whether this entire movement which 
culminates in the Fourth gospel starts from elements 
which are vital to the faith of Jesus Himself ; 
not only that He occasionally spoke words which 
cannot be fitted into any thorough-going eschato- 
logical theory of His teaching, but that His con- 
ceptions of God and the kingdom and His own 
person involved a rehgious attitude towards the 
future which did not find congenial or complete 
expression in the apocalyptic categories of the 
age. 

1 The germ of this goes back to Jesua Himself ; it is an expansion 
of the thought which underlies Luke xyii. 20. 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS 47 

It is more than a mere paradox to say that the 
first thing in the gospels is their conception of the 
last things. The theology of the gospels, like every 
theology which arises within the Christian sphere, 
involves a teleology. Whatever value we assign 
to the eschatological element in the gospels, there 
is enough of it to bear witness to this vital conviction 
of the rehgious mind, that the present relation 
of God and man, the hopes and endeavours of men 
on earth, and the entire range of their love and 
loyalty, are uninteihgible except in the light of a 
destiny which the divine purpose has been and stUl 
is working out in history. In religion, as Ritschl 
used to insist, we have to do not only with God and 
the soul, but with God, the soul, and the world. 
What is a possession of the soul must be related, 
somehow, to the world of which the soul is part and 
over which the soul's God is Lord. Theology 
means a conception of God in relation to the 
universe, and this in turn impUes not simply a sense 
of the divine power in what modems describe as 
Nature, not simply a valuation of God's presence, 
but a conviction of His purpose as the end. It is 
the end which gives meaning to the present. The 
end is not always present to the religious con- 
sciousness, it hes sometimes below the horizon ; 
but it is always there. The common antithesis 
between ethical and eschatological breaks down 
upon examination. Eschatology was not void of 
ethical impulse and discipline in primitive Chris- 
tianity ; and the ethical element rested on an 
eschatological, though not always on an apocalyptic 
basis. 

How organic the strictly eschatological element 



48 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

was to the teaching of Jesus may be inferred from 
the mere fact that the saying,'^ 

Heaven and earth will pass away, 
But my words will never pass away, 

occurs in an apocalyptic context : Truly I tell 
you that this generation will not pass away until it 
all comes to pass. The delay which confronted the 
Church when the synoptic gospels were composed 
was embarrassing, but the eschatological predictions 
of Jesus formed so vital a part of His gospel that 
they were retained ; in fact, as the insertion of the 
small apocalypse shows, they were not only edited 
occasionally by way of smoothing down their in- 
congruities with the subsequent cause of events, 
but also now and then sharpened and expanded. 
Thus the synoptic gospels, by their loyalty to this 
element in the primitive tradition, confront us 
with the paradox that the most confident word of 
Jesus upon the permanent value of His sayings 
guarantees the very class of sayings which appear 
to be least permanent. 

Another incidental proof of this element and of 
its place in the teaching of Jesus is afiorded by the 
survival of the dif6.cult saying ^ : When they persecute 
you in this city, flee to the other, and if they persecute 
you in the other, flee to the next ; for truly I tell you. 
You will not cover the cities of Israel before the 
Son of man comes. The saying interrupts the 
context, and its Jewish horizon is out of keeping 
not only with passages hke xxiv. 14, xxviii. 19, etc., 
but with the words immediately preceding it 

1 Mark xiii. 31 ; Matt. xxiv. 35 ; Luke xxi. 33. 

2 Matt. X. 23. 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 49 

in verses 18 and 22, which presuppose a mission to 
pagan nations beyond the pale of Israel. The point 
of the counsel seems to be that the evangelists need 
not be afraid of exhausting the available cities of 
refuge within Palestine. The end will come before 
ever they manage to get over them all ! 

But alongside of sayings which thus prove the 
predominance of the apocalyptic hope within the 
preaching of Jesus there are others which suggest 
that He transmuted, as He took over, this behef in 
the near advent of the kingdom. 

(a) There are several sayings which imply that 
Jesus regarded the kingdom as a present reality in 
connection with His own person and teaching. The 
chief of these is the well-known passage in Luke 
xvii. 20-1 : On being questioned by the Pharisees 
when God's kingdom was to come, he replied, God's 
kingdom is not coming with observation, nar shall 
men say, Lo here ! or Lo there ! for, behold, God's 
kingdom is within you (Ji/tSs v/ctoiv ko-nv). Whatever 
was the original Aramaic of this saying, it is upon 
the whole clear that Luke took it to express the 
inward character of the kingdom. Had he under- 
stood it as equivalent to a statement that the kingdom 
would appear suddenly among men, he would have 
used his favourite term kv [Jt,^a-<j) instead of cyrds. 
Even if evrds meant ' among,' it would imply most 
naturally that Jesus described the kingdom as 
already present, and this is much more the case when 
we render it ' within.' The word you does not rule 
this out, for the original reference, as Wellhausen 
points out, was not confined to the Pharisees. ' The 
kingdom of God here, as in the parable of the leaven, 
is conceived as a principle working invisibly in the 

D 



50 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

hearts of individuals.' The phrase /iera Trapa- 
rrjpiQcreuii means that the signs of it can be either 
seen or foreseen externally. Jesus denies that 
this is to be the ease with God's Reign, as He under- 
stood it and inaugurated it. As He said elsewhere, 
no sign of the Reign was to be vouchsafed to the 
present generation except such inward signs and 
tokens as belonged to the nature of the Reign itself. 
The Lucan saying does not necessarily exclude a 
catastrophic future as the cUmax of the Reign ; 
it simply insists that the Reign of God is already 
present in such a form that the present generation 
is responsible for its attitude to this manifestation 
of God. 

The unlikelihood of the eartv being proleptic 
in this saying is heightened by the cognate saying 
of Q preserved in Matt. xii. 28 (=Luke xi. 20) : 
// I cast out demons by the Spirit [Luke has, the 
finger] of God, then God's kingdom has already come 
ufon you (ecjiOaa-ev ij" ii/ias). This does not mean 
that the kingdom is imminent, as though the cures 
and exorcisms of Jesus were a harbinger of the new 
era which is on the point of coming ; it means that 
the new era has already begun to challenge and 
invade the present sway of the devil on earth. As 
the context indicates, the messianic power of Jesus 
on earth denotes an inroad upon the demons who, 
under Satan, have control of men, and this inroad is 
the entrance of God's kingdom upon its final career. 

Once more, this hne of thought is corroborated 
by the other saying from Q (Matt. xi. ll=Luke 
vii. 28) upon John the Baptist : He who is least 
within the kingdom of heaven is greater than he (John). 
It is conceivable that the present tense here is 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 51 

dramatic, but the natural and literal sense is more 
likely, in view of the context. John had sent to 
make sure that Jesus was really the messiah, and 
the reply of Jesus is followed up by an address to 
the crowd upon the epoch-making significance of 
John as the forerunner of the new messianic era. 
No man yet, says Jesus, ha,s been greater than John ; 
nevertheless, he only stands at the threshold of the 
kingdom. Then follows the word about the storming 
of the kingdom from the days of John till now, which 
impUes that the kingdom was within reach of 
earnest men when Jesus spoke. He was conscious 
that His mission was fulfilling the old Isaianic 
prophecies. His reply to John denotes not the 
sense that a new era was in course of preparation, 
but that it was already inaugurated, and it is of 
this new order that He speaks. 

The saying which immediately follows is a further 
proof of the conception of the kingdom as incipient 
in the ministry of Jesus : — 

Matt. xi. 12-13 Luke xvi. 16 

From the daps of John the Till John, the law and the 

Baptist until now the prophets I Thereafter the 

kingdom of heaven suffers kingdom of God is 

violence and the violent preached, and every one 

press into it. presses into it. 

For all the prophets and the 
law prophesied till John. 

In Matthew this is followed up by the remark : 
And if you will receive it, this is the Elijah wlio was 
to come, which gives the clue to the previous saying. 
Jesus apparently is alluding to the contemporary 
tradition (cf . Edujoth 8 ') that Elijah would come 



52 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

' to exclude from Israel those who had been received 
by force, and to receive into Israel those who had 
been excluded by force.' This dual function, of 
rejecting members who had forcibly and fraudulently 
claimed a place in the community, and of welcoming 
those who had been violently shut out from their 
rights,^ has been Laaugurated, Jesus argues, by 
John, when his mission is properly viewed. Only, 
his mission reversed the popular Jewish idea. In 
the Christian era, dating from John's movement, 
the tax-gatherers and sinners, hitherto excluded 
on the score of their disreputable character, are 
thronging into God's kingdom which Jesus preached, 
and those who claimed a place in it on the score of 
birth and orthodoxy are being excluded. 

Again, when the high-minded scribe ^ delighted 
Jesus by confessing not only that God was one, 
but that to love Mm with the whole heart and the whole 
understanding and the whole strength, and to love one's 
neighbour as oneself, is far more than all holocausts and 
sacrifices, Jesus told him : Tou are not far from God's 
kingdom. This word implies that the kingdom is 
not eschatological but present in the moral and 
spiritual order, just as in Matt. xxi. 31 {The tax- 
gatherers and harlots are entering the kingdom of 
God before you) and xviii. 3-4. 

Sayings Uke this amount to a cumulative proof. 
When the scribe e.g. is told that he is not far from 
God's kingdom, and when the wealthy young Jew 
is asked to sell all his property, if he means to be 
perfect, and follow Jesus, the underl3mig idea is 
practically the same, that adhesion to the cause 
and person of Jesus Christ is the condition under 
1 Cf. Luke xi. 52. » M»rk xii. 34. 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 53 

which the sound moral life blossoms into the flower 
of a true faith and love for God. Wellhausen 
endeavours to discount the force of such passages 
by identifying the kingdom with the Church, and 
arguing that this identification presupposes the 
death of Jesus. But there is nothing in the context 
of either passage which involves the death of Christ 
as a motive for such adhesion, and in the cognate 
saying about the least in the kingdom being greater 
than John (who, for all his importance to the 
kingdom, had not become a personal disciple of Jesus) 
it is needless to discover an identification of the 
present kingdom and the Christian Church. What 
this series of allusions indicates is that the reign of 
God has already begun in some sense here and there 
on earth. It is no answer to this to argue that 
faith would then be superfluous ; on the one 
hand, the visible signs of the presence of the 
kingdom were only partial and — we might almost 
say — ^preliminary, and on the other hand, such as 
they were they were capable of misinterpretation. 
It was possible to deny their validity. Zealots who 
strained their eyes for signs of a poUtical rising 
could not recognise the kingdom in unselfishness 
and purity of heart and the forgiving spirit ; where 
Jesus saw the real and royal presence of the Father 
they could only see unpatriotic, poor-spirited 
creatures. It was the same with some of the 
Pharisees, in their own way. They ascribed the 
cures wrought by Jesus to a connivance, on His 
part, with the devil. What He recognised as signs 
of the divine reign on earth, due to the working of 
the Spirit through His personaUty, they deUber- 
ately described as diabohc. 



54 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [CH. 

The attitude of Jesus towards the expulsion of 
demons, as proving the entrance of the divine 
kingdom upon the present order, implies further 
that He extended the same thought in other directions. 
It was not a belief which was connected simply 
with what is called the supernatural antagonism of 
God and the devil. We cannot draw such a dis- 
tinction for the world of Jesus. The heahngs which 
He effected were bound up with the forgiveness of 
sins, and if the kingdom was present in the anti- 
demonic aspect it was equally present in the 
revelation of God's character and purpose through 
the attitude of Jesus towards the sinful and the 
burdened. His preaching of the new righteousness, 
His revelation of the Father's nature in deed as 
well as in word, constituted an immediate proof that 
the relationship to God which He called hfe was a 
present gift.^ Jesus looked into the future for the 
final ratification and consummation of the gift, 
but it was of a gift already bestowed upon the 
experience of trust and loyalty. The reality of the 
Reign does not depend for Him upon the dramatic 
denouement of the apocalyptic esohatology. It 
is the reverse. That future is assured by the 
character and purpose of God as already manifested 
in His mission and personahty. Jesus never uses 
the term ' hope,' but it is hope in the hving God 
which dominates His message, hope rising from a 
deep, inward consciousness of God's loving will for 
men. When He declared the kingdom of God is 
at hand He was not speaking out of apocalyptic 
calculation, but from His assurance that through 

1 See on this aspect of the kingdom Dr. G. F. Barbour's Philo- 
sophical Study of Christian Ethics, pp. 186 f. 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 55 

Him God was about to exercise the sovereign sway 
of His good purpose. The avoidance of detailed 
calculations may have been due in part to His 
conviction that the end was imminent ; but they 
were superfluous, for a deeper reason. It was His 
belief in God's character which rendered detailed 
schemes and programmes of the future irrelevant, 
just as it convinced Him that the kingdom, with 
its apparently unpromising beginnings in the pre- 
sent, was sure of a glorious consummation. 

This is one reason why Jesus spoke of the kingdom 
in parables and occasionally explained their meaning 
to the disciples. His conception of the divine 
Reign had elements of novelty which did not tally 
with current ideas on the subject. The parables 
contained the mystery of the kingdom?- His message 
on the nature of the kingdom was a revelation, which 
only the sympathetic could understand. Whether 
it included the destiny of Himself as messiah is a 
question which is more easily asked than answered. 
If so, and if the explanations contained references 
to His own future, their substance has been preserved 
for the most part in other forms. But in itself 
the conjecture is not altogether improbable ; the 
messianic, personal background shimmers through 
Mark iv. 29 and xii. 6, for example. His view of the 
kingdom implied teaching about His relation to its 
character, course, and end, and out of that teaching 
some of the passages referring to the death and resur- 
rection may have come. In any case, the kingdom 

1 Mark (iv. 11) here has preserved the original form ; the plural of 
Matthew and Luke is secondary. The ' mystery ' cannot he confined 
to the nearness of the kingdom — that was openly proclaimed by John 
the Baptist as well as by Jesus. 



66 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

parables are not poptilar illustrations of the obvious.^ 
The kingdom as He revealed it, for example, had 
a future out of all proportion to its present unim- 
pressive scale arid size on earth (Mark iv. 30 f.). 
But, again, this future was not to come in a wholly 
cataclysmic fashion ; its growth resembled leaven, 
not a sudden interposition of the supernatural 
within the natural order. It is noticeable, for 
example, how many of the parables are directed 
against impatience for the speedy advent of the 
kingdom. This appKes not only to the parable of 
the seed growing secretly (Mark iv. 26-9), which 
is one of several sayings addressed to a mood 
of wonder why the messiah of God should be so 
inactive in the Hne of vigorous challenge and 
propaganda, but also to the parable of the ten 
virgins (Matt. xxv. 1-13), which warns the disciples 
to be prepared for delay in the final coming of the 
Lord. 

Consequently the parabolic instruction of Jesus 
was doubly surprisLag. It was surprising both in 
form and in context, for there were no parables 
about the kingdom of heaven ia rabbinic teaching, 
and the outline which Jesus drew of the character 
and future of that kingdom ran counter to some of 
the most cherished ideas of piety. Its messianic 
nature, as determined by the Fatherly purpose of 
God, involved a widening of its range which sounded 
strange to contemporary Judaism. No doubt, the 
contemporary use of ' malkuth ' in Jewish piety 
{e.g. in the phrase about accepting the yoke of the 
divine sovereignty) tells decidedly against the view 

1 Cf. on this Dr. H. B. Sharman's Teaching of Jesus aJ>out the 
Futwe, pp. SI.") f. 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 57 

that the Reign of God upon the lips of Jesus must 
have been eschatological to be intelhgible. The 
fact of Judaism, with its observance of the Torah 
and its worship of the true God, was a witness, even 
in the untoward position of the nation, to the 
divine sovereignty. It is true, as Volz points out, 
that the Reign of God was considered to have not 
only a prospect of future manifestation but already 
a number of loyal subjects on earth, and that in 
both of these respects the rabbinic and the synoptic 
views were agreed. Yet ' in spite of the predomin- 
ance of eschatological sayings on the kingdom in 
the synoptic gospels, it is a fact that Jesus did 
transform the Reign of God from something which 
was eschatological, prepared already, and only to 
be waited for in an attitude of passivity, into some- 
thing which developed historically and which was 
to be achieved ; He thereby converted into a unity 
the two lines (eschatological and inward) of the 
jSaa-iXiia rov 6eov, which ran parallel in the theo- 
logical system of Judaism.' * The indications of 
this higher synthesis are not confined to the say- 
ings which have just been noted ; they are borne 
out, as we shall see, by the conception which Jesus 
had 'of God and of His own vocation. Meantime, 
however, it is enough to lay stress upon these specific 
allusions to the presence of the kingdom as a proof 
that the attitude of Jesus to this eschatological 
hope of Judaism can hardly have been so rigid as the 
eschatological theorists make out. 

(6) In the second place, it is inaccurate to argue 
that Jesus conceived the kingdom would come 
without any effort upon the part either of Himself 

1 Jiidische Eschatologie, pp. 299-300, 



68 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [oh. 

or even of His disciples. He regarded His own death 
as a vital stage in the fulfilment of God's purpose. 
It was the wiU of the Father that He should thus 
sacrifice Himself for the sake of men ; this was the 
outcome of His consciousness as God's Son, who was 
to carry out a role hke that of Yahveh's Servant 
(cf. Chapter rv.). The conception of the throes or 
birth-pangs of suffering which were to precede the 
messianic era was already present, but this was not 
the primary source of the impulse which led Jesus 
to seek Jerusalem and suffer there. 

Furthermore, His efforts to awaken penitence and 
to sustain earnest prayer for the kingdom point 
to a belief that the new order of things involved 
more than passive expectancy upon the part of 
men.^ The command to pray, Thy kingdom come, 
was more than an injunction to breathe a pious sigh 
for the future. Jesus believed profoundly in the 
power of prayer to affect even the will of God in 
the matter of the coming kingdom. The Father 
was wilhng to be entreated. Men must be content 
to leave the how and when in His hands, but, while 
Jesus discouraged any attempt hke that of the zealots 
to force the issue, and while He disclaimed any know- 
ledge of the exact period of the crisis. He did not 
inculcate any fatahsm. The burden of His teach- 
ing on prayer is that man, by earnest prayer, by 
the concentrated effort of the soul in devotion and 
desire, may ' bring the power of faith to bear upon 
the divine purpose.' ^ 

This is an aspect of the kingdom to which modem 

1 This is the thought of Acts iii. 19-20 and Matt. ix. 37-38. 

2 Cf. Prof. E. F. Scott's The Eingdom and the Messiah, pp. 134 f., 
where this point is admirably argued. 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 59 

readers often find it difSoult to do justice ; they 
are under the influence of preconceptions about 
natural law, and in looking back to the age of Jesus 
they are apt to identify His sajdngs about the divine 
intervention with a sort of Oriental fataUsm. But 
the theology of the gospels, and especially their 
eschatology, is not intelhgible unless it is reaUsed 
that Jesus meant by prayer more than resignation 
to the will of God. A later writer once said that 
Christians should not only look out for but actually 
hasten the arrival of God's Day,i and this is the 
thought which underlies the teaching of Jesus upon 
the kingdom as an object of prayer. The faithful 
are to wrestle with God for the speedy accomphsh- 
ment of His purpose ; the Fatherly goodness of God 
and His royal authority forbid prayer becoming 
a form of dictation or a wild, impatient complaint, 
but they invite the earnest efforts of the faithful to 
hasten His interposition. All this, again, is hopelessly 
inconsistent with the uncompromisingly predestin- 
arian view of the eschatologists. 

(c) Thirdly, there are sections of the ethical teach- 
ing in the synoptic gospels which cannot be brought 
under "the eschatological category, as if Jesus only 
taught conduct which was appropriate to the interval 
preceding the final advent of the kingdom. It is 
not eschatology which supplies e.g. the motive for 
loving one's enemies, or the point of stories Hke 
those of the good Samaritan and the profligate son. 
The tendency of an ultra-eschatological view here 
is either to depreciate the moral teaching of Jesus 
or to reduce His interest in the present world to some 
casual glances which were irrelevant to His main 
1 2 Peter iii. 12. 



60 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

passion for the future. Jesus was much more than 
an ethical teacher. He was a prophet and more 
than a prophet. But His conception of God renders 
it impossible for us to beheve that His teaching upon 
character and conduct was transitory, and sub- 
ordinate in principle to the eschatological hope of 
the coming kingdom. In the beatitudes, for example, 
there is not simply a description of those who are 
predestined to the future kingdom. Jesus lays 
down the qualities and characteristics which belong 
to the kingdom itself, and endeavours to prepare 
men for it by inducing repentance or a change of 
heart and hfe. He is enunciating the laws and 
principles of the coming reign, when God is to rule 
as the Father over men, and He shows how even 
during the present age, with its handicaps and 
hindrances, men may observe these laws and enter 
into the Spirit of the Father. The future coming 
of the kingdom will alter many of the conditions of 
the present order. But it wiU belong to men just 
as they are already quahfied to receive it ; the new 
righteousness, which is its soil and atmosphere, 
is implicit in the present relations of men to God 
which Jesus seeks to create and foster. To read 
the gospels as if they meant that Jesus despaired 
entirely of the present world, or as if His ethical teach- 
ing were provisional and temporary, is to throw His 
mission even more out of focus than if the apocalyptic 
element were explained away altogether. For 
example, His argument against amassing riches is not 
that this is not worth a man's while, since the final 
catastrophe is so near ; it is that such a concentra- 
tion of heart upon outward possessions is at variance 
with a free devotion to the Father. Or again, in 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 61 

speaking of marriage He never takes up the position 
that, in view of the imminent end, such natural ties 
had better be left alone. It was Paul, not Jesus, 
who said : The fashion of this world is passing away 
. . . the time is shortened (1 Cor. vii. 26 f.), and used 
this consideration of the present distress to dis- 
courage marriage. 

Both in Q and iu Mark, iu the former more than 
in the latter, there are strata of the teaching of 
Jesus which do not rest upon the eschatological 
passion for the urgency of the end, and these strata 
belong to the most characteristic of the gospels. 
It is necessary to read the latter with a sense of 
proportion. The mind of Jesus is larger than the 
apocalyptic theory would allow, and no sort of 
justice is done to it unless the absolute vaUdity 
which He attached to the truths of pardoning love, 
trust in God, and the higher righteousness is candidly 
admitted.^ 

These three considerations bring out the critical 
attitude of Jesus to the current conception of the 
kingdom of God, an attitude due to the new religious 
ideas for which He made it the vehicle. No doubt, 
the outlook of Jesus upon the future is not to be 

1 Loisy [Jisus et la Tradition EvanglUque, pp. 127, 131) puts this 
frankly. 'L'id^e du rigne de Dieu s'^panouissait en doctrines on 
I'on pent disoerner trois Sl^ments : le nationalisme traditionnel, ou ce 
que le Dien d'Israel fait pour son penple ; une rfegle de vie morale, 
qui se fonde sur un principe de religion universelle ; la transforma- 
tion du monde, le triomphe eomplet de Dieu, pour que I'flite d'Isras 
et de I'humaniti puisse jouir paisiblement du bonheur dans la 
justice.' In the teaching of Jesus, 'le nationalisme de I'id^e se 
trouTe en partie oorrig^ par I'importance essentielle donn^e k son 
aspect moral, soit en ce qui regarde les moyens de sa realisation, 
soit en ce qui regarde les conditions requises pour etre admis an 
royaume.' 



62 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

confined to sayings about the kingdom ; it embraces 
a wider prospect, just as the emphasis upon the 
present reahty of the divine Reign emerges in sections 
of His teaching which are not specifically connected 
with the (Sao-tAei'a. But naturally it was the con- 
ception of the divine Reign of the Father which 
embodied most of the characteristic ideas of Jesus, 
and it is here that the antinomy of the present and 
the future is most sharply expressed. 

The Greek term liaa-iXeia, as used in the gospels, 
is better translated ' reign ' or ' sovereignty ' than 
' kingdom ' in perhaps the majority of instances. 
The latter rendering suggests associations of organisa- 
tion and territory which are misleading, and even 
although it has to be retained for the sake of general 
convenience, the sense attached to it must be 
primarily the personal rule of God over His people, 
the divine government as realised through the 
faithful obedience of men to their royal Father in 
heaven ; in a word, ' reign ' rather than ' domain.' 
Now, the coming of God's kingdom loith power is the 
final return of Jesus as the Son of man within the 
present generation (Mark viii. 38-ix. 1), and Matthew 
makes this expUcit by his version of the second 
saying (xvi. 28), which substitutes the Son of man 
coming in His kingdom for the kin^gdom of God come 
in power. Incidentally, it is a proof of the com- 
parative independence of the Marcan christology as 
against the Pauline (cf. Rom. i. 4), which assigns 
the full power of Christ as Lord to the resurrection, 
not to the second advent ; but primarily it bears 
witness to the urgent hope of Jesus. Whether He 
spoke of the kingdom simply, or of the kingdom of 
God, is indifferent. The usage of the gospels varies 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 63 

on this point significantly. Thus Mark and Luke 
alike speak of the kingdom or the kingdom of God, 
while Matthew's favourite expression is the kingdom 
of heaven (17 (iaa-iXiia. tuiv ovpavZv) — a phrase which, 
apart from two allusions in the gospel of the Hebrews 
and the Fourth gospel (iii. 3, 5),^ is pecuhar to 
Matthew among the early gospels. It denotes a 
kingdom already present and prepared in heaven, 
and on the point of being estabUshed on earth by 
the intervention of God. Whether the addition of 
heaven is connected with the Jewish impersonal 
synonym for God, or whether the phrase in Matthew 
has a specially transcendental and eschatological 
value, it is not easy to say. Its usage may form 
part and parcel of the increased eschatological 
element, which is prominent in Matthew ; or, it 
may have been altered in Mark and Luke into 
expressions which were more intelUgible to Greek 
and Roman Christians. It is doubtful if Matthew 
intended to draw any sharp distinction between the 
kingdom of heaven as the future realm to be intro- 
duced by the Son of man, and the kingdom of God 
as in a sense present upon earth. In two of the 
references to the latter the reading is uncertain 
(vi. 33, xix. 24), and more than once the kingdom of 
heaven is used in a sense which is not necessarily 
eschatological {e.g. xi. 11, 12 ; xiu. 31 ; xxui. 13). 
In any case, the primary eschatological sense of 
PauiXda as the Reign is brought out by its use and 

i Also in the Oxyrhynchite logion (second of second series). The 

reading in John is doubtful, but in any case Matthew's phrase is not 

• an approximation to the Johannine idea of the Father's house 

(xiv. 2, i), as if the pious were to be taken up to the kingdom in 

heaven. 



64 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [oh. 

context in many other passages of the gospels, 
apart altogether from the addition of tSv ovpavZv. 

On one or two occasions, e.g. in Matt. xxi. 43 
{The kingdom of God shall be taken from you and given 
to a nation which produces its fruits), the term is 
used in a more popular and general sense ; it is 
implied that the Jews as the ancestral people of God 
possess it now in the sense of the theocracy. Their 
acknowledgment of God as King means their posses- 
sion of the kingdom here and now, though their 
refusal of Jesus is to deprive them of this privilege. 
But such a use is exceptional. Equally exceptional 
is the occasional use by Jesus of the phrase : My 
kingdom. Thus Luke (xxii. 29-30) makes Him speak 
of the realm as His own : / bequeath to you a realm, 
as my Father bequeathed to me, that you may eat and 
drink at my table in my realm. John characteristically 
emphasises this aspect of the realm in one of his rare 
allusions to it (xviii. 34 f.) : Pilate said to Him, Are 
you the king of the Jews ? . . . Jesus replied. My 
realm does not belong to this world. In a sense the 
divine realm might be said to belong to the Son of 
man as the divine iaaugurator of it. A priori, there 
is no reason to doubt that Jesus may have spoken 
of it as His. But the eschatology of the gospels 
does not include the conception of a /3acrtA.eia Xpio-ToC, 
as distiaguished from the (iaa-iXda. d^ov. J. Weiss ^ 
has argued that the language of Matt. xiii. 41 and 
Mark ix. 1 involves such an idea, corresponding 
to the Pauline view in 1 Cor. xv. 24 f . and Col. i. 
13 ; but this double-stage interpretation, which he 
admits was not held by Jesus, is not absolutely 
essential to either of these sayings in the gospels. 
I Predigt%-pp. 40 f. 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 65 

The Marcan passage does not rest on an antithesis 
between the kingdom in weakness and in power. 
The former notion would never have occurred to 
the early church, and it is pressing language into 
dogmatic moulds to find a difference between the Son 
of man's kingdom and the Father's in the Matthean 
parable. Elsewhere the kingdom is called Christ's 
(Matt. xvi. 28, xx. 21), in a way which suggests that 
the distinction is one of aspect rather than of stages. 
It is interesting to trace the changes made by 
Paul and the apostoUc church in Christ's concep- 
tion of the kingdom, and to notice how several of 
its cardinal items are expressed often in other terms ; 
but it is more important to ascertain the modifica- 
tions which Jesus Himself introduced into the signifi- 
cance of this ancient behef. Thus, He stood aside 
from the traditix)nal view that the present Eeign 
of God in Israel would sometime and somehow pass 
into a world-wide recognition of God as Israel's 
God by the nations, as well as from the cognate 
hope that the future would witness the overthrow 
of the Roman power, which represented the con- 
temporary antithesis of the divine Realm. The 
subtle favouritism, the nationalistic idea of God, and 
the external reUance on political methods, which 
were involved in such hopes, were alien to Jesus. A 
large number of messianic expectations looked 
forward to a national re-establishment of Judaism 
as the sovereign power ; others, of a more specifically 
apocalyptic character, soared into the transcendental 
region of a heavenly Jerusalem and a supernatural 
change to be effected in the universe. The former 
occasionally blended with the latter ; the one took 
over elements from the other. The messiah now 



66 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

and then became a transcendent, supernatural 
figure rather than a Davidic scion, and the heavenly 
order of the new age was more than once presented 
in forms which owed something of their definiteness 
and popularity to the reahstio messianism of the 
older prophecies. The theology of the gospels 
shows in outhne, but without ambiguity, how Jesus 
stood towards this heterogeneous and many-sided 
conception. So far as the advent and future of 
the divine Reign went. He approximated to the 
position of the Pharisees rather than to that of the 
Zealots. The latter are opposed in several of His 
explicit sayings against the use of force, but His 
indifference to their patriotic propaganda is even 
more significant. Probably it gave more mortal 
offence. ' At great pohtical crises he who opposes 
the patriots is not so likely to be considered their 
worst foe, as he who ignores them. It was not that 
our Lord preached submission to Rome, though no 
doubt the decision as to the tribute money was 
capable of being represented in that Ught — ^it was 
that He roused a spirit which moved in another 
plane than that of resistance or submission to 
imperial power.' ^ On the other hand, He differed 
radically from the Pharisees on the question of the 
repentance and righteousness which were essential 
to inheritance in the kingdom of God to come. 
History and experience had disillusionised the 
Pharisees. They saw that the coming of the divine 
Reign on earth must be an act of God in the dim 
future, which would be supernatural, not brought 
on by any rebelhon against the power of Rome. 
Like the Sadducees, though for higher motives, they 

1 Miss Wedgwood, The Message of Israel, p. 305, 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 67 

were prepared to acquiesce temporarily in the 
status quo of the Roman suzerainty. The nation- 
alist and political form of the messianic hope was 
therefore challenged on two sides : by the more 
transcendent expectation of a Davidic Son of man 
which appealed to some apocalyptic circles, and by 
the temper which discountenanced any messianic 
movement as dangerous. Jesus undoubtedly was 
in more sympathy with the former than with the 
latter, but the kingdom which He preached was of 
so unique a character that it enabled the Pharisees 
to make capital out of His supposed anti-Roman 
tendencies, just as it disappointed those who secretly 
expected that a messiah would be at least sympathetic 
with the patriotic hopes of the popular mind about 
the restoration of the kingdom to Israel. 

The eschatological element of the kingdom in 
the preaching of Jesus was not merely apocalyptic, 
however. Apocalyptic was invariably eschatological, 
but eschatology was not invariably apocalyptic. A 
closer analysis of the transcendental apocalyptic 
idea in Judaism shows that this very passion for 
a vivid effective revelation of God in the immediate 
future involved frequently a spiritualising tendency, 
and the criticism of the gospels lays bare the striking 
fact that the Jesus who shared this form of eschato- 
logical hope believed in a God who was by no means 
the distant deity of conventional apocalyptic, but 
a hving, loving Father.^ The belief of Jesus in God, 
which is fundamental for the valuation of the eschato- 
logical element in the gospels, is a warning against 

1 Jesus uses the term ' kingdom ' where the rabbis often spoke of 
' the age to come ' ; He never uses ' kingdom ' as a periphrasis for the 
more direct expression of God's real and immediate intervention. 



68 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

all rough-and-ready identifications of the message 
of Jesus on the Idngdom with the apocalyptic schemes 
in whose dialectic many of His sayings happen to 
be couched. It is in His conception of God, more 
than in the derivative conception of the kingdom, 
that we can discover the faith for which He lived 
and died. As God the Father was not merely or 
even mainly an object of hope for Himself or for 
men, it followed that the Realm or Reign could not 
be relegated exclusively to the age to come ; much 
less could it be confined to the sons of Israel. The 
kingdom to Jesus was not an abstract, vague con- 
dition of humanity, but neither was it defined in 
terms of an antithesis to the pagan powers of the 
world. It was the order and sphere of bliss for 
men, bliss being conceived as perfect loyalty to the 
will of the Father, or as Life (cf. Matt. viii. 22, 
Luke XV. 32, Mark ii. 19, Matt. xii. 28) in the fullest 
sense of the term ; and both aspects (the latter 
marks a transcending of the eschatological idea) 
were related to the special functions which the 
Christ of God had to discharge in order that men 
might participate in the fellowship of heaven. Thus, 
the kingdom was to come for the Jews, but not 
because they were Jews, and not for Jews only ; 
the condition of entrance was not a punctilious 
observance of the Torah, as the Pharisees interpreted 
it. If Jesus ever hoped that Israel as a whole would 
repent, He appears soon to have realised that the 
religious authorities and the mass of the people were 
obdurate. He had more hope of the world in general 
than of His own people, and He faced death, not in 
a mood of eschatological desperation, but in the 
consciousness that His self-sacrifice would avail to 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 69 

redeem the wider circle. As the Son of the Father, 
who loved men in spite of their sins ; as the Servant 
of God who, in His great pity and love, was wilhng 
to suffer in order to redeem men, He went with hope 
and courage to the cross. The conviction that He 
must die, to carry out the Father's purpose, would 
carry with it the hope of resurrection as a triumph 
over the forces of death and sin, but the inspiration 
of this hope lay in His profound faith ; He drew it, as 
He drew the consciousness of God the living Father 
which sustained it, from His inward communion 
with the Father, not from an apocalyptic dogma 
about the prospects of the kingdom. 

The vital element in this apocalyptic phase of the 
theology which the gospels present as an embodi- 
ment of what Jesus thought and beheved, is not 
simply a heroic faith in the power of God to carry 
out His purpose of regeneration and redemption 
for men amid conditions which intimidated and 
discouraged all but the most ardent souls on earth. 
It is that. When these things begin — ^physical cata- 
strophes, supernatural terrors, national convulsions 
— take heart and lift up your heads, for your redemp- 
tion is drawing near.^ But it is more than that. 
This confidence in the power and goodness of God 
is bound up with the person of Jesus Christ. The 
eschatological hope anticipates a future in which 
the bhss and reUef are mediated through the divine 
Christ ; God is to reign over a people for whom 
Jesus has given His Ufe as a ransom, for whom He 
has shed His blood, to bring them into the new 
relationship of sons to the heavenly Father. Finally, 
the future hope lays a moral obhgation upon those 
1 Luke xxi. 28. 



70 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

who cherish it. Ethical excellence does not win 
the kingdom, but without the ethical temper of 
unworldliness it cannot be received. Take heed to 
yourselves, lest your hearts he overlaid by debauchery 
and drunkenness and worldly cares, and so that Day 
come on you suddenly like a snare. For come it will 
on all who dwell on the face of the whole earth. Be 
watchful and pray at every season that you may have 
strength to escape all that is coming to pass, and to 
stand in. presence of the Son of man. It is the eschat- 
ological hope which suppUes at least the motive for 
the counsels to watchfulness and zeal during the 
interval of waiting. The developing theology of the 
gospels shows how the eariy Christians gradually 
became sensible that faith in God and in the future 
was not necessarily bound up with this or any other 
apocalyptic expectation ; but, even in transcending 
the primitive eschatology, they carry on the religious 
and ethical instinct which it embodied ; they attest 
the fact that the attitude of Jesus to the future 
kingdom meant neither a purely supernatural deity, 
nor an attitude of passive unethical expectancy upon 
the part of men, nor an order of things in which His 
own person was transcended. 

But, while this process of reflection is carried out 
most fully in the Fourth gospel, the synoptic gospels 
reveal the antinomy of the present and the future 
within the consciousness of Jesus — an antinomy, 
without which the subsequent developments of the 
primitive Christian theology are inexplicable. The 
kingdom is to be inherited and entered when He 
returns. That is the one side, attested by a score 
of sayings. The other side is that God's reign has 
begun with His messianic mission, that it is not 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 71 

simply imminent but actually inaugurated in measure. 
This consciousness of the present era as the climax 
of the past and the beginning of a glorious future 
is expressed or imphed in a whole series of passages, 
but one of the most expUcit is the beatitude (Matt. 
xiii. 16-17=Luke x. 23-4) of Q— 

Blessed are your eyes for they see, 
and your ears for they hear : 
I tell you, 

many prophets and just men have desired to see 
what you see, 

but have not seen it : 
and to hear what you hear, 

but have not heard it. 

There is nothing here of the ' ulterioris ripae amor,' 
which, according to the rigid eschatological theory, 
was the mood invariably inculcated by Jesus. He 
fehcitates the disciples on the revelation of God 
which they were privileged to enjoy in their inter- 
course with Himself, here and now. It was an 
experience which, as He elsewhere urges, carried 
rich promise for the future of the kingdom, but it 
was none the less a present reahty ; the disciples 
saw the fulfilment in Jesus of the long-expected 
redejnption of God, and heard the notes of the final 
message of good news for man. This is a word 
which shows the new era had begun with Jesus ; it is 
not merely that He was in the future to herald the 
Reign of the Father, but that already He was inaugurat- 
ing it by His presence and vocation among men. The 
consciousness of God and of God's purpose which 
breathes in a saying Uke this, reveals a range of 
mind which Is deeper and vidder than any apocalyptic 



72 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [CH. 

theory of the gospel can embrace. Such a concep- 
tion of the messianic kingdom betrays an originaHty 
and independence which throws a pencil of hght on 
a number of other passages, and the problem is to 
harmonise it psychologically with the cross-light 
thrown by the futuristic sayings. 

(i) The first explanation of such an antinomy, 
which occurs to the mind of a modem critic, is that 
it must be due to the differences between the reUgion 
of Jesus and the later standpoint of the apostolic 
churches which more or less deliberately moulded 
the tradition of that reUgion to the current interests 
and preconceptions of the day. The influence of 
this factor may be traced in various directions, 
without much trouble. It is clear that the gospels 
have not only laid special stress upon some eschato- 
logical sayings, but ' eschatologised ' others which 
originally had no reference to the future, (a) The 
incorporation of the small apocalyptic tract in Mark 
xiii.=Matt. xxiv. ; (6) the eschatological setting and 
shape given by Matthew to the saying on the Way 
(vi. 13), and to the (vii. 21) word about the formal 
use of ' Lord, Lord,' whose original reference is pre- 
served by Luke (vi. 46) ; (c) the saying about the 
first and the last, which has been changed in the 
course of transmission from a law of the present 
life (coimecting with the situation of Mark ix. 35 f. 
Luke xxii. 26) into details of the eschatological 
future ; (d) the homiletic application of the refer- 
ence to Jonah (Matt. xii. 40) ; ^ (e) finally, the 

1 This, like the sharpening of the prediction about rising on the 
third day, or after three days, is apostolic ; it also marks the begin- 
ning of the tendency to elaborate the descenstis ad inferos, which 
otherwise has no place in the theology of the gospels. 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 73 

eschatological turn given by Luke (xviii. 1 ff.) to 
the parable of the widow and the judge, which seems 
originally to have inculcated the duty of constant 
prayer, but, perhaps owing to the word ' avenge,' 
to have been adapted to a special situation of the 
early church ; — these are only specimens of the 
process at work, but they will suffice to indicate 
its general character and motives. 

A fair example of the opposite movement is afforded 
by Matthew's version of the beatitudes, which tends 
to bring out not only their spiritual but their immedi- 
ate aspect more than is the case with Luke.^ Most 
of the data which point in this direction, however, 
are special sayings for which there is no parallel in 
any of the other two gospels. 

The Ukehhood is that both processes were at work 
within the early church. There are passages in the 
gospels where the intense behef qi Jesus that the 
crisis would arrive suddenly and speedily has been 
smoothed down, or — if we choose to say so — 
spirituahsed ; there are others where the inward- 
ness of His teaching may be conjectured not unfairly 
to have been somewhat narrowed duriag the course 
of transmission through the Palestinian communities. 
The evidence for these modifications is drawn ulti- 
mately from an analysis of the synoptic tradition 
which is rather hypothetical so far as it rests upon 
Q. We can hardly be sure enough of the latter's 
contents to enable us to say whether its eschatology 



1 Luke's probable omission of Thy kingdom come (in original text 
of xi. 3-4), apparently on account of its eschatological ussooiation, 
or because of the semi-politioal connotation which it might suggest 
to Grentile readers, is, however, noticeable, especially in view of his 
change (xix. 38) in the cry of the crowd at the entry into Jerusalem. 



74 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [ch. 

was of a less developed type than that of Mark. Such 
a conclusion assumes too readily that Q did not 
contain much if any of the material which happens 
to be preserved in Mark ; besides it depends largely 
on the decision between the relative merits of the 
Lucan and Matthean versions. But apart from 
what is problematical on this line of reconstruc- 
tion, it must be admitted that the movement of 
early Oiristian theology which Paul, for example, 
represents, i.e. the movement from a predominating 
to a subordinate eschatological interest, need not 
have been typical of the apostohc reUgion as a 
whole. Whatever date we assign to Mark, and 
whatever his relation to Q may have been, the pro- 
babilities are that the attitude of the early church 
to the eschatological tradition of Jesus was not 
homogeneous and stereotyped. The apocalyptic 
temperature would rise and fall, partly according 
to circumstances, partly according to the inherited 
temperament of certain circles. In estimating the 
effect of the early church's beUefs upon the words 
of Jesus and also upon the record of His ministry, 
it is fair to allow for the possibility that there was 
a tendency in some quarters to give an eschatological 
and somewhat conventional turn to the tradition, 
just as in other circles and at other periods the 
opposite drift would prevail. The latter tendency 
is apt to engross the attention of the modem student, 
especially in view of the culmination which is pre- 
sented in the Fourth gospel, but the former is not 
to be overlooked. It is true that upon the whole 
there is a broad movement of thought, illustrated 
by Paulinism, from the more to the less with regard 
to apocalyptic eschatology, from the kingdom to 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OF|THE GOSPELS 75 

the Church as the centre of interest ; but, as the 
history of early Christianity and the internal data 
of the synoptic gospels indicate, this was not by 
any means uniform. The more realistic and primi- 
tive view repeatedly found expression, and there 
are traces of it in the special modifications which 
Matthew and Luke more than once introduce into 
the tradition. 

There are serious objections, however, to a posi- 
tion hke that of Wellhausen on this point. He 
attributes the strictly eschatological emphasis to the 
later Church, and wiU have nothing to do with the 
theory that Jesus was bound up in an eschatological 
series of predictions. On the other hand, while he 
recognises in the parables, for example, distinct 
traces of the conception that the kingdom of God 
is a present reality, present in germ within the situa- 
tion which the parables presuppose, he identifies 
the kingdom as present with the Church, and thus 
practically removes from the teaching of the historical 
Jesus not only the definitely eschatological element, 
but the complementary references to the present 
order of the divine kingdom. The weakness of this 
position is not that it recognises the infiuence of the 
apostolic church upon both sides of the preaching 
of Jesus ; it is the dogmatic standard which Well- 
hausen imposes upon the historical materials. The 
Jesus who is left, after both of the deductions have 
been made which are considered necessary, is not 
a Jesus who by His teaching or actions could have 
given rise to such a movement as the early Christian 
faith. There is not enough left in His teaching or 
in His personality to account either for the visions 
which, according to Wellhausen, produced the belief 



76 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [CH. 

that He had risen from the dead, or for the forms 
which that behef assumed within the primitive 
theology. 

(ii) The source of such antinomies in the preaching 
of the kingdom really lies deeper than any interaction 
of a primitive tradition and a later consciousness 
of the apostolic church. It was not the theology 
of the gospels which created them all ; some of them, 
and some of the most vital, go back to the very con- 
sciousness of Jesus Himself. The element of apoca- 
lyptic eschatology cannot be eliminated from His 
preaching, and neither can the stress laid upon the 
kingdom as in a true sense present, like a germ, in 
His personal ministry among men. Unless the 
latter is admitted, no less than the former, the 
subsequent development of early Christian theology 
is not easily explained, and we are obliged to explain 
away with more ingenuity than historical success 
some authentic features of the mission of Jesus. It 
is a further problem to do justice to the presence 
of both elements within the consciousness of Jesus 
— a problem which belongs ultimately to the study 
of His life. Did the eschatological interest, it may 
be asked, belong specially to one period of His 
teaching ? Was it mainly due to the influence of 
John the Baptist, and did He gradually reach a more 
inward conception of the kingdom through deeper 
reflection and experience ? Or was the apocalyptic 
passion thrown up by the later experiences of Israel's 
obduracy ? Did the earlier preaching of God the 
Father, and of the sonship of men through trust 
and obedience, give place, during the period after 
Csesarea Philippi, to a definitely messianic propa- 
ganda which found its chmax and heart in the near 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 77 

future ? A solution of the problem, on such psycho- 
logical and historical lines, has been more than once 
attempted. The former hypothesis imphes that the 
gospel of Mark has antedated the prospect of suffer- 
ing in the record. This is not absolutely impossible ; 
on other grounds it has been conjectured that the 
cycle of conffict-stories in ii. 1-iii. 6 belongs probably 
to the neighbourhood of xii. Both hypotheses are 
complicated, however, by the inadequate evidence 
afforded by the sources (as we have them) for any 
vital development of this chronological character. 
Neither can do more than furnish an approximate 
hint for the grouping of the data ; the augmenting 
of the eschatological element after Caesarea Phihppi, 
for example, is obvious, but the element itself is 
not wholly absent from the previous teaching. 
Instead of distinguishing periods or successive 
phases it is better to allow for the varying emphasis 
laid by Jesus on different aspects of the kingdom. 
Less weight attaches to another hypothesis that the 
sayings which seem to denote any presence of the 
kingdom really express no more than the speaker's 
intense conviction that it was imminent, as if in 
saying ' it is here,' he meant to declare vividly, ' it 
is upon you.' This might apply to one or two 
phrases, but it does not cover all. It is not, in fact, 
upon the interpretation of a few isolated passages 
that the solution of the problem depends, but on 
the general messianic consciousness of Jesus, which 
has to be estimated from a wider range of evidence. 
If any series of phases could be made out from the 
synoptic material, it would be on the lines adum- 
biated by Baldensperger in his monograph, Die 
messianisch-a/pohalyptischenHoffnungen des Judentums 



78 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [oh. 

(1903) : a preliminary stage in which the conception 
of the kingdom for the most part resembled the 
ordinary apocalyptic view, then a phase during 
which it became more inward and occasionally even 
a present reality in some sense for Jesus, and finally 
a fresh presentation of the kingdom as transcen- 
dental and future. Baldensperger does not claim, 
of course, that these phases were definitely succes- 
sive. They overlapped ; the point of view repre- 
sented by the second, for example, in the central 
parabolic teaching, was not entirely absent from 
the first or the third. As we have them, the 
gospels probably support a theory like this better 
than almost any other, and the very appearance of 
complication which chngs to it is a better proof of 
genuineness than the simplicity which the others 
claim. Life, as Jesus found it in the messianic 
vocation, with new ideals to reaUse and convey, 
was not simple. The complexity of the situation 
involved a changing emphasis on various aspects 
of the kingdom, and anything is better than to 
attempt an explanation of his experience by crush- 
ing it into a strait formula, or by regarding it as the 
undeviating pursuit of an eschatological ideal. 

(iii) Neither is it feasible to argue that Jesus 
simply employed pictorial forms of thought and 
language, often drawn from eschatological tradi- 
tion, to express His deeper faith, and that the evan- 
gelists not only misplaced some of these sayings, 
but often failed to do justice to their imaginative 
and plastic character. There is force in this con- 
tention, but it does not furnish a complete clue to 
the problem. The abuse of metaphor has certainly 
been one of the standing errors in theology : either 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 79 

too much or too little has been made of it, in the 
interpretation of the words of Jesus. The Oriental 
picturesqueness of His teaching has often been 
ignored or minimised, with unfortunate results for 
the appreciation of His ethics as well as of His 
theology ; and in the opposite direction, under the 
fear of modernising, we are apt to make serious 
mistakes by insisting that Oriental expressions in 
the gospels must be taken literally.^ It is possible 
that even the evangehsts were not free from the 
latter tendency, not because they were not Orientals, 
but because their standpoint was lower than that 
of the religious genius of Jesus. His language was 
often poetic and figurative. He frequently spoke 
in a popular metaphorical style, which was admir- 
ably effective for His purpose of impressing the 
conscience and imagination, and it is hopelessly 
prosaic to deduce theological inferences from such 
dramatic or vivid expressions. As the Old Testa- 
ment prophets are enough to show, preaching in 
its highest reaches inevitably assumes an almost 
lyric or symbolic note ; its aim is to suggest and 
inspire, not to use words of which it can be 
said pedantically ' this means that.' We 
can recognise this figurative element in such 
sayings as these : // you have faith as a grain of 
mustard seed, you would say to this sycamine tree, 
Be thou rooted up and ie thou planted in the sea ; and 
it would have obeyed you — / came not to bring peace 
hut a sword ; or, in another direction, in the vivid 
and passionate intensity which throbs under such 

1 There are some apposite remarks upon the valuation of Hebrew 
metaphor and allegory in Professor E. E, Kennett's In Ow Tongues 
(1907), pp. 7 f, 



80 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

concentrated demands as that a disciple shall hate 
his father and mother, or let the dead bury their dead. 
These tremendous requirements witness to the white 
heat with which Jesus, in moments of supreme 
tension, viewed the devotion requisite to His cause 
on earth. Or, again, when He exclaimed, with 
reference to the success of the disciples in their 
mission, I saw Satan fall from heaven like lightning, 
the metaphorical note is quite audible. This does 
not mean that Jesus spoke of Satan and demons 
figuratively ; the kingdom of God which as messiah 
he had come to inaugurate, meant the collapse of 
that hierarchy of evil spirits which He beUeved were 
in control of the present age. But it does mean 
that His language even upon such subjects must 
be interpreted naturally and freely, and that some 
of His eschatological utterances were vivid, semi- 
allegorical expressions which were never intended 
to be taken literally. It is too easy to Uteralise 
the symbolic or poetic element into an unreal 
estimate of what He said and meant. When the 
profligate son in the parable came to his sober senses 
and returned to his home, with moral penitence 
triumphing over false pride and shame, he acted 
upon his belief in his father's unwearied affection. 
By a moral act of trust he determined to cast himself 
upon the parental love from which he had fooUshly 
and wilfully broken away. And, when he was 
restored, the terms of the welcome were : This, my 
son, was dead and is alive again, he was lost and he is 
found. It would not be safe to infer from this that 
the words, e.g., of Matt. xi. 4 f . are to be taken allegori- 
cally. It is possible, but not certain, that when 
Jesus said, The dead are raised up, He meant the 



n.] THE BSCHATOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS 81 

qmckening of life in the penitent. But some place 
must be left for this symbohc and pictorial element 
in the apocalyptical teaching of Jesus. When He 
said, // you are willing to receive it, this is Elijah, who 
is to come. He was enunciating a principle which 
underlay more than His estimate of John the Baptist. 
There was a freedom in the way He expressed current 
and conventional ideas, as well as in the way He 
recast them. To make allowance for this does not 
carry us to any final solution of the apocalyptic 
antinomy iu His preaching, but it is one considera- 
tion which is essential to an adequate estimate and 
statement of the data in question.^ 

No one of these proposed solutions is reaUy 
satisfactory. Each contributes some element, but 
neither singly nor collectively do they yield any 
valid answer to the question. Ultimately it is an 
historical problem, for a study of the conscious- 
ness of Jesus rather than for the theology of the 
gospels. The latter assumes both elements and 
correlates them with less difficulty upon the whole 
than a modem reader finds, partly because personal 
piety is seldom sensible of theological difficulties to 
the point of embarrassment, partly because the 
synoptic gospels at anyrate were composed mainly 
imder the same time- view as that under which Jesus 

1 ' Our modern notions of Christ's eschatology are often based on 
an underrating of the extent to which He used material imagery, and 
of the extent to which He was absorbed — whereas His disciples were 
by no means similarly absorbed — in spiritual thought. . . . We 
Christians go wrong in poring over the apocalyptic imagery without 
bearing in mind that, if it came from Christ, it was used according to 
Hebrew prophetic precedent by One whom we believe to have been 
more spiritual than any Hebrew prophet. '—Abbott, The Son of 
Man, 3583. 

F 



82 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [CH. 

Himself lived and thought. The vital point to be 
grasped, however, is that neither the apocalyptic nor 
the present emphasis can be ruled out of the teach- 
ing of Jesus on the kingdom. And if any psychological 
aid is sought in order to meet the situation which is 
thus created, the theology of Paul supphes what we 
want. It is instructive to recollect how this synthesis 
of the present and the future is corroborated by the 
reUgious mind of Paul. The apocaljrptic form of 
eschatology which even to the end remains in the 
backgroimd of his doctrine did not prevent him from 
recognising that the kingdom was already a present 
experience of believers, through the Spirit of the 
risen Christ. The kingdom-idea, for him, is only 
one of several categories ; it has not the central 
position that it occupies in the theology of the 
gospels. The ' family-aspect,' which is present in 
the teaching of Jesus, is developed by Paul, particu- 
larly in connection with his view of adoption. But 
he speaks of the kingdom as present in the authority 
of an apostle,^ and of the kingdom as denoting 
righteousness, joy, and peace in the Holy Spirit, 
as the sphere of Christian service,^ and as the posi- 
tion of forgiveness and fellowship into which 
Christians have already entered. The Christian 
hope looks forward to the appearance of Christ ; 
the resurrection is not undervalued ; but the period 
of the divine Reign has begun. ' God has delivered 
us from the power of darkness and transferred us 
into the kingdom of His dear Son.' ^ We have no 
business to assume that what was possible to Paul 
was beyond the reach of Jesus. The very fact that 
an eschatological background lies behind most of 
1 1 Cor. iv. 20. 2 Eom. xiv. 17 f. a Col. i. 13. 



n.] THE ESCHATOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 83 

Paul's sayings about the present kingdom emphasises 
the organic character of the latter to a religious view 
of the Reign of God, and serves to buttress the con- 
viction that Jesus was not bound rigidly to a futur- 
istic hope. Here as elsewhere the disciple is not 
greater than his master. If the primitive theology 
of the church succeeded in penetrating to some 
consciousness of the present kingdom, under the 
experience of the Spirit, it is an inversion of proba- 
biUties to deny that the mind of Jesus was unequal 
to such a range and depth of insight. It is necessary 
even to assume that the Pauline position must have 
been anticipated by that of the Lord in this respect. 

Jesus, then, used not only apocalyptic language 
but apocalyptic ideas, at certain moments of His 
life. If we cannot, without arbitrariness, read all His 
teaching and actions in the light of an eschatological 
enthusiasm, we cannot, without almost equal violence, 
eliminate the realistic eschatological hope from the 
record of His career. At the beginning, as at the 
end. He was sustained by the belief that the kingdom 
was close at hand. This was the form taken by 
His faith in God's purpose of goodwill ; it was not 
merely the form into which the early church, in 
the over-eagerness of its messianic ardour, threw 
His teaching on the kingdom. But the essential 
significance of the kingdom for Jesus is not to be 
found by interpreting it in the hght of earlier or 
contemporary apocalyptic hopes. The kingdom 
varied even there with the particular conception 
of God or of messiah, and when Jesus took over 
this ancestral hope of Judaism, He modified it 
inevitably by connecting it with His profpunder 
conceptions of God's nature and of His own destiny. 



84 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

This transmutation of the idea gives the starting- 
point for the development which culminated in the 
Fourth gospel, by showing that the stress upon the 
inward and present aspect began not with the early 
church but with Jesus Himself. As Von Dobsohiitz has 
happily expressed it, ' in the teaching of Jesus there 
is a strong line of what I would call transmuted 
eschatology. I mean eschatology transmuted in the 
sense that what was spoken of in Jewish eschatology 
as to come in the last days is taken here as already 
at hand in the lifetime of Jesus ; transmuted at the 
same time in the other sense that what was expected 
as an external change is taken inwardly : not all 
people seeing it, but Jesus' disciples becoming aware 
of it.' ^ The reasons for this transmutation lie in 
Jesus' consciousness of God as the Father and of 
His own Sonship. Both of these determine the 
conception of the new realm or reign of God which 
He came to inaugurate, and it is to the study of their 
meaning that we must now pass. 

1 The EsoliMtology of the Gospels (1910), p. 150. 



rn.] THE GOD OF JESUS 85 



CHAPTER III 

THE GOD OF JESUS 

Phtlg, the Alexandrian contemporary of Jesus, 
closes his treatise, De Opificio Mundi, with a summary 
of the five supremely important lessons which are 
taught by Moses in the Genesis-story of the creation, 
(i) To refute atheists, he teaches that God really 
exists ; (ii) to refute polytheists, he shows that 
God is one ; (iii) in opposition to those who hold 
that the universe is eternal and self-existing, he 
emphasises its creation by God, (iv) and also its 
unity, as the work of the God who is Himself 
one, in opposition to speculations about a plurality 
of worlds ; (v) finally, we learn the truth of provi- 
dence, ' for it must needs be that the Maker should 
duly care for what He has made, just as parents 
take thought for their children.' Jesus never called 
God the creator. He beheved the Genesis-tradi- 
tion, as is evident from His references to sex and 
the sabbath, but He generally states in other forms 
the moral and religious significance which attaches 
to the doctrine of creation. God is the Father, for 
Jesus, but not because He is creator. The truth of 
the divine providence is connected specifically with 
the Fatherly interest of God. Jesus assumes the 
Jewish belief in the existence and the unity of God ; 
He did not require to teach men that God forgave 
pins, and His teaching contains no theories about 



86 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

creation ; He never had to argue with people who 
denied the power or righteousness of God.^ The 
stress of His teaching falls on the practical issues of 
belief in God as the Father of men. 

(a) The first of these is that the Father cares for 
their interests. Thus, in the very act of insist- 
ing that His disciples must subordinate every other 
consideration to the interests of the divine kingdom, 
Jesus assures them that God the Father is not in- 
different to such matters as their food and clothing. 
Your Father knows that you need these ; only seek 
his kingdom and they shall be added to you?' The 
very dangers and deaths which may be encountered 
in the Christian mission lie within His fatherly 
providence : — • 

Are not two sparrows sold for a farthing I 

Yet not one of them drops to the ground without your 

Father. 
Fear not, then : you are of far more value than 

sparrows.^ 

This is a belief which dominates the central concep- 
tion of God's relation to men, in the theology of the 
gospels. But it neither absolves men from legitimate 
activity in the matter of providing for themselves, 
nor from prudence in safeguarding life against 
normal dangers. By His actions as well as by His 
teaching, Jesus shows that this unswerving trust 
in God as the Father implies a use of ordinary 

1 The omniscience of God is assumed, but in the religious sense of 
Matt. vi. 4, 6, 18 (cf. ver. 32), not as a dogma. 

2 Luke xii. 31. 

3 So Wellhausen on Matt. x. 31, arguing that ttoWSv is a mistrans- 
lation of the Aramaic original as above rendered. 



m.] THE GOD OF JESUS 87 

mfeans to secure one's livelihood, and a recourse to 
reasonable precautions in order to ensure one's 
personal safety. It does not justify carelessness or 
presumption. The doctrine of the divine provi- 
dence, which is impUcit and explicit in the gospels, 
is not a premium put on the recklessness even of 
good men. A concrete example of this is afforded 
by the refusal of Jesus to be deterred from His 
mission by the reported threat of Herod to murder 
Him (Luke xiii. 31 f.). He replied. Go and tell that 
fox, Behold I cast out demons and perform cures to-day 
and to-morrow, . . . to-day and to-morrow and the 
next day I must go on. The third day I shall he 
perfected. The providence of God is over Him 
until His mission is accompUshed. But it is not 
accomplished without suffering. With a touch of 
deep irony, He adds : For it is impossible that any 
prophet should perish except in Jerusalem. The Holy 
City must retain its monopoly of killing the messengers 
of God ! Nevertheless, even this fate is part of 
God's providence, since without it the divine work 
of Jesus could not be accomphshed. He beheves 
in this providence and has courage to face risks 
in carrying out God's purpose, but at the same time, 
as His withdrawal from GaUlee and His precautions 
before the Last Supper show, this is perfectly con- 
sonant with a careful avoidance of needless dangers. 
When they persecute you in one city, He told His dis- 
ciples similarly, flee to another.^ But the clearest 

1 Matt. X. 23. This text was abused in the later churcli by weak- 
kneed Christians who, in times of persecution, as TertuUian caus- 
tically remarked {de Corona, i.), thought there was no word equal to 
it in the gospel. The best comment on the verse is Acts zvii. 
10, 14. 



88 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

statement of the principle involved is presented 
by the temptation-narrative in Matt. iv. 5-6, where 
Jesus refuses to presume upon the providence of 
God by thrusting Himself into dangerous positions, 
and expecting God to intervene on His behalf. The 
point is that in order to believe in God's provi- 
dential care, it is not necessary to claim arbitrary 
proofs of it. The first temptation is to abuse the 
feeling of independence which comes from the con- 
sciousness of divine sonship, by claiming exemption 
from the ordinary duty of relying upon God's good- 
ness in the sphere of natural wants ; the second is, 
to abuse the feeling of dependence by an arbitrary 
test of God's willingness to intervene miraculously 
on behalf of those who are in peril. Jesus behoved 
God's angels had charge of the faithful. But He 
declined to presume on this belief in providence ; 
He felt that the more genuine it was, the less it would 
look for such exceptional proofs of the divine interest. 
The same thought recurs in Matt. xxvi. 53, and 
again in coimection with the function of angels in 
providence. The popular belief in angels, which 
Jesus shared, is most prominent in the birth-stories 
of Matthew and Luke. Mark has comparatively 
few allusions to them, and there is little special 
development of the belief in the other gospels ; 
while Matthew's^ special parables, like Luke's (xv. 
10, xvi. 22), mention angels (xiii. 39, xxv. 41), and 
while an angel appears in connection with the resur- 
rection (xxviii. 2, 5),^ Luke twice in one passage 
(xii. 6-9) substitutes the angels of God for the original 

1 The saying in xviii. 10 is the only other allusion peculiar to this 
gospel. It is a reference to guardian angels. 

2 Cf. John XX. 12 for a different tradition. 



m.] THE GOD OF JESUS 89 

My Father in heaven (Matt. x. 29-33). The reticence 
of the Fourth gospel upon angels is connected with 
its omission of any reference to demons. So far as 
the synoptic tradition is concerned, the function of 
angels in the life of Jesus is confined to their support 
in crises (Mark i. 13, Luke xxii. 43) ; they are to be 
His agents and retinue in the final establishment of 
the kingdom, but they play a noticeably small role 
in mediating between men and God, compared 
with their corresponding functions in Judaism. The 
direct and deep faith of Jesus in God as the Father 
tended to confine the operations of providence and 
the mediation of revelation to His immediate con- 
tact with men.^ 

(6) A further outcome of this fundamental belief 
in God's fatherly providence is the conviction that 
He is able to see His purpose through, and to ensure 
the success of His cause in the world. The relation 
of the Father to the order of the universe implies 
that this spiritual aim will be effected, and this 
purpose of the kingdom is brought out in three ways. 

(i) ' Faith,' says Mazzini, ' requires a purpose that 
shall embrace hfe as a whole, that shall concentrate 
all its manifestations, and either direct its various 
energies or subordinate them to the control of a 
single activity ; it requires an earnest, imshaken 
belief that the purpose will be attained, a profound 
conviction of a mission and the obligation to fulfil 
that mission, and the consciousness of a supreme 
"power that watches over the believer's progress to the 
goal. These elements are indispensable. Where any 

1 It is by angels that God's will is done in heaven (Matt. vi. 10), and 
the condition of Christians at the resurrection is to be angelic (Mark xii. 
26), i.e. according to Luke (xz. 36), immortal as well as unmarried. 



90 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

one of them is lacking, we may have a sect, a school, 
a political party, but not a faith, not an hourly self- 
sacrifice for the sake of a great religious ideal.' The 
words which I have italicised point to a religious 
conviction which fiads expression in the Fatherhood 
of God as represented by the teaching of Jesus. 
There is no doctrine of God's omnipotence,^ ia the 
sense of later dogma, but there is an equivalent for 
it which meets the moral and spiritual needs of faith. 
This is expressed in the saying, / fraise thee, Father, 
Lord of heaven and earth, that while thou hast concealed 
this from the loise and shrewd, thou hast revealed it to 
the children.^ Here the words Lord of heaven and 
earth are not an otiose or formal epithet ; they are 
intended to suggest that the fatherly, purpose of 
God in Jesus Christ has the full power and force 
of the universe behind it ; it is effective in the 
natural order. This invocation of Jesus guarantees 
that the God on whom Christians rely for their 
personal faith is adequate to carry out the divine 
purpose to which they are committed by their self- 
surrender. The God of Jesus has control of the 
natural powers by which Christians are surrounded 
and apparently thwarted here and there. The 
Father is ' Lord of heaven and earth,' and as such 
He is competent to have His will done on earth as 
in heaven. According to the teaching of Jesus, our 
faith in God the Father justifies us in believing that 
in the mysterious world of Nature an absolute value 

1 Note the context of the saying. With God all things are possible 
(Matt. xix. 26). The will or plan of God can be thwarted (Luke Tii. 
29-30) ; there is no determinism about it. How often I would . . . 
and you would not 1 

2 Matt, xi. 25. 



m.] THE GOD OF JESUS 91 

attaches to our personalities, as they are directed 
to the ends of God. The theology of the gospels, 
in this respect true to the teaching of our Lord, 
is interested in creation mainly from such a prac- 
tical point of view. There is no attempt to explain 
the dualism of God and evil. The iinal triumph 
of God is assumed, as the religious basis of the 
eschatological hope. 

(ii) This hope of the good time coming, when the 
power of the Father will come fully into play, was 
vital to the faith of Jesus. He whose will is done 
in heaven by the angels is willing and able to have 
it done also upon earth, and this effective oUmax 
is the outcome of His redeeming providence in the 
present. On the one hand, it was" the aim of Jesus 
to create and foster in His disciples the character 
which corresponded to the future realm and reign 
of God the Father ; purity of heart, brotherly love, 
a forgiving spirit, and genuine humihty. He taught, 
were the qualities which gave men a title to the bliss 
of the reign to come. Again, one of the motives 
for courage and hope, under the stress of the present 
evil order, was the conviction that it was temporary ; 
the Father would ere long vindicate His loyal sons. 
Similarly, the renunciation of the world for the sake 
of a higher devotion to the interests of the Reign, 
was represented as sure of a reward in the shape 
of fuller life. The underlying thought is that the 
Fatherhood of God means a royal authority. To be 
His sons is to be sons (Matt. viii. 12, etc.) of the 
kingdom, i.e. members of the heavenly order which 
it is His will to realise. There is no opposition 
between the fatherly kindness of God and the 
divine kingship in the gospels ; the latter is an 



92 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [oh. 

aspect of the former. Belief in God the Father 
involved confidence in His supreme power over the 
universe, and this found expression in the concep- 
tion of His reign. 1 He who was Lord of heaven, 
where His will was done by the spiritual beings of 
the upper order, would prove Lord of earth as well, 
through the fulfilment of His royal purpose of love 
for men through Christ. 

(iii) Another Une of suggestion is afforded by the 
place assigned to miracles in connection with the 
personality of Jesus. The real aim of His healing- 
miracles was to induce the reverent recognition of 
God's power as manifested in Himself ; thus the 
Samaritan leper, when he saw he was cured, returned 
glorifying God . . . and giving him (i.e. Jesus) 
thanks (Luke xvii. 15-16). These works of healing 
represent the pity and power of God exercised 
upon men ; they are cures which are meant to 
deepen faith in the merciful and strong character 
of the Father, whose kingdom Jesus has come to 
establish. Furthermore, the miracles which are 
conditioned by faith in the recipient of the divine 
benefits ^ witness to the truth that the reign of God 
concerns the physical as well as the spiritual well- 
being of men, and that the goodwill of the Father 

1 Cf, Titius, Der PauUnismus, pp. 32 f. (' Orientals do not recog- 
nise our sharp distinction between the family and the state-organisa- 
tion. . . . The distinction between family and kingdom must be 
entirely ignored in connection with the mind and preaching of 
Jesus '). 

2 That is, according to the usual synoptic tradition. In the Fourth 
gospel the ffri/j.eTa elicit faith rather than presuppose it; they are 
what an ancient writer would have called dperal ffeoS, demonstrating 
the divine 'glory' of Christ for the sake of producing faith in 
Himself. 



in.] THE GOD OF JESUS 93 

embraces all sides of human nature (cf . Matt. xi. 4 f .), 
with the power of reaching and healing it at every 
point. The distiaction between these healing miracles 
and the Nature-miracles is unreal, from the stand- 
point of the gospels. The diseases and disorders 
which Jesus cured, as part of His work for the 
Father's kingdom, belonged to the sphere of Nature 
over which God ruled for the benefit of His people. 
The apologetic value, therefore, of the so-called 
Nature-miracles was the demonstration that the 
God who produced spiritual miracles upon the souls 
of men had at His command the powers of the 
universe. 

The relation of God's providence to the natural 
order is illustrated not only by the ' miracles,' how- 
ever, but by the direct teaching of our Lord. It is 
significant that the God of Jesus is vividly present 
in the simple processes of Nature. To the theology 
of the gospels, as distinguished from the lurid con- 
ception of the main apocalypses and from the 
average rabbinic doctrine, Nature is instinct with 
the divine Spirit. The world of what moderns call 
inanimate Nature is not profane to Jesus, and this 
is a dominant note in His teaching upon the 
character of God. 

Observe how the flowers of the field grow I They 
neither toil nor spin ; 
Yet, I tell you, even Solomon in all his grandeur 
was not robed like one of these. 
And if God so clothes the grass of the field which to-day 
is and to-morrow is thrown into the oven, 
men of little faith, shall he not much more clothe 
you ? ^ 

I Matt. vi. 28 f. 



94 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

This recalls the older appeal of the psalmists to 
Nature as a proof of the divine goodness, but it 
stands out from contemporary Judaism in its dis- 
tinctive appreciation of the religious as well as the 
aesthetic side of the world. ' Almost all Christ's 
moral precepts might be paralleled or illustrated 
by something in Hebrew or Jewish hterature. This 
praise of th© beauty of flowers cannot, apparently, 
be so paralleled. And it helps Christians to approxi- 
mate to a- reaUsation of the spiritual attitude of 
Christ's conception of beauty and glory in the moral 
world. Of all Christ's sayings it is the most original.' ^ 
Another passage in the Sermon on the Mount points 
to the same behef in the Uving God of Nature : — 

Swear not by heaven, 

For it is God's throne : 
Neither by the earth, 

For it is the footstool of his feetJ^ 

This prohibition of careless swearing is character- 
istic of the best Jewish piety, and the phrasing of 
the saying itself suggests a verbal reminiscence of 
the post-exilic oracle in Isaiah IxvL 1-2 : 

Thus saith Yahveh : Heaven is my throne, 

And the earth is my footstool. 
What house then would you build for me. 

And wliut place of habitation ? 

Only, we notice that Jesus does not use these 
words in order to prove that God does not dwell 
in houses made by hands. As a matter of fact, He 
assumes God's presence in the temple — His Father's 
house (cf . Luke ii. 49) — on a later occasion when He 

1 Dr. B. A. Abbott, Tlie Son of Man, p. xiv. and 3565 d. 

2 Matt. V. 34-35. 



m.] THE GOD OF JESUS 95 

again refers to the contemporary abuse of oaths 
(Matt, xxiii. 22) : 

i)o&s not a man who swears by the temple swear also 

by Mm who inhabits it ? 
And does not he who swears by heaven swear by God's 

throne and by him who is seated on it ? 

The saying is another glimpse of the directness 
and inwardness with which He viewed the earth as 
God's earth, for all its evil and pain. Nothing is 
more remote from the teaching of the gospels than 
a deistic view of the world.^ Even the lurid tinge 
which apocalyptic eschatology imparted to some of 
the later predictions does not remove the deeper 
aspect of the hving Father as present in the world 
of men and things, to bless the former and in their 
interests to control the latter. It is much the same 
intuitive feehng which Browning voices through 
his Luria : — 

' My own East ! 
How nearer God we were ! He glows above 
With scarce an intervention, presses close 
And palpitatingly, his soul o'er ours : 
We feel Mm, nor by painful reason know ! 
All changes at his instantaneous will, 
Not by the operation of a law 
Whose maker is elsewhere at other work. 
His hand is still engaged upon his world — 
Man's praise can forward it, man's prayer suspend, 
For is not God all-mighty f To recast 
The world, erase old things and make them new. 
What costs it him? So, man breathes nobly there.' 

1 Cf. e.g. John v. 17. The difiSculty of reconciling the problem of 
God with Nature, and of explaining the relation between an absolute, 
spiritual being and the material creation, which vexed the soul of the 
later gnostics, is not directly present to the theology of the gospels. 



96 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

' His hand is still engaged upon His world.' The 
gospels present the Ufe of God in the natural world 
as active on behalf of His moral and spiritual interests 
in human hfe. His control of Nature permits the 
full growth of the human soul into His own likeness, 
and the full accomplishment of His redeeming 
purpose in this universe of pain and suffering and 
sin. 

It is at this point that the theology of the gospels 
anticipates a modern problem of the religious con- 
sciousness, the difficulty of beheving in a transcen- 
dental God who is great and high, and at the same 
time of trusting in a God who is present in the most 
intimate hfe of the soul. According to the gospels, 
the immanence of God is not confined to Nature as 
opposed to human nature, nor to human nature as 
distinguished from the sphere of natural forces and 
elements.' The Father is King and Lord of the 
universe, not in an external sense, but as creating 
and sustaining it for His own ends, and this implies 
that He wills to come into direct relation mth those 
in whom these ends are to be fulfilled. Jesus teaches 
that the reign or realm of God the Father is the 
reahsation of His will on earth as it is in heaven. 
Thy kingdom come, thy mil he done. The spirit of 
this prayer means that the Christian identifies his 
will with the will of God, as directed to the reahsa- 
tion of the divine realm in this world, the realm 
being the life and activity of God's household. It 
is the same thought which underlies Christ's teach- 
ing, that when life is surrendered for the sake of 
Himself and the gospel it is truly won ; men take 
up their hfe again, under this devotion to the great 
cause of God, and find that it is really life in the 



m.] THE GOD OP JESUS 97 

deepest sense of the word. In other words, the 
renunciation of the lower self, with its narrow and 
particular ends, in favour of the will of God, brings 
a man into the closest experience of the living Grod, 
and at the same time reveals a divine purpose 
which transcends the finite sphere of human activities. 
From one point of view, as the Fourth gospel puts it 
(xiv. 23), such a man lives the Ufe of God ; if a man 
lone me — ^which, as the context shows (cf. ver. 21), 
impKes obedience to the commands of Christ — lie 
will keep my word, and my Father will love him, 
and we will come to him and make our abode ivith 
him. This is not equivalent to any mystic absorp- 
tion of the human personality in the divine. It is 
not upon the mere unity of God and man that com- 
munion with God depends. Such a view invariably 
tends to reduce communion to an abstract or imper- 
sonal relationship between either finite beings and 
some absolute essence of which they are so many 
differentiations, or between the dewdrop and the 
shining sea of deity into which it slips. The gospels 
represent communion with God in terms of sonship, 
which involves kinship and dependence. This con- 
ception practically carries with it the elements 
which a modem doctrine of Immanence is designed to 
conserve — the essential affinity of man to God, the 
sacredness and worth of the present Ufe, and the near- 
ness of God to man in moral and spiritual experience. 
Thus the theology of the gospels is saved from 
the danger into which later theologies of the mystic 
type have more than once sHpped — the danger of 
allowing the consciousness and contemplation of 
God to distract fife from moral devotion to the 
interests of the divine service and kingdom. It 
G 



98 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [oh. 

is based on faith in the risen Christ, and therefore 
this commmiion of God and man is regarded as 
mediated through the Son. Now, the condition 
of the presence of Christ is invariably obedience 
to His ■will as a will of service and fealty. Go . . . 
and lo ! I am with you always} One of the later 
rabbis is reported to have said, as a deduction 
from Malachi iii. 16, that ' two who sit together 
and are occupied with the words of Torah have the 
Shekinah among them ' (Pirqe Ahoth, iii. 3). Jesus, 
according to Matthew (xviii. 20), promises His 
divine presence to any two or three of His disciples 
who have met in his name. This is an anticipa- 
tion of the Fourth gospel's doctrine of the indwelling 
of Christ, and elsewhere in that gospel {e.g. i. 14) 
there are traces of the Hebrew conception of the 
Shekinah or ' Presence of the Glory ' having been 
fused with the Logos-idea of the evangehst, a fusion 
which was all the more natural as the Shekinah 
and the Memra, or Word, were sometimes almost 
indistinguishable. But the point of the Matthean 
saying ^ is, that the divine presence of Jesus not 
only corresponds to the older conception of God's 
nearness to the faithful, but is conditioned by 

1 Matt, xxviii. 19. 

2 There is nothing in the gospels which exactly corresponds to the 
mystical expansion of this saying in the famous Oxyrhynchite logion, 
which (in Blass's restoration) runs : Wheresoever two are, they 
are not godless, and where there is one only, I say, I am imth him. 
Raise the stone, and there thou shall find me; cleave the tree, and 1 
am there. The diTine presence with the individual saint is argued as 
in Pirqe Ahoth, iii. 9 ; but the rest of the saying is pantheistic, as the 
gospels are not. Compare the description of the Christian soutar in 
George Macdonald's novel, Salted with Fire (p. 183), as ' turning up 
ilka muckle stane to luik for his Maister aneth it.' The thought, 
quid inierius Deo S is otherwise put by Jesus, 



in.] THE GOD OP JESUS 99 

devotion to His person and cause (cf. the context). 
The theology of the gospels might be described 
as the grammar and syntax of that personal reUgion 
whose spirit prompts the cry, Father, Father. The 
revelation of God which gave rise to this faith was 
the effect of the teaching and personahty of Jesus. 
The distinctive factor in Christianity is not that 
He taught God was the Father of men, but that 
God was His Father ; it was in virtue of this unique 
consciousness of sonship that He called men to 
come to Him and learn the secret of sonship,- and He 
mediated the knowledge of it by His life and death 
and resurrection, no less than by His words. The 
teaching of Jesus on this point or on any other cannot 
be severed from His personahty and vocation. He 
was the Son of God in order to bring men into son- 
ship, by enabling them to lay hold of the redeeming 
love of the Father, and this required more than words. 
At &st, however, it is principally the conception 
of God in His teaching which is before us. Now, a 
rehgion may call God by several names, but there 
are titles for God without which it would not be 
itself, and for Christianity the supreme title is that 
of ' Father.' Its distinctive meaning as the charac- 
teristic description of God in the gospels is further 
brought out by a comparison of the current Jewish 
titles which Jesus either ignored or used sparingly. 
Among the chief of these were The Lord (o Kijpios), 
The Blessed (o euAoyi^Tos),-' The Most High (o vxj'ia-TO'i),^ 

1 In Mark xiv. 61 (the high priest's challenge), Are you the messiah, 
the son of the Blessed i 

2 In Mark v. 7, an adjuration of the demoniac. It is doubtful 
whether the Lucan use is a personal predilection of the evangelist, or 
reflects an occasional habit of Jesus. 



100 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [ch. 

or, under the influence of an ultra-reverential feeling, 
simply The Name''- or Heaven (of. Mark xi. 30, 
Luke XV. 18, 21, John iii. 27, for incidental traces of 
this usage). Once,^ in the threatening prediction 
made to the Jewish authorities, he calls God by the 
Jewish allusive title of The Power (Mark xiv. 62= 
Matt. xxvi. 64) ,8 possibly because ' He desires to 
warn the Jews that in condemning " the Son of man " 
on earth, they are turning God into a " Power," 
instead of a Father, in heaven, and are preparing 
for themselves, in the Son, not a mediator revealing 
the Father, but a judge seated at the right hand of 
the Power ' (Abbott, The Son of Man, 3309). In any 
case. He does not speak of God as the Almighty. 
The Father's divine power, as we have already 
seen, is presented in other language with special 
reference to the interests of Christians and the 
kingdom. 

A similar attitude characterises the teaching of 
Jesus with regard to the ' hohness ' of God. The 
Lord's Prayer begins. Our Father who art in heaven, 
hallowed be thy name. As the name or rather the 
character of God is Father, the prayer is for the 
deeper and wider knowledge not of His transcend- 

1 Of. e.g. the high priest's confession in Joma, iii. 8, ' Name, I 
have sinned before Thee, I and my house ; Name, do Thou make 
atonement,' etc. 

2 The gospel of Peter preserves the cry of Jesus on the cross as My 
Power, my Power, thou hast left Trie, hut this is not necessarily a 
divine title ; it may denote the higher spiritual power of His own 
personality. 

3 Luke writes the power of God (xxii. 69), either because he wished 
to avoid this unfamiliar synonym for God, or because he took the 
earlier phrase (as it might be taken, though less probably) as an 
equivalent for the right hand of power (Swd/ieois^an adjectival 
genitive). 



m.] THE GOD OP JESUS 101 

ence but of His fatherly nature. Eeverence for God 
as the Father is what Jesus teaches in this petition 
or aspiration. The sacred name for Him was not The 
Holy One but Father ; it was as Father that God 
was to be reverenced and honoured. Jesus deepens 
as He carries on the conception of God as the Father, 
the Father not simply of the community but of 
the individual also, and of the individual man not 
simply of the individual IsraeUte. He is the royal 
Father of men, not because He created them, nor 
because He rules them, but because they stand to 
Him in a moral relation of kinship and dependence. 
But it is His Spirit which is described as holy, not 
Himself. The association of remoteness and ritual 
which had gathered round the divine name of ' holy,' 
probably accounted for Jesus' avoidance of it ; the 
moral purity and passion which it denoted, were 
expressed by Him in terms of the Father's love as 
opposed to sin in man. It was His profound con- 
ception of the divine love which embraced what 
had hitherto been grouped mainly under the special 
category of holiness ia the description of God's 
character. As the Father, God inspired, for Jesus, 
the moral reverence and humility wliich His holiness 
had elicited in Judaism, and not only inspired but 
deepened them. The fact that Jesus avoided this 
term accounts for its comparative rarity in the 
theology of the primitive Christians. ' Holiness ' had 
associations which were inconsistent with their 
religious experience of God as the Father, and its 
vaUd elements were expressed in other ways. It is 
not unlikely, too, that the adjective was avoided 
as a divine epithet owing to the fact that the Greeks 
never applied it to their deities. The convert 



102 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

instinctively felt that heavenly or in the heavens was 
more appropriate than the less famihar and less 
obvious holy (aytos).^ 

There is only one passage in the gospels where 
' holy ' is definitely apphed to God, i.e. in John 
xvii. 11. Holy Father, keep them in thy name 
{i.e. keep them faithful to thy nature and revela- 
tion of Father) which thou hast given to me, that 
theirs may be a unity like ours. The last words are 
reiterated throughout the prayer (ver. 20 f., 24 f.), and 
denote its special object. Christ's desire, according 
to the writer, is that His people may be kept from 
the divisive, imbrotherly spirit of the world ; Keep 
them from the evil one, who rules with a spirit of hate 
the world in which they have to live and work. 
Their sphere is the relationship and attitude in which 
they call God Father, as revealed in Christ, and 
thus form a brotherhood on earth.^ This passage is 
therefore an expansion of the thought in the synoptic 
Lord's Prayer. The term holy is chosen in opposi- 
tion to that of the world, but the idea is not dissimilar 
to the Lord's Prayer, viz., that to pray for the 
Father's name being hallowed, implies absolute 
loyalty to His will, trust in His love, and — forgive 
us our debts, as we forgive our debtors — a temper of 
unvarying forgiveness in the lives of those who thus 
call Him Father. In fact the term holy, in John 
xvii. 11, is probably an equivalent for the synoptic 
heavenly, which is never apphed to Gtod by the 
writer of the Fourth gospel. Holy Father is practi- 

1 Kattenbusch, Das Apostolische Symbol, ii. 687. 

2 This is the real life (ver. 17, corresponding to the true character 
of their God) to which he devotes them, setting them apart for its 
propagation in this world. 



m.] THE GOD OF JESUS 103 

cally another mode of expression for Father in 
heaven?- 

What is totally absent from this conception of 
God as Father, is the notion that any ceremony is 
required upon the part of man to render honour and 
glory to Him, or to thank Him publicly and formally 
for His goodness. The theology of the gospels does 
not know such a deity ; it tacitly supersedes the older 
ideas of a God, to which such practices were relevant 
as the moral elements in sacrifice. The God of 
Jesus is to be worshipped, according to the Fourth 
gospel, as Father in spirit and in truth (iv. 23) ; He 
is honoured and served in a hfe which, inspired by 
His spirit, is faithful and loving in the common duties 
of this world. The extemahties of ritual and cere- 
mony, with their local circumstances, belong to the 
sphere of the flesh, which in the Johaunine usage is 
the material and lower antithesis to the divine world 
of the spirit as the only reality. The basis for this 
conception of inward worship is laid down by Jesus 
in the anti-Pharisaic passage at the opening of 
Matthew vi. where the genuine ideal of righteousness 
is defined, in the sphere of ordinary life as well as 
of worship. Jesus requires a passionate devotion to 
this righteousness (Matt. v. 6, 10), and promises that 
it will be satisfied in the realm of God. He connects 
it with the realm of God, not simply as the require- 
ment but as the atmosphere and content of that 
realm or reign (cf. Mark xii. 29-31). The righteous- 
ness and the kingdom of God are not only associated 
(Matt. vi. 33, seek first the kingdmn and his righteous- 

1 This term, which is practically confined to Matthew's gospel, is 
allied to that of the kiMgdom of heaven (see above, p. 63). For argu- 
ments against its originality, cf. Abbott's Son of Man, 3492. 



104 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [CH. 

ness),^ but by being brought under the common 
and supreme category of life are practically identified. 
What Jesus meant by the term which we translate 
rigUeousness, was the conduct and character which 
corresponded to the fatherly love of God (of. Matt. 
V. 43 f.), and this meant a share in His own life.^ 

The outstanding feature of this rigMeousness, 
which differentiates it from any formal or legal 
conception, is spontaneous, ungrudging, unreserved 
love. 

Love your enemies and pray for your persecutors. 
That you may prove sons of your Father in heaven : 

For he makes his sun rise on the evil and the good, 
And rains upon the just and the unjust.^ 

Jesus prohibits any restriction of love and pity 
to those who are kind to ourselves. The doctrine 
sounds heroic to ordinary human nature, but Jesus 
does not present it as heroic. He grounds His 
demand upon the natural attitude of the Father, 
upon what Francis of Assisi called ' the great courtesy 
of God.' He assumes that men enjoy the benefits 
of rain and sunshine from the hand of the Father, 
and argues that a similar generosity must stream 
out from their hearts upon the undeserving. Love 

1 ' Kighteousness ' is one of Matthew's favourite terms, and in this 
passage it is uncertain whether the Lucan omission is not more' 
correct. If it is retained, it denotes not the character of God but the 
moral and spiritual requirements which He makes upon those who 
are sons and citizens of His kingdom. 

2 The remark of Wisdom xii. 19 : Thmi hast taught thy people that 
the righteous should he a lover of men {fpiKavdpiairov) occurs In a 
nationalistic passage, but it is based on the conception of God's 
gracious nature (ver. 12). 

s Matt. V. 44 f. 



m.] THE GOD OF JESUS 105 

is the absolute character of God, love even for the 
undeserving. The Most High is kind to the thankless 
and the evil. Be -pitiful, even as your Father is 
pitiful. This is the Lucao parallel to Matthew's 
word — You are to be perfect, as your heavenly Father 
is perfect, as your love extends even to your enemies.^ 
The moral claim is that the sons of the kingdom 
must reproduce in their own hves the spirit of their 
royal Father, especially towards those who have 
wronged them. 

This conception of God's nature is interwoven 
with every fibre of the Christian message. It is 
illustrated by the identification of love to God with 
sympathy and service, by Christ's insistence that 
forgiveness and charity must not be allowed to 
stand aside on any pretext — ^not even on the pretext 
that worship has prior obligations. Go and learn, 
said Jesus once, what this saying means : I desire 
mercy, and not sacrifice. He said this to clinch His 
reasons for associating with the tax-gatherers and 
sinners of Gahlee, a proceeding which scandalised 
the Pharisees ; and this points to a second method 
by which the character of God was interpreted by 
Him. His welcome, extended to classes which were 
treated as beyond the pale by the rehgious authorities, 
was a practical demonstration of the divine purpose 
in its graciousness. The whole attitude of Jesus 
to sinners has a theological significance which tallies 
with His teaching upon God's fatherly and gracious 

1 It is in this brotherly love that the moral personality develops 
into the life of God. This is the motive of the higher ' righteousness.' 
It anticipates a reward, not in the sense of recompense ■which can 
be claimed for mei-it laid up by almsgiving and the like, but as the 
consequence and fruition of the Inward spirit which aspires to the 
character of the Father. 



106 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [oh. 

love to all sorts and conditions of men. Jesus pro- 
claims by act as well as word the holy love of God 
seeking out the sinful, welcoming the lost and 
harassed, restoring the penitent to God's favour, 
and assuring men of their place in the Father's 
heart. Now this message has presuppositions and 
consequences which involve more than appears upon 
the surface. 

(i) The first is, the self-sacrifice of love in God as 
well as in man. A vivid ray of hght is thrown upon 
the character of God by the terms in which Jesus 
passionately rebuked Peter for seeking to dissuade 
Him from going up to suffer and die at Jerusalem. 
And he began to teach them that the Son of man must 
endure great suffering, and be rejected by the elders and 
the high priests and the scribes, and be killed, and after 
three days rise again. He spoke of this frankly and 
explicitly. Then Peter took him, and began to rebuke 
him. But Jesus turned round and, seeing his dis- 
ciples, rebuked Peter, saying. Begone, thou Satan, for 
thy tlwughts are mn/rCs, not Ood's.^ The intensity 
of this reproof insists that suffering is in the line 
of God's heart and mind. Human feeling is apt to 
shrink from pain and death ; it naturally assumes 
that these must be incompatible with the divine 
nature. Even Peter, who is forward to hail Jesus 
as the Christ of God, is shocked at the idea that 
his Master should dream of exposing Himself to 
ignominy and distress ; his conception of the divine 
purpose cannot yet admit the idea of a messiah 
who triumphs through suffering. Jesus reverses his 
view, as imtrue to the mind of God ; ov cjipoveii 
TO, Tov dtov d\X.a TO Twv avOpwiriav, God's way is 
' Mark viii. 31 f. 



m.] THE GOD OP JESUS 107 

not the line of shrinking from self-sacrifice. To 
choose the path leading to the cross is to mind the 
things of God, i.e. to act upon His motives and to 
sympathise practically with His aim. When Jesus 
introduced into the conception of the apocalyptic 
Son of man the startling function of suffering, He 
was implicitly revolutionising the entire scheme of 
messianic eschatology. When He showed that He 
must go forward on this line, that it was the only 
divine course to take, the only course open to any 
one who understood the real purpose and method of 
God, He was giving an taterpretation of the divine 
Spirit which controlled the kingdom. 

If there was not for His contemporaries, there is for 
us, a dramatic significance in the very locality of this 
decision.^ Csesarea PhiHppi lay outside Judaea, and it 
was associated with more faiths than one. In the high 
red limestone cliff, from which the Jordan bubbled, 
there was a huge cave or grotto, sacred to the worship 
of Pan and the nymphs — a worship consecrated by 
the Macedonian Greeks, who had settled in the 
district after Alexander the Great's conquest. Pan, 
the god of green fields and grazing flocks, represented 
the joyful worship of the Greek world as it aban- 
doned itself to the natural instincts of life. There 
was another local cult, however. On the cliff 
above the grotto a white temple stood, where the 
Roman emperor was worshipped. This temple had 
been erected by Herod after the visit of Caesar 
Augustus ; it denoted a form or phase of supersti- 
tion which glorified pomp and authority, not Nature. 
Now, both of these contemporary religions were 

1 Cf. Dr. G. A. Smith's Historical Geography of Palestine, 
pp. 474 f. 



108 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

the aiitithesis||of the rehgion which Jesus revealed 
to the disciples at Csesarea Philippi, when He began 
to show His disciples that He must go to Jerusalem 
and suffer and be killed, in obedience to the prompt- 
ing of His God. 

This is one of the most striking proofs of what 
Jesus believed His God to be. Anticipations of the 
divine nature as implying self-sacrifice and sympathy 
had been already voiced here and there both within 
Judaism and Hellenism, by the fifty-third chapter 
of Isaiah, e.g., by sayings like In all their affliction 
he was afflicted — which the finer faith of the rabbis 
dwelt upon with emphasis, and also, throughout 
the higher reaches of Greek and Oriental thought, 
by the contemporary belief in the dying and sufier- 
ing god of the cults. These are glimpses of the 
light that was coming into the world in full splendour 
through the person of Jesus Christ. But how difficult 
it was to believe that the higher life came through 
dying to self, and that it is divine to bear suffering 
willingly for the sake of others, is shown by Peter's 
blimt remonstrance. He was shocked at the notion 
of the Son of God actually dreaming of anything so 
humihating and unworthy as pain and self-sacrifice. 
The pageant of apocalyptic eschatology dazzled 
his eyes till they failed as yet to recognise where the 
true glory of life lay. It required the facts of the 
passion and the cross and the resurrection to convince 
the disciples that Jesus was right in His reading of 
God's character, and therefore He revealed the 
nature of the Father, not simply by telling men of 
His intuitions, but by acting as He believed in the 
line of God and pointing men, through what He did 
and suffered, to the essential spirit and motives of 



m.] THE GOD OF JESUS 109 

the Father. The parables enshrine with unrivalled 
clearness the fatherly and forgiving goodness of God. 
But, as Jesus showed at Csesarea Philippi, the deeds 
of our Lord — His entire vocation, His attitude to 
life and death — set forth even with greater vividness 
the real interests of God. He who has seen me has 
seen the Father, says the Christ of the Fourth gospel. 
That saying sums up the meaning of Christ's life 
as a practical revelation of God's character and 
purpose ; ^ it renders expUcit what is more or 
less imphcit in the synoptic tradition, the divine, 
redeeming love which led up to the cross. 

It was the sin of man, bound up with the evil of 
the world, which necessitated this utter self-sacrifice. 
Jesus had to overcome more than wrong views 
about God ; He had to meet the sin of the world 
as a positive opponent of the Father. To Him the 
forgiveness of sins was the negative side of bliss or 
entrance into fellowship with God. It was by reveal- 
ing the true character and realising the gracious 
purpose of God, that He sought to produce a genuine 
repentance, and on the other hand to reassure those 
who had a sense of sin. When, therefore. He 
demanded repentance because the kingdom of God 
is at hand, the conception of the kingdom deter- 
mined the nature of the repentance which was 
required ; the motives for the latter were found in 
God's fatherly love, with its corollary of brotherly 

1 ' A son may reveal a father in two ways : either by being like 
him — so entirely in his image as to be justified in saying, He that 
hath seen me hath seen my father — or by manifesting a constant 
reverential, loving trust, and thus testifying that the father is worthy 
of such a trust. Jesus revealed the Father in both these ways ' 
(Brskine, The Spiritual Order, p. 250). The former is mainly charac- 
teristic of the Fourth gospel, the latter of the synoptists, 



110 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

service, and both of these are represented in the Hfe 
and death of Jesus ; He hves and dies to bring them 
home with power to the conscience of men, amid 
the sins of worldliness and hatred which exclude 
from the kingdom. 

(ii) The special and unique work which Jesus had 
thus to do, in connection with the purpose of God, 
implied a corresponding relation between Him and 
the Father. This topic partly belongs to the next 
chapter, but it is cognate to our present discussion, 
since the character of God as the Father of Jesus 
is the basis of the general Fatherhood which underlies 
the synoptic tradition as well as the Johannine. 

The chief passage which voices this aspect of the 
S5moptic theology is Matt. xi. 26-7 : 

All has been given over to me hy my Father : 
And no one knows the Son except the Father — 
Nor does any one know the Father except the Son, 
And he to whom the Son chooses to reveal him. 

The last word has to be suppUed. The original 
has no accusative after reveal, and the object of the 
Son's revelation might include Himself as well as 
the Father. It is possible that the last clause thus 
refers to both of the preceding, as Irenseus suggested 
{Adv. Haer. iv. 6. 3, especially his comment on the 
phrase, which runs, teaching of Himself and of the 
Father). In any case Jesus speaks of God as His 
Father, and of Himself as the Son, in a specific 
sense. The saying at the transfiguration (Mark ix. 7) 
and some other allusions corroborate the view that 
this was not an isolated usage, which may be 
explained away in Matt. xi. 26-7 as the projection 
of a ' Johannine ' idea into the synoptic tradition. 
It is the expression rather than the thought which 



m.] THE GOD OF JESUS 111 

is exceptional in this passage. Jesus is here as 
elsewhere the Son, not because He is the messiah, 
but in virtue of a unique relation to the Father. It 
is through BQs consciousness of a distinct relation 
to God as the Father, that the consciousness of the 
messianic vocation is interpreted by the evangeUsts. 
Jesus is presented as the Son of God who has a 
divine calling to fulfil on behalf of men. He is 
conscious of His divine Sonship as He is conscious 
of this vocation to realise the purpose of God the 
Father for men. The latter was determined for 
ELim by His relation of Sonship to God. 

In the second century some Christians, Hke the 
Marcionites, used the aorist (eyvm) to corroborate 
their distiaction between the God of the Old Testa- 
ment and the God of Jesus. ' Those who would 
like to be wiser than the apostles,' says Irenseus 
(Adv. Haer. iv. 6. 1), ' write the passage thus : " No 
one has known the Father except the Son, nor the 
Son except the Father, and he to whom the Son 
has chosen to reveal Him," iaterpretiag it as though 
the true God had been known by no one prior to 
the coming of our Lord, and denying that the God 
whom the prophets announced was the Father of 
Christ.' This gnostic reading is adopted for other 
reasons by several editors including Hamack, who 
also contends (Sayings of Jesti^, pp. 272 f.) that the 
clause, who the Son is but the Father, was interpolated 
from Matthew into Luke (x. 22) at an early stage, and 
that the original Lucan text — ^which represents the 
saying better than the Matthean form — simply ran 

All has been given over to me by the Father, 
And no one has known the Father except the Son, 
And he to whom the Son reveals Him. 



112 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

But neither Hamack's facts nor his inferences 
in the textual field of early Christian quotations are 
beyond challenge ; ^ the aorist eyuta is gnomic rather 
than historic, and therefore is not out of place in the 
canonical form of the text ; even the omission of 
the second clause, though more defensible,^ spoils 
the rhythm and balance of the passage. It has to be 
remembered that the consciousness of His messianic 
calHng and character as God's Son had been a revela- 
tion to Jesus at the baptism. It was a revelation 
to Peter at Csesarea Phihppi — flesh and blood have not 
revealed this to thee, but my Father in heaven ; though 
Peter failed to understand the full significance of 
the revelation. And to Jesus Himself it was a 
mystery. No one knows the Son but the Father. It 
was only through steadfast obedience to the Father's 
will, through prayer and temptation, that He came 
to realise the meaning of His Sonslaip for Himself 
and for men. 

The bearing of the passage upon God's Fatherhood 
is that God was the Father of Jesus in a special 
sense, and that Jesus was conscious of a filial 
intimacy and commimion which enabled Him to 
reveal God's character as none else could, and to 
realise God's redeeming purpose for the sons of 
men. There is no definition of the divine nature ; 
there is no assertion of a metaphysical relationship 

1 Cf. Dom Chapman in Journal of Theological Studies, 1909, pp. 
562-66, though it is not necessary to iind the occasion for the thanlcs- 
givingin the neighhourhood of Matt, xvi., and to regard the ravra 
of ver. 11 as the revelation of the divine Sonship. The general sense 
is paralleled by John v. 20 and vii. 16. 

2 It occurs, however, as early as Justin Martyr. The variations in 
the order of the two clauses do not seem of primary significance, in 
spite of Harnack's pleading. 



nr.] THE GOD OF JESUS 113 

between the Father and the Son. It is not until we 
reach the Fourth gospel that we get any definition 
of the nature of God. There (iv. 24) alongside of the 
Fatherhood of God we find the statement that God is 
Spirit, i.e. devoid of what is material, lifted above the 
realm of the flesh. But these words have a specific 
bearing on the freedom of the Christian God from 
any embodiment in a cultus : they belong to the 
general conception of the divine nature in the Fourth 
gospel, on the one hand, and on the other they fall 
to be interpreted by the conception of the divine 
Fatherhood. The God who is spirit is the Father. 
The usage of Father in this absolute sense, in the 
Fourth gospel, practically corresponds to the 
synoptic title of the Father in heaven, or the heavenly 
Father. It is hardly possible, without over-subtlety, 
to draw distinctions between ' the Father ' and ' my 
Father,' on the hps of the Johannine Christ, and 
in some other passages it is an equivalent for the 
synoptic ' our Father,' a phrase which is absent 
from the Fourth gospel, where it is expressly 
avoided in one passage (xx. 17), in order to keep 
before the mind the unique Sonship of Christ, in 
virtue of which men attain to their position in 
the Father's household. The technical use of the 
phrase ' the Father ' in the Johannine theology is 
due to the reflective element, which regards the 
rehgious sonship of men as well as of Christ as 
resting ultimately on the nature of God, who is the 
source of life. The kinship and dependence which are 
imphed in sonship are viewed against a background 
of essential relationship. There is an approach to 
the older idea of fatherhood as creative, but at the 
same time the creative or Ufe-giving na.ture of God as 

H 



114 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

the Father is pre-eminently exhibited in its religious 
and ethical aspects, and this controlling interest 
of the writer helps to prevent the so-called meta- 
physical element from rendering the argument 
abstract or speculative. Thus even the relation of 
Jesus to the Father is not stated in exclusively 
metaphysical terms.^ It is represented as a moral 
and spiritual tie, in which Christ confesses His 
dependence on the Father : He remains within the 
love of the Father by keeping the Father's com- 
mandments (xv. 10, viii. 29, etc.), and the same con- 
ditions apply to men (xiv. 15, xvii. 6, 10). To 
become children of God, to come to the Father, is 
to have faith ; and the course of the religious life is 
summed up in the pregnant sentence, 

// you keep my commandments, 

you shall remmn within my love : 

even as I have kept my Father's commandments 
and remain within His love. 

(iii) It is the fatherly love of God which also 
explains the new sense of joy and freedom breathed 
by Jesus into the souls of men. He gave them 
confidence in the character of God, especially with 
regard to the fears and hesitation born of sin. 
The Father did not view men as totally depraved ; 
they were captives to be released from the slavery 
of evil, sick folk to be cured, wandering souls to be 
brought back to the father's household, disobedient 
sons to be reasoned with. The synoptic gospels 
contain no theory of sin. They show how Jesus 
viewed it as a transgression of the divine law, as a 
choice of the world in preference to God above all, 

1 Cf. J. Weias, Bie JVachfolr/e CJtrisH, pp. 4S f., 54 f. 



m.] THE GOD OP JESUS 115 

or as egoism over against God and man. He spoke 
of it as a debt, a disease, a defilement. It was 
punished by suffering in this world, and by exclu- 
sion from the presence of God in the world to come. 
Jesus had much to say about its punishment, especi- 
ally in the case of the impenitent, and more to say 
about its forgiveness, about the willingness of the 
Father to receive the disobedient back again, about 
His unvarying love for His children even iu their 
waywardness. He had httle or nothing to say 
about the origin of sin. Beyond the fact that man 
was responsible for his offences against the law of 
God, and that sin arose from within, from the evil 
will or the weakness of the flesh, there is no direct 
clue to Christ's view of how sin came into being. 
He does not speculate, for example, upon the evil 
impulse, as the rabbis did. What sin involved is 
brought out rather in the sacrifice which its pardon 
required from Him as the Son ; it is in its conse- 
quences for Himself that the seriousness of human 
sin becomes evident. 

In the Fourth gospel the conception of sin is 
worked out to some extent. The thought of forgive- 
ness is presented in terms of the giving of life eternal, 
however, rather than in the simpler synoptic manner, 
and this may account for the fact that an entire 
cluster of questions remains unanswered — how the 
Logos became incarnate, how the darkness originated 
which confronted the light in a miiverse created by 
God, or how the devil came to be the opponent of 
God. At one point the last-named problem does 
appear to be raised, in viii. 44 f., where it is said that 
the devil was a murderer from the beginning and has 
no place in the Truth, for the Truth is not in him. 



116 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [oh. 

When he tells a lie he is speaking from his own nature,^ 
for a liar he is and the father of lies (or falsehood). 
When eo-TjjKEf ev, which is rendered has no place in, 
is taken as an equivalent iov fell from or failed to keep 
his place in, the Truth, a basis may be found for a 
doctrine of the devil's fall : but this interpretation is 
unnecessary, and there is nothing else in the passage 
to suggest such a mythological speculation, not even 
in the cryptic allusion either to the envy of the devil, 
which brought about the fall of Adam, or more pro- 
bably to the murder of Abel. The only confirma- 
tion of such an idea would be the closing words, if 
they were rendered, as they might be grammatically, 
for his father also is a liar. This view was apparently 
taken by Macarius Magnes, who translates the first 
words of verse 44, you are of the father of the devil. 
It would tally with the Gnostic theory that the 
devil's father was a demiurge or archon, Sabaoth, 
the God of the Jews. Such an exploitation of 
Gnostic mythology, in the iaterests of anti-Jewish 
propaganda, would be entirely out of keeping, 
however, with the general tone of the gospel. To 
meet the difficulties of the existing text, it has 
been proposed either to change the subject after 
the Truth is not in him, and read — when any one tells 
a lie, he is speaking from, his own nature (or, in keep- 
ing with his own family), for his father also {i.e. the 
devil) is a liar ; or to restore the original reference 
of the words to Gain — you are of Cain and are fain 
to do his murderous desires (Wellhausen), etc. But 
neither of these expedients is plausible. The 

1 Br. Abbott suggests that ix tCov lUav here may mean that the 
devil speaks out of men as his family (Johannine Orammar, 2378, 
2728). 



m.] THE GOD OP JESUS 117 

Johannine idiom points to the usual rendering, 
you are of your father the devil ... a liar he is and 
the father thereof. 

Even in the Fourth gospel, however, where the 
dialectic used for the controversial purposes of the 
writing naturally tends to elaborate some of the 
antitheses connected with the problem of sin, it is 
remarkable that several of the specific allusions to 
sin are historical and apologetic. Thus both in viii. 
21,f24, and xvi. 9, the primary reference is to the 
sin of Judaism in rejecting Jesus, the Son of God, 
as the true messiah. You shall die in your sins, 
if you do [not believe that I am (He who is from 
above, ver. 23, the divine Son) ; this epitaph on 
unbeheving Judaism is fiUed out by the declaration 
that the Spirit of Christ will enable the disciples 
to show how the resurrection vindicated the char- 
acter and mission of Jesus, by proving that the 
world was wrong in refusing to believe in His 
divine authority, and in condemning Him to death. 
The same idea reappears in xv. 22 f. and ix. 41, 
where the sin of Judaism in refusing to accept Christ 
is equivalent to the unpardonable sin of the synoptic 
tradition. Even in the argumentative passage, 
viii. 34 f., the primary reference is also apologetic. 
Judaism, by its deliberate enmity to Christ, proves 
that it has no vital and permanent place in the 
household of God the Father. Such unbelief is sin, 
and any one who commits sin is the slave of sin ; slaves, 
unlike sons, do not belong essentially to the house- 
hold. In fact, this deadly unbeHef of Judaism 
identifies them with the household of Satan, the 
antagonist of God, and deprives them of any claim 
to be legitimate members of the elect household 



118 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [CH. 

in which Christ, as the Son of God, has authority. 
This latter thought widens out in the phrase, if the 
Son frees you from sin, you will be really free, 
i.e. vital members of the divine household, in full 
possession of sonship. The context of the phrase 
shows how this freedom is bestowed and received. 
// you remain within my word {i.e. within the element 
of my revelation of God, living in harmony with 
its environment), you are really disciples of mine, 
and you shall know the truth, and the truth shall mahe 
you free. Freedom from sin, therefore, means the 
acceptance of Christ's revelation as a revelation of 
sonship to God the Father, which is bound up with 
faith in Himself. The sin which is contemplated 
is the special sin of those who dehberately refuse 
to avail themselves of Christ in order to enjoy the 
life of God. In a word, this sin is sin against the 
light ; it can only be committed by those who are 
brought face to face with the final revelation of 
God in His Son Jesus Christ, and who prefer their 
traditional religion, or irreUgion. Finally, we may 
add, this is borne out by the parallel antithesis in 
XV. 14-15, where Christ contrasts slavery not with 
sonship but with friendship. You are my friends 
if you do what I command you. I no longer call you 
slaves, for a slave does not know what his master does ; 
hut I have called you friends, for I have made known 
to you all that I heard from my Father. Here the 
intimate confidence which is the mark of the Chris- 
tian experience and obedience is again mediated by 
Ihe revelation of Christ. 

It is the same conception of freedom, though in a 
less theological sense, that underlies the argument of 
Jesus about the payment of the temple dues (Matt, 
xvii. 24 f.), where He oontiasts the sons of God 



m.] THE GOD OP JESUS 119 

with aliens ; the former, i.e. Christians, are ' free,' 
the latter, i.e. the Jews, are in bondage. ' The word 
" liberty," ' as Dr. Carpenter observes, ' does not 
occur in the first three Gospels. But the idea is 
everywhere.' ^ Whether viewed as release from the 
tyranny of Satan and the evil spirits, or as deliver- 
ance from the minute, vexatious regulations of the 
Law, or as a disentanglement from hampering scruples 
and doubts about the goodness of God, the kingdom 
as preached by Jesus lifted a load from the conscience 
of many. There is nothing in the synoptic theology 
which quite corresponds to the antithesis of Law 
and Christian freedom in Paul ; even in the Fourth 
Gospel the freedom of Christ is rather from the 
material nature which thwarts the Spirit and faith. 
But the personality and mission of Jesus revealed 
a conception of God's nature which seemed like 
coming into the open air from a close room. He 
was a Father wiUing and eager for men's salvation, 
for their return to true sonship, for their release 
from the bondage and false freedom of sia. Jesus 
said, The Son of man came to seek and save the lost. 
Before Him, on this mission, the cross loomed, as 
the outcome of His work : behind Him lay the 
eternal love of the Father ^ for His own. The 
supreme obstacle to the coming of the Father's 
kingdom was the sin of the people ; and repentance 
was the condition of receiving it — 

' Only heart-sorrow 
And a clear life ensuing.' 

1 Dr. J. Bstlin Carpenter, The First Three Oospels, p. 374. 

2 This is specially prominent in the Fourth gospel, with its 
emphasis on the truth that it is the Father who prompts and inspires 
the work of the Son {v. 30 ; vii. 17-18, 28 ; viii. 28, 42 ; xii. 49 ; xiv. 
10, etc.). 



120 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

This 1 is the thought of Mark ii. 10 f., that Jesus, 
as Son of man, has authority on earth to forgive sins 
as well as to cast out evil spirits. The Satan, whose 
agents possess the bodies of men, is also the tempter, 
and messiah's work is to pronounce forgiveness as 
well as to cure diseases, both being expressions of 
the divine will for men. Consequently, the death 
of Jesus, or the Son of God, is connected primarily 
with the forgiveness of sins, as the supreme boon 
of the kingdom which overthrows the anti-divine 
reign of sin and death. But even Mark's gospel 
which lays special stress upon the authority of 
Jesus over evil spirits, does not state the meaning 
of His death in terms of a victory over the 
devil. Man's rebelHon and despair are to the fore- 
front, to be overcome by God's forgiveness. It 
is curious that the Fourth gospel, which omits all 
the instances of exorcism from the ministry, does 
connect the Passion with the devil (xiv. 30, xix. 11), ^ 
but this is due to the special pragmatism of that 
gospel ; Judas, e.g., is represented as possessed 
by Satan (xiii. 2) for his work of treachery. The 
conception of the crucifixion as the work of the 
evil spirits of this world, which Paul reproduces 
(1 Cor. ii. 8), is significantly absent from the theology 
of the synoptic gospels — a fresh proof, by the way, 
of their independent attitude towards the christology 

1 In some circles of contemporary Jewish piety, the messianic 
reign was expected only after a period of national repentance ; e.g. in 
Assumptio Mosis, i. 17-18, God is to be worshipped in the temple 
' until the day of repentance, in the visitation wherewith the Lord 
shall visit them in the consummation of the end of the days. ' After 
the fall of the temple, this belief continued to prevail in rabbinic 
theology. 

2 There are slight traces of this view already in Luke (e.g. xxii, 63). 



m.] THE GOD OP JESUS 121 

of Paulinism.i It is in Ignatius and the subsequent 
theology that the antithesis of the devil and God 
in the saving work of CJhrist becomes really prominent. 

(iv) Knally, it is this revelation of love as the 
character of God the Father which involves the 
tremendous severity of judgment upon those who 
are guilty of the worst sin in the world — the sin 
against love, deliberate rejection of love as the 
one power of life.^ It is to this conviction of Jesus 
about the Father that His passionate invectives 
against all who misrepresented God are due, as well 
as His warnings against those who deUberately 
trifled with the love of God, or with its costly 
expression in His own mission. The full orb of the 
divine Fatherhood, in the gospels, includes majesty 
and awe as well as loving-kindness. The modem 
sentimental view of the Fatherhood as celestial 
good-nature is wholly inadequate to the teaching 
of Jesus, either as regards the forgiveness or the 
punishment of sins. 

The impUcates of forgiveness are brought out in 
the tremendous saying (Matt. x. 28=Luke xii. 4-5) : 
Be not afraid of those who hill the body, hut are 
unable to kill the soul. Rather he afraid of him who 
is able to destroy both soul and body in Gehenna. Or, 
in the fuller Lucan version : / tell you, my friends, 

1 In the eachatological section of Matt. xxv. 31 f. the righteous 
inherit the kingdom prepared for them before the foundation of the 
world, whereas the selfish and worldly are consigned to the eternal 
fire which is prepared for the devil and his angels. 

2 On the Jewish scheme, the judgment formed an essential part of 
the doctrine of the Law. When the latter was replaced or restated 
as loye to God, implying love to one's neighbour, the conception 
of the divine judgment was correspondingly humanised and at the 
same time rendered more stringent. 



122 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

be not afraid of those who kill the body, and after that 
can do nothing further. I will show you whom to 
fear ; fear him who has the power after death of casting 
into Gehenna. Yea, I tell you, be afraid of him. So 
Jesus judges the sin of cowardice, which amounts 
to a denial of God through the love of self. As the 
context shows, such a traitorous preference of one's 
safety and comfort to the interests of the kingdom 
is visited by exclusion from the presence of God. 
Whosoever denies me before men, I will deny him 
before my Father in heaven. The selfish and cowardly 
are disowned by the Jesus of whom they have been 
ashamed on earth. Once again we are thus brought 
round to the close connection between God's action 
and the power of Jesus Christ ; the cause of God 
is bound up with the character and words of Christ, 
and the judgment upon unfaithful servants of the 
cause is represented indifferently as punishment at 
the hand of God, and repudiation by Jesus Christ. 
This is an outcome of the relation between God 
the Father and His kingdom. Tlie righteousness 
of the latter involves the forgiveness and the 
judgment of trespasses, and this is what the mission 
of Jesus, as God's representative, signifies. ' The 
kingdom of God is the centre of all spiritual faith, 
and the perception that that kingdom can never 
be reaHsed without a personal centre, a representa- 
tive of God with man and man with God, was the 
thought, reaching far beyond the narrow range of 
Pharisaic legalism, which was the last lesson of the 
vicissitudes of the Old Testament dispensation ' (En- 
cyclopcedia Biblica, 3063). The bearing of this truth 
upon the forgiveness of wrongdoing and rebellion may 
be illustrated from the setting as well as from the con- 



m.] THE GOD OF JESUS 123 

tents of the parables in Luke xv. The tax-gatherers 
and sinners were all flocking to Jesus, and this 
aroused the indignation of the Jewish authorities. 
They murmured, saying, This man welcomes sinners 
and eats with them ! The reply of Jesus is conveyed 
in three parables, only the third of which, at first 
sight, seems exactly apposite. The action of the 
woman who searches the house till she discovers the 
lost piece of money, and of the shepherd who will 
not rest till he has brought back the stray sheep to 
the fold, corresponds to a Jesus who seeks men, 
rather than to one who is criticised for allowing them 
to seek Him. Apparently, it is in the third parable 
of the profligate son, who voluntarily returns to 
find a welcome at home, that the full justification of 
the relations between Jesus and the local sinners 
is presented. Now, it is no doubt true that in the 
first two parables, as in the third, Jesus is primarily 
defending Himself. So far from being embarrassed 
or compromised by associating with the disreput- 
able sinners who were attracted to His company. He 
declares that this is the real happiness of His minis- 
try, a moral joy with which any one who understands 
the divine heart should sympathise. Rejoice with 
me, instead of criticising me. But inferentially He 
is defending the instinct which led these religious 
outcasts to associate with Him. Repentance, He 
argues, as a return to the love and law of God, is 
welcome to God just because it is the end for which 
God works and waits in human hfe. The point of 
the first two parables, where the initiative is repre- 
sented as wholly God's, is that there is joy in heaven 
over a single penitent sinner. And the same note 
of joy is struck in the third parable, where the father 



124 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [CH. 

does nothing to induce the son's return. Let us be 
merry, for this my son was dead and is come to life 
again, he was lost — like the coin and the sheep — and 
he is found. 

What Jesus therefore means to teach is the 
double appeal of God which motives human repent- 
ance. On the one hand, there are natures into 
which He requires, as it were, to break, in order to 
arouse them to their danger and loss. Upon the 
other hand, repentance may be stirred apparently 
without any direct interposition of God. The latter 
is the conception of the third parable ; but even 
there the unconscious desires for a truer life, under 
the impulse of reconciliation, are the effect of the 
Father's Spirit working seriously on the conscience. 
The stress of the third parable is not to be confined 
to the latter part, in which Jesus deliberately answers 
the churlish attitude of the scribes and Pharisees 
as represented by the elder brother. The first part, 
in which the profligate son dares to return home and 
finds that his penitence is not presumptuous, is a 
shield thrown over the people who had ventured 
near to Jesus to listen to His revelation of God's 
love and pity. God the Father is ready to forgive ; 
He takes sin seriously, and those who also take it 
seriously find He is a God who loves to pardon. 

In either case, the motive of repentance lies in the 
character of God, and this is the new element which 
makes the teaching and mission of Jesus a gospel. 
When Jesus began His ministry. His message ran : 
The kingdom of God is at hand, repent (Mark i. 15). 
Even the call to repentance is in itself a gospel. It 
implies that men can really turn to God ; they are 
not helpless automata in a world of unmoral deter- 



m.] THE GOD OF JESUS 125 

minism. But the gospel of repentance, as Jesus pro- 
claimed it, has still further claims to novelty. It was 
an advance upon any revelation of God even within 
Judaism. Sinners drew near to hem Mm. ' Surely,' 
says Mr. Montefiore,^ ' this is a new note, something 
which we have not yet heard in the Old Testament 
or of its heroes, something which we do not hear in 
the Talmud or of its heroes. . . . The virtues of 
repentance are gloriously praised in the rabbinical 
literature, but this direct search for, and appeal to, 
the sinner are new and moving notes of high import 
and signiiicance.' Only, it has to be recollected 
that these sinners did not merely venture close to 
Jesus to hsten to Him. They were welcomed by Him 
to God. He associated with them, the Pharisees 
complained. His gospel of repentance was not 
simply an announcement that God was a forgiving 
Father, but a practical expression of what that 
forgiveness meant, in its moral obhgations of loyalty 
and obedience. And this in turn involved still more. 
The death as well as the hfe of Jesus was necessary 
to the full disclosure of God's heart of mercy and 
welcome. The Father's dealings with sinful men 
issued in the sacrifice of Jesus as the supreme appeal 
to the conscience. Take a word hke this : // thy 
brother sins, rebuke him ; and if he repents, 
forgive him (Luke xvii. 3, cf. Matt, xviii. 15). The 
forgiveness which a Christian is to grant to his 
erring brother depends upon the penitence of the 
latter. But it is the duty of the Christian to induce 
that penitence by pointing out to the offender his 
wrongdoing, by bringing home to him a sense of 

1 Cf. The Synoptic Gospels, i. pp. Ixxviii, 86 ; ii. 574, 985 ; Sotne 
Elements of the Religious Teaching of Jesus, p. 67. 



126 THE THEOLQGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

his sin. He has a moral right not only to our forgive- 
ness but to our rebuke. Now, what corresponds 
to that in the relation of Grod to men ? Forgive us 
our sins as we forgive those who have sinned against 
us. In this prayer we are taught by Jesus to expect 
that God will treat us as we treat our offending 
brothers, and briug home to us our offences. Rebuke 
him ; that is the first part of our moral responsi- 
bihty to any one who has sinned. What is God's 
rebuke of us when we go wrong ? What is it that 
we have a right to expect from God as the supreme 
inducement to penitence ? The theology of the 
gospels answers that God the Father sent His Son 
to deal with this sinful state of men. It is the con- 
fession of the church, in the Fourth gospel, that 
Ood so loved the world that he gave his own Son to 
save men from destruction. The presuppositions of 
this beUef are presented already in the synoptic 
tradition ; God creates the very desire for forgive- 
ness by bringing home to men what sin means to 
Him and to themselves, as a sin against love ; and 
this forgiveness, with the judgment on which it 
rested, needed the sacrifice of Jesus to reach men 
fully. The details of this religious truth belong to 
the ohristology proper, but the fundamental basis 
underneath it is the inexorable love of the Father 
for men as interpreted through the Son, which the 
relation of the coming of the kingdom to the death 
of Jesus in the sjmoptio tradition brings out in one 
deep aspect. 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 127 



CHAPTER IV 

THE PERSON OF JESUS 

' We modem "theologians,' says Schweitzer/ ' are 
too proud of our historical method. . . . There was 
a danger of our thrusting ourselves between men and 
the gospels, and refusing to leave the individual 
man alone with the sayings of Jesus. There was a 
danger that we should offer them a Jesus who was 
too small, because we forced Him into conformity 
with our human standards and human psychology.' 
What the sayings of Jesus indicate about His own 
person is primarily its epoch-making, its absolute 
significance for men. We have already (p. 71) 
found this consciousness of His supreme position 
in the great beatitude of privilege : — 

Blessed are your eyes, for they see, 

And your ears, for they hear. 
I tell you, many prophets and just men ^ have longed 
to see what you see hut have not seen it. 

And to hear what you hear hut have not heard it. 

In Matthew this follows a quotation from Isaiah, 
which is also cited in the Fourth Gospel, and for 
much the same purpose (xii. 39 f.), to account for 
the obduracy of the public, who are no longer the 

1 The Quest of the Historical Jesus, p. 398. 

2 Luke substitutes kings toijust tnen. 



128 THE THEOLOGTY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

Galileans but the Jews, and also to explain, charac- 
teristically, that Isaiah the prophet had a vision 
of the pre-existent Christ or Logos. These things 
said Isaiah because he saw Ms glory, and he spohe of 
him. The latter conception had been already ex- 
pressed in the phrase, Your father Abraham exulted 
to see my day. The Fourth gospel thus deepens 
and at the same time reverses the synoptic saying. 
The prophets and just men of the Old Testament 
had not simply longed to see the messianic day of 
Jesus Christ ; they had seen it. The pragmatism 
of the Logos-idea enables the writer of the Fourth 
gospel to beheve that the saints and prophets of 
the Old Testament had more than anticipations of 
the end ; their visions and prophecies were due to 
the pre-existent Christ who even then revealed His 
glory to their gaze. The glory of Yahveh which 
Isaiah saw in his vision was really the glory of the 
pre-existent Logos, who became incarnate in Jesus 
Christ. 

The theology of the Fourth gospel thus elaborates 
the truth that the mission of Jesus had been antici- 
pated in the history of Israel. This is the idea of 
the saying in viii. 56 : Your father Abraham exulted 
to see my day. It is the conception of Paul (e.g. 
Gal. iii. 16 f.), who also traces a messianic significance 
in Gen. xvii. 17 ; and Philo, before him, had explained 
(De Mutat. Nomirmm, 29-30), commenting on the 
Genesis-passage, that Abraham's laughter was the 
joy of anticipating a happiness which was already 
within reach ; ' fear is grief before grief, and so 
hope is joy before joy.' But Philo characteristically 
avoids any messianic interpretation, such as the 
Fourth gospel presents. 



IV.] THE PERSON OF JESUS 129 

There is another passage in the book of Isaiah 
where some prophet of the exile, describing his 
divine mission to Israel, exclaims : 

The Spirit of the Lard is upon me, 
Becatise he has anointed me to preach good tidings 
to the poor, 
He has sent me to proclaim release for captives and 
recovery of sight for the blind, 
To set the bruised free. 

To proclaim the Lord's year of welcome and our 
God's day of vengeance. 

Luke (iv. 16 f.) relates how Jesus read this passage 
in the synagogue at Nazareth, as far as the Lord's 
year of welcome, when He stopped and began His 
address by telling the audience that this passage 
of prophecy was fulfilled there and then before 
them in His own mission to Israel. The omission 
of the last clause by Jesus is significant. As the 
later author of the Epistle to Diognetus put it 
(7) : Was He sent to rule, to inspire fear and 
terror ? By no means. God sent Him in gentle- 
ness and m.eekness, as a king sending his royal 
son. . . ; sent Him to save, to persuade, not to use 
force, for force has nothing to do with God. But 
it is the larger conception of Christ's person and 
mission as the fulfilment of older prophecy, and as 
the inauguration of a new reUgious era, which is 
most prominent — a conception which dominates 
the theology of the gospels, and which is derived 
from the consciousness of Jesus Himself. The 
supreme significance of His work for men rests upon 
the unique relation between Him and the Father, 

I 



130 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

and this is expressed in the various titles which were 
applied to Him, or which He applied to Himself. 
A brief survey of these will suffice to give an 
outline of His person and functions in the new 
order of things which His mission introduced, 
(a) The first is His divine Sonship. 
According to the gospels the consciousness which 
Jesus had of His Sonship was a consciousness of 
purpose, a consciousness of being sent to fulfil the 
ends of God on earth. It is the good pleasure of 
the Father to give men the kingdom (Luke xii. 32), 
and this boon is mediated through Jesus, who reveals 
to men the true nature of God their King and Father, 
and dies to inaugurate His reign on earth. The 
messianic consciousness was the specific form which 
this sense of vocation assumed for Jesus, but it 
was determined and shaped by his inner conscious- 
ness of God's character as His Father and the Father 
of men. This is of fundamental importance, and it 
requires to be held firmly in order to see the 
relevant data in their true proportions. 

The voice of divine approval at the baptism and 
at the transfiguration, which hails Jesus as the Son 
of God, denotes primarily His consecration to the 
will of the Father. But the consciousness of Sonship 
did not date from the baptism ; otherwise it would 
be no more than His consecration to the messianic 
task which now dawned upon Him. His con- 
ception of the latter cannot be imderstood apart 
from the deeper relationship of His nature to God 
which underlay it. The sahent feature of the baptism- 
stories, so far as the theology of the gospels is con- 
cerned, is that they denote the filial rather than the 
messianic consciousness of Jesus at the outset of 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 131 

His ministry.^ The functions of Christ in the 
kingdom are determined through His personal 
relation to the Father. He is messiah because He 
is God's Son ; He is not Grod's Son simply in virtue 
of His messianic calling. It was His very concep- 
tion of God as Father, as His Father in a unique 
sense, and as the Father of men, that determined 
His preaching of what the kingdom meant, and 
differentiated it from current conceptions, eschato- 
logical, rabbinic, and nationalist. This is the 
primary factor in the christology of the gospels, and 
unless it is assigned its full weight the ideas of the 
kingdom, of man, and of the world fail to occupy their 
proper focus. ' With the most careful and reverent 
apphcation of psychological methods, it is obvious 
that our Lord's consciousness of Sonship must have 
preceded in time the consciousness of messiahship, 
must indeed have formed a stepping-stone to the 
latter. ... In His soul the consciousness of what 
He was must have come first, and only when this 
had attained to the height of consciousness of Son- 
ship could the tremendous leap be taken to the 
consciousness of messiahship.' ^ What is on the 
whole central, therefore, is the sense of His special 
union with the Father. The messianic consciousness 
is a modification of this, and no estimate of the aim 
and function of Jesus is adequate unless it allows 
for the fact that He was messiah and more than 
messiah, that His consciousness of service to God 
and man lay behind the messianic vocation, instead 

1 Cf. especially the Lucan version (iii. 21-22), which hrings out the 
personal and spiritual experience underlying the new sense of vocation. 

2 Hamack, Sayings of Jesus, pp. 245-6. This aspect has been 
emphasised especially by Baldensperger, 



132 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

of springing out of it, and that the very critical 
attitude which He took up towards current messianic 
hopes, transcendental no less than poUtical, was due 
to this fundamental consciousness of Sonship to 
the Father. This is the fact against which the 
theories of rigorous eschatology beat in vain. 
When Schweitzer, for example, asks, ' What is there 
to prove that Jesus' distinctive faith in the Father- 
hood of God ever existed independently, and not 
as an alternative form of historically-conditioned 
messianic consciousness ? ' the only answer is, 
circumsjnce. Unless the critic insists upon view- 
ing the teaching of Jesus through a small, rigid glass 
of messianic eschatology, there are few things more 
luminous than the fact that the messianic vocation 
of Jesus has always to be understood as conditioned 
by His special consciousness of Sonship, and not 
vice-versa. It is the filial, not the messianic con- 
sciousness of Jesus which is the basis of Christianity. 
This is the conviction which determines the theology 
of the gospels, and it is also a conviction which 
goes back to the mind of Jesus Himself. 

The voice at the baptism. Thou art my Son, the 
Beloved, in whom I am well 'pleased, blends the two 
ideas of the Son of God in the second Psalm, and of 
the servant of Yahveh in Isaiah xlii. Whether or 
not the second Psalm was originally messianic, as 
Wellhausen claims, a messianic significance was 
attached to it before Jesus in some circles of Jewish 
piety.^ Though the use of Son of God to denote 
messiah does not seem to have been prevalent, it was 
not entirely unknown. But while it is applied to Jesus, 
in the gospels, it is never used by Him to denote His 

1 Of. G. H. Box, The Ezra- Apocalypse (1912), pp. Ivi-lvii. 



IV,] THE PERSON OP JESUS 133 

own person. God is His Father, and the title Son of 
God is an inference from that position of divine Son- 
ship, but He speaks of Himself as the Son, not as the 
Son of God} as e.g. in the saying : No one knows about 
that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, not 
even the Son, hut only the Father (Mark xiii. 32= 
Matt. xxiv. 36). This correlation of the Son and 
the Father is only strange when it is isolated from 
other allusions Uke — of Him shall the Son of man he 
ashamed when He cxrnies in the glory of His Father 
(Mark viii. 38). The conception seems to belong not 
only to the primitive gospel tradition, but to Jesus 
Himself. So difficult in fact did the acknowledg- 
ment of ignorance on the part of Jesus seem to some 
early Christians that Luke, who elsewhere reproduces 
sayings of Jesus which employ Son, Kar ^oxqv, in 
this connection {e.g. x. 22), omits the present saying, 
and puts a smoother version of it into the hps of 
the risen Christ (Acts i. 7 : It is not for you to know 
the times or seasons, which the Father has kept in his 
own power). 

Again, the consciousness of Sonship reappears 
in Matt. xi. 26 f. : Father, Lord of heaven and earth, I 
praise thee that while thou hast concealed these things 
from the wise and shrewd, thou hast revealed them to the 
children. Yea, Father, I hless thee that such was thy 
pleasure. Jesus is thankful that the true knowledge 
of God is not a monopoly confined to experts and 
exponents of the Jfewish Torah, but, on the contrary, 

1 The Fourth gospel twice (x. 36, xi. 4) puts the title on his lips. 
The allusion in Matt, xxvii. 43 (he said, I am God's Son) is probably 
an editorial reference to Wisdom ii. 18 (if the just man is the son 
of God, he. will hdp him and deliver him from the hand of his 
opponents). 



134 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

that it is open to the unsophisticated sons of men. 
It is from another point of view that Paul argues 
(Rom. ii. 17-20) : You hear the name of Jew, you rely 
on the Torah, you boast of God and know His will, you 
are certain that you are a light for those who are in 
darkness, a teacher of children {vijttmv) ! The apostle 
is contrasting the inconsistent Jew with the moral 
pagan, whereas Jesus is primarily contrasting the 
professional authorities of Judaism with the humble 
and despised v-fjinoi. Primarily, for in the parable of 
the royal banquet which the original guests despised, 
the ultimate guests are drawn from outside Judaism 
(Matt. xxii. 8-9). What Jesus emphasises here, 
however, is the accessibihty of the divine revela- 
tion which He was conscious of mediating for men. 
He resented, on behalf of these simple children of 
God, the elaborate developments of Pentateuchal 
law which burdened the conscience and perplexed 
the soul (Matt, xxiii. 4=Luke xi. 46). Only, He is 
not merely championing their rights, as if He admitted 
that the scribes and Pharisees really had the keys 
of the Father's knowledge and kingdom. He 
claims for Himself the supreme authority in the 
sphere of divine revelation. The hope of these 
defrauded and despised vi^Triot does not lie in any 
reform upon the part of the authorities ; it lies in 
His own commission from the Father to reveal the 
true and open way of hfe (see above, pp. 90 f .). Con- 
sequently, in the consciousness of this unique rela- 
tion to the Father, He adds : Come to me, all who 
are toiling and burdened, and I (xdyw, emphatic) will 
refresh you. Take on you (this is the meaning and 
purpose of come) my yoke {i.e. the method of reUgion 
which I impose, in contrast to the Pharisaic yoke 



IV.] THE PERSON OF JESUS 135 

of the Torah) and learn from me, for I am meek and 
lowly in heart — and you will find your souls refreshed. 
For my yoke is not hard to bear, my burden is not heavy. 
What enabled Him to confront the reUgious needs 
of men with serene confidence in His message and 
mission, was the conviction that He possessed a 
knowledge of God's character which was adequate 
to the situation. He knew the Father, as none else 
did, and He had the power of conveying this know- 
ledge to others through His own personaUty.^ It 
was as the Son, in far more than a merely messianic 
sense, that He called men to learn the open secret 
of His reUgion. 

The supernatural position of Jesus as the Son of 
God in Mark's narrative, is explained by the birth- 
stories of Matthew and Luke as involving an absence of 
human paternity. To Mark Jesus is practically Son of 
God as messiah, who is invested with divine authority 
(cf. iii. 11), though it is improbable that the evangehst 
regarded Him as owing His divine Sonship to the 
reception of the messianic spirit at baptism. Whether 
the words Son of God in the title of the gospel are 
authentic or not, they represent correctly the stand- 
point of the evangehst. Jesus is a heavenly being, 
sent by God as His only and well-beloved Son, to 
accomplish the purpose of the kingdom ; ^ and this 

1 The Herodoteau saying (ix. 16. 8) ix^^"''"'! ^^ iSivri ia-H twv iv 
dvOpdyiroLin aijTuj, TroXXct (ppof^ovra fnjdevh Kpar^eLV affords an 
interesting contrast. Matthew puts the call of Jesus to men im- 
mediately after the thanksgiving for the Father's revelation to him- 
self; it is the latter which makes the former possible. Christ's 
knowledge of God was a power in itself. 

2 On the authenticity of the parable in xii. 1 f. of. Professor 
Burkitt's paper in Transactions of Third International Congress for 
the History of Religions, ii. pp. 321 f. 



136 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

is what lends point to the argument, e.g. of xii. 35 f . 
(cf. xiv. 61 f.),^ as well as to the remark wrung from 
the pagan officer at the cross, Truly this man was a 
son of Ood. The evangehst means to suggest by the 
latter testimony the deeper sense of the title. What 
imderUes the birth-stories, again, is the conception 
that the messianic consciousness of sonship is based 
upon a special consciousness of Sonship to the 
Father. This is the only adequate explanation of 
the deeper sayings of Jesus in the gospels which refer 
to His divine Sonship, and the development which 
the birth-stories chronicle is organic to it. They 
are naive attempts to express the Christian sense of 
what was imphed in the unique filial consciousness of 
Jesus, and even in grounding the latter upon a basis 
which Jesus Himself never mentioned, they both 
witness to the fact (or at any rate to the conviction) 
that His Sonship was more than messianic. Thus 
while Luke has the same Isaianic passage as Matthew 
in his mind (i. 31), he prefers to present the virgin- 
birth in terms more intelligible to Christians who 
were famiUar with the mythology of the Greek and 
Roman world ; and while it is Jesus the messiah 
whose birth he chronicles, he nevertheless chronicles 
it in a way that is not Jewish. The word to Mary- 
is : The Holy Spirit mil come upon thee, and the power 
of the Most High will overshadow thee : therefore shall 
the holy thing which is to be born be called Ood's 
Son. At this stage ^ the divine Sonship of Jesus is 
understood as an essential and imique relation 

1 Emphasised in Luke xxii. 70-71. 

2 Later on, the doctrine of the virgin-birth was used in the interests 
of the anti-docetic propaganda ; but there is no trace of this motive 
in Matthew or in Luke. 



IV.] THE PERSON OF JESUS 137 

between Him and God which is His from birth. The 
Sonship is still connected vitally with the Holy 
Spirit,- though it is associated with the birth of Jesus, 
not with the baptismal experience. The tradition 
of the virgin-birth therefore embodies an apostolic 
interpretation of the divine Sonship of Jesus, which 
impUes what a modem would call a metaphysical 
relation between the Father and the Son. It is not 
a relationship which Jesus ever puts forward in 
His teaching. Even the gospels which open with 
this prologue to His mission never represent Him 
as adducing it on His own behalf ; they do not, 
for example, refer His sinlessness to it. The value 
of it, theologically, is that it confirms the concep- 
tion of the divine Sonship which is presented by Q 
and even by Mark. It is a developed stage of the 
positive tradition, but instead of denoting the 
transmutation of an originally messianic Sonship 
into one of nature, it represents a more realistic 
statement of the latter. It is not inaccurate to 
say that ' nowhere,' even in the synoptic tradition, 
' do we find that Jesus called Himself the Son of God 
in such a sense as to suggest a merely rehgious and 
ethical relation to God — a relation which others 
also actually possessed, or which they were capable 
of attaining or destined to acquire.' ^ 

The theological significance of the birth-stories 
in Matthew and Luke is conveyed otherwise by the 
Fourth gospel. Here, the divine Sonship of Jesus, 
as the ordy-hegotten Son, is not associated with His 
birth ; His incarnation as the Logos is only a form 
of that eternal Sonship which He enjoyed with the 
Father as an essential relation in His nature. The 
1 Dalman, Words of Jesus, p. 287. 



138 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [cH. 

Son (of God) is not simply one sent by God into 
the world on a messianic mission, but the only-begotten 
(o /Lcovoycvijs), who is specifically related to the 
Father as a divine being (i. 18), akin to God in 
nature and at the same time dependent upon Him. 
Among the sons of God (i. 12, cf. x. 35) He is the 
only-hegotten (i. 14, 18 ; iii. 16, 18). The author uses 
Son of God as a higher equivalent for the Christ 
(xx. 31) ; the phrase is applied chiefly to Jesus, 
whereas He applies the term Son specially to Him- 
self — a conception which expands the thought of 
Matt. xi. 24=Luke x. 22. The Johannine use of 
the term, therefore, differs in two essential aspects 
from the Pauline. Christ is the Son of God with 
power, not by His resurrection, but by His incarna- 
tion — an advance in the latter idea beyond the 
synoptic view. Again, the pre-existence of Christ 
ia the Fourth gospel is more definite and at the 
same time more inclusive than in Paulinism. It is 
messianic, but more than messianic ; the prologue 
connects it with the Logos, and, as if to prevent this 
being confused with any ideal or abstract pre-exist- 
ence, the pre-incamate relation of Christ and God 
is described as that of Son and Father. After the 
resurrection the Son regains the position which 
He formerly held {e.g. xvii. 5). 

In the conception of Son of man ^ the idea of 
pre-existence was already implied, but it is not 
present explicitly in the synoptic theology ; here 
as elsewhere (see above, pp. 26-27) the idea remains in 
the background. What the Fourth gospel does is 
to develop a thought organic to the synoptic christ- 

1 Cf. Fiebig's Der Menschensohn, pp. 121 f., »nd Titiua, Jesu Lehre 
vom Reiche Gottes, pp. 118 f. 



IV.] THE PERSON OE JESUS 139 

ology, and to develop it specially in connection with 
the characteristic doctriae of the Logos and the 
divine Sonship. Thus — to take a single illustra- 
tion — ^it is the supreme function of the Logos- 
Christ to disclose the real Name or nature of God, 
which He Himself knows as the pre-existent Son ; 
but this disclosure is not the work of a mere mysta- 
gogue. The very context in which the technical 
term (e^ryyTjo-aro) ^ occurs, indicates the atmosphere 
of the writer's thought. This disclosure is the 
spontaneous expression of God's love for the world ; 
it is the Son who brings home to men the passion 
of God's heart for their sonship, not simply by acting 
for God, but by mediating the real Ufe of God in 
His own person. The entire process of the incarna- 
tion, life, death, and resurrection of Jesus lies within 
the fatherly love of God for men, and the latter is re- 
vealed directly in and through the mission of the Son. 
(6) A similar transcendence of the messianic role 
is furnished by the place of the Servant of Yahveh 
conception in the consciousness of Jesus. Li the 
baptismal voice (see above, p. 132) as elsewhere, the 
messianic appUoation of Isaiah xUi. f . is taken up into 
the filial consciousness of Jesus as consecrated for the 
work of the Father among men. There was a partial 
anticipation of this synthesis in Ps. Solomon xvii., 
and it ought not to be forgotten that even the original 
Servant-prophecy was not quite devoid of messianic 
traits. The older messianic conception was indeed 
transcended, but it left some of its characteristic 
elements in the higher union, and the Servant retains, 
not incongruously, one or two subordinate f eatm^es of 
messiah as a royal conqueror. ' It was natural and 
1 John i. 18. 



140 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

necessary that the die, from which the coins with 
the royal stamp had proceeded, should be broken, 
the royalistic form of the messianic conception having 
become antiquated with the hopeless downfall of 
the kingdom of Judah ; but equally so that frag- 
ments of the die should be gathered up and fused 
with other elements into a new whole.' ^ This 
formed a basis for that synthesis of the royal divine 
Son of the second Psalm and the Isaianic Servant 
of God which occurs in the baptism-voice. But the 
most distinctive featiire in the use which Jesus 
made of the Servant-prophecy is His extension 
of the messianic significance to the prophecy of the 
suffering Servant in Isaiah hii. The point of the 
latter passage is that the extraordinary change in the 
position and prospects of the Servant proves a revela- 
tion to the nations. But a revelation of what ? Of 
the fact that the Servant's suffering was due to their 
sins, not His own, and that it led to their heaUng. 
The remorseful chorus of the nations cry : — 

He was despised, and we held him of no account. 
But he hore our sicknesses, 

And carried our sorrows, 
While we deemed him stricken. 

Smitten by God and afflicted. 
Yea, for our transgressions was he pierced, 

For our iniquities was he bruised : 
The chastisement that brought us peace fell on him. 

And with his bruises we have been healed. 
We Imd all strayed like sheep, 

We had turned every oiie to his own way ; 
And Tahveh laid on him 

The penalty of us all. 

1 Cheyne, The Prophecies of Isaiah, ii. pp. 216-17. 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 141 

Jewish theology had akeady felt its way to the 
truth that the sufferings and death of the righteous 
avail to atone for others. It was partly deduced 
from this great Servant-passage in the fifty-third 
chapter of Isaiah, which was occasionally inter- 
preted of Moses, on the strength of Exodus xxxii. 32. 
It was also connected with the martyrs, particu- 
larly after the Maccabean struggle. With Jesus 
it became a vehicle of the truth that as God's Son, 
in the special aspect of the messianic vocation, He 
must suffer for men according to the will of God. 
This role of the Christ had been partially anticipated 
by the Jewish faith which voiced itself in the passages 
upon the Servant of Yahveh. Whether the Servant 
was originally an individual or Israel personified, 
matters very Uttle for our present purpose. It was 
as an individual that he was conceived by Jesus 
and the early church, and it is in this light that the 
sayings of the gospels are to be interpreted. Thus we 
read : — They brought Mm many who were possessed by 
demons, and he expelled the spirits with a word and. 
healed all who were sick. Here the evangelist sees 
in the ministry of heaUng a fulfilment of the Servant 
of Yahveh's career : Himself he took {i.e. took 
away) our sicknesses and bore our diseases (Matt. viii. 
16-17). Or, again, as we read in the Fomth gospel. 
Behold the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of 
the world. The Greek term (aipwv) differs from that 
used by Matthew to translate Isaiah Uii. 4, but it 
means practically the same idea. Once again 
(in Matt. xii. 16 f.) the Servant-passages are 
specifically appKed to Jesus ; in fact, the identifi- 
cation of our Lord with Yahveh's Servant is one of 
the most notable features in the primitive apostolic 
preaching, especially as recorded in the book of 



142 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

Acts. It was to the fifty- third chapter of Isaiah that 
the early chtirch, prior to Paul, had gone back for a 
proof of its belief that Christ died for our sins. This 
was the scripture, and the significance attached to it 
is profoundly suggestive. But a critical study of the 
gospels proves that it was more than the reflection 
of the early church upon this scripture. There is 
evidence to show that it was present to the mind 
of Jesus Himself, and that He saw in the character 
and mission of the suffering Servant anticipations 
of His own career. 

According to the Ebed - Yahveh passages, the 
ideal community or Servant undergoes a purifying 
disciphne of suffering which fits it to carry out 
Yahveh's redeeming purpose for the world. The 
Servant undergoes humiliation and agony, but his 
mission is glorious and his sufferings are vicarious. 

Now (i) it is when this element of vicarious suffer- 
ing, in the Servant - conception, is adequately 
estimated, that the basis e.g. for the drastic eschato- 
logical view begins to give way. Jesus, we are some- 
times told [e.g. by J. Weiss, Die Predigt Jesu vom 
Beiche Oottes, pp. 238 f.), began by attempting to 
create penitence throughout the nation, and thereby 
to prepare the people for the coming of the kingdom. 
But ' convinced that the kingdom could not come, 
on account of the inadequate penitence which His 
preaching had evoked, He finally determined that 
His own death must be the ransom-price.' The 
consciousness of this need, however, in the light of 
the Servant-prophecy, was not an after-thought. It 
must have been present to His mind more or less 
definitely from the first. 

(ii) Again, it throws Ught on the truth that the death 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 143 

of Jesus was a free gift to men, and that He viewed it 
as a voluntary sacrifice for their sake. This con- 
ception underlies the language of the acted parable 
which we caU the Lord's Supper, when He took 
the bread and the cup, representing His personality, 
as dedicated to death, and gave them to the disciples. 
The Son of man, he had just said, goes away as it 
has been written of him — meaning that the Son of 
man was to fulfil the mysterious prophecy of the 
Servant of Yahveh who had to disappear from the 
earth by a death of violence, only to return in 
triumph for the accompfishment of God's saving 
purpose. Jesus freely yields Himself to this divine 
plan for the world. The Foiirth gospel, in its own 
way, reproduces this conception (x. 17 f.), but it is 
present in germ within the earfier synoptic tradi- 
tion, where the Christian is called upon to be ready, 
if need be, to lose his fife for the cause, while Jesus 
gives His. It is the prerogative of the Lord to give 
His hfe for the sake of His people. This thought 
is presented in a twofold antithesis, in contrast to 
the selfish craving for life which might tempt Him 
to spare Himself the cost, and in contrast to the idea 
that His death was forced upon Him involuntarily. 
The former is synoptic, the latter Johannine, but 
the former also enters into the Johannine conception, 
(iii) Furthermore, in the remonstrance of John 
the Baptist and the reply of Jesus, as recorded by 
Matthew (iii. 15), while we can hear the difficulty 
felt by the early church about the baptism of the 
sinless Son of God, the very answer is significant, as 
compared with that of the gospel of the Hebrews. 
When Jesus repHes, it behoves us to fulfil all righteous- 
ness. He is identifying Himself with the people for 



144 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

whom He came to live and labour. It is most pro- 
bable that the underlying idea of the phrase is the 
consecration of the righteous Son and Servant to 
God's interests among a faulty and perverse genera- 
tion. 

(iv) Once more, it is important to recollect that 
the horizon of the Servant-belief is the world, not 
Israel. The Servant stands plainly between 
Yahveh and the nations, with a commission from 
the former to the latter. He shall announce justice 
{i.e. true reUgion) to the nations . . . and in His name 
the nations shall trust. This is definitely apphed to 
Jesus by Matthew (xii. 18, 21), just as Luke (ii. 32) 
sees in Him the fulfilment of the Servant-promise, 
/ will set thee for a light to the nations. The universal 
range which is implicit in the message of Jesus goes 
back to this element in the conception of the Servant. 
But it may be illustrated from another side. It is 
prosaic and unreal to suppose that when a word 
of the Old Testament leapt to the mind and hps of 
Jesus, He was conscious of its context. But some 
passages were plainly wells of revelation for Him, 
and since the narrative of the baptism proves that 
the second Psalm was one of these at this period, it 
is more than possible that He had brooded over not 
only the divine assurance— TAom art my Son, this 
day have I begotten thee — but the divine promise, 
which immediately follows — Ask of me, and I will 
give thee the heathen for thine inheritance, and the 
uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession. This, 
at any rate, formed the ground of one of the subse- 
quent temptations, and it throws some light upon 
the range of His consciousness and vocation. 

(v) Finally and fundamentally, it is in the light 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 146 

of the Servant-prophecy in Isaiah liii. that we ought to 
read the ransom-saying of Matt. xx. 28=Mark x. 45 : 
The Son of man has not come to he ministered to hut 
to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many. 
The first part of the saying is the ohmax of the 
preceding argument that greatness in the kingdom 
of God is measured by service, and that this prin- 
ciple applies to the Son of man who inaugurates 
the kingdom, as well as to its members. The second 
part implies that the messianic vocation for Jesus 
involved not only a career of humble service but a 
service which culminated in death — and in death, 
not as a catastrophe, but as a soiirce of eternal 
profit to many. The problem is to ascertain why 
and how the death of Jesus should produce this efiect. 
In Isaiah Mii., as we have seen, the extraordinary 
impression and influence of the Servant's death ^ 
upon the outside world is left unexplained, and at first 
sight it seems as if this were also the case in the 
synoptic passage. The term ransom {X-vrpov) is 
never used elsewhere by Jesus. He does not add any 
explanation of it here, and it has been attributed 
naturally by some critics to the influence of PauUn- 
ism. But the term is not Pauhne, and the authen- 
ticity as well as the present position of the saying can 
be estabhshed if the context is broadly interpreted.^ 

^ In Matthew's version of the voice at the Transfiguration (xvii. 5) 
the words in whom I am weU pleased, or on whom I have set my seal 
of approval, or on whom I home fixed my choice, are repeated from the 
baptism-story. They imply the Servant-prophecy (cf. Mark i. 11 = 
Isa. xlii. 1-4 ; Matt. xii. 18-21). 

2 See on this point Professor E. F. Scott's The Kingdom and the 
Messiah, pp. 230 f. ; Professor Denney's Death of Christ, pp. 34 f. ; 
Titins, Jesu Lehre vom Reiche Gottes, pp. 147 f. ; and Earth's Haupt- 
proUeme des Lebens Jesu 3 (1907), pp. 199 f . 

K 



46 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

in appreciation of the Marcan logion involves pro- 
)ably the admission of some element of truth in the 
dew which Dr. E. A. Abbott has stated,^ viz. that the 
jrnoptic references to Jesus being delivered up mean 
lot betrayal but the deeper dehvering up of His life 
o be an intercessory sacrifice for sinners, as in the 
servant-prophecy of Isaiah hii. 12. There is reason to 
)eUeve that Jesus Himself thus predicted His death as 
I. vicarious sacrifice. He was to suffer many things 
ind be rejected, hke the Servant ; Hke him also, He was 
lO be delivered up (LXX of Isa. hii. 12) for the trans- 
gressors. It is not necessary to comphcate the argu- 
nent by supposing that the last three words were 
)art of the original prediction of Jesus, but the data 
lubstantiaUy support Dr. Abbott's general thesis, 
for our present purpose, this is important on account 
)f the light which it throws upon the bearings of an 
ipparently isolated word hke that about the ransom. 
We obtain a valuable hint as to the context of such 
t saying, and this view of the statement about being 
lelivered up corroborates the impression that the 
bought of His death as a vicarious sacrifice was not 
oreign to the mind of Jesus, and that the back- 
ground of the thought was really furnished by the 
Servant-prophecy in relation to His own deeper view 
)f the messianic vocation. We may note in passing 
ihat another indirect trace of this circle of ideas is 
umished by the earher saying, what shall a man give 
IS an equivalent for his life? {avrdWayna tijs ^pvxv^ 
iiItoC, Matt. xvi. 26=Mark viii. 37). Here selfish 
ndulgence is pronounced the ruin of hfe, while real 
ife is to identify oneself at all costs with the interests 
)f Jesus and the gospel. Besides, the metaphor of 
1 lu Paradosis (1904), pp. 3 f. ; cf. The Son of Man (1910), 3264 f. 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 147 

ransoming is used, as abeady in Ps. xlix. 8 f.,i for 
regaining or securing life when it is in imminent 
danger of death. 

The, kingdom which as Son of man He thus came 
to estabhsh meant the forgiveness of sins and eternal 
life ; both of these boons had to be realised in face 
of the evil order of the present age which held men 
down imder the forces of the Evil One. When Jesus 
therefore speaks of giving His hfe as a ransom for 
the common good of men, He is thinking of some- 
thing deeper than securing by His death the immunity 
of the disciples from danger,^ or dedicating His Mfe 
to an expenditure of pain and sympathy with man- 
kind which meant a continuous costly effort,* or doing 
for men what any member of the human race could do, 
i.e. sacrificing Himself for their sakes.* The phrase 
certainly expresses what Jesus meant when He 
spoke of saving the lost, but this involved for Him 
a unique function as the Son of man who by His 
death was to complete the divine purpose which 
He had come to fulfil. Set in this hght, the 
saying seems Unked to the preceding words, 
instead of forming, as some contend, an incongruous 
pendant. He had just told James and John that 

1 The thought of Joh xxxiii. 24 is even closer, in some ways, as 
it suggests the connection of sin and death (cf. Enoch xcviii, 10, 
4 Mace. xvii. 21 f.). 

2 Sohmiedel in Encyclopmdia Biblica, 1887. 

3 Abbott {ibid., 3271) : ' The effort might in some sense be called 
a "ransom." Tt was already, so to speak, an expenditure, drop by 
drop, of His life-blood, to be summed up in the pouring forth of His 
soul on the Cross.' 

* This is only possible if, with 0. Holtzmann \Li/e of Jesus, 
p. 167 f.). Son of man is taken here, and in Luke xix. 10, in a 
generic sense. 



148 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [CH. 

it was not for Him ^ to assign (SoCvai) positions 
of privilege in the kingdom, and had followed 
up this by adding that any one who wished to 
be chief among them was to be the servant of all. 
He now declares that the Son of man, who heads 
the kingdom of God, occupies that position by His 
service of men, and that He can and will give {Sovnat} 
His life to secure theirs. 

Prom this it is a straight line to the confession 
of the Te Deum, ' When thou hadst overcome the 
sharpness of death, thou didst open the kingdom 
of heaven to all behevers.' But historically rather 
than theologically, the saying is illuminated by the 
previous prophecies of the Old Testament. ' To 
understand Him it is sufficient to remember that 
the redemptive value of the sufferings of the righteous, 
an atonement made for sin not through material 
sacrifice but in the obedience and spiritual agony 
of an ethical agent, was one idea familiar to prophecy. 
It is enough to be sure, as we can be sure, that He 
whose grasp of the truths of the Old Testament 
excelled that of His predecessors, did not apply 
this particular truth to Himself in a vaguer way, and 
understand by it less, than they did. His people's 
pardon. His people's purity— foretold as the work 
of a righteous hfe, a perfect service of God, a wiUing 

1 Luke, who omits the ransom-saying as well as the logion of 
Matt. xvi. 26= Mark viii. 37— the former, because he omits the whole 
passage about the son of Zebedee which led up to it — reproduces the 
thought of humble service in connection with the Last Supper (xxii. 
24 f. ), and inserts a saying (xxii. 29 f. ) which makes Jesus promise 
what he declines to promise to the sons of Zebedee. Luke's concep- 
tion of redemption is narrower than that of Jesus (cf. i. 68, ii. 38, 
xxi. 28, xxiv. 21) ; he also avoids referring to the tf/ux^/) of Jesus 
(of. the omissions here and in xxii. 40, with the significant change 
in Acts ii. 27, 31). 



IV.] THE PERSON OF JESUS 149 

self-sacrifice — He now accepted as His own work, 
and for it He offered His life and submitted to death. 
The ideas, as we have seen, were not new ; the new 
thing was that He felt they were to be fulfilled in 
His person and through His passion.' ^ 

It is thus plain that the suffering Servant concep- 
tion was organic to the consciousness of Jesus, and 
that He often regarded His vocation in the fight of 
this suprenaely suggestive prophecy. It is the bap- 
tism voice which marks the earUest token of this 
attitude upon the part of Jesus. It may indeed 
appear to some that there is nothing particularly 
notable, and perhaps something rather artificial, 
in the mere combination of two different sayings 
from the Old Testament. But the facts are other- 
wise. The perception of a fink between such 
sayings, the insight which penetrates to the un- 
suspected unity behind both, may be truly epoch- 
making. If it was ' a brilliant flash of the highest 
reUgious genius ' ^ to combine Deuteronomy vi. 4-5 
with Leviticus xix. 18, uniting the love of God with 
the love of man, surely it was not less when Jesus 
recognised in His own character and career the union 
of the Isaianic Servant of Yahveh ^'and the messianic 
royal son of the second Psahn ? Such combinations 
are not the cool and clever result of a scribe poring 
over the Old Testament texts. They witness to a 
depth of refigious insight and experience which is 
creative. They interpret not texts but a Life. 

1 Dr. G. A. Smith, Jemsalan, ii. 547-8. 

2 Montefiore in the HiVbert Jownal, vol. iii. p. 658. 

3 See above, p. 132. But this does not imply that the synoptic San 
is a mistranslation of the Isaianio Servant, owing to the ambiguity of 
iraXs (Abbott, From Letter to Spimt, 805 ff.). 



150 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

(c) The allied conception of the Son of man also 
serves to bring out the significance of the Servant- 
prophecy for Jesus. It is not a title to be isolated. 
' The " Father in heaven," the " kingdom of God," 
and " the Son of man," form a trinity of ideas which 
haA^e developed organically to the rehgious con- 
sciousness of Jesus, and which are reciprocally to 
be defined and understood ; in them His preaching 
has reached its chmax.' ^ What the Son of man 
specially emphasises is the divine mission of Jesus 
in connection with the messianic kingdom. He seems 
to have preferred this title to that of ' messiah ' ; ^ 
it is used comparatively freely, and apparently 
without any indication that it was unintelhgible. 
At the same time, it is an open question whether it 
was used invariably with a messianic connotation, 
and how far Jesus attached a special nuance, to it. 

The first open admission of His messianic voca- 
tion (Matt. xvi. 13, 21 f.=Mark viii. 27, 31 f., cf. Luke 
ix. 18, 22 f.), is connected with this term. 

Wlio do men say that I, Who do men say that I 
the Son of man, am ? am ? 

Here Matthew inserts /,' taking Son of man as 
an equivalent for the first personal pronoun on the 
lips of Jesus, and this may represent the origin of 
the title in some of the synoptic passages.* Matthew 
also appears to correlate the Son of man and the Son 
of Qod (ver. 16) in this passage, as terms for the 

1 Holtzmaim, Das messianische Bevmsstsein Jesu, p. 54. 

2 Or to ' Son of David. ' ' Son of man ' had this advantage, that it 
was free or capable of being freed from particularistic limitations. 

3 By some early authorities ixe is omitted, but the omission, even 
if better supported, would hardly alter the sense. 

* E.g. in Luke vi. 22. 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 151 

human and divine aspects of the mysterious person- 
ality of Jesus, but the important feature of the saying 
is the explicit subsequent avowal of the messianic 
calling in terms of the Son of man conception. 

This raises the further question, whether the prior 
references to Son of man are misplaced, or equivalent 
to a non-messianic title. 

In the story of Jesus curing the paralytic 
man (Mark ii. 1 f.=Matt. ix. l-8=Luke v. 18 f.), 
the closing words of Matthew about the crowd 
glorifying God who had given such power to men, 
have naturally suggested that originally Jesus said, 
man (not, the Son of mun) has power on earth to 
forgive sins. This, it is argued, was the sense of the 
Aramaic. Jesus meant no more than to assert that 
if to err was human, to forgive was human as well 
as divine ; He claims that man, in virtue of his true 
humanity, can forgive sins. This is plausible, but 
not, I think, adequate to the context of the sajring. 
The point of the story is blunted if the chmax is 
reached in a statement that man, no less than 
God, has the right to forgive sins. The cure which 
follows and clinches the declaration of forgiveness 
is the outcome of the divine or quasi-messianic 
functions claimed by Jesus as bar-nascha, and, unless 
the story is arbitrarily dissected, His right to forgive 
and His power of deaUng with disease are to be taken 
as co-ordinate elements of His personality. The 
issue between Jesus, and His critics is not the pre- 
rogatives of man, but the specific power of God which 
operates through Jesus as Son of man} The f orgive- 

I So e.g. DalmaD, Fiebig, Loisy, Denney, and Montefiore ; also 
Wrede {Zeitschrift filr die neutestamentliche Wissenscha/t (1804), 
p. 355 f. ), though he had previously taken the opposite view. 



152 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

ness of sins was not directly assigned to messiah by 
the Jews, so far as our extant sources permit us to 
judge, but it was one of the privileges of the new era,^ 
and as the representative of God, who inaugurates 
as well as announces that new era, Jesus assumes 
the right of conferring the boon. 

It is more plausible to suppose that in the next 
sajdng. The Son of man is Lord even of the sabbath 
(Mark ii. 28=Matt. xii. 8, Luke vi. 6), we have a mes- 
sianic expansion of what originally was a claim for 
human rights as opposed to the Sabbatarian rigour 
of the Jewish law. But even this is not a necessary 
inference. Matthew leads up to the saying by a 
passage of his own (verses 5-7), from Q or elsewhere, 
which ranks Jesus higher than the temple. Mark 
reaches the same end by saying, the sabbath was 
made for man, not man for the sabbath. Luke argues 
directly from the precedent of David to the authority 
of the Son of man. But if the Son of man is accepted 
as authentic in the earher passage, there is a proba- 
bility that it was original here. Besides, the con- 
nection is good. Jesus vindicates the right of the 
disciples because they are ' His ' disciples ; as Son of 
man He claims to set aside the later elaboration of the 
sabbath-law which encroached upon human needs. 
What David could do for his followers. He, the Son 
of man, can do for His disciples. Had the original 
Aramaic simply meant ' man ' in both sentences of 
Mark, it would have been translated as such uniformly, 
and, besides, Jesus would not have claimed that man 
was master of the sabbath which God had instituted.^ 

1 Of. Jer. xxxi. 34, Ezek. xxxvii. 23, Isa. xxxiii. 24 (and the 
inhabitant shall not say, I am sick : the people that dwell therein 
shall be forgiven their iniquity). 

2 Of. Loisy, Les ivangUes Synoptiques, i. 512. 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 153 

From the historical point of view, it therefore 
remains an open question whether these two refer- 
ences, prior to Csesarea PhiHppi, are not antedated. 
From the theological point of view, the decision is 
of subordinate importance, once it is admitted that 
Son of man in both passages is neither generic nor 
a colourless self-designation. 

The messianic connotation of the title, on the lips 
of Jesus, includes humanity and apocalyptic triumph 
in the future. It expressed, as one critic has said, 
' the messianic consciousness of Jesus in three dis- 
tinct directions. It announced a messiah appointed 
to suffer, richly endowed with human sympathy, and 
destined to pass through suffering to glory.' '^ All 
theories that Jesus used it to denote some one other 
than Himself — some future agent of God — or that 
it merely expressed His consciousness of personal 
humanity, may be set aside without hesitation. 
There is an unequivocal class of authentic logia where 
it cannot possibly represent ' man,' e.g., the Son of 
man has nowhere to lay his head (Matt. viii. 20= 
Luke ix. 58), the Son of man came eating and drinking 
(Matt. xi. 19=Luke vii. 34), and Judas, betray the 
Son of man with a kiss ! (Luke xxii. 48). Both of 
the former probably belong to Q, and in the second 
the term ' man ' lies near {and they say, here is a man 
fond of eating and drinking). This suggests a doubt 
about the assertion that Aramaic had no means of 
distinguishing between ' man ' and ' Son of man,' — 
a doubt which is confirmed by the fact that when 
Daniel was read and translated in the synagogues, 
it must have been possible to feel that the Greek 
term ' like a son of man ' represented something 
' Bruce, The Kingdom of Ood, pp. 176 f. 



134 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

different from what was meant by the ordinary 
Aramaic bar-nascha. By the tone of His voice, by 
the very context in which the term was used, Jesus 
could have conveyed to His hearers the special 
significance which the relevant Greek sayings of 
the tradition imply. The latter do not allow us 
to interpret the Son of man invariably as merely a 
generic term for man, or an equivalent for ' some- 
body,' or for 'I.' 'I doubt,' says WeUhausen, 
' whether the term " Son of man " first acquired its 
messianic significance in Greek, although it was 
easier in Greek than in Aramaic to distinguish it 
from " man." . . . The Jerusalemite Christians 
would already distinguish between the specific and the 
generic " barnascha." ' ^ If they could, Jesus could. 
The messianic connotation of ' bar-nascha,' which is 
denied on linguistic grounds by some scholars, is 
rendered more than probable by an exegesis of the 
synoptic data, which do not permit an exclusive 
reference of the term in its messianic sense to the 
later theology of the Church. If it was easier 
to distinguish the term ' man ' in Greek than in 
Aramaic, it was still easier to make such a distinc- 
tion and emphasis in oral than in written Aramaic, 
and the procediu-e of the Jerusalemite Christians 
is unintelligible, unless Jesus had aheady given a 
hint of the special meaning .which He attached 
to the term as a designation of His own messianic 
personality. 

It is not by accident that Son of man never occurs 
in the narrative of the gospels. The careful avoid- 
ance of the term in such passages ^ is an indication 

1 Mnleitung in die drei ersten Evangelien ", p. 130. 

2 Even though the Lord is used, e.g., by Luke as well as John. 



IV.] THE PERSON OF JESUS 155 

that the evangelists did not read back the concep- 
tion right and left into the tradition of Jesus. It is 
unlikely that the original apocalyptic use of the term 
led them to extend it to other passages as a self- 
designation of Jesus, for there is no obvious reason 
why it was only extended to some passages, and on 
the other hand, it has an apt significance in nearly 
all. The Son of man, as a present and as a future 
designation, corresponds to the double sense in 
which the kingdom of God appears in the tradition ; 
it is a title closely associated with the divine realm, 
of which the Son of man is the founder and herald. 
The organic connection between the two justifies 
us in retaining the term in the synoptic logia 
which is un-apocalyptic, as well as in beheving 
that it had an eschatological significance for Jesus 
Himself, 

The critical alternatives are (a) to eliminate from 
the title any messianic content, or (&) admitting such 
a content, to eliminate the title from the teaching 
of Jesus, and to regard it as a catchword of the 
apostolic age (so especially. Bacon and — on other 
grounds — Brandt, Die Evangelische Geschichfe, pp. 
562 f.), or (c) to take it as a title which Jesus used, 
half to reveal and half to conceal the significance 
of His personahty, an indefinite expression which, 
partly owing to its earlier history and partly to 
the larger synthesis in which He set it, meant 
more than a merely messianic function. Neither 
(a) nor (&) will cover all the data. When the Son 
of man passages are turned back into the original 
Aramaic vernacular, the generic sense of the term 
more than once proves jejune or unnatural, and any 
other sense fails on the whole to satisfy the 



156 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

context. Again, in view of the appearance of the 
term in a messianic sense in the early source of 
Acts vii. 56, it is difficult to date its rise aftep Paul's 
death or to find the avenue for its introduction into 
the synoptic tradition in Q or the small Apocalypse. 
The conclusions of Lietzmann and Wellhausen are 
not so final that we need to be intimidated by them 
into a rejection of the term upon linguistic grounds, 
as used by Jesus in a special sense, even though the 
extant references may not always bear the precise 
weight which the evangelists attach to them. An 
examination of the synoptic data seriatim vindi- 
cates the hypothesis that Jesus called Himself ' Son 
of man,' and that the significance of this self-desig- 
nation is to be found not simply in the apocalyptic 
tradition, as a title for the future functions of the 
Christ, but in the larger sphere of His conscious- 
ness as expressed particularly through the Servant 
of Yahveh prophecies. 

The presence — one might almost say the predomin- 
ance — of the Danielio Son of man is evident not only 
in sayings which, in their present form at any rate, 
bear the stamp of the apostolic Church, but in others 
which were certainly spoken by Jesus Himself. A 
fair example of the former class may be found in the 
closing paragraph of Matthew's gospel (xxviii. 18 f.), 
where the phrase, all power (authority) is given to me 
in heaven and on earth, is an echo of the Danielic 
prediction that there was given him [i.e. the Son 
of man) dominion and glory and a kingdom} The 
leading example of the latter class of sayings is the 

1 This symbolic application of a highly symbolic prediction suggests 
that the reply of Jesus to the high priest, which is couched in terms 
of the same prediction, contains a figurative element. 



IV.] THE PERSON OF JESUS 167 

crucial reply of Jesus to the high priest and his 
colleagues : — 

Mark xiv. 62. Matt. xxvi. 64. Luke xxii. 69. 

You vdU see the Son You will see the Son The Son of man 

of man sitting at of man sitting at will he seated 

the right hand of the right hand of at the right 

the Power and the Power and hand of the 

cotmng on the coming with the Power of God, 

ckntds of heaven. clouds of heaven. 

The ott' a/3Ti Willi which Matthew, and the a-ao 
Tov vvv with which Luke, introduces the saying, 
may be glosses ; Luke's suppression of the predic- 
tions about messiah coming on the clouds (which, 
however, he reproduces later in Acts i. 9-11) and 
being seen by His former judges, reflects at any rate 
the theology of an age which had outUved the first 
generation. Jesus is condemned not for claiming 
to be the Son of man, but for admitting that He was 
the Son of God (ver. 70, cf. Mark xiv. 63), a higher 
title than messiah (cf. John xx. 31), but his pre- 
diction speaks of the Danielle Son of man returning 
in power to fulfil the royal divine purpose which 
His death was supposed to check. It might appear 
recondite to find in the words seated at the right 
hand an allusion to Ps. ex., were it not that Jesus 
appears to have already quoted that psahn during 
the last days of His Ufe (cf. Mark xii. 36). The 
psalm, as a messianic ode, had a great career in the 
theology of the early church (cf. Mark xvi. 19, 
1 Cor. XV. 24 f., Heb. i. 11 f., etc.). It is the 
prediction of the Danielle Son of man coming on 
the clouds which is the core of the saying, how- 
ever, and this cannot be interpreted simply as the 
aspect in which the opponents who condemn Jesus 



158 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

will henceforth have to regard Him, i.e. as judge 
instead of as redeemer.^ Either the Marcan form is 
original, or that which Luke has reproduced but which 
Matthew preserves in a conflate reading, retaining 
and coming on the clouds of heaven, in spite of its in- 
compatibility with the introductory from henceforth. 

The primary and ultimate source of such Son 
of man passages is the prediction of Dan. vii. 13, a 
description which, by the time of the Similitudes of 
Enoch, had become definite and personal ; the figure 
nice a Son of man who symbolises Israel in the apoca- 
lyptic vision of Daniel is now the Son of man, a 
supernatural pre-existent being, who sits on the 
throne of His glory, which is also God's throne, as 
the judge and ruler of men. But the Enochic Son 
of man has no career on earth ; He is only revealed 
in the latter days of resurrection and judgnient, 
except that the community of the righteous know 
Him through the prophecies of the Old Testament. 
Furthermore, this Son of man is related to God 
not as the Father but as the Lord of Spirits. 

Now it is the references in the gospels to suffering 
and death as the prelude to the Son of man's final 
victory, and to His career of lowly service and dis- 
cipline on earth, which constitute the significance 
of the title for Jesus. The apocalyptic origin and 
setting of the title would be corroborated if it were 
true ^ that Son of man represented, even prior to 
Daniel, a semi -mythological conception of some First 
Man, a heavenly personality parallel to the figure of 
messiah, who returns with divine powers of restoring 

1 Cf. above, p. 100, and Abbott's The Son of Man, 3313-14. 

2 Cf. Gressmann's Ursprung der Israeliiisch-judischen Escliato- 
logie, pp. 360 f. 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 159 

life at the end of history. The term would thus 
belong to the technical and traditional vocabulary 
of eschatology ; it was capable of transformation, 
as when the author of Daniel interpreted it nationally 
instead of individually, but it regained its messianic 
associations later and finally furnished the basis 
for the specific conception of Jesus. The theory 
has its attractions, but it is not certain yet whether 
Gressmann has discovered an Ariadne's thread or a 
mare's nest. In any case, the term as present to the 
consciousness of Jesus and His age went back to 
the Daniel-Enoch cycle, so far as it suggested a 
messianic role. But, while the Son of man specially 
suggests the future career of Christ as the judge of 
men, who is only to enter on the full vocation of 
messiah after death, the passages which associate 
the Son of man with suffering point to a character- 
istic modification or expansion of the term by Jesus. 
Neither in the royal divine Son of God of the second 
Psalm, nor in the Danielic Son of man, was there any 
place for a career of suffering and death. What the 
synoptic tradition represents as a feature of the 
mind of Jesus is due to the infusion of the sufiering 
Servant's role into these conceptions. As soon as 
Peter hails Him with the title of the Christ, the Son 
of God, He begins to explain that the Son of man 
must suffer. . . and be killed and be raised on the third 
day. Nothing could well be more incongruous with 
the traditional apocalyptic role of the Son of man 
than such a destiny. The idea that the messiah 
was to die, after a hfe of humane service upon earth, 
was as imprecedented as the idea of a messiah who 
fulfilled teaching and prophetic fimctions among 
men. It is striking when the mysterious and super- 



160 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

natural figure of the Son of man as presented by 
Daniel and Enoch is identified by Jesus with Him- 
self, in the flash of prediction to the high priest ; 
but it is even more striking when He is associated 
with humiliation and suffering. The clue to such 
a remarkable consciousness upon the part of Jesus 
is furnished by ' the inward synthesis of these two 
ideas of the past in an ideal, nay in a PersonaHty 
transcending them both.' ^ The allusion to Isaiah 
Uii. 12 in Luke xxii. 37 implies that the Servant-ideal 
was fulfilled by Jesus in more points than in the 
special mode of His death ; in the light of it as of 
nothing else can we understand the bearing of several 
of the Son of man passages. 

The dozen references to Son of man in the Fourth 
gospel are independent of the synoptic tradition ; 
they reflect a theology which presupposes but 
amphfies the messianic significance of the title for 
the personality of the incarnate Christ. Primarily, the 
element of supernatural pre-existence is emphasised, 
as in iii. 13 — No one lias ascended to heaven, exceft 
him who came down from heaven, the Son of man who 
is in heaven, and vi. 62 — What if you see the Son of 
man ascending where he was before ? This involves 
the return of the Son of man to heavenly glory, a 
thought which the writer connects not with the 
second coming, but with the ascension, or hfting 
up. For the latter idea he uses a suggestively 
ambiguous term {v^pova-Oai),^ which might denote 
either crucifixion (viii. 28) or exaltation in glory,' 

1 R. H. Charles, The Book of Enochs, p. 308. 

2 Cf. Dr. E. A. Abbott's Johannine Graminar, 22116, c ; 2642 J, 

s E.g. in the LXX of the Servant-prophecy, Isa. Iii. 13, i'5oi> avv-qau 
6 TTois /Mv Kui b^j/aBijaeTai Kal Sa^a.aS'^ccTai <T<f>6dpa. 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 161 

and sometimes seems to include both (xii. 32, 34). 
In iii. 14-15, the conviction that the Son of man 
must he lifted up is expressed by a comparison of the 
serpent which Moses hfted up before the Israehtes 
in the wilderness ; ' compared with the synoptic pre- 
dictions of the passion and resurrection, this figure 
of the serpent seems recondite and abstruse,' ^ but 
it is employed to bring out the positive communica- 
tion of hfe through the death and resurrection of 
Jesus, and not merely the divine necessity of His 
passion. Similarly, the two allusions to the Son 
of man being glorified (one public, xii. 23, and the 
other private, xiii. 31) imply that the crucifixion, 
for all its apparent degradation and defeat, is the 
true means of expressing and realising the divine 
nature ; through the sufferings and splf-sacrifice of 
Jesus, the real glory of God comes out. The words 
are a sHghtly elaborate equivalent for the synoptic 
phrase about minding the things of God (see above, 
p. 107). When the writer comes to speak of the 
communication of the divine hfe to the faith of men, 
he develops his argument in a series of subtle and 
paradoxical comments upon the manna in the wilder- 
ness, as he had already applied this semi-allegorical 
method to the legend of the serpent. The mystical 
interpretation of the Lord's Supper as a vital union 
between the participant and the hving Christ (vi. 53) 
is farther from the teaching of the synoptic Jesus than 
the earlier saying (vi. 27) that eternal life is to be 
given to Christians by the Son of man, for him Ood 
the Father has sealed (i.e. certified or set apart for 
this purpose), but the latter phrase is to be read in 
the light of the former. The thought, though not 

1 Dr. E. A. Abbott, The Son of Man, 3407, i. 
L 



162 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [oh. 

the expression, in i. 51, is simpler : Tou shall see 
heaven opened and the angels of Ood ascending and 
descending upon the Son of man. As the context 
indicates, the idea is that Jacob's dream of com- 
munion between God and men is to be fulfilled for 
the Church in the person of Christ. The angels, 
says Philo in his exposition of Gen. xxviii. 12 {de 
Somniis, i. 22), are so-called, because they 'report 
(Si.ayye\Xovcri) the Father's injunctions to the chil- 
dren, and the needs of the children to the Father.' 
This is the function of Christ, then, to maintain 
unbroken communion between God and His people ; 
consequently the metaphorical expression of the say- 
ing covers much the same thoughts as are presented 
by the author of Hebrews in the description of 
Jesus as the high priest of men. ' In and with Him, 
visibly for those who are His, heaven is upon earth.' ^ 
In most of these passages, and particularly in that 
last quoted, the term Son of man has obviously 
outgrown its primary messianic significance, and it 
may be held that this is true even of the references 
to the Son of man as judge. The reading in ix. 35 
is doubtful. But if Son of man is preferred there 
to Son of God, the idea (cf. ver. 39) is of His judg- 
ment as in V. 27 : The Father has granted Him, the 
right to exercise judgment, because He is the Son of 
man. The underljring thought is almost that of Acts 
xvii. 31, Heb. iv. 15, and even Matt. xxv. 31, but the 
critical process which the person of Christ sets in 
motion for men tends to overshadow the more 
dramatic and eschatological view of judgment which 
the synoptic theology had put forward. Upon the 

1 Julius Grill, UnUrsuchungen iiber die Entstehung des vierten 
Evangeliums (1902), p. 48. 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 163 

whole, therefore, the Fourth gospel assumes, rather 
than emphasises, the humanity suggested by the 
term Son of man, while it elaborates the super- 
natural as distinguished from the apocalyptic asso- 
ciations of the title. 

{d) An important inference for the messianic con- 
sciousness of Jesus follows from the discussion with 
the scribes over the Davidic messiah (Mark xii. 35- 
37, Matt. xxii. 41-46, Luke xx. 41-44), in which He 
corrects the popular ^ inference that the true messiah 
needs to be a scion and heir of David who would fulfil, 
as the Psalter of Solomon expected, the nationalist 
hopes of Judaism, by overthrowing the Roman yoke 
and subduing the Gentiles into a position of respectful 
homage to the purified and triumphant Jews. The 
messianic role which Jesus was conscious of fulfilling 
had no relation to the Jewish monarchy. He appears 
to have accepted the title, but He repudiated both 
the stress laid upon it and the royalist associations 
with which it was invested. The authority he had 
to exercise was through humble love and service, 
and not through any material conquest such as had 
been for long expected from messiah as a Davidic 
scion. This is one of the points made by the story of 
the entry into Jerusalem, which is connected with 
the prediction of Zechariah's humble king of peace 
(Matt. xxi. 5), but which explicitly differs from the 
setting of his entry in the group of oracles^ which have 
been incorporated in Zech. ix.-xiv., by ignoring the 

1 Compare the appeal of Bartimaeus, Jesus, son of David, and the 
welcome of the crowd at his entry into Jerusalem, besides the remark 
of the crowd in Matt. xii. 23. 

3 The influence of these oracles on the gospel tradition in other 
directions maybe seen,e.g., in Matt. xxvi. 31=Zech. xiii. 7(scattering 
of disciples). Matt, xxvii. 9 f. =Zech. xi. 13 (price of potter's field), 



164 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [oh. 

re-establishment of Israel in Palestine after the de- 
feat of their pagan oppressors. It is rather significant 
that neither here nor elsewhere did Jesus call Himself 
Son of David ; the evangelists who attach more im- 
portance than He did to the title, explain that He 
was bom in the Davidic line (cf . e.g. Matt. i. 1 f ., John 
vii.42),but He Himself laid no claim to this, although 
it is quite possible that His family were of Davidic 
descent. 

This is borne out by the further fact that Jesus 
does not appear to connect the new covenant, of which 
He speaks at the Last Supper, with the messianic 
fulfilment of the Davidic hope. Such a fulfilment 
would have been consonant with several fines of the 
older Jewish tradition (e.g. Pss. Ixxxix. 27, and cxxxu. 
11, Ezek. xxxvii. 24-25, Ps. Sol. xvn. 5f., 23 f.),and in 
the primitive Church the resurrection of Jesus was 
interpreted in the light (Acts xiii. 34) of the enig- 
matic prediction (Isa. Iv. 3), 

I mil make an everlasting covenant with you, 
Even the sure mercies of David. 

But while Jesus at the Last Supper speaks of the 
kingdom in terms of the covenant-idea. He does not 
associate it with the fulfiQment of the messianic hope 
in its Davidic form. What made Him sit loose 
to the latter ideal was His higher conception of the 
messianic vocation in connection with the Servant 
of Yahveh, rather than a preference for some more 

Luke xxii. 20=Zecli. ix. 11 (blood of covenant), and John xix. 37= 
Zech. xii. 10 (penitence for murder of Jesus). More than two cen- 
turies after the death of Jesus one of the rabbis (T. B. Sanhedr., 98 a) 
explained that the messiah would come as in Dan. vii. 13, if Israel 
proved worthy, but that if they proved unworthy He would come 
upon an ass, like Zeohariah'a prince, t. e. humbly. 



IV.] THE PERSON OF JESUS 165 

apocalyptic ideal of messiah, or a desire to eraphasise 
his divine (as contrasted with a Davidic) Sonship, 
though we may admit that the latter thought is not 
entirely to be ruled out of the argument. 

(e) The inward aspect of the messianic conscious- 
ness is further expressed ia the voice of divine 
approval (Matt.iii. 17, Marki. 11, Matt. xvii. 5, etc.), 
Thou art my Son, my beloved, in thee am I well 
pleased. Here o ayairrjTO'i is a separate title, 
equivalent to The Beloved, which is again, for the 
gospels, practically synonymous with The Elecl,^ or 
Chosen One (cf. Matt. xii. 18, Luke ix. 35), a pre- 
Christian messianic title, which is specially used by 
Luke (cf. xxiii. 35), possibly owing to the influence 
of Enoch. But this does not imply that Jesus 
regarded Himself as God's Son because He was 
conscious of being the Chosen of the Father's love. 
The term Beloved is primarily messianic, as it is in 
the 'Ascension of Isaiah,' where, hke Son of God 
and Son of man elsewhere, it has passed from a 
designation of Israel into a title of Israel's messiah. 
But neither in the theology of the gospels, any more 
than in Ephesians or Barnabas (3, 4) or Ignatius, 
is it a central term ; and the personal rather than 
the official sense of the name, which is impKed in 
the synoptic usage, is shown by the adjectival use 
in Clement of Rome (hx. 2-3) as well as in the 
Johannine periphrasis (iii. 35, v. 20, x. 17, xv. 9).^ 

(/) Jesus did not often speak of God as the Lord 
(o Kvpios), and none of the rare allusions * to Himself 

1 The Elect is an early variant reading for the Son in John i. 34. 

2 In Bph. i. 6 it reproduces the son of Sis love in Col. i. 13. 

3 Matt. vii. 22 (Luke yi. 46), Matt. xxi. 3=Mark xi. 3=Luke lix. 
31, 34, and Matt. xxiv. 42; indirectly in Matt. xxii. 43 f. {hoio does 
David call him Lord I), Matt, xxv, 37 f. {Lord, when did we see thee ?) 



166 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

as Lord is beyond doubt ; they may represent an 
original ' rabbi ' or ' master,' which has been 
amplified into the divine title by the evangelists. 
The latter process is specially clear in Luke's 
use of the term as apphed to Jesus in narrative or 
in address. This was partly due to its popularity 
among Gtentile Christians as a more intelligible 
synonym for messiah or Christ, partly also to the 
growing sense of His divine nature. Both considera- 
tions, but especially the former, led to the title being 
appUed to Jesus during His hfetime,^ although even 
according to Luke (Acts ii. 36) He really became Lord 
at the resurrection. There is no clear trace in the 
theology of the gospels of any tacit protest against 
the contemporary tendency to apply the term to 
the Roman emperors. In the one passage where 
such a reference might be expected (Luke xxii. 26 f .), 
the term Lord is not employed. 

{g) It is at first sight strange, in view of the later 
popularity of the term, that the conception of Wisdom 
as a personified divine power was not employed by 
the theology of the gospels. Yet, apart from the 
saying which claims for Him a wisdom superior 
to that of Solomon (Matt. xii. 42), Wisdom occurs 
only in two passages : [a) that of Matt. xi. 19= 
Luke vii. 35, and (6) that of Luke xi. 49. In the 
former, upon the practical vindication of Wisdom, 
Wisdom means the divine providence which in- 
spires both John the Baptist and Jesus in their 
different roles. This enters also into the con- 
ception of the second passage, where Luke pet- 
sonifies Wisdom, and puts into her lips, possibly 

1 So in the gospel of Peter ; on the religious significance of the 
term, see Kattenbusch's Apost. Symbol, ii. 596 f. 



IV.] THE PERSON OF JESUS 167 

as a quotation from some lost sapiential book, words 
which Matthew (xxiii. 34 f .) attributes in an expanded 
form to Jesus Himself : Therefore the Wisdom of God 
has said, I vnll send to them prophets and apostles, 
some of whom they mil kill and drive out, that the 
blood of all the prophets shed from the beginning of 
the world may be required of this generation: . . . yea, 
I tell you, from this generation shall it be required. In 
the pre-Christian book of Jubilees (i. 12) God promises 
Moses : / shall send witnesses unto them, that I may 
witness against them, but they vnll not hear, and will 
slay the witnesses also, and they will persecute those 
who seek the Law. The interest of this parallel is 
heightened by differences between it and the passage 
from the gospels. In the latter (cf. especially 
Luke xi. 45 f .) the thought is that the rigid authorities 
and interpreters of the Law will be responsible 
for the murder of God's witnesses, whereas the 
object of Jubilees is to uphold the vahdity of the 
Law. In the second place, the context of the passage 
in Jubilees suggests that, in spite of this hostile 
attitude to the divine witnesses, Israel will ulti- 
mately repent. The gospels, on the other hand, do 
not anticipate anything except impenitent enmity 
from the Jewish nation as a whole. 

When we pass on to the Fourth gospel, it is to 
find several of the older conceptions of Wisdom 
expressed, in more or less modified form, but the 
conception itself absent from beginning to end. In 
the Book of Wisdom, Wisdom becomes practically a 
personified organ of the divine creation, revelation, 
and ethical inspiration, with cosmic functions which 
are assigned by Philo to the Logos as well. In the 
latter writer, however, the Logos is more prominent 



168 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

than Wisdom, and this approximates to the stand- 
point of the Fourth gospel's theology, although, in 
contrast to Philo, the evangelist excludes Wisdom 
entirely from his delineation of Jesus as the Logos.^ 
The very term (o-oi^ia) is deliberately omitted, with 
the cognate term yvuxru. The Christ of the Fourth 
gospel declares / am the Truth, but not / am the 
Wisdom. It is as the incarnate Logos, not as the 
incarnate Wisdom of God, that Jesus is the Christ, 
the Son of God. The most probable explanation 
of this avoidance of cro<^ta is that it was due not only 
to the feminine form of the word, but to the role 
which Wisdom had already begun to play among the 
seons of Gnostic theosophy, where its fimctions and 
characteristics are distinctly lower than in the pre- 
Christian developments of the later Judaism. Even 
in the Similitudes of Enoch, the conception of 
the divine Wisdom blends with that of the Son of 
man, although the connection is left unexplained 
(xUi.). Wisdom came to make her dwelling among 
the children of men and found no dwelling place ; hke 
the Logos of the Johannine prologue, men would 
not receive the divine messenger, but preferred 
darkness to Hght, welcoming unrighteousness instead 
of Wisdom. Only, whereas the Enochio Wisdom 
returned to heaven baffled, the Logos became flesh 
and carried out the purpose of God amid the faith- 
lessness and disobedience of men. 

(h) The specific category of the Logos, in the 
Fourth gospel's theology, embraces not merely the 
functions of Wisdom but of more than one of the 

1 In the Poimandres theosophy, whare the doctrine emerges of the 
Logos as the divine Son, a second God whom men learn to reverence, 
there is a similar absence of the Wisdom idea. 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 169 

other synoptic categories for the person of Jesus. 
The Greek term Logos (Aoyos) denoted not simply 
reason, but the speech in which reason uttered itself 
to men. Now the Greek speculations upon the 
Logos had been primarily concerned with the 
problem of the relation between the created universe 
and God, which was solved by the. theory that the 
divine reason pervaded the visible world. Philo, 
working on the Jewish conception of the Word, made 
the Logos the organ of God's self-revelation to men 
as well as of His creative power ; he thus overcame 
the duahsm between the world and a transcendent 
Grod, and conserved the principle of spontaneous 
self-revelation ; but this was at the expense of 
consistency, for his view of the Logos wavers between 
a more or less independent divine agent and an 
impersonal expression of the divine mind and will. 
It is difficult to ignore the Philonian background for 
this idea in the Fourth gospel, but the genesis of 
the Logos-idea is less important for our purpose 
than its exodus. It was baptized by the Fourth 
gospel into Christ, and served to guide generations 
of beheving men into a fuller apprehension of Jesus 
than the previous messianic categories of the synoptic 
theology could have done. 

Take the prologue to the Fourth gospel, to which 
the term, though not the thought, is confined. 
Phrase after phrase in it is carefully chosen to set 
aside some misconception of what Christ was as 
the true Logos. The Logos existed in the very 
beginning — ^not an inferior seon or emanation, sub- 
sequent to the original order of things, as e.g. the 
Valentinian Gnostics taught; the Logos was in vital 
relation luith God, the Logos was divine by nature — 



170 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

not a mere heavenly seon as the Gnostics argued, 
but ivith God in the very beginning of things in 
unrivalled supremacy. It was through this Logos 
alone that God created the imi verse. Through the 
Logos everything came into being, and apart from the 
Logos no existence came into being — a side-stroke at 
the Gnostic theories of creation through angels or a 
plurality of inferior seons, of matter as self-existent, 
and of the creator as distinguished from the redeemer. 
Here the Logos is, as it was to Philo in his own way, 
the sole organ or instrument of creation. Then 
foUows the work of the Logos within the created 
universe of men. Life — in the pregnant sense of 
the term — was in the Logos, as divine, and that 
Life was the Light of men,^ as opposed to the Gnostic 
doctrine that the powers of creation were at issue 
with the highest revelation of God. The Light 
shines in the Darkness, but the Darkness has not under- 
stood it (cf. iii. 19, xiii. 30). This is the Johannine 
form of the synoptic antithesis between the realms 
of Satan and God. Then comes an imphcit contrast 
between the Logos and John the Baptist, whose 
ministry, in opposition to some current exaggera- 
tions, is ranked subordinate and transient. He was 
simply sent by God to bear testimony to the Light. 
The real Light, which enlightens every man, was 
coming into the world ; even when John entered on 
his career of testimony, the Light was breaking 
round him upon men. But instead of accepting 
John's testimony, and allowing themselves to be 
enlightened, mankind denied and rejected Him. He 
entered into the world — the world which came into 
being through him (and not through any demiurge) 

1 Note the connection in iii. 16 f., 19 f., and viii. 12. 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 171 

— but the world did not recognise him. He came to 
what was his own, hut his ovm people did not welcome 
him. "On the other hajid, this tragedy is set off 
by success. Those who do accept him — to them he 
has given the right of becoming God's children, that is, 
to those who believe in his name, who owe their birth 
to God, not to human blood, nor to any impulse of 
the flesh, nor (as some Gnostics taught) to the human 
mil. So the Logos became flesh (instead of a phantom 
Jesus, as the docetic Gnostics taught), and tarried 
among us, and we saw his glory — glory such as an 
only son has, who comes from his father, full of grace 
and truth. . . . From his fulness (instead of from 
a variety of Gnostic seons) we have all received grace 
after grace * ; for while the Law was given through 
Moses (and therefore, being divine, is not to be re- 
jected as the Gnostics did), grace and truth have come 
through Jesus Christ (the Christian revelation of God's 
reahty needed a deeper and more personal medium 
than that of a Jewish lawgiver). This gracious 
embodiment of the divine reahty is due to the 
person of the divine Son. No one, not even Moses, 
has ever seen God, but he has been unfolded by the 
only divine One who lies (once more, after His in- 
carnate Hfe on earth) upon the Father's breast (see 
above, p. 139). 

It only remains to add that in the name of ' Jesus ' 
there was no specifically rehgious meaning. Matthew's 
gospel, in the birth-section, attaches a pregnant 

1 Compare Philo's words in De Posteritate Oaini, 43 : ' God always 
measures ont and apportions with reserve His iirst graces (xipiras), 
ere the partakers grow sated and wanton ; then He bestows others in 
place of them {iripas Avt ixdvdiv) . . . and so forth, always new for 
old {via% &vtI TToKaioTipuv).' 



172 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

sense to it: Thou shall call his name ^ Jesus, ^ for he 
shall save his people from their sins, an obvious play 
upon the etymology of the Hebrew original {' Yahveh 
is salvation '), but no such significance is felt by any 
of the contemporaries of Jesus. As for ' Christ ' 
(x/oto-Tos, maschiah), it meant ' the anointed One,' 
not one who had been anointed ; it was a technical 
term ^ for God's vassal or regent who was to execute 
His royal purpose upon earth. Curiously enough, 
it is in the Fourth gospel alone, which (in spite of 
iv. 25 and xx. -31) is the least messianic of the four 
gospels, that the term ' messiah ' is preserved 
(cf. i. 41). The Christ, whom Matthew hails at the 
outset as the true Immanuel (' God with us '), indeed 
promises at the close to be with His people for ever. 
And this presence is the presence of One who has 
passed through death for the sake of men, the pre- 
sence of the Jesus who came to save His people from 
their sins, and saved them by shedding His blood 
for the forgiveness of sins (xxvi. 28). The concep- 
tion is that Christ mediates a new relationship 
between God and man ; He has complete power and 
authority over the people of God His Father. This 
idea (see above, pp. 142 f.) is one stage on the road 
to the Johannine view, but the conception of the 
mystical presence of Christ is presented by the 
Fourth gospel in terms of contemporary Hellenistic 
mysticism rather than along the lines of the Jewish 
view.^ 



1 Never used absolutely, however, for the messiah till the gospels 
and the apocalypse of Baruch (cf. E. A. Abbott, The Son of Man, 
3062, i.-iv.). 

2 On this unio mystica, in relation to contemporary Hellenistic 
religion, see especially Eeitzenstein's Poimandres, pp. 245 f. 



IV.] THE PERSON OP JESUS 173 

The increasing stress which begins to be laid upon 
faith in Christ is cognate to this belief in His spiritual 
presence. The quahties which draw out reUgious 
confidence are present in the Jesus of the synoptic 
tradition ; He appeals for loyalty for His sake, and 
accepts the grateful homage of men. But it is faith 
in God rather than faith in Himself which is upper- 
most in His teaching. His divine authority invests 
Him with a unique claim, but the expUcit allusions 
to faith in Himself are scanty. Besides Luke viii. 
50,"^ there is the saying about the little ones who believe 
in me (Matt, xviii. 6). The words in me are not 
quite certain of their place in the text of the Marcan 
parallel (ix. 42), and their absence would tend to 
invahdate Matthew's phrasing,^ as a touch of his 
higher christology. But the words are more con- 
gruous to the Marcan context than to the Matthean, 
and their presence in the latter text is probably 
due to the fact that the author found them already 
in Mark. Taken along with the general attitude of 
Jesus to God and men, they express the truth that 
He required a confidence in Himself as God's Son 
and Servant, with a devotion which involved trust 
and confidence in His divine power. He asked 
for more than belief in His word. He sought to 
attach men to Himself as God's Servant and Son. 
' God is undoubtedly the only and the ultimate object 
of faith, but what the synoptic gospels in point of 
fact present to us on this and many other occasions 

1 Also the crucial importance of men's attitude to himself, Matt. 
X. 32-33=Luke xii. 8-9. 

2 Merx insists that they are part of the original Marcan text, 
on the ground that they were omitted in order to leave the term 
'believe' as an equivalent for the 'fides salviflca' of the Church. 
But he will not accept the phrase as a genuine utterance of Jesus, 



174 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

is (to borrow the language of 1 Pet. i. 21), the spectacle 
of men who believe in God through him.'' ^ The 
soteriological aspect of this faith is naturally pro- 
minent in the Foiirth gospel, where it is definitely- 
put forward in xiv. 1. The phrase starts a problem 
of translation, for which the most suggestive solu- 
tion resembles that proposed by Hort : Let not your 
heart he troubled. Believe — believe in Ood and in me, 
' the first suggestion being of constancy opposed to 
troubling and fearfulness, and the second of the 
ground of that constancy, rest in God, itself depend- 
ing on rest in Christ.' ^ 

To sum up : 

The Jesus of the primitive Church was a Jesus 
whom believers hailed and worshipped as the Christ 
of God. My point is that an examination of the 
earhest records, of the sources behind Mark and the 
other two synoptic gospels, shows that the messianic 
drapery or setting of His person was not the result 
of PauUnism impinging upon the pure and original 
memory of a humanitarian figure, who hved and 
died for the sake of a message which amounted to 
httle more than a doctrine of theism flus brotherly 
love.^ This is a conclusion upon which several hnes 
of research converge. It was brought out by the 
recent Paul and Jesu? controversy, ratified by the 
simultaneous investigations into the theology of 
Mark and Q, and corroborated, with independent 

1 Denney, Jesus and the Gospel, p. 255. 

2 Gf. Hort's note on 1 Peter i. 21. In John vi. 47 the Syriao 
versions add in Ood to believeth, some of the later uncials in me. 

3 We cannot explain primitive Christianity either as the trans- 
formation of the Jesus of history into the Christ of faith, or as the 
evolution of a Jesus-cult out of a current series of christological 
doctrines. 



IV,] THE PERSON OF JESUS 175 

vigour, by the eschatological school. Only, the aid 
of the esehatologists is not to be accepted on their 
own terms. ' Whatever the ultimate solution may 
be,' says Schweitzer, ' the historical Jesus of whom 
the criticism of the future will draw the portrait 
. . .'will be a Jesus who was messiah and hved as 
such.' That is a welcome and significant admission, 
but the messianic consciousness of Jesus is not the 
ultimate clue to His personality, and still less a 
messianic consciousness which is narrowed to the 
eschatological scheme. It is at this point that 
we join issue with the esehatologists. In the desire 
to find a real Jesus behind the mediaeval regalia of the 
creeds, the earlier movements of criticism repeatedly 
tended to create a Christ in the hkeness of modern 
rationahsm and moraUsm, who was messiah, if He was 
messiah at aU, in the role of a great rehgious reformer. 
In the conviction that such attempts were unsatis- 
factory, from the historical rather than from the 
rehgious point of view, the esehatologists have thrown 
into brilliant relief the supernatural features which 
dominate the messianic consciousness of Jesus, not 
merely of the primitive Church. Thus far, they 
argue, and no farther shalt thou go. Beyond that, 
research cannot proceed without recourse to what 
is termed psychology, and psychology is the cardinal 
sin here in the eyes of Schweitzer and his allies. To 
use psychological methods in estimating the con- 
sciousness of Jesus is to be ' modem.' I confess that 
to attempt a non-psychological exposition of the 
Son of man passages in the gospels, for example, 
seems to me as promising and legitimate as it would 
be to propose a non-philosophic inquiry into Plato's 
allusions to the daemon of Socrates. The rationaUs- 



176 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [oh. 

ing and modernising explanations of Jesus have 
not been due to too much but to too little psychology ; 
if they have failed to do justice to the Christ of the 
gospels, the fault has lain elsewhere than in the 
refusal to estimate so great a personahty on the 
score of texts and current ideas. 

It is the recognition of this filial consciousness of 
Jesus as the crucial element in the synoptic christology 
which reaUy enables us to understand the continuity 
between the first three gospels and the Fourth. In 
the latter the messianic categories fall comparatively 
into the background, but the absorption of the 
Fourth gospel in the relation between the Father and 
the Son is theologically, rather than historically, 
organic to the underlying basis of the synoptic 
christology. 1 When the fiUal consciousness of 
Jesus is seen to be prior to the messianic, the start- 
ing-point for the special christology of the Fourth 
gospel is at once granted. This is brought out even 
when we turn to a conception which at first sight 
marks one of the broadest differences between the 
first three gospels and the Fourth, viz. the conception 
of the Spirit. 

1 The final and absolute significance of Christ, which the primitive 
tradition expressed in terms of His messianic judicial function, now 
appears as His eternal presence through the Spirit, 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 177 



CHAPTER V 

THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 

The phrase ' the Spirit of Jesus ' only occurs once 
in the New Testament, and it is not in the gospels. 
Luke uses it, in the sequel to the third gospel, to 
describe a mysterious arrest laid upon Paul and 
his companions, as they endeavoured to begin a 
Christian mission in Bithynia : They were attem/pting 
to make their way into Bithynia, but the Spirit of Jesus 
did not allow them?- The difficulty of the expression 
was felt at an early period, and led to the omission 
of the words of Jesus from some texts of Acts. Pro- 
bably it denoted a vision of Jesus which appeared 
to Paul or Silas in prophetic ecstasy, although the 
more common phrase, as the context indicates, was 
simply the Holy Spirit, or the Spirit. But, whatever 
Luke meant, it is not in this sense that we can speak 
of the Spirit of Jesus in connection with the theology 
of the gospels. Neither is it in the trinitarian sense ; 
still 'less, in the opposite and un technical sense of the 
disposition or genius which characterises the teach- 
LQg of Jesus. It is true that this last connotation of 
S'pirit is not entirely absent even from the vocabulary 
of Paul; although he normally employs spirit in 
the sense of a divine power acting on the Christian 
and the church through the person of the risen 

1 Acts xvi. 7. 
M 



178 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

Christ, there are instances in which he seems to 
use the term spirit in. connection with human faculties 
and temperament as a modem would. But by the 
Spirit of Jesus, as a rubric for some of the contents 
of the gospels, we mean {a) the divine power pos- 
sessed by Jesus on earth, and (6) the divine power 
which came upon His followers after His resurrec- 
tion, rendering their hfe stable and effective. 

Jesus has a spirit of His own, Hke any one else 
(of. Mark ii. 8, viii. 12), but the second Marcan 
passage is omitted, and the former altered, by 
Matthew and Luke, possibly from considerations of 
reverence, although Matthew describes how Jesus 
ga/oe up his spirit on the cross (xxvii. 50 ; cf . Eccles. 
xii. 7, Luke xxiii. 46). Luke, on the other hand, adds 
that Jesus as a child developed in spirit {fKpaTawvro 
TTVivnari), and lays stress upon the power and 
presence of the Holy Spirit in Jesus during His 
ministry (cf. e.g. iv. 1, 14, iv. 18 f., x. 21). In the 
Fourth gospel ' the spirit ' of Jesus is twice men- 
tioned (xi. 33, xiii. 21) in connection with perturba- 
tion of soul, quite in the popular usage of the term ; 
the characteristic doctrine of the Spirit has to be 
sought elsewhere. 

(i) Li the synoptic gospels, the only occasion on 
which Jesus mentions the Spirit in connection with 
His mission is in self-defence, when the Pharisees 
declared that His power of expelUng evil spirits was 
due to collusion with Satan. He claims that He 
exercises this power hy the Holy Spirit, i.e. as pos- 
sessed by the Spirit of God, which works for the 
establishment of the divine reign on earth by over- 
throwing the reign of Satan (Matt. xii. 28, a passage 
from Q, where Luke characteristically — cf. i. 55, 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 179 

66, 71, 74 — changes the Spirit into the finger of God).^ 
In the following paragraph, which asserts that no 
one can pillage a strong man's house unless he first 
seizes the strong man himself, Jesus imphes that His 
exorcisms are the result of a previous victory over 
Satan. This consciousness of messianic authority 
over the great antagonist of God reaches back to 
the experiences of the temptation which followed 
his reception of the Spirit at baptism (Marki. 9-13= 
Matt. iii. 13-iv. 11), and Luke corroborates the con- 
nection by associating the Isaianic prophecy of the 
Spirit with the opening of the mission of Jesus at 
Nazareth (iv. 17 f.). According to the naive cos- 
mogony which is presupposed in the theology of the 
gospels, Jesus in or by the Spirit of God confronts 
the authority of Satan as represented by the evil 
spirits of disease. The sufferers whom He cures are 
kv ■Kve.vfj.a.Ti aKaddpTii),^ possessed by Unclean spirits, 
as opposed to the pure Spirit of their deliverer, and 
it is the sense of His irresistible approach, heralding 
the reign of God, which excites the anger and dismay 
of the imclean spirits. According to Mark especially, 
they recognise their conqueror and yield sullenly 
to His superior power (cf. i. 23 f., iii. 11, v. 2 f., 
vli. 25, ix. 17 f.), as He invades their territory. 
It is this consciousness of being an organ of the 
Holy Spirit which prompts the saying of Jesus 
(preserved in Q, Matt. xii. 32= Luke xii. 10, as well 
as in Mark iii. 29), that blasphemy against the Holy 

1 In later theology tlie Holy Spirit is called the Finger of God 
(cf. Augustine on Ps. zc. 11), partly on the basis of this passage. 

2 The wicked {wovripd) spirits of Luke vii. 21 and viii. 2 are not 
essentially different (of. Matt. xii. 46). This belief is said to have 
been specially prevalent in Galilee. 



180 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

Spirit, such as the Pharisees uttered in ascribing 
his exorcisms to Satanic iufluence, was beyond all 
pardon . These works of supernatural power authenti- 
cated Him as God's representative, whom it was 
perilous to despise, according to the Hebrew con- 
ception of prophetic authority (of. e.g. 'Num. xvi. 
29 f., Deut. xviii. 19). Jesus, however, claims not 
simply to speak the divine prophetic word, but to 
act under the divine Spirit, as the messiah or medium 
of God's redeeming purpose upon earth. 

In Mark's version, blasphemy against the Holy 
Spirit is unpardonable, whereas the sons of men 
are forgiven any other sin of blasphemy. Thus 
it is pardonable to curse God for sending trouble, 
as Job was tempted to do, because man is often 
ignorant of the truly wise and kind purpose which 
lies behind apparently hostile dealings of God. 
Jesus was perfectly frank in His teaching on this 
point. He knows that God often seemed indifferent 
and callous, e.g., in the sphere of answers to prayer.^ 
Men are sometimes tempted to be unjust to God 
because He seems unjust to them. 

' Behind a frowning providence 
He hides a smiling face,' 

but those who see only the frowns are apt to criticise 
Him harshly. Such transgressions, even although 
they are unfair, are pronounced pardonable, because 
they are due to the sufferer's inability for the time 
being to understand the mysterious ways of pro- 
vidence. It is a very different matter when acts 
of God, such as the expulsion of the evil spirits by 
Jesus, which are obviously beneficent, are attributed 
I Cf. A, B. Bruce, The Parabolic Teaching of Jetus, pp. 147 f. 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 181 

to Satan. Here there can be no question or plea of 
inadvertence.^ The sin is blasphemy of a deliberate 
kind, and when the scribes out of sheer malice sneered 
at the cures of Jesus as due to collusion with the 
devil, when they would do anything rather than admit 
or let other people admit His claims to be acting 
in the power of God, He declared passionately that 
their malignant attitude put them beyond the reach of 
forgiveness. Whosoever shall blaspheme against the 
Holy Spirit never has forgiveness, but is guilty of an 
eternal sin. Here the Holy Spirit is the power of 
God manifested in the works of Jesus. He spoke 
in this way, Mark adds, because they said, He has an 
unclean spirit. But the identification of Jesus with 
the Holy Spirit, in this connection, does not depend 
upon the evangehst's comment ; it is impUcit in the 
argument. 

The other version reproduced by Matthew and 
partly by Luke, contrasts blasphemy against the 
Holy Spirit with blasphemy against the Son of man. 
Son of man here means Jesus in His human aspect 
as the messiah ; it is in the last degree unhkely 
that the term was originally generic, and that the 
contrast was between insulting criticism of a human 
being and blasphemy against the divine Spirit. So 
far as the two renderings of the original Aramaic 
are concerned, however, the probability lies on the 
side of Matthew's. To the primitive Qiristians, 
as Sohmiedel points out, it would appear the height 
of blasphemy to say that blasphemy against Jesus 

1 There is nothing In the context to support Oscar Holtzmann's 
idea that the scribes viewed the good works of Jesus as a clever device 
of Satan to hegoile men, first of all, and thus get them more completely 
into his power. 



182 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

was pardonable, and unless the sajdng had been 
extant in some authoritative source like Q, it is 
unlikely that it would have been constructed out 
of the Marcan version. The reverse is much more 
probable, as indeed WeUhausen considers was the case 
in the saying of Mark iii. 28. We may claim, on the 
whole, that this consideration outweighs the difficulty 
of interpreting the saying intelUgibly, as implying a 
distinction between Jesus the Son of man and Jesus 
as an agent of the divine Spirit. It would be easier if 
Son of man here were a personal self-designation, but 
in any case Jesus was speaking of Himself, and one 
clue to His meaning Ues in the misjudgment of His 
family (Mark iii. 20 : They said, He is beside himself). 
By omitting this, from motives of reverence, Matthew 
and Luke have failed to supply a contemporary 
illustration of what blasphemy against Jesus as the 
Son of man really was.^ His relatives might be par- 
doned for their crude misapprehension of His actions ; 
but for people hke the scribes, who were face to face 
with His supernatural acts of healing, to discredit 
Him by asserting that He was inspired by the devil 
instead of by the pure Spirit of God was unpardon- 
able. The difference between the two versions is 
one of form, therefore, rather than of spirit. Mark's 
tends to identify Jesus with the Holy Spirit ; a 
calumny against Him is a blasphemy against the 
very power of God. The other version contrasts 
the Son of man and the Spirit, and yet includes 
the scribes' calumny against Jesus, ' the most sense- 
less and infamous accusation which they ever 
uttered,' ^ under the category of sins against the 

1 Cf. also Luke ix. 51 f., xxiii. 34. 

2 Keim, Jesus of Namra, iv. 9. 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 183 

Spirit ; it is pronounced more than a personal 
insult to Jesus, which might be due to thoughtless- 
ness or ignorance. The main drawback to the latter 
view is that such a distinction between the two 
aspects of Jesus seems to indicate a theological 
position of the early church, rather than what 
He would have been Ukely to say Himself in the 
historical situation presupposed.^ 

(ii) The allusions to the Spirit in the teaching of 
Jesus are comparatively rare.^ It is promised to 
the disciples as a special equipment for defence, 
when they are brought before civil and reUgious 
tribunals, pagan and Jewish. Jesus assures them 
that in such moments they will be inspired to speak 
the apt and telhng word, instead of being left to 
their own resources. Do not be anxious beforehand 
about what you are to say ; say whatever is given to 
you at that hour, for it is not you who speak but the 
Holy Spirit. Mark puts this promise among the 
final directions of Jesus, in the eschatological section 
of the gospel (xiii. 11). Matthew sets it earher, in 
the instructions of Jesus for the mission of the 
twelve dming His hfetime, and presents a sUghtly 
altered version : Do not be anxious about how or what 
you are to say, for it is not you who speak but the Spirit 
of your Father which speaks through you (to XaXovv 

1 To profane the Name of God was for Judaism a form of irreverence 
which could not be forgiven in this life. According to Joma, 86 a: 
' For guch a sinner repentance cannot suspend his punishment, nor 
can the Day of Atonement atone, nor can suffering avail to purify. ' 
The Enochic references to a sin against the Spirit are dubious (xx. 6, 
Ixvii. 10). 

2 Once the Spirit is mentioned as the source of Old Testament inspir- 
ation(Mark xii. 36=Matt. xxii. 43). Luke, though partial otherwise to 
the doctrine of the Spirit, corrects this Jewish expression (xi. 42). 



184 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [oh. 

ev- vixiv, X. 19-20.) Luke again replaces the Holy 
Spirit in Mark's logion by the personal Jesus : 
Settle it in your hearts not to plan your answer before- 
hand ; I myself mil give you a movih and wisdom 
which all your adversaries will he unable to resist or 
refute (xxi. 14-15). Here the telling effect of a 
Christian defence is heightened, but the remarkable 
feature is that Luke, who elsewhere goes beyond 
Mark and Matthew in emphasising the place of the 
Spirit in the teaching of Jesus, should omit it in 
favour of Jesus Himself (cf. xxiv. 49). His parallel 
to the Matthean logion is set unhistorically as a 
pendant to another saying upon the Spirit : Do not 
be anxious about how or what you are to answer or 
say, for the Holy Spirit will teach you at that hour 
what has to be said (xii. 11-12), but the modification in 
xxi. 14-15 marks the first stage of the process which 
ends in the Fourth gospel, under the influence of 
Pauhnism, with the correlation of Christ and the 
Spirit, the latter being no longer a special equip- 
ment for exorcising demons or making an effective 
confession, but the principle of a new Ufe. The 
developed stage of reflection in Luke's version is 
indicated not merely by the change of an adequate 
testimony into an irresistible defence, but by the sub- 
stitution of Jesus for the Spirit. The latter touch 
points to the view elaborated in the Fourth gospel, 
where the Spirit {TrapdKXrjTos) as the alter ego of 
Jesus animates and inspires Christians for effective 
testimony in face of an incredulous world (John xiv. 
26, XV. 26, xvi. 13). 

The background of the apostolic age is obvious 
in Luke's version especially ; compare passages Uke 
Acts xvi. 24, 2 Tim. iv. 16, 1 Cor. iL 13, Eph. vi. 19, 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 185 

and the experiences of Stephen and Paul. But the 
tone of the saying, particularly in its Marcan form, is 
consonant with the teaching of Jesus. The Spirit is 
promised not as the principle of a new life but as a 
special equipment for emergencies, which ensures 
an adequate witness to the gospel, not the personal 
safety of the witnesses. This is on the hues of the 
Old Testament conception of the Spirit as prophetic 
and inspiring. There is no attempt, as in the Fourth 
gospel, to follow Paul in grouping under the Spirit 
faith, love, fellowship, and life eternal. Jesus 
stated these in other terms, and it is an incidental 
proof of the authenticity of this sajdng that it con- 
fines the Spirit to the special emergencies which met 
the Christian in his vocation of witnessing to the 
messianic cause, instead of connecting the Spirit 
with Jesus Himself or representing it as giv'en in 
answer to prayer. 

So far as the theology of the synoptic gospels is 
concerned, Jesus never imparted the Spirit to His 
disciples, nor did He even promise it explicitly. 
Luke supplements this omission in part by substi- 
tuting the Holy Spirit for good things in the saying 
from Q which originally ran as follows : // then you, 
evil as you are, know to give good gifts -to your children, 
how much more shall your Father in heaven give good 
things to those who ask Him (Matt. vii. ll=Luke xi. 
13), and in Marcion's edition of the gospel this was 
reiterated in the substitution of may thy Holy Spirit 
come wpon us and cleanse us for the first or second 
petition of the Lord's Prayer. But it is noticeable 
that the prediction of John the Baptist that Jesus 
was to baptize, not with water but with the Holy 
Spirit {iv irvcv/xaTi o.yi<^, Mark i. 8), is not echoed 



186 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [ch. 

by Jesus Himself.^ Luke interprets it as fulfilled 
after the resurrection in the outburst of spiritual 
ecstasy at Pentecost (Luke xxiv. 49, cf. Acts i. 4), 
and this was probably the normal view of the early 
church. Yet, in one important passage of the 
Fourth gospel (xx. 22-3), the impartation of the 
Spirit is associated with an appearance of the risen 
Lord. He breathed on them and said to them, Receive 
the Holy Spirit : 

Whosesoever sins you forgive, they are forgiven ; 
Whosesoever sins you retain, they are retained. 

The symbolims of the passage is partly visible 
already in the Philonic system. Commenting on 
Gen. ii. 7, Philo {Legum Alleg. i. 13), observes that 
' there are three things, what breathes in, what 
receives the breath, and what is breathed in ; what 
breathes in is God, what receives God is o voCs, 
and what is breathed in is to irvev/xa.' Through 
the medium of the Spirit God conveys to man the 
power [reivavTO's tov deov ttjv ix<^' lavTov ^vvajxiv Slo. 
Tov /lea-ov TTi/tu/iaros axP' '''°^ viroK£i/i6Voi>) of knowing 
and touching the divine nature, and the reason why 
TTvorl is used instead of Trvevfia in the former part 
of Gen. ii. 7 is that Trvevjxa is associated with energy 

and intensity (to /xiv yap Trvcv/ia vtvorjTat, Kara Trjv 
la-)(vv Kal evTOvlav Kal Stlva/itv), whereas ttvotq is a 

gentle, mild breath. Consequently, while the heavenly 
man or the vovi fashioned after God's own likeness 
may be said to partake of the Spirit, the material 

1 Jesus appears to have invested the disciples with the power of 
exorcising as well as of healing (in his name ?) in token of the divine 
reign which they were to announce (Matt. ix. 35, Luke ix. 1-2, Matt. 
X. 1), but this is not a fulfilment of John's prediction. 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 187 

man or the vovs «« t'^s vKri? only participates in the 
milder effluence of the divine Being. The Fourth 
evangeUst, however, refrains from associating the gift 
of the Spirit with a new creation of the soul ; he 
connects the vital power of it especially with 
forgiveness. 

Now, this is a conception of the Spirit which is 
significant in several directions. As Baur has pointed 
out, ' The Spirit only comes in His fulness after the 
close of the earthly hfe of Jesus, and thus stands, as 
the universal Christian principle, high above the per- 
sonal authority even of the apostles.' ^ The word- 
ing of this statement is not beyond criticism, but it 
is substantially accurate. Elsewhere in the Fourth 
gospel the author is not content, like Luke, to ignore 
the special claim on behalf of Peter, which had led in 
some Jewish Christian circles to the shaping of the 
saying in Matt. xvi. 19 ; he is careful to suggest 
Peter's subordination to the favourite disciple. 
Furthermore, he broadens out even the general 
promise of Matt, xviii. 18 into a promise ^ for the 
disciples as a body, and associates it with the Spirit. 
Finally, this incident in the upper room is the 
Johannine equivalent for the Lucan story of the 
bestowal of the Spirit at Pentecost. The writer's 
aim is to connect the Spirit as closely as possible 
with the person of Christ, a coimection which is not 
prominent in the Lucan story, where moreover the 
Spirit is ecstatic or explosive rather than an expres- 
sion for the indwelHng presence of the living Christ. 
According to the Johannine pragmatism (xv. 26, 

1 Chwrch History of the First Three Centuries, i, 178. 

2 Von Dobsohiitz (Ostern und Pfingsten, 1903) further identifies 
1 Cor. XV. 6 with this scene. 



188 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

xvi. 7, etc.), this reception of the Spirit follows the 
return of Jesus to the Father, and it is therefore 
possible that the latter change is supposed to have 
taken place between ver. 17 and ver. 19. In any 
case there is no such interval of time as in the 
Lucan story or even in Matthew's gospel (xxviii. 20). 
Jesus is glorified and the Spirit is forthwith bestowed 
by Him directly on the Church, without any sugges- 
tion that it was to be mediated to others through 
the agency of the apostles. * This does not imply 
that the author was indifferent to the historical 
function of the apostles in the course of early Chris- 
tianity. It simply marks his desire to emphasise 
the significance of the Spirit as the very life of Christ 
in men, and to connect that Spirit, on the one hand, 
with the risen Jesus directly, and on the other hand, 
with the experience,^ not merely with the particular 
activities, of the Church. The description of the 
Spirit being breathed upon the disciples is not 
exactly harmonious with the semi-personal concep- 
tion which pervades the previous chapters (xiv.-xvii.) : 
it is more reahstic than we might expect from what 
precedes. But the motive of the incident obviously 
is to safeguard against the idea that the Spirit in the 
Church is anything else than the Spirit of Christ 
Himself, or that it can be mediated except through 
direct personal touch with Him.^ According to 

1 This is the thought which, in another connection, underlies John 
iv. 23 f. 

s Philo {De Plantatione, 5) explains Gen. ii. 7 (Goil breathed into 
man's face the breath of life, iviirvevae . . . trvo^v fa}^s)tomean that 
man, by receiving the breath of the divine lips, was changed into the 
likeness of Him who imparted the breath. 

3 The Spirit which th»se who believed in him were to receive (vii, 
39), Here trust is equivalent to personal dependence. 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 189 

the Johannine view, the faith"and fellowship of the 
Church rest not upon the Spirit of God so much as 
on the Spirit conceived as the Spirit of Christ, on 
the Spirit as the alter ego of the risen Jesus, whose 
functions are bound up with the revelation of God in 
His Son. The indwelling of the Spirit is equivalent ^ 
to the presence of Christ in the heart of Christians.^ 
The Spirit is another ^ comforter, who carries on in 
the new conditions the relation of Jesus to His dis- 
ciples on earth, and raises that relationship to an 
eternal and spiritual tie between men and God. 
The fourth gospel reproduces the synoptic concep- 
tion that the Spirit did not exist for the Church 
till Jesus died and rose again (vii. 39). The precise 
form in which the thought is expressed is not synoptic, 
but the thought itself is. There could be no Spirit, 
in the Christian sense of the term, until Jesus had 
passed from earth ; only when He was glorified 
could the Spirit come into play within the sphere 
of faith as an inspiring and animating power. 
The fourth evangelist sums up this characteristic 

1 The two conceptions of (a) Christ in heaven, dwelling through 
His alter ego in the hearts of His people ; and (ft) Christ personally 
indwelling, are complementary expressions of the same religious 
experience. Both were already suggested by Paul, but they were 
needed specially by the Fourth evangelist, as he never speaks of 
Christians dwelling in the heavenly places or having their life hid 
with Christ in God. See on this Beyschlag's Neio Testament Theology, 
i. 279 f. 

' Dr. Abbott {Johannine Grammar, 2352-63) subtly distinguishes 
three stages in xvi. 16-17 : the Spirit is to be with them (^efl' i/xSiy) 
for ever, not for a short time as Jesus had been in the flesh : also, it 
is to be at home with them {irap' lifuv pAvu), since they possess a 
spiritual afSnity with the truth: finally, it is to be in them (koI 4v 
i/uv IffTiv), i.e. in their inmost being. 

» It is hardly possible to regard this term as ' another than your- 
selves ' (Abbott, Johannine Gram/inar, 2793-94). 



190 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oH. 

theology of the Spirit in two phrases : the Paraclete 
and the Spirit of truth. 

(a) The former (TrapaxAijTos) has no EngUsh eqxii- 
valent. ' Comforter ' is too one-sided, unless it is 
recollected that ' comfort ' etymologicaUy means 
to strengthen. ' Advocate ' is closer to the original 
sense of the Greek term, but no functions of inter- 
cession are ascribed to the Spirit. Neither is much 
light thrown upon the Johannine usage by the fact 
that the Targum employs 'p'raqlita for the angelic 
messenger who intervenes in Job xxxiii. 23 f . to bring 
man to his senses before it is too late : except that 
here as in Philo the term ' Paraclete ' has acquired 
the meaning of instructor or interpreter in things 
divine, with the natural connotation of helpfulness 
and encouragement. The insight and aid afforded 
by the Spirit as Paraclete, according to the Johannine 
theology, may be said to relate almost entirely to 
the higher gnosis of the personaUty of Christ. All 
fresh intuitions and experiences of the Christian 
life are referred to the operation of the Spirit as 
Paraclete. It is also through the Church, as exercis- 
ing authority in the Ufe and witness of Christians 
to the Uving Christ, that the Spirit convicts the 
outside world ^ of the tragic error which it makes 
in refusing to take Christ at His own and at the 
Church's valuation. The presentment of Christ as 
the Ught and love of God rejected by men will 
bring home to their conscience the sin of crucifying 
and denying Him : the resurrection, proved by the 
presence of the Spirit in the Church, shows that He 
did not perish as a criminal, but Uves with the 
Father, while the real crime lies with those who put 
' xvi. 7-11. 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 191 

Him to death as a blasphemer : finally, this vindica- 
tion of Christ by the resurrection ^ proves that the 
devil, as prince of the present world, is doomed, 
since the living presence of the Spirit in the Church 
means that Christ has been victorious over the forces 
of death and the devil. The three lines along which 
the world is thus confounded and condemned are 
not separate but converging. They are different 
directions taken by the same overwhelming force 
of testimony which is generated by the Spirit in the 
Christian community, witnessing through the very 
existence of that community as a spiritual body to 
the hving Lord. The third is a climax only in 
form. The expectation of judgment, by being 
transferred to the sphere of the Spirit, ceases to be 
eschatologioal in the synoptic sense. ' The judg- 
ment upon the world which the primitive Christian 
community looked for at the future coming of the 
messiah is regarded by the Hellenic evangelist as 
already fulfilled in the fact that Christ, by His death 
and by His being glorified in the Spirit of the Church, 
had been proved to be the holy One of God, and the 
victorious conqueror of the world.' ^ The very fact 
that the writer uses a technical term of apocalyptic 
eschatology {lXeyxei.v) in this spiritual sense seems 
to emphasise the transformation of the conception. 
The apocalyptic counterpart left no doubt as to 
the ' conviction ' being one of doom (cf. Rev. i. 7, 
Fourth Esdras xii. 32 f., etc.), and this is possibly the 
primary meaning of the Fourth evangehst, although 
he does not develop the Une of thought. For this 

1 This may be the allusion in the obscure phrase of 1 Tim. iii, 16, 
He was vindicated iy the Spirit. See above, p. 37. 

2 Pfleiderer, Primitive Christianity, iv. 221. 



192 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [CH. 

reason, among others, it is unlikely that the con- 
vincing power of the Spirit in this passage- denotes 
the overwhelming, mysterious effect which was 
sometimes produced on outsiders or on recalcitrant 
Christians by utterances from the Hps of men who 
were possessed by the prophetic Spirit (instances in 
1 Cor. xiv. 24 f., Ignat. ad Phil. 1)} The impression 
which the Spirit is described as conveying, in the 
Johannine doctrine of conviction, is at once more 
general and less remedial. 

(6) The Spirit of Truth is a Bynon3rm for the Para- 
clete, but it is wholly confined to the operation of 
the Spirit on the community ■ (contrast xvi. 7 and 
xvi. 13). The phrase itself is as old as the Testa- 
ments of the Patriarchs (cf. Test. Jud. 20), but the 
specific sense of the term is determined by the 
Johannine usage of truth ^ as reality, as the trans- 
cendent and absolute divine hfe which is fully 
manifested in the person of Jesus, God's Son, Christ 
is HimseK the truth, and the Spirit of truth is His 
Spirit, mediating for men that personal participa- 
tion in the eternal life of God which is described as 
the knowledge of God and of His Son Jesus Christ. 
The antithesis to truth is the unsubstantial as well 
as the false, and the corresponding antithesis is that 
between the flesh and the Spirit, or between light 
and darkness. As the grace and the truth of God — 
i.e. the gracious reahty, or the real grace— came 
through Jesus into the world, the Spirit of truth 
carries on this full disclosure of the divine nature 
to the faith of the elect and susceptible. 

1 So Weinel, Die Wirkungen des Geistes und der Gfeister (1899), 
pp. 53, 189. 

2 Cf. Hastings' Dictionary of Christ and the Gospels, ii. 768-71. 



v.] THE SPIRIT OP JESUS 193 

Attempts have been made sometimes to connect 
both epithets. Thus Dr. Abbott suggests that the 
Paraclete is called the Spirit of truth, or the Holy 
Spirit, in order to safeguard the doctrine against 
any superstitious notion of the Advocate procuring 
special favours from God contrary to justice ; simi- 
larly the references to the divii^e origin of the Para- 
clete in xiv. 16, 26, xv. 26, must be interpreted, on 
his theory, as emphasising the fact that the Advocate 
of Christians is not ' one of the ordinary kind — the 
kind that takes up a chent's cause, good or bad, and 
makes the best of it.' ^ It is extremely doubtful, how- 
ever, if such a shade of meaning was present to the 
mind of the writer. The term Paraclete was probably 
used by him without any such consciousness of its 
literal legal associations, and in calling the Spirit 
the Spirit of truth, he simply defines its sphere as 
the unfolding of the divine reality of hfe in Christ. 
The full truth into which the Spirit initiates the 
faithful is the absolute manifestation of God in the 
person of Jesus Christ. He will glorify me, for he 
will take of mine and declare it to you. The higher 
insight into the meaning of the life of Jesus, which 
is presented in the Fourth gospel, is thus defended 
as legitimate over against the vagaries of Gnostic 
speculation on the one side, and the opposite dis- 
inchnation to advance beyond the Jewish Christian 
or messianic categories of interpretation which had 
been current among the first generation of the 
disciples. 

The writer does more, however, than justify his 

own interpretation of Christ. He anticipates fresh 

insight into the meaning of the Lord, provided that 

1 Cf. Johannvne Vocabulary, 1720 Z; Johannme Grammar, 1932. 

N 



194 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [ch. 

the historic incarnation is maintained as primary. 
It is the work of the Spirit to unfold more and more 
of that meaning, as believing men keep in contact 
with Him who is Himself the Reahty. The Fourth 
gospel provides for further self-expression on the 
part of the Christ to His Church, and these revela- 
tions in the future and of the future he within the 
progressive witness of the Spirit to faith. They are 
described in xvi. 13-14 : — 

He will declare to you the things that are to come. 
He will glorify me : 

for he will take of mine and declare it to you. 

The former function is the Johannine equivalent 
for the synoptic eschatological predictions, and 
represents the normal Church's view of the Spirit 
as the inspirer of hope for the future. But the 
second declaration is more characteristic of the 
gospel's theology,^ and though it would be unfair 
to read the former exclusively in the hght of the 
latter, it is on the latter that the stress falls. 

The distinctive sense of ' truth ' in the Fourth 
gospel, as an equivalent for the reaUty of the divine 
nature, suggests that the Spirit of this dXrjOeia would 
be mediated in some sense through baptism and 
the Lord's Supper. In the ciurent Hellenistic 
theology the Spirit or essence of the deity was 

1 It corresponds to the synoptic view that the full meaning of the life 
of Jesus only dawned upon the Church after His death, and that the 
latter was needed in order to reveal His divine messianic significance 
(of. Luke xxiv. 25-27, 45). This prompted the interest in the proof 
from prophecy, especially, but the theology of the gospels is still 
remote from the later Gnostic view, based on Acts i. 3, that Jesus 
imparted esoteric teaching during the interval between the resurrec- 
tion and the ascension. 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 195 

imparted to worshippers not simply through ecstasy 
but through participation in sacred rites and creeds, 
by means of which the devotee was invested with 
immortaUty and freed from the corruption of the 
flesh. It is a moot point how far the language of 
the Fourth gospel, which undoubtedly recalls this 
popular theology of the cults, denotes a reaction 
against it or against its introduction into the Chris- 
tian cult. At any rate, the connection of the Spirit 
with baptism and the Lord's Supper is stated in a 
fashion which has no exact parallel in the synoptic 
gospels. 

(c) In iii. 1 f. there may be an implicit contrast 
between the Christian sacrament of baptism and the 
ritual hope of regeneration which characterised 
some of the mysteries and cults, but, if so, this 
reference is wholly secondary to the main theme of 
the passage, which is to present the Christian con- 
dition of access to God over against the Jewish. 
The setting of the idea in a dialogue between Jesus 
and a Jewish rabbi is sufELcient to suggest what was 
in the writer's mind. Christian baptism, admitting 
the convert to God's kingdom, is a regenerating 
process which makes him in reahty what the Jewish 
proselyte was in name, ' a new-bom child,' initiating 
him into the mysteries of the divine household.^ 
The subsequent allusion to Hght (verses 19 f.) corro- 
borates this. Proselytes to the monotheism of the 
Jews should be heartily welcomed, says Philo {De 
PcBniteniia, i.), since ' although they were formerly 
bhnd they have received their sight, beholding 
hght most briUiant out of darkness most profound.' 

1 In iii. 3 (of. Justin's Apol. i. 61) we have a development of Matt, 
xviii. 3. 



196 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

Tlie'Jradical change of nature upon which Jesus 
insisted when He declared that men must turn and 
become like little children before they could enter 
the kingdom, is thus presented in the Fourth, gospel 
as regeneration, a birth from above, which works an 
entire transformation of life. The necessity of this 
birth from the Spirit is traced to the nature of man 
as flesh. That which is horn of the flesh is flesh, and 
that which is born of the spirit is spirit. As the pro- 
logue had already pointed out, those who become 
children of God by faith in Christ are born of God, not 
of any human imptilse or effort. This is the theo- 
logical interpretation, from the side of God, of the 
experience which the synoptic gospels present as a 
moral change upon the part of man in response to 
God's call ; as a theological iuterpretation it bears 
a predestinarian and semi-metaphysical appearance 
which is characteristic of the Fourth gospel, the more 
so that this gospel avoids terms like repentance and 
turning. But elsewhere faith is presented as the 
vital condition of the new birth, and even in the 
context of this passage it is subsequently recognised. 
From the outset baptism into the name of Christ 
had connoted an inward personal union with the 
nature of the Lord. Paul had deepened this relation 
by his faith-mysticism, and in the Fourth gospel 
there is as little sense of any contradiction or dis- 
crepancy between the spiritual process and the rite 
with which it was bound up in the normal practice 
of the Church. The writer significantly lays stress 
upon the work of the Spirit as the decisive factor. 
Indeed there would be no difficulty in understanding 
the thought of this passage were it not for the fact 
that he once co-ordinates water incidentally with the 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 197 

Spirit. Unless one is born of water and. the Spirit he 
cannot enter God's kingdom.. The clause would fall 
at once into harmony with its context, and with the 
deepest principles of the Johannine theology, if the 
words liSaTos Kal were omitted ^ as a later sacramen- 
tarian gloss. Even when they are retained, they 
cannot be assigned any primary importance for the 
argument, in view e.g. of the fact that baptism is 
elsewhere omitted (cf. i. 12) in the description of 
how men become children of God. Baptism is inter- 
preted as the initial act of entrance into the kingdom, 
on primitive hnes, but the Spirit occupies the fore- 
ground of the argument, and it is no longer the Spirit, 
as in the primitive ecstatic view, but the Spirit as 
the creative power of God which produces the divine 
hfe. This is slightly closer to the Pauline conception 
than to the teaching of the sub-Pauhne theology, 
e.g., in Titus iii. 5, where it is argued that God saved 
us not on the score of good conduct — ^not, as John 
would say, by the flesh — but by the bath of regeneration 
{XovTpov TraXiyytveo-tas) and renewal by the holy Spirit 
which he poured out richly upon us through Jesus 
Christ, or again in Eph. v. 26, where Christ purifies 
the Church by the bath of water Iv p^/ian. The 
Fourth gospel assumes the outward rite, but lays all 
the stress upon the spiritual attitude to God through 
Christ which lends value and meaning to it. 

(d) It is a parallel conception which is presented in 
chapter vi., where again the vivifying power of the 
Spirit is brought forward, this time more promin- 
ently and in coimection with eating and drinking. 
Here it is not a question of sustaining the hfe im- 

1 So e.g. Kirsopp Lake, Influence of Textual Criticism on New 
Testament Exegesis (1904), pp. 1 f. 



198 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [CH. 

parted at baptism, but of receiving the divine life. 
The metaphor is changed from birth to eating and 
drinking, in order to bring out the active side of the 
relationship on the part of men, but there is no sug- 
gestion of food mystically mediating hfe eternal 
to those who have already been bom through baptism 
into the hfe of God. 

There were three elements in the primitive theology 
of the Lord's Supper : it was viewed as (a) a com- 
memoration of the sacrificial death of Jesus, which 
inaugurated the new order of things for the Church ; 
(6) as a medium of spiritual union between the Hving 
Lord and his people ; and (c) as a bond of brotherhood 
which closely knit the latter together in the mystical 
body of which the Lord was head. These elements 
are not separate ; they are connected with one 
another, and all are present, more or less distinctly, 
in the various representations of the Supper which 
have been preserved. But the emphasis varies : now 
one, now another, is prominent. In the theology 
of the Fourth gospel it is (6) which is uppermost. 
We can feel the vibration of (a) ^ in one or two 
allusions hke The bread which I will give is my flesh 
for the life of the world (vi. 51), but (c) is absent from 
the discussion ; it is on {&) that the writer concen- 
trates his attention. Here, as in the relation of the 
Spirit to baptism, the prominent interest is not the 
social or unifying conception, but the inward tie of 
the Christian to the Lord ; the corporate aspect 
bulks less in the writer's mind than the individual. 
But although the Fourth gospel omits the synoptic 
Supper, probably owing to its eschatological associ- 

1 The sacrifice which preceded an ancient sacramental meal was not 
directly present to the Johannine type of theology. 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 199 

ations in part.i it restates a fundamental idea of the 
earlier view. The synoptic words, this is my covenant- 
blood, plainly refer to the blood which Moses sprinkled 
on the Israelites (Exod. xxiv. 8) to ratify their 
covenant with Yahveh. They imply that by His 
self-sacrifice in death men are to enjoy the long- 
promised new covenant with God. His death is not 
the end of all things for the disciples ; it is the begin- 
ning of the new order of communion with God in 
which the highest hopes of forgiveness and fellowship 
will be realised through the relation of God to men 
which His sacrifice establishes. This is corroborated 
by the other reference of the saying to the Servant 
of Yahveh, of whom it is said, / give thee for a 
covenant of the people (eis SiadrjKrjv ycvous, Isa. 
xlii. 6, cf. xlix. 8). Here the function of the Servant 
is to mediate a covenant between Yahveh and His 
people.^ Such an association of Christ's death with 
the new covenant — which cannot be emended out of 
the text — is sufficient to prove that the bond of 
communion is intended to unite God and His people 
through Jesus. This is the primary and original 
sense of the tradition. It is in Paulinism that the 
further conception of unity between Christians is 
introduced, not in the specific restatement of the 



1 According to the Fourth gospel (xix. 35, 36), again, Christ's hody 
was not broken. The mystic significance of this did not harmonise 
with the earlier praxi« of the Lord's Supper as the breaking of the 
bread which represented the Lord's body. 

2 Note the LXX. version of Isa. liii. 11-12 (the Lord is willing), 
SiKfiLGjaai dUatov eG bovKeiovra iroWo^s, Kol rds afjiaprias atiTwv 
airis Avoicrei. Scd, toOto a&rds K\Tjpovofi'^(T€i ttoXXoiJs . . . &vd* Siv 
TapeS66ri els Bdvarov rj fvx^ airoO, where we have not only the 
Servant in relation to mam/, but the yielding up of his ^vx^ °^ their 
behalf (see above, p. 146). 



200 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [oh. 

supper, but in the previous context, where Christians 
are viewed as the body of Christ. We have no right 
to read this back into the synoptic (Mark-Matthew) 
tradition, as e.g. Wellhausen and Kattenbusch pro- 
pose to do, not even although the element of 
brotherhood and mutual unity in the Lord's Supper 
reappears in the Uturgical passage of the Didache 
(9-10). The latter tradition makes it all the more 
strange that the Fourth gospel, which is so concerned 
to emphasise the vmity of Christians through their 
relation to Jesus Christ, should fail to employ the 
Lord's Supper as a symbol and sacrament of com- 
munion. A partial clue to the omission may be 
found, however, in the so-called Epistle to the 
Ephesians, which also concentrates upon the unity 
of the Church and yet significantly ignores the Lord's 
Supper as a proof and symbol of brotherhood (iv. 4 f .). 
There is one Body and one Spirit, even as you were 
called in one hope of your calling, one Lord, one faith, 
one baptism. The Fourth gospel's distinctive con- 
tribution to the theology of the Last Supper is an 
emphasis upon it as the means of union between 
Christians and Christ who is the imparter of the 
divine hfe or spirit. 

It presents this characteristically in connection 
with the feeding of the five thousand (vi. 1-14, 26 f.). 
Down to verse 51 (or 51a) there is no difficulty ; 
the homily, in Johannine fashion, represents Christ 
as the source of spiritual nourishment for believing 
men, which is communicated to, and assimilated by, 
personal faith. / am the bread of life ; he who comes 
to me shall never hunger, and he who believes on me shall 
never thirst. . . . I am the living bread, descended from 
heaven ; if any one eats of this bread he shall live for 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 201 

eoer. It is at this point that the difiS.culty begins. 
The following intermediate passage down to verse 56 
(57, 58) insists that eternal life depends upon eating 
the flesh and drinking the blood of the Son of man. 
Then the dialogue explains this strange language. 
To prevent any misconception, it is pointed out that 
the food is the heavenly personality of the risen Son 
of man. It is the spirit — i.e. the ascended Christ — 
who imparts life, the flesh is of no use whatever. The 
words I have spoken to you are spirit and life. And, 
as if to emphasise the fact that this is the determin- 
ing and crucial thought of the entire dialogue, Peter 
confesses. Thou hast words of life eternal. 

It is natural that the middle and so-called ' sacra- 
mental ' passage should have raised critical suspicions 
of an interpolation or an authentic source which 
has been worked over by the evangelist ; but, even 
taking the entire section as it stands in the canonical 
text, we can do justice to its theology from the 
historical point of view by recalling the fact that 
this realistic tendency, against which the author of 
Hebrews protests (xiii. 9 f.) in the name of spiritual 
Christianity, is carried out still further as the post- 
apostolic age proceeds. By the time of Justin 
Martyr the bread and wine of the Supper effect a 
change in the bodies of the participants which 
guarantees to them eternal life, very much as in the 
contemporary mysteries. Now, the Fourth gospel is 
sometimes held to reflect an earlier stage of this 
tendency, and sometimes to express a sympathy 
with such sacramental views which is hardly recon- 
cilable with the author's more spiritual standpoint. 
For each of these interpretations, especially for the 
latter, a case can be made out. But there is good 



202 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [ch. 

reason to hold that neither is adequate to the entire 
synthesis and situation of the Fourth gospel. What 
the author seeks to do is to show that the communi- 
cation of the Spirit and life eternal is independent of 
any such feeding upon the Christian deity as present 
IQ the bread and wine of the Supper. This is one 
reason why he deliberately omits the institution of 
the Supper on the last night, and why at an earlier 
stage in the gospel he as deliberately inserts a para- 
graph full of realistic sacramental language in a con- 
text which indicates how it ought to be taken. As 
the long passages of table-talk ia chapters xiv.-xvii. 
plainly indicate, he was thoroughly alive to the 
communion of Christians with Christ and one another, 
which shone out in the sacrament from Paul to the 
Didache. But we have no clue to the significance 
which he attached to the Supper in the praxis of 
the Church, except the indirect clue to be found in his 
attitude of aloofness towards the realistic tendency 
of the age. Among the mystically minded it has been 
usual either to remain indifferent to the sacrament 
of the Lord's Supper, or to permeate its ritual with 
an inner significance of their own. The history of the 
Church offers instances of both attitudes. It is not 
possible, however, to determine the positive outlook 
of the Johannine theology upon this sacrament. The 
probabilities are that it did not differ essentially 
from that of Paul and Luke. According to the 
eschatological passage in the Apocalypse of Baruch 
(xxix. 3 f.), at the beginning of messiah's revelation 
those who hunger and thirst are to be miraculously 
fed in the latter days by the manna which is again 
showered from heaven, after which the messiah 
comes back in glory, and those who have fallen 



THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 203 

p in the hope of Him are raised from the dead. 
Fourth gospel represents the living Christ as 
sal, spiritual manna which is to be enjoyed here 
LOW by those who believe. Thus ia the interpre- 
1 both of baptism and the Lord's Supper it is 
pirit which dominates the argument, the Spirit 
mection with the personality of the risen Christ. 

in the Fourth gospel the Pauline antithesis of 
and spirit is conceived as a cosmic antithesis, 
vorld or koo-juos is opposed to the divine nature, 
1 is spirit, light, love, and truth. But the 
biesis is not left as a metaphysical or moral 
3m. The Father loves the world, and his love 
e source of Christ's mission. Christ, as the 

and the Son of God, has the Spirit in full 
are ; He possesses the divine life, and mediates 
men through His words or p-qfiara. It is signifi- 
that in the third and the sixth chapters alike 

' words ' are put forward iu the climax of the 
nent. He whom God has sent speaks the words 
>d, for God does not give the Spirit by measure, 
the Spirit which gives life . . . the words I have 
n to you are spirit and life. The words are 
personified, like the Spirit. They have a role 
Lulike that which Philo assigns to the logoi or 
ets in relation to the Logos ; ^ they are not 
ances or words, in the modem sense, so much 
il powers of the divine nature, acting on behalf 
ad or Christ. Only their effect is not repre- 
d as magical, and indeed it seems to be ia view 

M. Goguel, La notion Johannique de L'Bsprit et ses anU- 
Aistoriques, p. 103. The fi-^/naTa of the Fourth gospel really 

)etween the synoptic Xfryoi of Jesus and the semi-metaphysical 

IS of Philo. 



204 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS [CH. 

of such a misconception that the author refers to 
them in connection with baptism and the Lord's 
Supper. The divine Ufe which the words express and 
convey is conditioned by obedience and trust on the 
part of men ; thus only do they taste the heavenly gift. 

(e) In relation to the person of Christ, the Spirit, 
according to the representation of the Fourth gospel, 
occupies a position different from that of the synpptic 
tradition. 

The birth-stories of Matthew and Luke represent 
a somewhat developed stage of reflection in their 
association of the Spirit with the personaUty of 
Jesus, as compared with the baptism-stories (see 
above, pp. 136 f.). It was felt that prior to His 
mission Jesus must have been invested with the 
Spirit, and at the same time that the Spirit must 
have been more to Him than an equipment for the 
messianic vocation. Matthew, therefore, like Luke 
(i. 35) and Ignatius,^ ascribes the conception of 
Jesus by his mother to the Spirit (i. 18, 20), while 
Luke, who is even more influenced by the apostolic 
age as the age of the Spirit, adds that John the 
Baptist was filled with the messianic Spirit from his 
birth (i. 15, 17), and that his parents also possessed 
the prophetic Spirit (i. 41, 67),* hke Simeon (ii. 25 f.). 
The Fourth gospel, instead of employiag the idea of 
a virgin-birth, emphasises the fact that the divine 
Spirit remaiaed upon Jesus at the baptism (i. 32-33), 
a touch which also appears in the gospel according 
to the Hebrews,^ although the latter apparently 

1 Ad. Ephes. xviii. 2. 

2 Also i. 47, If the Magnificat was originally spoken by Elizabeth. 

3 ' When the Lord had ascended from the water, the entire foun- 
tain [the Greek original KoK\>ix^ii0pa was a confusion for kUKvii^is of 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 205 

omits any reference to the dove-symbolism. The 
Fourth gospel thus develops in its own way (cf. iii. 
34-35 with Luke iv. I, 14) Luke's emphasis upon 
the permanent endowment of Jesus with the Spirit, 
and if the union of the divine Spirit with the person 
of Jesus appears superfluous ^ after the incarnation 
of the Logos, it is hardly more so than the endow- 
ment of the Spirit at baptism after the Lucan explan- 
ation of the birth of Jesus. The logical position was 
to argue that such a supernatural being did not 
require the Spirit. Justin Martyr's theology reaches 
this stage : We, know it was not becaiise he needed 
ha/ptism or the Spirit that came upon him ^ like a dove, 
that he came to the river {Dial. 88). The Fourth 
evangeUst might have taken this view (cf . xi. 42), but 
he retains the incident of the Spirit's descent at 
baptism as a sign {a-r^netov) for John the Baptist ; 
it had not any specific significance for his own 
christology, but it served to emphasise the superi- 
ority of Christianity to the contemporary sect of 
John the Baptist's disciples and their sympathisers 
within Judaism. 

One remarkable feature of this theology of the 
Spirit in relation to the birth of Jesus is that it never 
associates the Spirit with the beguming of a new 

the Spirit descended and rested upon him.' But the original of the 
reference is probably the Enochic (ilix. 3) prediction that the Spirit 
of wisdom would dwell in messiah. 

1 Strictly speaking, the Fourth gospel cannot be said to describe the 
baptism ; it is only referred to by John the Baptist for the purpose 
of explaining how he came to recognise Christ. 

2 The tradition from which Justin takes his previous touch of the 
dove-Spirit 'fluttering' is reproduced in Od. Sol, xxiv. l{Tke dove 
fluttered over the messiah). On the dove-symbol, cf. Conybeare in 
Expositor (ninth series), ix. 451 f., Cheyne's Bible Problems, pp. 83 f., 
237 f., and B. A. Abbott in From Letter to Spirit, 685-724. 



206 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS [ch. 

creation in Jesus as the second Adam (cf. Luke iii. 
38). According to one rabbinic conception, the 
Spirit brooded like a dove over the waters at the 
creation of the world, but there is not the slightest 
hint that a similar idea of the Spirit as the presiding 
priuciple of the new order occurred to the authors 
of the gospels. Had they shared this view, they 
would not have left the symbolism of the dove in the 
narrative of the baptism. Even the Fourth gospel 
does not identify the birth of Jesus with the iaeama- 
tion of the Spirit of God. According to its theology, 
the function of the Spirit in relation to the person 
of Christ is to iuspire the utterances which reveal the 
nature and purpose of God (cf . iii. 31-34, vi. 63). This 
corresponds to its function in the Church (cf. xiv. 26), 
which deals with these revelations through Christ 
as its material, except that, while the Son possesses 
the Spirit in complete measure, Christians simply 
receive it in part (iii. 32, cf. 1 John iv. 13).^ As 
for the functions of the Spirit in relation to the 
indwelling Christ in chapters xiv.-xvi., they are as un- 
defined as they are ia relation to the Logos ; in the 
prologue the Spirit is absent, in the rest of the gospel 
the Logos. Probably ia both cases the idea of the 
Spirit partially coalesces with the other conception ; 
the latter is specifically Johanniue, and logically 
takes the place of the former, but the author carries 
on from the synoptic tradition and Paulinism the 
Spirit-idea, without definitely explaioiag its place 
in the light of his characteristic categories.^ It 

1 The conception of the indwelling Spirit naturally is not quite 
consistent with this view. 

3 A similar difficulty occurs in Philo, where the conception of the 
Spirit in relation to the Logos and Wisdom is also uncertain. 



v.] THE SPIRIT OT JESUS 207 

forms one expression for the personal religious 
experience, parallel to those of the Logos and the 
indwelUng Christ ; but the writer, like Paul, tends to 
confine the relations of God and the Christian to the 
Spirit, grouping under the category of the Logos the 
cosmic and providential functions which in Hebrew 
thought were subsumed under Wisdom or the Spirit. 
The contrast between the amount and the char- 
acter of the references to the Spirit in the synoptic 
and Johannine theologies is at first sight remarkable, 
even perplexing. It is possible, of course, that 
owing to its messianic associations the idea of the 
Spirit may have occupied a larger place in the 
teaching of Jesus than the synoptic records would 
suggest, and some critics, e.g., Dr. Kattenbusch ^ 
and Dr. E. A. Abbott,^ even argue that a basis may 
be found for some of the Johannine sayings on the 
Spirit. Thus the former considers that words like 
God is a Spirit, and they that worship him must 
worship him in spirit and in truth (iv. 24), the 
Spirit hloweth where it listeth (iii. 3, 8), and it is 
the Spirit who imparts life, the flesh is of no use 
whatever (vi. 63), are fairly genuiue. ' Certainly,' he 
adds, ' Paul did not go beyond his master when he 
told the Corinthians what were the greater xa/o'V/uara.' 
This is true, but it does not imply that Jesus, e.g., 
must have used a term like the Aramaic Parklete, 
which was variously paraphrased by the synoptic 

1 Das Aposiolische Symiol, ii. 674 f. 

2 The Son of Man, 3618 ff. Titius [Jesu Lehre vom Seiche Goites, 
160 f. ) also argues that if J esus was convinoed that the disciples would 
share in the future glory of His kingdom and life (Mark x. 45, xiv. 
24), it is reasonable to suppose that He told them how this mediation 
would be effected, and that the conception of the Spirit formed the 
best Old Testament idea for such instruction. 



208 THE THEOLOGY OF THE GOSPELS [oh. 

writers. There are organic correspondences of 
thought between the Fourth gospel's view of the 
Spirit in relation to Christ and some elements, un- 
coimected with the Spirit, in the synoptic tradition. 
' At any rate, the thought of John xvi. 7, which is 
not positively developed until xvi. 13 f ., seems to me 
to be too great for any one except Jesus. This 
conviction, held ia spite of all the untoward experi- 
ences of the preceding days, that his return to the 
Father, so far from interfering with His training of 
the disciples, would, on the contrary, carry it to 
completion, appears to me to be so congenial to the 
dauntless faith and humility of the Lord, and so 
essential as a link in His conceptions of what His own 
end and the end of the world implied, that in spite 
of the silence of the synoptic gospels I must attribute 
those words to Him.' ^ However this may be, the 
difference between the messianic Spirit of the earliest 
tradition in the synoptic gospels and the indwelling 
Spirit of the Fourth gospel is surely too great to 
permit of us reading back the latter into the 
theology of Jesus. It is an interpretation of His 
person, rather than an utterance of His own faith. 

Instead of attempting to harmonise the synoptic 
and the Johannine sayings on the Spirit, or of trying 
to find some basis for the latter in the historical 
teaching of Jesus, it is better for our present purpose 
to recall the inner significance of the Spirit idea in 
the Fourth gospel. What it lays stress on is that the 
religious value of Jesus consisted in His essential 
nearness to the God of love, the eternal and sublime 
One who revealed Himself thus to the faith and need 
of men. This absolute significance of Jesus is repre- 

1 Titius, Jesu Lehre vom Reiche Cfottes 164. 



v.] THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 209 

seated in the synoptic theology as a rule by other 
terms than those of the Spirit. The Fourth gospel, 
by developing the Spirit from the older messianic 
sphere into one more congruous with the Greek 
mind, is able to express the personality of the risen 
Lord in terms of the Spirit, but the religious content 
remains under the verbal differences ; the theo- 
logical evolution from the naive synoptic view to 
that of a personified hypostasis ought not to be 
allowed to obscure the identity of the devotional 
instinct which really prompts the more complex 
statement. This instinct still moves under the 
influence of the historic Jesus. It is the incarnate 
Logos which furnishes the material for the insight 
and vital energy of the Spirit in the community. 
He will take of mine and declare it to you. The 
theology of the Fourth gospel, as of the first three, 
would be impossible apart from the historical reve- 
lation of God in Jesus, and equally impossible if the 
life of Jesus on earth had exhausted that revelation. 
In this aspect, the doctrine of the Spirit in the Fourth 
gospel renders explicit what is presupposed in the 
earher records. 

It has an important bearing also upon the interpre- 
tation of the gospels in general as records of theology. 
Some Jewish rabbis, in the second century, used to 
attach a punning significance to the Greek term for 
the gospel, cva-yyiXiov. It is just 'awon gilion, they 
said, a piece of blank paper, a page without meaning 
or value. There are methods of treatiag the religious 
ideas of the gospels, within as well as outside the 
Church, which render them practically a blank page 
for faith. One is the tendency to explain the 
Christian ideas independently of a historical Jesus, 




210 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS 

or to minimise the cardinal and creative significance 
of His personality for the beliefs which are associ- 
ated with His name. Aaother is to confine His 
religion to a literal, historical reproduction of what 
He said and did on earth, identifying Him with some 
eschatological or humanitarian propaganda of His 
own age. Such methods, by minimising or exagger- 
ating the historical significance of Jesus, are untrue 
to the standpoint of religious faith from which the 
four gospels are written, faith in the living Lord who 
said, according to the Fourth (xvii. 26), / have 
made known to them thy name, and I will make it 
known. Theologies can be got from other stand- 
points, but none of them will be a theology of the 
gospels, and it is very doubtful if any of them will 
prove to be much of a gospel at all. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY 

A NTJMBEE of the more important treatises have been 
mentioned already. The following is only a selected list 
from the immense literature on the subject. 

On Mark's gospel : A. Menzies, The Earliest Gospel ; 
B. W. Bacon, The Beginnings of Gospel Story ; J. M. 
Thompson, Jesus according to S. Mark ; ' M. Goguel, 
L'Svangile de S. Marc et ses rapports avec ceux de 
Mathieu et de Luc ; J. Weiss, Das Aelteste Evangelium ; 
Wrede, Das Messiasgeheimnis in den Evangelien ; La- 
grange, Evangile selon Saint Marc. 

On Luke's gospel : Godet's Gommentaire ; B. Weiss, 
Die Quellen des Luhasevangeliums ; A. B. Bruce, The 
Kingdom of God; Colin Campbell, Critical Studies in 
S. Luke's Gospel. 

On Matthew's gospel : B. Weiss's edition in Meyer's 
Kommentar (1898); Zahn, Das Evangelium des Mat- 
thdus ; W. C. Allen in The International Critical Com- 
mentary ; Klostermann and Gressmann in Lietzmann's 
Handbuch zum I^euen Testament. 

On John's gospel : Godet's Gommentaire (fourth 
edition); Westcott's edition of the Greek text (1908); 
the editions by Zahn and Loisy ; J. Drummond, Character 
and Authorship of the Fourth Gospel; E. F. Scott, The 
Fourth Gospel, itspu/rpose and theology ; Wrede, Charahter 
vmd Tendenz des Johannesevangeliums. 

Also, the editions of all four gospels by H. J. Holtz- 

211 



212 THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 

mann in the Handcommentar, by Schanz, Wellhausen, 
and Merx (Syriac text). Loisy's Jesus et la tradition 
primitive stands to his tlvangiles Synoptiques as Monte- 
fiore's Jowett lectures on Elements of the Religious 
Teaching of Jesus stand to his Synoptic Gospels. 

On the general study of the gospels : WelLhausen's 
Einleitung in die drei ersten Evangelien (second edition) ; 
Burkitt's Gospel History and its Transmission ; Salmon's 
Human Element in the Gospels ; Von Soden's Die wichiig- 
sten Fragen im Lehen Jesu ; Denney's Jesus and the Gospel ; 
Batiffol's Six LeQons sur les £vangiles ; Spitta's Streit- 
fragen der Geschichte Jesu ; Streeter's essays in the recent 
Oxford book of Studies in the Synoptic Problem, 
and the older but by no means antiquated volume of 
Weizsacker'a Untersuchungen ueber die evangelische 
Geschichte. 

Keim's Jesus of Nazara (six volumes) is still the most 
adequate study of the life of Jesus, upon the whole, in 
spite of its critical basis. The theological aspect is 
stated from different sides in the shorter sketches by 
Sanday (Outlines of the Life of Christ), and Barth 
{Hauptprohleme des Lebens Jesu, third edition), or in 
Bousset's Jesus, Piepenbring's Jesus historique, and at 
greater length in N. Schmidt's Prophet of Nazareth, 
O, Holtzmann's Life of Jesus, A. K^ville's Jesus de 
Nazareth, and Count D'Alviella's L'^volution du dogme 
Caiholique, vol. i. Les Origines. 

On the religious ideas of the gospels : Harnack's 
What is Christianity ? with Loisy's reply, L'^vangile et 
Vtlglise ; the second volume of Eitschl's Christliche Lehre 
von der Rechtfertigung und VersQhnung ; Wendt's 
Teaching of Jesus ; ^ Batiffol's L'enseignement de Jesus ; 

1 The second German edition (1901) has been slightly modified 
under the iuflaence of J. Weiss, as may be seen even from his papers 
in the fifth volume of The Expository Times. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY 213 

Piepenbring's Les Principes fondamentaux de I'Enseigne- 
ment de Jesus ; Garvie, Studies in the Inner Life of 
Jesus ; Monnier, La Mission historique de Jesus ; Du 
Bose, The Gospel in the Gospels ; Jiilicher's Gleichnisreden 
Jesu ; Bischoff's Jesus und die Rahbinen ; J. M. King, 
The Theology of Christ's Teaching; G. H. Gilbert's Revela- 
tion of Jesus ; Meinertz, Jesus und die Heidenmission ; 
H. C. King, The Ethics of Jesus ; H. J. Holtzmann's 
Messianische Bewusstsein Jesu ; P. Gardner's Exploratio 
Evangelica (second edition) ; J. E. Carpenter, The His- 
torical Jesus and the Theological Christ ; G. F. Nolloth's 
The Person of our Lord and Recent Thought; Dunk- 
mann's Der historische Jesus, der mythologische Christ, 
und Jesus der Christus, and Steinmann's Geistige Offen- 
harung Gottes in der geschichtlichen Person Jesu. Also 
Wobbermin's Geschichte und Historie in der Religions- 
wissenschaft, the second and fourth volumes of Pfleiderer's 
Primitive Christianity, Wernle's Beginnings of Christi- 
anity, Drummond's Hibbert Lectures on Via, Veritas, 
Vita ; Hort's Hulsean Lectures on The Way, the Truth, 
and the Life; Dr. E. A. Abbott's indispensable series 
Diatessa/rica, with its eight volumes of suggestive 
material ; Dalman's Words of Jesus, Haupt's Eschaiolo- 
gischen Aussagen Jesu, F. Krop's La Pense'e de Jesus siir 
le Royaume de Dieu d'aprhs les Evangiles synoptiques, 
Shailer Mathew's Messianic Hope in the New Testament, 
L, A. Muirhead's Eschatology of Jesus, and von Dobschiitz's 
Eschatology of the Gospels. Father Tyrrell's posthumous 
Christianity at the Cross-roads, an attempt to use 
Schweitzer for dogmatic purposes, suffers from a tendency 
to paradox. The first and third volumes of Titius's 
Neutestamentliche Lehre von der Seligheit are studies in 
the synoptic and Johannine theologies respectively ; the 
latter is discussed, with special reference to the Logos, 
by J. Grill in his Untersuchungen iiber die Entstehwag 
des vierten Evangeliums, and by J. S. Johnston in The 
Philosophy of the Fourth Gospel. The christological 
problem is handled in J. Weiss's Christ : the Beginnings 



214 THE THEOLOGY OE THE GOSPELS 

of Dogma, Pfleiderer's Early Christian Conception of 
Christ, P. Gardner's Historic View of the New Testament, 

A. Eobinson's Study of the Saviour in the Newer Light 
(second edition), B. W. Bacon's Jesus the Son of God, 
and Cheyne's Bible Prohlems, from one standpoint ; and 
from another by A. M. Fairbairn in his Christ in Modern 
Theology, M. Lepin in Jesus, Messie et Fits de Dieu, 

B. B. Warfield's The Lord of Glory, W. L. Walker in 
The Cross and the Kingdom, D. W. Forrest in The Christ 
of History and Experience, P. T. Forsyth in The Person 
and Place of Jesus Christ, Canon Sanday in Chrisiologies 
Ancient and Modern, Bishop Gore in The Incarnation of 
the Son of God, and D. La Touche in The Person of 
Christ in Modern Thought. Pfanmiiller's Jesus im Urteil 
der Jahrhunderte, and the Hibhert Journal Supplement 
Jesus or Christ 1 present various facets of opinion. 

It is needless to enumerate the relevant articles in the 
various Bible dictionaries and encyclopedias, or the 
sections in any standard treatise upon New Testament 
Theology like G. B. Steven's, Holtzmann's, Bovon's, 
Feine's, Beyschlag's, or Weinel's. 

The critical attitude to the gospels, which is presup- 
posed in this volume, vnll be found stated at length in 
the writer's Introduction to the Literature of the New 
Testament (second edition), or in Professor Peake's con- 
tribution to the present series. 



INDEX (a) 



Abbott, E. A., 81, 94, 100, 116, 

146f., 161, 189, 193. 
Aioth, Pirlce, 98. 
AdTent, the second, 44, 45 f., 

191. 
Angels, 37, 88 f., 162. 
Apocalyptic element in gospels, 

67. 
Apologetic element in gospels, 3. 
Aramaic, 35, 152 f. 
Arnold, Matthew, 35, 
Ascensio Isaiae, 37, 165. 
Assumptio Mosis, 120. 

Bacon, B. W.,23. 
Baldensperger, 77 f., 131. 
Baptism of Jesus, 31, 130 f., 

179. 
Baptism of Christians, 195 f. 
Baruch, Apocalypse of, 202. 
Baur, 187. 

Beatitudes, the, 69, 73. 
'Beloved, The,' 165. 
Birth, stories of Christ's, 136 f., 

204 f. 
Blasphemy, 180 f. 
Browning, 95. 
Bruce, A. B., 153, 180. 

Caesabea Philippi, 106 f. 

Caird, E., 8. 

Canon, effect of the, 30 f. 



Carpenter, J. E, 119. 

Charles, R. H., 160. 

Cheyne, T. K., 39, 140. 

Christ : meaning of term, 172 ; 
presence of, 97 f., 172; revela- 
tion of the Father, 71, 109, 119. 

Christology, 9, 37, etc. 

Church, sayings on the, 32, 187 i. ; 
gospels and the, 15 f. , 37 f. 

Consciousness, filial conscious- 
ness of Jesus, 110 f., 130 f, 

Covenant, the new, 164 f. 

Creation, 85 f. 

Dalman, 137. 
Daniel, 156 f. 
David, son of, 163 f. 
Demonology, 50, 54, 120, 178 f. 
Denney, 173-4. 
Didaohe, the, 200. 
Diognetus, epistle to, 129. 
Dobsohtitz, von, 84, 187. 
Dove, symbolism of the, 205. 

JEdujoth, 51. 

Emperor, worship of the Roman, 

107, 166. 
Enoch, book of, 158 f , 168, 205. 
Erskine of Linlathen, 109. 
Eschatology, 41 f. 
Eternal life, 45. 
Ethics of Jesus, 47, 59 f., 69 f. 
215 



216 



THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 



Faith : characteristics of, 9, 53 ; 

in Jesus, 173. 
Family, the kingdom a, 82, 92. 
Fatherhood of God, 99 f., 112 f., 

121 f. 
Fellowship with God, 97 f. 
Figurative element in gospels, 

78 f. 
' Finger' of God, the, 179. 
Forgiveness, doctrine of, 120. 
Fourth gospel, 5, 11 f., 21 f., 

27 f., 44 f. ; prologue, 169 f. ; 

relation to synoptists, 24 f. , 

196, etc. 
Francis of Assisi, 104. 
Freedom, 117 f. 

Gloeiftino of Jesus, the, 160 f. 

Gnostics, 169 f., 194. 

God, as Father, 68 f., 85 t. ; as 

King, 91 f.; titles of, 99 f. 
' Gospel,' meaning of term,_37-8. 
Gospels, rise and aim of, 6 f., 

10 f., 15 f. 
Gospel of Hebrews, 63, 204. 
Gospel of Peter, 100, 166. 
Gressmann, 159. 
GrOl, 162. 

Haenaok, 16 f., 38, lllf., 131. 
Heaven, kingdom of, 63, 103. 
Herodotus, 135. 

Historical Jesus, the, 174, 209 f. 
Holiness of God, 100 f. 
Holtzmann, H. J., 150. 
Holtzmann, Oscar, 147, 181. 
Hooker, 38. 
Hope, 54. 
Hort, 174. 

lONATius, 121, 192, 204. 
Immanence, 96 f. 
Irenaeus, 110. 



Jesus: meaningof name, 171-172; 
messianic vocation, 17 f., 49 f., 
175 ; sacrificial death, 141 f,, 
172; teaching, 44 f., 54 f., 78 f. 

John the Baptist, 50 f., 170, 
204. 

Joma, 100, 183. 

Joy, 114 f. 

Judgment, doctrine of, 45 f., 121, 
162, 176, 191. 

Justin Martyr, theology of, 33, 
201, 205. 

Jubilees, book of, 167. 

Kattbnbusoh, 166, 207. 
Keim, 14, 182. 
Kingdom of Christ, 64. 
Kingdom of God, the, 53, 56, 109, 

etc. 
Kreyenbtihl, 28. 

Laqeangb, 22. 

Law, the, 134. . 

Logos, the, 28, 137 f., 167 f. 

Loisy, 61. 

' Lord,' the title, 99, 165 f. 

Love, brotherly, 105 ; God's, 

1061,120,203. 
Luke's Gospel, 14, 23, 73, 148. 

Maoaeius Magnes, 116. 

Macdonald, George, 98. 

Mark's Gospel, characteristics of, 

6, 12f., 22f. 
Matthew's Gospel, characteristics 

of, 13, 23, 63. 
Maurras, C, 10. 
Mazzini, 89. 
Merx, 173. 

Messianism, 65 f., 130 f., 153 f. 
Miracles, 92 f. 
Montefiore, 125, 149. 
Mystery of the kingdom, the, 

43f., 55. 



INDEX 



217 



NATnEE, God in, 93 f. 
Newman, 5. 

Old Testament, nse of, 9, 17, 

183. 
Omnipotence, 90. 
Omniscience, 86. 
OTerteck, 2. 
Oxyrhynchite Logia, 63, 98. 

Pabables, the, 19 f., 431, 55, 

123 f. 
Paraclete, 184, 190 f. 
Pascal, 7. 
Paulinism, 18 f., 82, 128, 138, 

196, 199. 
Pentecost, 186, 187. 
Pfleiderer, 191. 
Pharisees, 53, 66. 
Philo, 28, 85, 128, 162, 169, 170, 

186, 188, 195, 203. 
Poimandres, 168, 172. 
'Power, the,' 100. 
Prayer, doctrine of, 58 f. 
Prayer, the Lord's, 73, 100. 
Pre-existence, 26, 138. 
Proselytes, 195. 
Providence, doctrine of, 85 f. 

'Q,' problems connected with, 
23f., 25, 73 f. 

Eaebis, 67, 164, 206, 209. 
Eansom, doctrine of, 145 f. 
Eedemption, 147. 
Repentance, 124 f., 142. 
Resurrection, 72, 117, 161, 189 f. 
Righteousness, the higher, 103. 
Ritschl, 47. 

Sabbath, the, 152. 
Sacrifice, the divine, 106 f. 
Schmiedel, 24, 181. 
Schweitzer, 41 f., 127, 132, 175. 
Scott, B. F., 58. 
Sereant of Yahveh, 139 f., 199. 



Sharman, H. B., 15. 

Shekinah, 98. 

Sin, doctrine of, 109 f., 114 f., 

119 f. 
Smith, G. A., 107, 148. 
Solomon, odes of, 205. 
Solomon, Psalter of, 139, 163. 
Son of God, 131 f. 
Son of Man, 20, 150 f. 
Sonship of men, divine, 91 f. 
Spirit, the, 177 f. 
Supper, the Lord's, 164, 194 f. 

Temple, 94 f. 

Temptation, the, 88. 

TertuUian, 9, 33, 87. 

Text of gospels, 30 f. 

Theology, suspicions of, 1 f., 
5 f. ; meaning of, 38 f. ; neces- 
sity of, 5, 8. 

Titius, 21-2, 92, 207 f. 

Traditions, origin of, 14 f. 

Transfiguration, 45, 145. 

' Truth,' in Fourth gospel, 192 f. 

ViEQiN-BiETH, stories of, 33, 

136 f. 
Volz, 57. 

Wedgewood, Miss, 66. 
Weiss, J., 12, 42, 64, 142. 
Wellhausen, 9, 12, 49, 53, 75, 86, 

154. 
Wernle, 22. 
"Wisdom, conception of divine, 

166 f. ' 
Wisdom, book of, 104, 133. 
Wordsworth, 41. 
'Words 'of Christ, 203. 
World, the, 47. 
Worship, 103. 

Zealots, the, 63, 66. 
Zechariah, book of, 163. 



218 



THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 



INDEX (b) 



Genesis ii. 7, p. 186. 

„ xrii. 17, p. 128. 
Exodus xxiv. 8, p. 199. 

,, xxxii. 32, p. 141. 
Job xxxiii. 24, pp. 147, 190, 
Psalm ii. 7, pp. 132 f., 144. 

„ xlix. 8f., p. 147. 

„ ex., p. 157. 
Isaiah vi. 9-10, p. 127. 

,, xlii. 1 f., p. 144. 

„ lii. 13, p. 160. 

,, liii. lf.,p. 140. 

„ liii. 12, pp. 146, 199. 

„ Ixi. 1-2, p. 129. 

„ Ixvi. 1-2, p. 94. 
Daniel vii. 13, pp. 158 f. 
Matthew i. 21, p. 172. 

„ i. 23, p. 172. 

„ iii. 15, p. 143. 

,, V. 34-35, p. 94. 

„ V. 44 f., p. 104. 

„ fi. 13, p. 72. 

„ vi. 28f.,p. 93. 

„ vi. 33, p. 103. 

,, vii. 21, p. 72. 

„ viii 16-17, p. 140. 

„ viii. 20, p. 153. 

„ ix. 13, p. 105. 

,, X. 19-20, pp. 183-184. 

„ X. 23, pp. 48, 87. 
A. 28, p. 121. 

„ X. 31, p. 86. 

„ xi. 4f.,p. 80. 

,, xi. 11, p. 50, 

„ xi. 12-13, p. 51. 

,, xi. 19, pp. 153, 166. 



Matthew xi. 25, pp. 90, 133. 

xi. 26-27, pp. 110 f. 

xii. 16-17, p. 141. 

xii. 18, pp. 26, 144. 

xii. 28, pp. 50, 178. 

xii. 32, p. 179. 

xii. 40, p. 72. 

xiii. 16-17, pp. 71, 127. 

xvi. 13, p. 160. 

xvi. 18-19, pp. 32, 187. 

xvi. 26, p. 146. 

xvii. 24 f., p. 118. 

xviii. 3-4, p. 195. 

xviii. 6, p. 173. 

xviii. 18, p. 187. 

xviii. 20, p. 98. 

xix. 26, p. 90. 

XX. 28, pp. 145 f. 

xxi. 31, p. 52. 

xxi. 43, p. 64. 

xxii. 41f,,pp. 163,165. 

xxiii. 22, p. 95. 

xxiii. 34 f., p. 167. 

XXV. 31 f., p. 121. 

xxvi. 64, p. 157. 
„ xxviii. 19 f.,pp. 32 f., 
98, 156 f., 188. 
Mark i. 1, p. 135. 
i. 8, p. 185. 
i. 15, p. 124. 
ii. 1 f., pp. 77, 151. 
ii. 10 f., p. 120. 
ii. 28, p. 152. 
iii. 5, p. 26. 
iii. 20, p. 182. 
iii. 29, p. 179. 



INDEX 



219 



Mark iv. 11, p. 55, 

iT. 29, pp. 43, 55. 

iv. 38, p. 9. 

viii. 27, pp. 20 f. 

viii. 31 f., pp. 106 f. 

ix. 1, p. 48. 

ix. 42, p. 173. 

X. 14, p. 26. 

X. 45, pp. 145 f. 

xii. 34, p. 52. 

xlii. 11, p. 183. 

xiii. 14, p. 7. 

xiii. 31, p. 48. 

xiii. 32, p. 133. 

xiv. 21, p. 143. 

xiv. 61-62, pp. 136, 167. 
„ XV. 39, p. 136. 
Luke ii. 32, p. 144. 

iii. 22, pp. 31, 131. 

iv. 16 f., p. 129. 

vi. 46, p. 72. 

vii. 29-30, p. 90. 

vii. 35, p. 166. 

it. 22, p. 111. 

xi. 13, p. 185. 

xi. 49, p. 166. 

xii. 6-9, p. 88. 

xii. 10, p. 179. 

xii. 11-12, p. 184. 

xii. 31, p. 86. 

xiii. 31 f., p. 87. 

XV. If., pp. 123 f. 

xvii. 3, p. 125. 

xvii. 15-16, p. 92. 

xvii. 20, pp. 46, 49 f . 

xviii. 1 f., p. 73. 

XX. 42, p. 183. 

xxi. 14-15, p. 184. 

xxi. 28, p. 69. 

xxii. 37, p. 160. 

xxii. 48, p. 153. 

xxii. 69, pp. 100, 157. 

xxii. 70, pp. 136, 157. 



Luke xxiv. 49, p. 184. 
Johni. If., pp. 169 f. 

i. 13, pp. 33 f. 

i. 17, p. 21. 

i. 18, p. 139. 

i. 29, p. 141. 

i. 34, p. 165. 

i. 51, p. 162. 

iii. 3, pp. 195 f., 207. 

iii. 13, p. 160. 

iii. 14-15, p. 161. 

iv. 24, pp. 113, 207. 

V. 17, p. 95. 

vi. If., pp. 197 f. 

vi. 51f.,pp. 198 f, 200 f. 

vi. 62, p. 160. 

vi. 63, p. 207. 

vii. 39, pp. 188, 189. 

viii. 34 f., p. 116. 

viii. 44 f. , p. 115. 

viii. 56, p. 128. 

ix. 35, p. 162. 

X. 17 f., p. 143. 

xii. 39 f., p. 127. 

xiv. 1, p. 174. 

xiv. 16, p. 189. 

xiv. 23, p. 97. 

XV. 10, p. 114. 

XV. 14-1,5, p. 118. 

xvi. 7-11, pp. 190, 208 

xvi. 9f.,190f. 

xvi. 13, pp. 192, 194, 208. 

xvi. 14, pp. 193 f. 

xvi. 16-17, p. 189. 

xvii. 5, p. 138. 

xvii. 26, p. 210. 

xix. 35, p. 199. 

IX. 22 f., pp. 186 f. 

XX. 271, p. 11. 

XX. 31, p. 3. 
Acts i. 1, p. 38. 

i. 3, p. 194. 

i. 7, p. 133. 



220 



THE THEOLOGY OP THE GOSPELS 



Acts ii. 36, p. 166. 

„ vii. 56, p. 156. 

,, xvi. 7, p. 177. 
Gal. iii. 16 f., p. 128. 

1 Cor. ii. 8, p. 120. 
„ vii. 19, p. 23. 

„ vii. 26 f., p. 61. 
„ X. 16f.,pp. 199f. 
,, XV. 3, pp. 4-5, 142. 
„ XV. 6, p. 187. 

2 Cor. viii. 18, p. 37. 
,, xiii. 14, p. 33. 



Eom. 1. 4, p. 138. 

„ ii. 20, p. 134. 

,, xiv. 17f.,p. 82. 
Col. i, 13, pp. 64, 82, 165. 
Eph. i. 6, p. 165. 

„ iv. 4f.,p. 200. 

„ ». 26, p. 197. 
1 Timothy iii. 16, pp. 36 f., 191. 
Titus iif. 5, p. 197. 

1 Peter i, 21, p. 174. 

2 Peter iii. 12, p. 59. 



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