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'"Ex. I hSZ, »rS.& 



HARVARD COLLEGE 
LIBRARY 




GIFT OF 

JAMES STUR.GIS PRAY 

QadfUfl Eliot I^fHtoT of I^ndsape Anhiucnue 



To be kept in ihe main calledioa of the 
College Library 




THE 



GOSPEL NARRATIVES 



OBKIIN, FECaUABmES, AND TBANSBIESSiON. 



bt henrt a. miles. 



EIGHTH THOUSAND. 



BOSTON: 
PUBLISHED BY CBOSBY, NICHOLS, & CO^ 

FOB THE EXECUTIYE COMMITTEE OF THE AMEBICAN 

X7NITABIAN ASSOCIATION. 

1854. 



^■.1 






HARVARD tOlLCQE LIBRARY 

GIFT OF 

JAmS STUR«I8 PRAY 



Eatend accoidlnf to Act of OongnM, In ths year 1848, bj 

Wk. Crosby aiid H. P. Niorou, 

In the GI«Ek*« Office of the District Court of the District of Mnwnchnsetto. 



cambbidge: 

■nUOTTPBD AHB nUMTSD BT 
BTOALP AND COMPANY, 



PEEFACE. 



What was the origin of our four Gosjiel Nar- 
rathres? If the authors of these wrote indepen- 
dently, how can we account for their rerbal coin- 
cidences? If thef copied from one another, how 
can we account for their discrepancies? Uiider 
what circumstances did each writer perform his 
work? How far did his situation and character 
and purpose give shape to his composition? How 
have these Gospels been transmitted down to our 
times ? — Such are the chief questions which it is 
the object of this book to answer. It is believed 
that instruction on these points should form a part 
of a Christian education. They constitute a branch 
of the evidences of Christianity on which all his- 
torical belief must rest, but to which, for the most 
part, no general attention is paid. How many of 
the flippant objections of infidelity would lose all 
their power to unsettle faith, if some knowledge 



4 THB GOSPEL NARRATIYB8. 

on this subject were widely diffused! Perhaps it 
has been neglected through the want of a small 
book, that may briefly and clearly present the in- 
formation now found only in professional, and, to 
most readers, inaccessible treatises. This want it 
is here proposed to supply. While the author has 
had reference to the higher classes in our Sunday 
schools, for whose use he hopes this work may 
serve as a manual, he has also had his eye upon 
other readers, and has sought to. mak^^. a book suit- 
able for family and parish libraries. ^ fie^as studied 
accuracy in drawing his materials from the most 
approved sources, and has been ambitious of earn- 
ing for himself only the negative merits of lucid 
arrangement and perspicuous statement 



CONTENTS. 



PAOI 

I. Statement of the Question 7 

n. The Evangelists not Copyists 11 

m. Their Life in Jerusalem 13 

rV. Their Written Narratives shaped bt their 

previous Oral ones 18 

y. Application of this View to the Pacts of the 

Narrative 81 

YI. Notices of the Life of Matthew ..... S5 

YII. The Gospel of Matthew 80 

Tin. Notices of the Life of Marx 38 

IX. The GrosPEL of Marx 44 

X. Notices of the Life of Luxe 51 

XI. The Gospel of Luxe 66 

Xn. Notices of the Life of John 85 

Xm. The Gospel of John 77 

XrV. View of the G^ospels as a Whole .... 90 
XV. The Transmission of the Gospels down to our 

Times 98 

XVI. The Evidence that thk Gospels have been 

transmitted without Corruption ... 110 



▼OL. Txn. — K 0. 254. 1 • 



THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES. 



CHAPTER I. 



STATBMEUT OF TBB QUESTION. 

The word Gospel, meaning good news, properly denotes 
the revelations which the history of Christ contains. These, 
revelations are the '^ glad tidings which shall he to all peo* 
pie.'' But in process of time that word has heen applied to 
the history itself, and denotes a book describing the birth, 
life, words, sufferings, and death of the Son of €rod. 

We have four distinct books of this kind, written evidently 
by four different men. We believe them to have been writ- 
ten by Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, not lojag after the 
ascension of Christ. Matthew and John were his personal 
followers ; Mark received his materials from Peter, another 
follower of Christ ; while Luke, as he tells us in his preface,, 
set in order the things which had been delivered to him by 
those who from the beginning had been eyewitnesses- and 
ministers of the word. Thus they did not undertake to 
write without being well informed of the events which they 
have related. Hence the confidence with which they ap- 
pealed to the sources of their knowledge:— *^ That which 



8 ' THE GOSPEL N ABRATIVES. 

was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we 
have seen with our eyes, declare we unto you." 

Did they all four write together ? Did any of them copy 
what another had written ? Did they all write independent- 
ly, each with no knowledge of the others' compositions? 
Here are seiwral theories suggested ; which of ^lem do the 
facts of history compel us to take ? 

As regards the Gospel of John, we cannot be at much 
loss to decide. When he composed his narrative, he had 
undoubtedly seen what Matthew, Mark, and Luke had pre- 
viously written. This is evident ftx>m the whole character 
of his work. Thus he for the most part records only what 
Jesus said and did in Judea, as the other Evangelists con- 
fined themselves chiefly to what Jesus said and did in Gali- 
lee. What they fully related he omits, their omissions he 
supplies, and some sHght errors of theirs he corrects. He 
alludes to our Saviour's baptism, and to the last Supper, 
though he has not described tiiose events, evidently suppose 
mg that they would be well known by means of the other 
Gospels; and in the end of his history he says, — '^ Many 
other signs truly did Jesus, which are not written in this 
book.** He knew many of them were written in tixe books 
of the other Evangelists. His tacit appeal to their writings 
must be understood as an approval of what they had pre- 
viously published. 

But now what shall we say of the- other three Gospeb ? 
When we compare them with one another, we find two 
Ikcts, which at first we hardly know how to reconcile with 
any theory as to their origm. We find that in some places 
Aey agree with one another, not merely in describing the 
same thing, but in describing it word for word alike ; while 
in other places they not only use difierent words in describ- 
ui^ the same things but give <|tiite dnftrent accounts. 



TBB GOSFEL NARRATIVB8. 9 

Examples need not be adduced of what must be so fomil- 
iar to every one who has compared the Gospels of Matthew^ 
Mark, and Luke together. Open them where we will, we 
occasionally find, in descriptions of the same occurrence, 
whole verses which in all three of the writers are word for 
word alike, and which seem as if they must have been cop- 
ied one from the other. But we do not read far before we 
find that there are also great dififerences between them, not 
merely in arrangement and quotation, but in the statement 
of facts. These difierences seldom relate to very material 
facts. Merely to show their character, one or two examples 
may be adduced. 

There was a dispute among the disciples on the questicm, 
who of them should be greatest in the kingdom of heaven. 
Jesus rebuked their folly by setting a little child before them, 
and saying, ^ Except ye be converted and become as little 
children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.^* 
Now Matthew says that the disciples referred this dispute to 
Jesus. '^ At the same time came Uie disciples unto Jesus, 
saying. Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven? '* — 
Matt xviiL 1. 

But an exactly opposite account is given in Mark, wjio 
says* that Christ inquired for the subject of their dispute, and 
that the disciples declined to name it ^* And being in the 
house, he asked them, What was it that ye disputed among 
yourselves by the way ? But they held their peace ; for by 
the way they had disputed among themselves who should be 
tiie greatest'* — Mark ix. 33, 34. 

How clearly marked is the difference between these two 
statements ! Yet we do not find it difficult to reconcile them. 
We know that Peter, James, and John, tiie sons of Zebedee, 
claimed to be greatest among the disciples, and on their way 
to Capernaum they probably advanced their claims, which 



10 TBI QOBWEL JXAEMkTPnUL 

led to the diipute. Other disciplet, without claiming the 
first rank, might think it tXBjust to he treated at inferiors ; 
and Matthew, who was a humble publican, was probabij of 
this party. He doubtless brought the matter in dispute 
befofe Christ The Saviour reserved the diseosskm until 
they had entered the house, and then made the inquiry re- 
corded by Marie. Peter, James, and John made no answer, 
f<Mr they would expect reproof. Both statements ave thus 
reconciled by supposing that Matthew related the paart to 
which he was knowing, and that Mark, who derived his ma- 
terials from Peter, related the part to which he was know- 
ing, but that neither related the who^e. There is no real 
contradiction between them. But there is a seeming con- 
tradiction. Taken simply by themselves, it would appear, 
that, if Matthew^s account were true, Mark^s must be &lse. 
If it was not for what we incidentally learn, in some other 
part of the Gospel, of the ambitioin claim of Peter, James, 
and John, it would not be easy to make any consistent 
agreement between them. 

We may take another case. The account of Peter^s de- 
nying his Lord is recorded by all four Evangelists. Both 
Matthew and Mark give us to understand that the second 
denial was made to one of the waiting taaids in the ht^- 
priest^s palace. Matthew xxvii. 71. Marie xiv. 69. But 
Jjtake^a account is, that the second dental was made to a 
man. Ijokit xjoL 58. This is one of the places which 
John^s Gospel corrects and explains. He tells us that the 
second denial was made to a great numier of servants and 
officers, who were standing widi Peter hv the fire in the 
high-priest^s palace. John xviii. 25. This makes the 
oAer acootmts appear ^rue. But had it not been for this 
explanation, we should not know wlnoh statement to be- 
Usire. 



Tn OOSPXXi NABBATIVSS. 11 

Now die quettioii that arises is this : How shall we ex« 
plaiia the man j yerhal coincidenees^ aad, 9X the same time, 
the maay marked discrepances, which are found in the 
fiist three Gospel histories ? Shall we say that their au>- 
thors wrote in concert, or that one saw the work of his 
predecessor and copied it? This wUl ei^lahi the lesem- 
hlanees. But how shall we then account for the difierences ? 
Shall we then take the other view, and e<»ielude thai they 
are peifeedy independent historians^ writing without the 
slightest knowledge of each other^s worits? This will 
account for die difierences. But what shall we then say of 
their resemblances ? 



i*«* 



CHAPTER n. 



THE EYANOELISTS NOT COPTISTS. 

Wb should concnderably relieye the difficulty before us, 
if we could prove that the first three Evangelists did not 
copy one firom the other. And this is the impressioa which 
must be left strongly on the mind when we compare their 
narratives together. They arrange events in difieient or* 
der. They assign different occasicms to the same discourse 
or parable. We should not have looked for this, either if 
they had written together, or if one had copied from the 
other. It is not easy to believe that one writer copied the 
other merely thai he mig^t make some small additions of 
original matt^ for such addidons in any one Gospel are too 
inconsideralide to render such a supposition credible. Then 
thore is no tiaoe of any other Gospel in that one, whichever 



12 THB G08PSL NABXATIYni. 

it be, that you assume to be a copy. Verbal coincidences 
nowhere lie together in masses. Identity in the use of 
words nowhere extends unbroken through long passages. 
The same word or phrase occurs only here and there, in 
separated and scattered places. 

MoreoTer, the Evangelists had no motive to copy from 
one another. As preachers of Christianity, they were all 
well acquainted with the transactions which it was their pur- 
pose to record. Each one, therefore, was competent to 
draw up his own independent account Besides, each one^s 
account appears to be his own, — his own style, his own 
associations, his own arrangement It is of still more im- 
portance to observe, that each one^s knowledge of every 
event appears to be his own independent knowledge. To 
a description of almost all the prominent events of our 
Saviour^s life, each Evangelist has contributed something. 
One noticed one circumstance, another a second, another a 
third, so that, as in the case already adduced of the denial 
of Peter, we have not a full description until we put all their 
works together. When we come to examine each Gospel 
by itself, we shall see still further evidence to show that 
these histories were written independently, at different times, 
in different places, and for different purposes. The discrep- 
ancies between them are just such as we might expect from 
three independent historians. 

No contemporaneous and independent histories are pre- 
cisely alike. Inspiration would not secure the Evangelists 
from discrepancies common to all other writers, because in- 
spiration does not mean omniscience. Even if we found 
inexplicable contradictions between the Grospels, it would by 
no means follow that the history they give is false. The 
only just inference would be, that their authors were not 
in&llible. Between different Yaatimos of England, for ex* 



THE GOSPEL NARRATITB8. IS 

ample, there are most mysterious contradictions as to strik- 
ing and prominent events. But no one concludes that these 
histories are all fabulous, and that these events never tran- 
spired. So, also, in the examination of witnesses, and in the 
common rumors of our neighbourhood and town, we nev^ 
suffer the fact of many contradictory accounts of any al- 
leged event to preclude all belief. We involuntarily have a 
stronger faith that something has happened. We question 
only the perfect accuracy of narrators. This is all we could 
reasonably doubt, did we find inexplicable contradictions in 
the Gospels. But such contradictions a/e not here found to 
perplex the fair inquirer. He finds only such discrepancies 
in the relation of minor events as must always mark in- 
dependent accounts. When one individual paints a city 
from the east side, and another one from the west, both 
must, indeed, represent the highest and most prominent 
steeples and buildings ; but in other respects the two sketches 
may and must be very difierent from each other. And yet 
each may give a faithful representation. 



CHAPTER III. 



THEIR LIFE IN JERUSALEM. 

Before we can see the cause of the verbal coincidences 
in the Gospels, we nr^ust give attention to some historical 
facts. 

AAer our Locd^s resurrection, he showed himself to his 
disciples, on various occasions, for the space of forty days. 
Just before his ascension, he directed them to come togeth^ir 

VOL. XXII. — NO. 254. 3 



14 THX GOSPEL NAEBATIVSS. 

at Jerusalein, after he idiould leave them, and there for a 
while to tarry. Luke xxiv. 49. Acts i. 4. There was 
deep wisdom in this direction. Jerusalem was in the near 
neighbourhood of the wonderful scenes of the crucifixion, the 
resurrection, and the ascension, and the Saviour would have 
his disciples bear witness to these facts on the very spot of 
theirsoccurrence. It was the most public witness they could 
bear, before all the inhabitants of that city, and before all 
the people from all parts of Judea, who came up at the great 
national festivals. It was right that the discfples should 
challenge the most open and public investigation. Nothing 
had been done in a corner, and every thing which had been 
told to them in private, they were to proclaim upon the 
house-top. Their constant and bold preaching in such a 
place as Jerusalem would be a proof that they were not 
ashamed of their religion, although its founder had been 
crucified as a vile criminal. It would be an expression of 
their belief, that their great cause did not die with their 
leader, while a more central place for the propagation of 
the truth could not be selected. Here were Parthians and 
Modes, Cretes and Arabians, strangers from Egypt and 
Rome. Converts made among these would spread the re- 
ligion all over the world. So important was it that tbe dis- 
ciples should keep together at Jerusalem, as commanded 
by their Master. 

And they did keep together there. We are told in the 
Acts of the Apostles, i. 12, that from the scene of their Sav- 
iour^s ascension they returned at once unto Jerusalem, and 
went up into an upper room, where they abode together. 
While they dwelt here, all the events transpired wTiich are 
recorded in the first seven chapters of the Acts, -«- the elec- 
tion of an Apostle to take the place of Judas, the giil of 
tongues on the day of Pentecost, the cure of the lame man 



THE G08FCL NARBATIVZS. 15 

at the gate of the temple, the imprisonment and release of 
John, the deaths of Ananias and Sapphira, and the martyr- 
dom of Stephen. We do not know exactly how long a 
space of time these events covered. It could not have heen 
less than several years. During these, the disciples were 
continually repeating in each other^s hearing the story of 
Christ's life and words. 

Now let us try to enter into their situation. Their Head 
and Master, to whom they had looked for coutisel, and on 
whom they had leaned for support, had been taken from 
them. They were left like a little band 6( brothers who 
have suddenly lost their father. They were iti the heart of 
a great city, in which they felt alone, for among its busy 
throngs they at first found but little sympathy, being either 
pitied as deluded men or despised as deceivers. If iire had 
not been told that they dwelt together, how natumlly shoultd 
we have presumed this, and that they continually conferred 
with dhe another, and endeavoured to comfort, sustain, and 
animate each other's hearts ! And in these frequent inter- 
views, what would so much occupy their thoughts, and ht 
the constant topic of their conversation, as the wonderful 
events of their Master's life, and the impressive instructions 
that he gave them ? Doubtless, at their first interview their 
remembrances of these' were very much alike in their minds. 
The more accurately they could recall the very words that 
Christ used, the more coincident would these remiembrancea 
be. Nor would it be difficult for them to recall his precise 
words. In those days the art of writing was not common in 
the class to which the Apostles belonged. The memory on 
this account received a greater cultivation. Much longer 
histories than either of our Gospels were very often treasur- 
ed up in the memory alone. To tasks of knemory, it is not 
unlikely the disciples themselves had been accustomed, when 



16 TH£ 60SF£L NAERATIVES. 

Jews. The Rabbis required their pupils to repeat what was 
taught them, and in this way an immense mass of tradition- 
ary accounts was handed down from one generation to an- 
other. 

Then what strong motives had the Apostles to make them 
remember both the words of their absent Teacher, and the 
wonderful events of his life ! All their interests and hopes 
were bound up in these things. Gratitude and reverence, 
their loneliness and danger, their duty to their Master^s cause, 
and the uncertainty that hung over their prospects, — every 
thing would send their minds back to that one fountain of 
light and hope, the life and words of Christ The sick heal- 
ed, the lame, the blind, the deaf, the insane, restored, the 
very dead raised, and those touching parables they had heard, 
of the good Samaritan, the prodigal son, the rich man and 
Lazarus, — how was it possible that they could forget these ? 
Their recollections of them must have been their spring of 
action by day, and their meditation by night. This was 
their Comforter. The spirit of truth was with them, and 
brought all things to their remembrance. 

Now there was one cause constantly at work to make 
them express their remembrances alike. They were con- 
stantly teaching in one another^s hearing. Few and feeble 
as they were, they soon had converts. A large number 
was added to them on the day of Pentecost Soon the fame 
of their wonderful works spread abroad. The sick were 
brought in beds, and laid in the streets where the Apostles 
lived. Believers were added to the Church daily. We can 
easily conceive what an intense curiosity all these would feel 
to learn the precise words and actions of Jesus. It was now 
the business of the Apostles to gratify this curiosity. Their 
discourses must have consisted, in great part, of simple nar- 
latiTes concerning the life of Jesus. It was a matter of ne- 



tttB GOStftL NAftKATir«8. 17 

cessity that th^y should he continually speaking ahont him, 

• 

describing his miracles to establish his authority, the minor 
events of his life to illustrate his character, and his parables 
and discourses to set forth his. doctrine. Thus month after 
month, and year after year, they were repeating the same 
narrative which we find recorded in fte Gospels. As they 
did this continually, in each other^s hearing, to different per- 
sons who wished to hear precisely the same things, how 
obvious is it that they would soon acquire a similar style of 
narration. At each repetition, the narrative would assume 
more and more a common form in each of their minds. We 
can name three peculiarities which their n^thod of telling 
the story of Christ would naturally acquire. 

1. There would be the greatest verbal coincidence in their 
repetitions of the words of Jesus. Because, if they remem- 
bered his words correctly, the accounts of them must -be 
identically the same. Naturally attaching a peculiar sacred- 
ness to the precise words which he used, they would take 
the greatest care to recall them correctly, and for this pur- 
pose they would help and correct one another^s remem- 
brances. 

2. There would be less verbal coincidence in the narra- 
tive parts of their story, those, namely, in which they de- 
scribed events without repeating the words of Jesus. Here 
each disciple would adopt a method somewhat peculiar to 
himself, though naturally there would be some verbal resem- 
blance in the uee of partieular phrases and connecting «e&- 
tences. 

8. In the matter of order afid arrangement there would to 
the least retemblanee of all. They would problBi^ly seleet 
tiieir topics with reference to t^e pretiotis knon^ledge Of 
particular euriwrity of their heiirers. Each one^ therefore^ 
would gKmp partiotiliur pambles, miyt&toft, iUsA dauboatu^ <t 

2* 



IS THS GOSrSL NABKATIVB8. 

our Lord together in his own way. Where nothing was to 
be gained bj chronology, there would be no regard and no 
pretence to it, and thus would be formed a diversity of asso- 
ciations in regard to time and the sequence of events. 

Here, then, the Apostles lived together, and told the same 
story, over and over again, to the converts who were added 
daily to the Church. Matthew and John were here, for 
their names are given in the list found in Acts i. 13. Luke 
was undoubtedly here, for he was an early convert, and in 
his preface to his Gospel he tells us that he obtained his 
knowledge from those who from the beginniDg were eyewit- 
nesses and ministers of the word, that is to say, from the 
Apostles. And Mark was here, for his mother^s house was 
one of the places where the Apostles used to meet. Acts 
xiL 12. 



CHAPTER IV. 



THUS WBITTEK ^ARRATIYBS SHAPED BY THEIR PREVIOUS 

ORAL ONES. 

At length the day came when they could no longer live 
together in Jerusalem. Their bold preaching, and their 
convincing miracles, made so many converts as to attract 
the attention of the priests and rulers. Then followed days 
of persecution, when they were all driven from the city, and 
were scattered abroad. But persecution always strengthens 
what it would suppress. The effect of banishing thousands 
of converts from Jerusalem was to give increased life and 
power to the new religion. Its friends were now sent into 



THS 60SPBL NiJUU.TI¥S8. 19 

■ 

all the principal cities and Tillage round about, who became 
80 many preachers, made more ardent by persecution; 
They found that the fame of their banishment had every- 
where gone before them, and people were everywhere ask- 
ing what the new doctrine was. Hence bodies of believers 
were soon gathered in Samaria, at Damascus, Antioch, 
Cesarea, Cyprus, Corinth^ and the wrath of man was made 
to praise Grod» 

In these places, the first desire of all ccmverts was to hear 
those who had been personal followers of the Saviour. 
Hence the Aposties were pressed to tell what they knew, 
and to testify to what they had seen. But soon it appeared 
that the call came from more places than they could visit, 
and from more converts than they could personally address. 
To supply the want of their attendance in person, several of 
them wrote out what they had so often preached, and copies 
of their narrations were sent t^ instruct and comfort believ- 
ers. Thus Matthew, about the year 65, wrote out a short 
record of the Saviour^s life and words, for the use of the 
churches in Judea. At that time Mark was with Peter in 
Rome, and there he put his short Gospel history into writ- 
ing. Luke, before either of these accounts were written, as 
is probable, sent his history to his Gentile friend Thdophilus ; 
and John, long afler the others had published their narra- 
tives, contributed the additions and corrections which are 
found in his Gospel, for the benefit of the church at Ephe- 
sus. 

Thus each writer had his own independent object to ac- 
complish, and wrote in his own independent manner. Still, 
each one gave his account in writing very much in the 
same way they had so long been accustomed to give it in 
preacking^ when they lived together in Jerusalem. And to 
men so little practised in writing as the Aposties were, and 



ifitent only upon telling the simple truth in the shortest and 
most direct manner, could any thing be more natural than 
the course thej took? May we not feel increased con- 
fidence in the truth and honesty of these men, when we see 
tiiat in hanishment, amid persecution, imd no longer sus- 
tained by each other^s sympathy and support, they persisted 
in publishing the same narrative they had formerly preached 
in Jerusalem? Nor should we fail to admire the good 
providence of God, which, out of the persecution which 
separated the disciples from their home and from one anoth- 
er, and sent them forth to a perilous life to be socm termi- 
nated by a martyr^s death, created a necessity of making at 
once, when all was well remembered and well known, a 
clear record of words and events so mtensely interestii^ to 
our dearest wants and hopes. 

But those single-minded writers little knew to what a work 
they had seated themselves They only thought of en- 
lightening their personal friends, or at most, of comforting 
a few feeble churches, scattered throu^ Judea. They little 
thought that the roll, which seemed to them so brief, frag- 
mentary, and perishable, would ftoat over the whole world, 
and down to all time. The thing which, had it ever been 
thought of, must have seemed impossible widi man, has 
been possible with God. 



THE GOSFEL NABBATIYSS. 21 



CHAPTER V. 



APPLICATION OP THIS VIEW TO THE FACTS OF THE 

NARRATITE. 

The question with which we are next concerned is this, 
— Will the view ahove given account for all the facts in the 
case? Will it explain hoth the resemblances and the dis- 
crepancies found in the Gospels? If this explanation be 
the true one, it will shed not only a consistent, but a clear, 
convincing, and interesting light upon the Evangelical nar- 
rative. We will proceed, then, to apply it to the facts in 
the case. 

We have seen that the Apostles, in giving their accounts 
of Jesus, would be anxious first of all to repeat his words 
exactly ; and that between their statements of what he said, 
if their statements are worthy of reliance, there must be 
very great resemblances. We have seen, also, that in the 
mere narrative parts of their histories each writer would be 
free to use his own words, and that here the resemblances 
would be less. Now how stands the fact ? 

We will take first the Gospel of Matthew. Of the whole 
book, only one sixth part consists of passages verbally coin- 
cident with one or both of the other two Gospels. Of this 
small part, seven eighths occur in the recital of the words 
of others, mostly the words of Jesus, while only about one 
eighth is found in mere narration. 

We next look to the Gospel of Mark. The proportion of 
coincident passages to the whole contents of the Gospel is 
about one sixth. Of this not one fiflh occurs in the narra- 
tive. 



is THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES. 

Luke has still less agreement of expression with the other 
Evangelists. The passages in which it is found amount only 
to about a tenth of his Gospel, and not one twentieth part of 
this in the narrative. 

But then we should not expect the aggregate of verbal 
resemblances to be as great in the narrative part of the Gos- 
pels as it is in that where the words of others are professed- 
ly quoted, because the narrative part is not one half of the 
whole Gospels. The narrative part occupies but one fburth 
of Matthew's Gospel, one half of Mark's Gospel, and one 
third of Luke's. " It may be easily computed, therefore, 
that the proportion of verbal coincidence found in the narra- 
tive part of each Gospel, compared with what exists in the 
other part, is about in the following ratios: in Matthew as 
one to somewhat more than two, in Mark as one to fbur, and 
in Luke as one to ten." 

These definite proportions were obtained by the careful 
investigations of Andrews Norton of Cambridgig, to Whose 
learned work on the Genuineness of the Gospels the reader 
is referred. Vol. I., Appendix, p. ci. How important they 
are to support the view before presented, that our present 
toritten Gospels grew out of previous spoken ohes, must be 
obvious at once. If the Evangelists had copied from one 
another's writings, we should have looked for just as many 
coincidences in the narrative part of their Gospels as in the 
other part. If, on the other hand, they welre not familiar 
with each other's laode of narration, we should not have 
expected in the narrative part any coincidences &t all. 

We may add another consideration. In the narrative 
parts of the Gospels, the coincidences are of a kind which 
we should expect to find. Those who learn, from each 
other's frequent repetition, the form of narrating any events, 
seldom repeat long portions word for word alike. Tliey 



THE GOSPEL IfAERATlVES. j0 

coincide only in the general mould of thoMgbt, qtnd in ih» 
use of peculiar phrases and connecting sentenceo^ We. hare 
before taken notice of the fact, that in tbo Grospels yerbal 
coincidences nowhere lie together in masses. They occur, 
a few words here, and a few words ther^, in peculiar phrases 
and colloquial expressions. ^' And Jeaus nuimtirfid ih^m md 

■ 

said^^^ ^^ And after this it came to passy^ ** Vstilify verily^ 
I say wKtp you V ; — the^e and like e^jpr^n^iooa give an ap- 
pearance of similarity between the narrative portions of dif- 
ferent Gospels ; and it is just such sentences m these which, 
when we oAen hear and tell the same story, we are most 
prone to catch and repeat from one c^nother^s lips. 

And, lastly, that our first three Gospels took Uieir form 
and character from the narratives which the Apostles used 
to give, whei^ they lived and taught together in Jerusalem, 
is rendered still further probable by the little regard which 
their writers pay to chronological arrangemej^t. It was be- 
fore remarked, that in their oral teachings they would be 
likely to neglect the order of time, and to group together 
particulto parableS) or discourses, or miracles, with reference 
to the state of information or curiosity of their hearers. Now, 
in our written Gospels we find this disregard to the natural 
sequence of events, and this grouping of different things to- 
gether. There is frequently a particular class of miracles, 
or a particular series of instructioiis, evidently cast by each 
writer in the same general style of description ; but each is 
made up without the slightest miurk of any regard to the 
order of time. They bear traces of halving been distinct 
narratives by themselves. They are ccHmected together by 
associations peculiar to each Evangelist. Hence, to make 
out a satisfactory Gospel chronology is one of the most diffi- 
cult things in Biblical study. What we lose in this respect, 
we more than gain in the greater assurances we have of the 



J 



94 * TBS GOSPEL NAKRATIYXS. 

perfect artlessness and careless simplicity of an honest pur- 
pose, in which the histories of Christ were written. 

Indeed, how much do we owe to the fact, that these his- 
tories were written in this way and by these men ! The 
very circumstance that they were unlearned men made them 
better qualified to be scribes of the truth. Tliey have given 
us nothing but/octe, — not a word of comment, or inference, 
or even note of admiration. A learned man of their times 
would have been pretty sure to thrust in something of his 
own into his pages ; and how suspicious, how out of keeping 
with the simple and sublime words of Jesus, would it have 
appeared ! Who does not see that the charm and power of 
the Crospel narrative would have been lost, if it had been 
handed over to the verbose periods and oratorical descrip- 
tions of such a writer as Josephus ? The Evangelists have 
given us nothing butyiicte. When we read their words, we 
feel that we are in the presence of facts, whose solemn 
reality moved their deepest natures, and overawed all mere* 
ly personal feelings. And it is this air of simple, sincere, 
straightforward, and solemn reality, everywhere spread over 
their writings, that gives them their power. The Christian 
feels them to be true. The skeptic himself feels them to be 
true. The French infidel, Diderot, was one day caught 
learning his little daughter to read the Gospels. When re- 
minded of his inconsistency, he replied, ^ After all, there is 
no history like this.^* And there is not The learning of 
the schools, and the wisdom of ages, have not given us a 
work like theirs, who sought only to place us in their posi- 
tion, that we might ourselves hear Him who spake as never 
man spake. Thus hath God chosen the foolish things of 
the worid to confound the wise, and the weak things of the 
world to confound the things that are mighty. 



THE GOSPEL NA^&ATIYES. 25 



CHAPTER VI. 



NOTICES OF THE LIFE OF MATTHEW. 

Matthew, called also Levi, was a GaUlean, of the Jewish 
religion, and an inhabitant of Capernaum. His business was 
that of a publican, that is, a tax-gatherer ; and he discharged 
the duties pertaining to that office eJL tibe lake of Galilee. It 
was an humble station, and among the Jews a despised one. 
Those who filled it were appointed by the Romans, to whom 
the Jews were now subject, and for whose use these taxes 
were collected. To pay tribute to them was not only a 
constant acknowledgment and badge of subjection and ser- 
vitude, but to the Jews it was something more galling still. 
(t wounded their religious as well as their patriotic pride. 
(t was a thought of unmitigated bitterness, that the people 
of Grod should be held under the hated yoke of idolaters. 
The office itself being thus detestable, those who held and 
exercised it were universally scorned. 

There were two orders, however, among the publicans, — 
the receivers-general, and their deputies. The former were 
usually selected from the higher classes of society, and 
were sometimes men of distinction. Pne of this order is 
named by Luke, xix. 2, who is called chief among the pub- 
licans, and a rich man. But the deputies were reckoned 
ignoble and contemptible even by the Gentiles themselves, 
and were, in fact, for the most part, rapacious and unmerci- 
ful men. Some one asked Theocritus which was the most 
cruel of all beasts. He answered, '' Among the beasts of 
the wilderness, the bear and the lion; among the beasts of 
^ city, the publican and the parasite.'' Members of this 

yoL. zxii. — MO. 254. 8 



26 THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES 

order are frequently classed in the Scriptures with sinners. 
'' Let him be unto thee as a heathen man and a sinner,'' is 
a phrase which expresses strongly the universal ban which 
was suspended over them. We are told, that, though a 
publican might be a Jew, he was hardly recognized as such 
by his countrymen. He was not allowed to enter the tem- 
ple, nor to give testimony in courts of justice ; and the very 
gifls which his devotion might prompt him to render were 
rejected from the altar of Jehovah as unclean and abominable. 

Of this abhorred class, Matthew was a member. The 
duties of his office were discharged a little out of Caper- 
naum, and by the shore of the lake of Galilee. Here his 
situation was such, that he soon learned whatever occurred 
in the adjoining country, to which the lake was a. central 
place of business and resort. The fame of Jesus was not 
long in coming to his ears. Of his baptism on the banks of 
Jordan, of his sermon on the mount near Capernaum, and 
of the miracles which immediately followed, he had doubt- 
less heard ; and it is reasonable to suppose that he had 
resolved, that, as soon as a convenient opportunity allowed, 
he would unite himself with one whom so many things 
pointed out as the long-expected Messiah. 

An opportunity was soon presented. Jesus, in going 
from Capernaum to some of the cities and villages on 
the shore of the lake, had occasion to pass by the place 
where the taxes were received, called in the Gospels the 
receipt of custom^ and here, either having before heard of 
Matthew, or now receiving from his own lips a statement of 
his faith and wishes, the Saviour invites him to become his 
pupil and personal attendant. And Matthew arose, and left 
all, and followed him. We can but little imagine what his 
feelings must have been in that most eventful moment of his 
life. We can, however, most clearly see that this great 



THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES. 27 

Step was taken from no worldly or selfish motive. For what 
was that Jesus to whom Matthew had now joined himself? 
He was without friends, without wealth, without home, with- 
out even a place where to lay his head. Matthew must 
have known that scorn and persecution would be the inevi- 
table lot of all who should uphold the claims of the carpen- 
ter's son of Nazareth to be the long-expected Messiah, and 
that, in a worldly point of view, to relinquish for this lot his 
safe and doubtless lucrative publican's office, hateful though 
that was, would be but a poor exchange. There could have 
been, therefore, but one motive in Matthew's heart to lead 
to the great step in his life which he now proposed to take, 
and that motive was a sincere purpose to follow Him, how- 
ever despised among men, who spake in his Father's name. 
Had it not been for that feeling in his heart, those few 
words, even from the Saviour's lips, ^* Follow thou me," 
would have fallen unheeded upon his ears. And so all in- 
vitations that now come to us, however affectionate and 
urgent they may be, will seem only like idle words, if w» 
do not keep alive a tender feeling to which these may make 
appeal. 

From this time forth Matthew abandons entirely his for- 
mer business, and follows Jesus. He makes the act of 
doing this public; for on the day succeeding his call he 
prepares a supper at his house, to which he invites his new 
Master, and many publicans, his former associates. It was 
at this supper that many hypocritical Pharisees, passing by, 
exclaimed, "Why eateth your Master with publicans and 
sinners?" — Matthew ix. 11. They thought it was a 
strange and scandalous thing that one who set up as the 
Messiah of Israel, and the purifier of its ordinances, should 
take a publican to be a pupil, and should break bread — 
that greatest token of familiarity — with other publicans and 



28 THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES. 

sinners. And it was here that our Saviour made that ever-* 
memorable reply, Matthew ix. 12, which has been well par- 
aphrased in the following words: — "The religion which I 
came to teach embraces in its pure mercy the whole family 
of man ; it draws no impassable line between the priyileged 
and the profane ; it leaves none to despair of Heaven^s favor 
and acceptance ; — if ye are perfect, if ye are whole, my 
errand is not to you ; go ; go to your temple, and perform 
your rites ; but when there, study the meaning of that Scrip- 
ture, ' I will have mercy and not sacrifice.' As for these, 
they are sick ; they need a physician, and I must heal them; 
ye yourselves say that they are sinners, and why shall I nol 
call them to repentance, and save them ? '* 

Matthew says that all this was done "in the house'* 
(Matt. ix. 10), without once intimating to whose house he 
referred. We learn from the other Gro^els (Marie ii. 1&, 
Luke V. 29), that it was in his own house that this feast was 
made and this conversation held. The humble publican 
had no desire to speak of himself, and it is remarkable that 
in his whole narrative he makes not the slightest allusion to 
himself, and even his name is but once mentioned. He re- 
cords his own name in his catalc^e of disciples (Matt x. 2), 
and here he puts himself down as the eighth in the list, styl- 
ing himself " Matthew the publican." Even in this we have 
an intimation of his character. Here was a proof of his 
humility and good-sense. Long after he had abandoned 
that despised calling, and ha^ become a distinguished and 
honored man, he had no disposition to forget the station he 
had once held, nor was he ashamed to make it known. He 
cared not for the contempt which the confession might bring 
upon him, " He had the wisdom to perceive that there was 
no rank or occupatimi in life, however low, which could 
change the nature of true worth, or really disgrace an hon- 
est and virtuous man." 



THE GOSPEL ITAREATIVES. 29 

In all our Saviour's journeys, in all the scenes of his mir- 
acles, trials, sufferings, and death, we know not what partic- 
ular part Matthew bore. We only know that he was a per- 
petual eyewitness and constant pupil. In that little band 
of disciples he seems never to have put himself forward, and 
never to have committed errors like those which brought re- 
morse to the hearts of some of his brethren. He is never 
represented as taking part in conversations between the 
Saviour and his disciples, but maintains throughout the 
character of an humble, docile, and attentive learner. 

The next notice we have of Matthew is after his Master 
had finished the great work of his mission, when the disci- 
ples, according to the last request of their Saviour, came 
together at Jerusalem. Matthew's name is expressly men- 
tioned. Acts i. 13. Here he lived and taught, with his 
brethren, repeating to thousands of converts the same story 
of the life and words of Christ In the persecutions that 
followed, when all the disciples were driven from Jerusalem, 
and- were scattered abroad, it is not known to what place 
Matthew^ed. Wherever he was, we may be sure he was 
employed, as were the other disciples, in preaching the glad 
news of the kingdom from city to city, and from house to 
house. In this work many years were diligently, but quiet- 
ly, passed. Our next notice of him is about thirty years 
afler the ascension of Christ, when we hear of him as having 
returned to the city of Jerusalem. It was here that he prob- 
ably wrote out the Grospel which has always borne his name« 
After this, it is said that he traveUed as a missionary into 
Parthia and Ethiopia, and that at Naddaber, a town in the 
latter country, he suffered a violent death rather than re- 
nounce his faith and hope in the Gospel of Christ. Thus, in 
the glorious company of the Apostles while living, he joined 
the noble army of the martyrs when dead. 

8* 



so « TBE 608PBL NAHHATIYBS. 



CHAPTER VII. 



THE GOSPEL OF MATTHEW. 

From Matthew*s life our attention is now to be directed 
to Matthew^s Gospel. It was written, as has been said, at 
Jerusalem, and for the use of the churches in Judea. As a 
composition, it perfectly corresponds to what we have seen 
to be the character of its author. We see at once, upon 
reading this narrative, that the writer must have been a Jew, 
familiar with the opinions, ceremonies, and customs of his 
countrymen, conversant with the Old Testament writings, 
and habituated to their idiom. We see equally clearly, that 
ho must have been a man of plain sense, of little or no 
learning, that he wrote seriously and from conviction, that 
he describes as an eyewitness, and without ever entertaining 
the most distant thought of setting off his narrative, or of in- 
troducing himself in it. As a composition intended to be 
read by the Jews, it is 'noticeable at once that this Gospel 
has less of those descriptions of places and customs, and 
definitions of Jewish words and phrases, which we shall find 
in the other Gospels that were written to be sent to Gentiles. 
By Matthew^s readers all these things would be familiarly 
known. Such descriptions, for example, as are found in 
Mark vii. 3, or in John ii. 18, would be wholly uncalled for 
in Matthew's Gospel, and accordingly they are not found 
therein. The very word Jew or Jeios^ which occurs fre- 
quently in the other Gospels, is not used in Matthew. This 
proper noun, so likely to be employed by one writing at a 
distance from that people, would naturally be exchanged for 
some equivalent word by a writer in Judea ; and accordingiy 



THB GOSPEL IfABBATIVBS. ^ dl 

Matthew uses the words multitude^ people, &c., in its stead. 
Moreover, in the selection of materials for this Gospel, there 
is a manifest choice of every circumstance which might con- 
ciliate the faith of the Jews. Thus, there was no opinion 
relating to the Messiah with which that people were more 
strongly impressed than this, that he must he of the race of 
Ahraham and of the family of David. Matthew, therefore, 
with great propriety, begins his narrative with the genealogy 
of Jesus. He shows that He was of the seed of Abraham, 
and of the house of David. The Jews would have listened 
to no one^s claims to be the Christ until this point had been 
proved. So, also, that the Messiah should be bom at Beth- 
lehem of Judea was another circumstance in which the 
learned Jews of those times were agreed. Micah v. 2. 
Matt. ii. 4. His birth in that citv, with some memorable 
circumstances attending it, Matthew took the first opportu- 
nity to record. So, also, those passages in the prophets, or 
other sacred writers, which either foretell any thing that 
should occur to the Messiah, or admit an allusive application 
to him, are never passed over in silence by this Apostle. 
To the Jews, convinced of the inspiration of their sacred 
writings, the fulfilment of prophecy was always a great topic 
of ai^ument To the Gentiles, on the other hand, who 
knew nothing of the Old Testament predictions, this argu- 
ment would be of but little force. Accordingly, in the other 
Grospels, designed, as we shall see, to be sent among the 
Gentiles, this argument is hardly ever adduced. But so 
great a weapon as this in controversy with the Jews, Mat- 
thew has frequently employed, and has hardly suffered an 
opportunity for its use to be neglected. 

A few instances of this reference to the Old Testament 
may be named. In the minds of their readers it would have 
added but little to the ^kci of Mark^s or LukeV account of 



82 THE GOSPEL If AREATIVES. 

Christ^s parables to have a(lded, '' All these things spake 
Jesus, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the 
prophet, saying, I will open my mouth in parables ; I will 
utter things which have been kept secret from the founda- 
tion of the world.^' But Matthew gives this reference to the 
Old Testament (Matt. xiii. 35), and it was greatly to his 
purpose to do it, because the Jews thought these words pre- 
dicted the manner in which their Messiah would teach. 

Both Mark and Luke have recorded the fact, that before 
Christ entered upon his ministry he dwelt at Nazareth. But 
to their Grentile readers this fact furnished no proof that he 
was the Messiah. To the Jews, on the other hand, this was 
a proof; for they were familiar with a prophecy which said, 
" He shall be called a Nazarene." To that prophecy, Mat- 
thew, in recording the place where Jesus dwelt, has not 
failed to refer (Matt. ii. 23), and he alone has referred to it. 

All the Evangelists write of the great number of the sick, 
of the lame, the dead, the possessed, whom Jesus restored 
with a word. ^ That he wrought miracles was a proof of 
his divine mission to all alike. Gentiles and Jews ; but that 
he wrought this particular class of miracles was a good arr 
gument in the mouth of Matthew alone, for his readers alone 
knew of the prophecy, ^' Himself took our infirmities, and 
bare our sicknesses," and this prophecy Matthew alone re- 
cords. Matt viii. 17. 

At the crucifixion of Christ his garments were divided 
among the soldiers by lot. This all the Evangelists have 
related. It is Matthew alone who has added, *'*' That it 
might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet. They 
parted my garments among them, and upon my vesture did 
they cast lots.'' Matt, xxvii. 35. 

The more the peculiarities of each Gospel are studied, 
the more shall we be convinced that each of the writers 



THE GOSPEL IffARHATIYES. 38 



• 



drew up his own independent account. They could not 
have copied one from the other. Nor did their living and 
teaching together for so long a time destroy their individu- 
ality, and make one servilely repeat th» other. When they 
sat down to write out their narratives, each one wrote freely, 
from his own independent remembrances, and with refer- 
ence to the iudependent object which he had in view. And 
the adaptation of each Gospel to the particular object for 
which it was written is a proof of the great care which each 
bestowed upon its composition. Written with the utmost 
freedom and simplicity, still the Grospels were not written 
hastily nor carelessly. Their writers' hearts were too much 
in their work to permit that. Matthew no doubt felt ten- 
derly for his brethren in the Jewish faith. The above are 
but a few instances where he betrays his affectionate solici- 
tude to notice every circumstance that would operate to per- 
suade them to admit the claims of Jesus to be their Christ. 

But this did not lead him into an error of another kind. 
He was liable to the temptation of withholding altogether 
disagreeable truths, or, at least, of apologizing for them and 
softening them down. There is not the slightest trace of 
any yielding to this. When he comes to record facts dis- 
agreeable to the Jews, he does it with the utmost plainness 
and fearlessness. Thus, take the case of those terrible 
dooms which Jesus with such awful solemnity pronounced 
against the Scribes and Pharisees, the cities of Chorazin and 
Bethsaida, and even the Holy City, Jerusalem itself. Luke, 
writing to his Gentile friend Theophilus, very briefly repeats 
them as a part of the words of Christ ; while Mark, think- 
ing, doubtless, that they were intended for the Jews alone, 
and that they formed no part of that Gospel which was to be 
preached to all nations, has omitted them altogether. There 
may have been another reason which influenced this latter 



34 TH£ GOSPEL NARRATIVES. 

Evangelist. At Rome, where Mark wrote, there was a 
disposition already too prevalent to insult and oppress the 
Jews, which Mark^s repetition of these fearful denunciations 
might have needlessly increased. But Matthew has given 
them, every one of them, at length, and with the utmost 
distinctness and solemnity. Those awful decrees, uttered 
for Jewish ears, and intended for their warning, we all see 
that it was in Matthew's Gospel that they properly belonged, 
and there we find they are. It was not for the plain and 
fearless publican to shrink from making them known. It 
would have been no proof of a true affection to his brethren 
to have smoothed these things over. Their case required 
great plainness of speech, that they might be prepared for 
events, which, by all his confidence in Christ, he knew would 
come, and which, in fact, did come only a few years after 
he had written his Gospel. To be able to utter, with calm- 
ness and decision, truths which we know will provoke scorn 
and opposition, is one great mark of moral courage ; and 
this virtue we must ascribe to Matthew. 

Another peculiarity of this Gospel is, that it is the only one 
which was written in the very language which the Saviour 
used. The other Gospels were written in Greek, which was 
then a kind of universal language, as the French is now. 
Mark, Luke, and John, writing in this language, placed their 
histories within the reach of a much larger number of read 
ers than if they had made use of any other tongue. Bu". 
Matthew wrote for the Jews alone, and he wrote in their 
own language, the Hebrew. They understood the Greek, 
but this was the language that they loved. In the life of 
Paul, we read that on one occasion, when surrounded by a 
riotous multitude, they were stilled at once, and listened to 
him readily, when they perceived that he addressed them 
in the Hebrew tongue. And this is the language which the 



THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES. 35 

Saviour used. We are reminded of this several times, by 
an occasional retention, in each of the Gospels, of a few 
original Hebrew words. Thus, when Jesus raised to life a 
young woman, 'he approach^ the bed where she lay, and 
said, Talitha cumi, which is to say. Damsel, I say unto thee 
arise. Mark v. 41. Again, when a man was brought to 
him who had an impediment in his speech, Jesus took up 
clay and touched his tongue, and, looking up to heaven, he 
said, Ephphatha, that is. Be opened. Mark vii. 34. 

It at first seems unaccountable why the Evangelists should 
retain here the precise words of Christ. " They are not 
singular words. They are among the simplest, and admit 
without the least difficulty of being translated. Nay, they 
are translated in the very next breath. How shall we ac- 
count for this curious feature in the narrative ? It admits " 
— as it has been ingeniously suggested by Mr. Fumess, in 
his Remarks on the Four Gospels, from which this quotation 
is made — " of an explanation which is wonderfully natural. 
Imagine the utterance of these simple words to have been 
instantly followed by the effects which they are said to have 
produced, namely, the restoration of the girl to life in the 
one case, and the recovery of the powers of hearing and 
speech in the deaf and dumb man in the other, and we per- 
ceive what stupendous power must have instantaneously 
passed, in the minds of those present, into tEbse brief articu- 
late sounds that issued from the lips of Jesus, and the utter- 
ance of which seemed naturally enough to be the cause of 
the astonishing effects produced. What peculiar, super- 
natural, and untranslatable significance must these words 
have instantly been thought to possess, which wrought or 
appeared to work so mightily! In the minds of the by- 
standers, those few sounds were instantly divorced, as by a 
ftroke of lightning, from all familiar associations. Their 



96 THE CM)SF£L HA&KATIVES. ^ 

ordinary import was lost in the new, instant, and unheard-of 
power which their utterance revealed. They no longer had 
any satisfactory correspondence with the articulations of any 
other language. No other Yorms of speech were felt to 
convey the same miraculous meaning, to possess the like 
force"; and when, years afler, the Apostles. sat down to 
recall and record those scenes, with what power of inex- 
pressible associations did these very words press into their 
minds ! What an impress of nature and reality do these 
mystic words impart to the narrative ! 

These remarks apply also to the Saviour^s exclamation on 
the cross, Eli^ Eli^ lama sahacthani? that is to say, My 
God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me ? Matt, xxvii. 
46. No other words from mortal lips could express the as- 
sociations which in the Apostles^ minds were for ever linked 
to these words. 

The Grospel of Matthew possesses peculiar interest, be- 
cause it was at first drawn up entirely in the language which 
that Teacher uttered, who could attach such wonderful pow- 
er to his words. It is true that the Gospel in that language 
has been lost. The most ancient form in which we now 
possess it is a translation into Greek, made soon after the 
original was composed. But there is no reason to doubt its 
exact faithfulness to the original. It was at once received 
by those who, reading familiarly both languages, would de- 
tect the slightest variation between the original and the 
translation. Though, then, we may be allowed to regret 
that we cannot look on the very words which this Apostle 
used in narrating the life and words of his Master, yet ouf 
faith need not be in the least disturbed by the loss, while 
there remains for us this translation of his history, so mani- 
festly ancient, complete, and true. 

One other circumstance, which gives peculiar valpe to the 



THE GOSPEL NABEATIYE8. 37 

Gospel of Matthew, may be named, and this is the remark- 
ably clear and forcible style in which it is composed. Those 
who have much studied the peculiarities of the Evangelical 
narratives tell us that they could at once detect a paragraph 
of Matthew's history, if it were inserted in either of the 
other narratives. But it does not need any rare critical ex- 
amination to appreciate the style of this writer. Let any 
one compare together Luke's and Matthew's record of the 
sermon on the mount, for example, and it will be at once 
seen how much superior in conciseness and energy is the 
latter. How observable especially is this in the manner in 
which each gives the beatitudes ! Matt. v. 3 - 12, com- 
. pared with Luke vi. 20-23. 

The same simplicity and power of expression are found 
in the account Matthew gives of Christ's charge to his Apos- 
tles, his illustrations of the nature of his kingdom, and his 
replies to the cavils of his adversaries. It is for this reason 
that Matthew's Gospel has always been most highly es- 
teemed, and has always been placed first in manuscript and 
printed collections. 

We never feel more profoundly that our Gospel histories 
are true, than when we thus make a comparison, one with 
the other, to learn the object and peculiarities of each. The 
external evidence of their genuineness, that of manuscripts, 
and history, and tradition, is important ; but there are marks 
in the Go4>els themselves of honesty and truth, which, if 
only reflected upon, are far more convincing and satisfac- 
tory. There is a certain way of telling a story which be- 
longs only to truth, and which, when perceived, carries with 
it all power of determining the understanding and touching 
the heart. But this way is perceived only by him who has 
sympathies with the truth, a free, open, and generous heart, 
that will discern it and bid it welcome. That famous 

TOL. ZXII. — NO. 253. 4 



38 THE GOSFEL NARRATIVES. 

aphorism of the Fathers, that all Scripture must be inter- 
preted by the same spirit ia which it was ¥nritten, covers a 
great principle. We see it illustrated every day. To the 
coarse and uncultivated, what a mystery are the pleasures 
of a refined taste ! to the selfish, how unintelligible are the 
impulses of generosity ! how can the depraved and earthly 
conceive of the jojrs of devotion ! Chie great reason why 
we are affected no more by the perusal of our Gospel his- 
tories is, that we have so little of that single-minded and all- 
devoted spirit in which they were written. Their authors 
had become like little children, in meekness, simplicity, rev- 
erence, and faith. Just in the proportion that we receive 
these virtues in our hearts shall we see in their writings sig- 
natures of honesty, sincerity, and reality, which we cannot 
resist, and which will draw us to Him in whom all treasures 
of wisdom are hid. 



CHAPTER VIII. 



NOTICES OF THE LIFE OF MARK. 

In the twelfth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, at the 
twelfth verse, we read these words : -^" And Peter came to 
the house of Mary the mother of John, whose surname was 
Mark ; where many were gathered together, praying." This 
is the first notice of Mark which we find in the Scriptures. 
We are here introduced to him in connection with an inter- 
esting incident in the life of that Apostle, with whom Mark 
afterwards long lived, and from whom he received the mate- 
xilils of the narrative which bears his name. Let us see 
what that incident was. 



THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES. 39 

The family and friends of Mary had been filled with grief 
and fear, and they had come together to obtain the comfort 
and strength of prayer. The Apostle Peter, whom they 
had long known, honored, and loved, had been arrested by 
order of Herod, and had been thrown into prison, with the 
intention that he should soon be given up to be destroyed by 
the Jews. On the very night before he was to have been 
brought forth, he was found sleeping between two soldiers, 
— such is the tranquillity of an upright heart even in extreme 
danger. The account of his deliverance is given in Acts 
xii. 7 ; and we will observe to what place Peter, when freed, 
immediately directed his steps. He repaired at once to the 
house where a group of friends were offering their prayers 
to God for his release. 

It is a circumstance which gives a great air of truth and 
reality to our Gospel histories, not only that* individual char- 
acters are so well preserved, — such as the affectionate tem- 
per of John, the impetuous spirit of Peter, — but that we are 
occasionally presented with little groups of relatives and 
friends, who in those days, when all were exposed to perse- 
cution, would be so naturally drawn together. Thus the 
family of Lazarus, with his sisters Mary and Martha and 
their friends, forms one group, which with singular distinct- 
ness is presented before us. Then the women, Mary Mag- 
dalene, Mary the mother of James, Salome the wife of 
Zebedee, who attended the crucifixion, prepared spices to 
embalm the body, and were so early at the tomb after the 
ascension of Christ, form another group that was brought 
naturally and frequently together. Peter's house at Caper- 
naum was a place where another like group of believers 
used to assemble, and there they had been sometimes favor- 
ed with the presence and teachings of Christ. 

Just such a place of assembling was this house of Mark's 



40 THE GOSPEL NAHSATIYBS. 

mother, to which the released Apostle now approached. 
During his long residence in Jerusalem he had often heen 
there, to instruct this family and their friends ; and when 
they had heard of his arrest, they naturally came together, 
to sympathize with his fate, and to pray for his deliverance. 
And their prayer had been heard. So well was Peter known 
by them, that, when he stood at the door and knocked, his 
Toice was at once recognized, and, as soon as their aston* 
ishment permitted them to attend to his words, he declared 
unto them how the Lord had brought him out of prison. 

This, then, was the home of Mark, an inhabitant of Jeru- 
salem, bom and educated a Jew. He was not one of the 
twelve, nor a personal companion of Chirist. At what time 
he embraced the new religion is not known, probably not 
until after the ascension of Christ. He was converted by 
Peter, who calls him his son ( 1 Peter v. 13), — a title which 
in those times was commonly given by the minister to every 
one who through him had been converted to the Christian 
faith. Doubtless this laid the foundation for that intimacy 
which we shall see always existed between the Apostle and 
his pupil. 

Soon after Peter^s release from prison, Mark determines 
to accompany Barnabas, who was his mother^s brother, and 
Saul, in their journeys to preach the Gospel. It was at this 
time that he first took the surname of Mark, having been 
known before by the name of John. It was a practice with 
the Jews to assume names more familiar to the nations they 
visited than those by which they were known in their own 
eountry. Antioch was the first place to which Saul and 
Barnabas repaired, and from thence they were sent by the 
churches to Paphos, in the isle of Cyprus, and to Perga, in 
Pamphylia. Here Mark leaves these Apostles, and returns 
to his mother^s house at Jerusalem. For what reason this 



THE OOSPBL NASSATIVBS. 41 

Step was taken, we have not been informed. It gave ofience 
to Paul ; for a few years af\er this, when he and Barnabas 
proposed another journey to visit and confirm the churches, 
and the latter was determined to take his nephew Mark with 
him, Paul, as we read in Acts xv^ 38, ^ thought not go^ to 
take him with them, who departed from them at Pamphylia, 
and went not with them to the work. And the contention 
was so sharp between them, that they departed asunder one 
from the other,'' Barnabas taking Mark and sailing to Cyprus, 
while Paul, with Silas for a companion, departed through 
Syria and Cilicia. 

How instructive is this account of the sharp contention, or 
paroxysm^ as it is in the original, between these two distin- 
guished disciples ! . We can imagine many reasons which 
induced Mark to return to his widowed mother at Jerusalem, 
reasons in themselves strong and satisfactory, which his 
mother's brother, Barnabas, would appreciate, but which, at 
the same time, might seem insufficient to one like Paul. He 
feared that Mark, if again employed, might desert them 
again ; Barnabas, it is probable, knew that the causes which 
before called Mark home would not again exist ; how natu- 
ral, then, that this dispute, with men of such temperament 
as Paul and Barnabas, should wax warm, and lead to their 
separation ! It proves that they were men, — just such men 
as we see now ; and that their inspiration left them free to 
consult their own judgments, and to follow their own wills. 
It proves something more important still. The Gospel his- 
tory, which they told from place to place, was no contrivance 
of theirs, which, as soon as they were vexed with one another 
and had separated, one of them would expose and renounce. 
When men plot some scheme of private interest or ambition, 
to impose upon the credulity of mankind under the cover of 
aeal for the public good, any contention or separation proves 

4» 



42 THE aOS7EL NASEATIVB8. 

fatal to their undertaking, reveals their secret, and betrays 
their wicked design. Nothing like this occurred here, be- 
cause nothing of a secret or private nature entered into the 
views of these men. When in their anger they separate, 
thej^go everywhere telling the same story, and teaching the 
same truths ; and thus we gain new evidence of the truth of 
the Grospel history even from the imperfections of its first 
teachers. Nor is this all. They not only prove it to be 
true historically, but they prove the influence its truth had 
upon their own hearts. Barnabas and Paul were men, and 
they separated in anger ; but they w^re Christians, too, and 
they cherished no resentment. Paul had the magnanimity 
to retract his opinion, and to acknowledge his mistake in 
regard to the character of Mark. Not long afler this dis- 
pute, we find that Paul had Mark with him as an esteemed 
fellow-laborer, and when again they were separated, the 
Apostle sends express word to Timothy, " Bring Mark with 
thee, for he is profitable to me for the ministry."' — 2 Tim- 
othy iv. 11. Differences of opinion will of^en rise among 
men, and good men are not exempt from the weakness of 
advocating their own views with excess of positiveness and 
warmth. To cherish no resentment, to review one's opinion, 
and to acknowledge an error or mistake, — this is the Chris- 
tian part, which the Apostles not only enjoined upon others, 
but acted themselves. 

We must return to the life of Mark. His stay at Cyprus 
was not long. Barnabas, it is said, was soon stoned to death 
by the Jews residing on that corrupt and licentious island, 
and thus added another name to the great number of those 
who counted not their lives dear unto them for the sake of 
the Gospel of Christ. Mark, thus deprived of his companion 
and guide, sought out at once the Apostle Peter, the long 
and intimate friend of his family, his spiritual father, who 



TBS OOSPEL If ASXATITES. 43 

better thiui any one else could further teach him the words 
of. light and life. That Apostle, as is supposed, then dwelt 
at Antioch. Mark joins him there, and from this time re- 
mains with him, his constant attendant and assistant, we 
know not exactly how long, but probably for eight or ten 
years. The churches which Peter had especially under his 
care were those in Antioch, Pontus, Cappadocia, and Bilhy- 
nia ; and as the Christian history speaks of Mark as a fellow- 
traveller with Peter, they doubtless visited together these 
congregations of believers. Afler this we hear of Mark in 
Rome, for his name is afiectionately mentioned at the con- 
clusion of the epistles written from that city by Paul. Col. 
iv. 10. 2 Timothy iv. 11. Philemon 24. 

It is the unanimous testimony of ancient writers, that Mark 
was entreated by the Christians of Rome to commit to writ- 
ing what he had learned from Peter of the life and words of 
Christ This was the occasion of the composition of his 
Gospel. When it was written,''Mark travelled to Alexandria 
in Egypt, where he was the first to preach the new religion, 
and where he established a church. Here he soon died, and 
was buried. 

Thus was secured another independent record of the life 
of Christ, from materials furnished by an eyewitness, and 
one of the most distinguished followers of the Saviourit 
Had it not been written then and there by Mark, Peter^s 
independent and important testimony would not have been 
written at all. For this Apostle himself lived but a short 
time after Mark had been separated from him. In the 
eighth year of the cruel reign of Nero, both Peter and Paul 
were crucified, and thus they placed to the testimony they 
gave the seal of their blood. It is said, that, out of a feel- 
ing of hymble respect for his Master, Peter requested to be 
cnicifie4 with his head downwards. ^^ If so, it is an afiect- 



44 THt GOn»EL NABSATITSS. 

ing conclusion of his eventful life, and another striking ex- 
hibition of the ardent character which adhered to him to the 
last. He conceived it too great an honor that sudi an one 
as he should meet his death erect, and looking upwards, like 
his beloved and venerated Lord ; and so, with his head in 
the dust, he closed his labors, his failings, his victories, his 
sufferings, and his life.^^ 

These occasional notices of Peter^s life seem to have been 
called for in connection with that of Mark, because the Gros- 
pel of Mark comes to us on the authority of Peter. For this 
reason, it has sometimes been called the Petrine Gospel ; 
but, as it was written by his companion and pupil, the title 
which it has always borne in our Bibles is evidently the 
proper one. 



CHAPTER IX. 



THE GOSPEL OF MABE. 

From all we know of Mark, it is very evident that both 
lie and his family occupied a humble position in society. In 
all. his journeys with Barnabas and Paul, and with Peter, he 
is named only as their minister, — as high a station, doubt- 
less, as he desired, or for which his education qualified him. 
Now with all this his Gospel remarkably corresponds. Its 
language is more like the language of an uneducated man 
than that of any other writing which the New Testament 
contains. It is less copious, more harsh, more abounding in 
expressions that are unusual and barbarous to the tongue. 
He describes clearly ; we have no difficulty in ui 



THE GOSPEL NABKATIYES. 45 

his meaning ; but every thing is narrated with great brevity^ 
and with a baldness and awkwardness of expression which 
will be seen on comparing his narrative with that of Matthew 
or Luke. 

Another peculiarity of this Gospel is, that, although writ- 
ten in Greek, and written, too, by one who in every chapter 
proves himself a Jew, we still find Roman, that is Latin, 
names and words, which occur in no other Gospel, and 
which sound oddly in the midst of words of a different 
tongue. Thus the other Evangelists, in writing of the title 
centurion^ captain of a hundred men, make use of the com- 
mon Greek word that denoted that office. Mark, on the 
other hand (xv. 19), designates it by the word by which it 
was always called among the Romans. The mere English 
reader will not perceive the difference, which is seen at once 
in the original. So, in Mark xii. 42, the value of the sum 
which the poor widow cast into the treasury is expressed by 
naming a Roman coin. Again, in Mark vii. 4, which con« 
tains an account of the Jewish ceremony of washing hands 
before meat, to the vessel made use of for this purpose Mark 
gives not the common name applied to it by the Jews, but 
'one more familiarly known by the Romans. If in using 
these words Mark had no design to make himself better un- 
derstood by those for whose benefit he was writing, we all 
know how unconsciously just such words as the above, if 
they have been recently used, will at onoe occur to the 
memory of the speaker or writer, even though using for the 
moment a different tongue. 

A more remarkable peculiarity of this Gospel may be 
found in the frequent explanations of places and customs 
which Mark introduces, in order to be better understood by his 
readers at Rome. Thus, when he has occasion to mention 
the Jordan (Mark i. 5), he prefixes the explanation tJie river ^ 



46 THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES. 

an explaiiati<m needed only in a distant country. The word 
translated hdl in our New Testaments is literally the name 
of a place near Jerusalem, the valley of Hinnomrwhere in- 
fants had been sacrificed by fire to Moloch ; a place well 
known to the inhabitants of Judea, but of which the Romans 
were ignorant. Accordingly, Mark, when he menticms it, 
adds, the fire that never shall he quenched. Mark ix. 43, 45. 
The Jews applied the word corhan to property which any 
man set apart to the exclusive service of Qod. Ungrateful 
and impious children, who had aged and infirm parents, 
would make eorban of their property, and thus avoid their 
support. The Saviour reproved them for thus making null 
the oommandments of God through their tradition. In giving 
an account of this, Mark uses the word corhan^ but he fails 
not to define it, — a giil to the Lord of that by which thoa 
mightest have been profited by me, — without which expla- 
nation to his readers, this reproof of the Saviour would be 
entirely misimderstood. Mark vii. 11. In the second verse 
of that same chapter, the phrase ^^ defiled hands '* would 
probably have suggested to Roman ears some offence mott 
heinous than neglect of a superstitious washing, had not 
Mark taken pains so to define it. Two remarkable verses 
follow, in these words : — '^ For the Pharisees, and all the 
Jews, except they wash their hands ofl, eat not, holding the 
tradition of the elders. And when they come from the 
market, except they wash, they eat not And many other 
things there be which they "have received to hold, as the 
washing of cups and pots, and brazen vessels, and of ta- 
bles." 

That Mark was writing for the benefit of other than Jew- 
ish readers must be obvious from this example alone. But 
there is another remark to be made in respect to the foreg<^ 
ing quotation. So much of mere comment and explanation 



TEB GOSPEL NABSATIYBS. 47 

from the writer is nowhere else to he fouad in the Gospels. 
Tius single fact is a proof how little these writers ever speak 
in their own names. They always retire hehind the facts 
they record, anxious that you should look at these alone. It 
is this circumstance which makes this long comment of Mark 
noticeable ; and at first we may wonder why he should have 
put it forward. But when we read on a little farther, what 
do we find ^ That Mark immediately gives the long sermon 
oi Christ, in which he shows that there is but one thing that 
can truly defile a man, namely, his own evil heart. A mo- 
in«:it's study of the passage leads us to see that the whole 
force of this sermon depends upon a knowledge of this Jew- 
ish custom, which was the text and explanation of the dis- 
course. The Saviour^s doctrine would not have been com- 
prehended, if the contrast which he draws between ceremo- 
nial washing and inward purity had not been preserved. 
This instance, requiring him to st^ so far aside from his 
usual way of narration, is a striking one of Mark's great 
care to adapt his Gospel to the comprehension of those for 
whose benefit it was composed. 

We see the same care, also, in the selection of the mate- 
rials for his Gospel. Mark, doubtless, had knowledge, 
through the Apostle Peter, of all the important events in the 
life of Christ. But many facts which we find in Matthew 
are wholly omitted in Mark. The reason is, he knew they 
would be of less consequence to his readers at Rome. Of 
this character were the genealogy of Christ, notices of his 
peurents, the time and circumstances of his birth, of the very 
place of which — the little town of Bethlehem — probably 
the most of these at Rome had never heard. All these par- 
ticulars Mark properly passes by. For the same reason is 
another fact, before noticed, that Mark gives us in a few 
words the discourses against the Scribes and Pharisees. 



48 THB GOSPEL NARRATmW. 

There is one other observation respecting Mark's Gospd, 
which suggests a peculiarly interesting light in which to sur- 
vey it If it was composed of materials furnished to Mark 
by Peter^ we shall naturally expect to find Peter in it, that is 
to say, traces of his independent knowledge and of his pecu- 
liar character. 

Such traces are found. We shall be able to notice only 
a few of the many particulars upon which the testimony of 
Peter in this Gospel throws a new and important light The 
conduct of our Saviour, when he was told that his mother 
and his brethren stood without, desiring to speak with him. 
appears singular and unnatural in Matthew^s account of it 
Matt xii. 48. The Saviour gave no attention to their re- 
quest, and does not appear to have noticed them. In Maik, 
a circumstance unrecorded by the other writers is added, 
which explains and justifies the course which Jesus took. 
We are here told, that ^^ his kinsmen went out to lay hold on 

m 

him ; for they said. He is beside himself.'' Mark iii. 21. 
Jesus, therefore, knew what they wanted of him, and would 
not permit their false view to interrupt him. 

Matthew, Mark, and Luke record, that, as Jesus was* 
going to be crucified, the soldiers compelled one Simon, a 
Cyrenean, to bear the cross. In Mark's Grospel alone we 
read that this Simon was the father of Alexander and Rufus. 
Mark xv. 21. Why should Mark have added this fact? 
Because, as we incidentally learn from the Epistle to the 
Romans, Rufus was then living m Rome. Romans xvi. 13. 
That the Saviour's cross was borne by the father of one then 
living in that city was a fact interesting to Mark's readers, 
and to his alone. It is probable that Peter, in narrating the 
crucifixion of his Master to his Roman hearers, of\en jeferred 
Uo this Rufus, then living among them, as one who could 
testify that his own father was a witness and an unwilling 



« 



TRS 60SPXL HAREATIYXS. 49 



abetter of that awful scene. A man, conscious that every 
word he uttered could be confirmed, would naturally make 
such an appeal as this to a present witness ; and here is an 
instance of a coincidence between the Gospels and the Epis- 
tles, which must have been undesigned, and which, as we 
should acknowledge were we legally examining these docu- 
ments, casts a convincing light on the question of their 
authenticity. 

We find, also, in this Gospel, traces of Peter's peculiar 
character. This Apostle was one of the most distinguished 
companions of Christ, who was at times both commended 
and severely reproved by his Master. In giving an account 
to Mark of the life and words of Jesus, Peter must of\en 
speak of himself, and a man will betray his character by the 
manner in which he does this. What accounts, then, of 
Peter do we find in this Gospel of Mark ? Precisely the 
same accounts that we find in the Gospels of Matthew and 
Luke. It is the same Peter in all ; the same bold, over-con- 
fident, impulsive, denying, yet quickly repentant and deeply 
afiectionate disciple. The facts stand in all their bald sim- 
plicity in this Gospel, just as they stand in the others. Peter 
puts in not one word of explanation, not one whisper of 
apology or palliation? In relation to that event which was 
so full of unmitigated grief and remorse, the denial of his Mas- 
ter, it is Peter's own account of it that makes us most deeply 
feel its folly and its guilt. The circumstances that preceded 
it, the prediction of Jesus that Peter would forsake him, and 
the solemn assurance pf the Apostle that he would not, are 
related with more distinctness and impressiveness in Mark's 
Gospel than in either of the others. The reason how natu- 
ral ! Those were words which sunk deep into Peter's heart, 
which he never forgot, and which, though they told such an 
awful tale against him, it was not for him to suppipsg. 

yoL. xzii. — NO. 954, 5 



60 THE OOSPSL NAEIATIYBS. 

Generous and devoted disciple ! With all the weaknesses 
and sins into which he was betrayed, who of us does not love 
him ? How can we lay up any thing against any human 
being, however erring and sinful, who, only by a look of 
reproval, is made to go out and weep bitterly ? 

While, then, Peter keeps not back an account of that bit- 
ter rebuke, does it appear that he was equally forward to 
make mention of the praise which he received from his 
Master^s lips ? Here, too, we have an indication of charac- 
ter both beautiful and delicate. You remember those em- 
phatic words of Jesus, pronouncing Peter blessed, declaring 
him to be the rock of the church, and to possess the keys 
of heaven. You remember it was supposed that these words 
conferred some preeminence upon Peter, and that therefore 
they created offence in the little band of equal disciples. 
You will find these words in the Gospel of Matthew. Matt 
xvi. 17 " 19. They are not found in the Gospel of Mark. 
The occasion on which they were uttered is named, and 
other conversation which was then held is narrated. Mark 
viii. 27 - 29. The words of praise are not repeated ; and 
yet could Peter have forgotten them ? 

Thus, in reading our four Gospel histories, there is hardly 
any thing with which we may be more deeply impressed, 
than with the fact that their writers must have been them- 
selves influenced by the doctrines which they taught. These 
doctrines, the veriest infidel allows, are adapted to make 
men love honesty, sincerity, and truth. So far, then, as we 
see that they had effect upon those who taught them, so fisur 
must we also see the moral impossibility that these men 
could all the while be engaged in a dark work of forgeries 
and lies. Who is credulous enough to believe that ? By 
all that their Master taught them they were made humble, 
forgetful of themselves, indifferent to the world's &vor oc 



THB GOSPEL NAKBATIYBS. &! 

reproach, in love only with the truth ; they were holy men, 
and could not speak otherwise than as they were moved by 
the spirit of sincerity and truth. 



CHAPTER X. 



NOTICES OF THE LIFE OF LXTEE. 

These are but few, and for the most part unsatisfactory. 
The author of two important books, the Gospel and the Acts 
of the Apostles, Luke had the self-forgetfulness so character- 
istic of the first disciples, who did not deem any thing relat- 
ing to their own history worthy the slightest notice in con- 
nection with Him whose life and words they were called to 
record. Luke has never, in either of his histories, mentioned 
himself by name. In giving an account of PauPs labors and 
travels, whose companion and assistant Luke was, he yet 
says no more of the part which he acted than such expres- 
sions as these imply : — " we journeyed," " we sailed," " we 
abode." Paul, in his epistles, makes occasional allusion to 
Luke by name, and from these sources, and from what we 
learn from credible historians, almost contemporaneous, we 
gather the materials for the following sketch. 

He was bom in Antioch, about fifteen years before the 
birth of Christ. Of the converts made to the new religion in 
the age of the Apostles, he was the oldest of whom we have 
any account. Antioch was at this time one of the most 
celebrated cities of the East, the capital of Syria, and the 
residence of the Roman governors. Here all religions were 
tolerated, and the population was composed of Greeks, Ro- 



52 TBS GOSPEL MAESATIICBS. 

mans, Macedonians, and Jews. Luke was bom, it is prob- 
able, of Gentile parents. Paul, in his Epistle to the Colos- 
sians (iv. 14), implies that he was not of the circunicisi(», 
as he gives his name after the names of those whose Jewish 
descent is expressly affirmed. See Col. iv. 7-11. He 
doubtless received a Gentile education, and was trained up 
to the profession of a physician. He was, therefore, a man 
of some learning. Those who followed this profession re- 
ceived more instruction than most men, both in their partic- 
ular art and in general literature. They obtained, besides, 
that practical knowledge which may be acquired by an ex- 
tensive intercourse with society. These qualifications were 
not of a low order, it is likely, in a city so learned as that 
of Luke^s birthplace, where the Greek language in its purity 
had long prevailed, and letters had long been cultivated, and 
where people of the first distinction rended. At what time 
Luke was made a convert to the Jewish religion is not 
known. It is probable he became such early in life, as 
throughout his Gospel and the Acts he shows the utmost 
familiarity with its doctrines and ceremonies, with the Ian* 
guage of its sacred books, and with places and customs of 
Judea. 

Here, then, at Antioch, Luke lived, as is supposed, until 
he was about fifty years of age, discharging the duties of 
his profession, and enjoying his religion as a proselyte Jew. 
Meantime all the events had been transpiring, in the neigh- 
bouring province of Judea, of which we read in the Gospels, 
— - the birth of the Saviour, his baptism, his ministry, his 
wonderful works, his arrest, trial, crucifixion, resurrection, 
and ascension ; and how worthy of our notice is it that God 
should now raise up, in this enlightened city of Antioch, 
another historian of all these facts, in the person of such a 
man as Luke,— -a man of age and attainments, whose char- 
acter was well formed and was probably well known 1 



THE 008PBL KABSATIYSS. 98 

Of the time and manner in which Luke first became ac- 
quainted with the Gospel, we have not been informed. We 
know clearly only what he has told Us in the preface to his 
Gospel, that he was not an eyewitness of the events of the 
Saviour^s life, but obtained a knowledge of them from those 
who were eyewitnesses and ministers of the word ; and also 
what we learn from the Acts, that, soon after Paul's con- 
version, Luke joined that Apostle, as his companion and 
assistant. It seems probable that Luke was converted to 
the Christian faith on the day of Pentecost. This was an 
oocasion, when, as a Jewish believer, he would naturally be 
present at Jerusalem ; and what more probable than that he 
was one of the great number of devout persons, out of every 
nation, who had then come together in that city ? Here, 
convinced by the miracles which on that day converted three 
thousand to the Christian faith, he made this the subject of 
his careful inquiry, and availed himself of all opportunities 
to hear the preachers of the new religion. During the 
years they spent in Jerusalem, Luke lived with them, as we 
have reason to conclude, and took part himself in their work 
of repeating to others the story of the life and words of 
Christ. Thus we see the sources of his information, and 
how his narrative also became influenced by the style of the 
Apostle^s oral accounts. 

We now pass several years down the course of events. 
The Apostles had fulfilled their ministry in Jerusalem, ac- 
cording to His word who told them to tarry for a time in 
that city, their number had been greatly enlarged, and that 
bold and able advocate, Paul of Tarsus, had been raised up 
to their cause. The martyrdom of Stephen and the im- 
prisonment of Peter were soon followed by days of perse- 
cution, that separated the Apostles and early preachers from 
one another, and sent them everywhere abro^ as missioa- 

5* 



M TRB CK>8FSL ITABXATXYBS. 

aries of the new faith. In this dispersion Paul went to An- 
tioch, to which place Luke had before repaired. Here the 
acqiiaintance between the Apostle and Evangelist probably 
commenced. Here Paul established a church, of which 
Luke was, doubtless, a prominent member. It was in this 
city, also, and at this time, that the disciples were first called 
Christians. Acts xi. 26. 

Not long after this, we find that Luke has determined to 
devote himself to the work of spreading a knowledge of 
these glad tidings abroad in the world. What the young 
disciple Mark did when he connected himself with Peter, 
what Matthew the publican did when the Saviour met him 
at the receipt of custom, this the older and more experi- 
enced Luke now does, — he leaves all to follow the call of 
Christ. So strong was the sense of duty in the hearts of 
these men ! They broke away from every attachment of 
kindred and country and habit and home, that they might 
everywhere bear witness to what they knew was for the 
healing and salvation of the world. In the case of Luke, 
this is particularly remarkable. He had now reached a 
period in life when men oftener think of retiring from its 
cares, than of turning their feet to a new and perilous pur- 
suit. The fervors of youth had passed away, and all his 
tastes and attachments must have confined him, in his de> 
dining years, to the city where he was bom, and where for 
so long a time he had followed the duties of his profession. 
But all these he now overcomes, and joins himself, as a 
companion and fellow-laborer, to the Apostle Paul. 

We have before seen how natural it was that Peter and 
Mark should unite together in their labors as missionaries 
and preachers of the word. They both sprang from the 
same humble station in life, they had for a long time been 
previously acquainted with one another, they had sustianed 



to each other the relation of teacher and pupil. Equally 
natural was it that two such men as Paul and Luke should 
unite together as companions and fellow-laborers. The 
former was brought up at the feet of Gamaliel, and was 
learned in the wisdom of the ancients, and in the sacred 
books of the Jews ; the latter, likewi^, from education, pro- 
fession, and the intercourse of his whole life with intelligent 
society, was a man of considerable attainments, accustomed 
to close examination and careful thought. Among all the 
early converts to the new religion, we know of no other one 
like these two men. How natural, then, that they should 
labor together, to bear one another^s burdens and to help one 
another^s joys ! 

Luke was with Paul, more or less, for many years. The 
account of their journeys, preachings, and many trials, he 
has recorded in the book of the J^cta, It is evidence of the 
great minuteness and exactness with which he has done this, 
that, with a common ancient ipap before us, we can trace 
the course of their voyages, see the islands at which they 
touched, and the places where they preached. In all these 
perils and labors, what particular part Luke himself bore we 
can only conjecture. It is noticeable that Paul does not call 
Luke his minister, as he did Mark. Luke was a fellow- 
laborer, an equal, the beloved physician, — one on whose 
wisdom and experience Paul leaned for support. Paul was 
younger, more active, a more gifted, and a more remarkable 
man, whose education, habits, wonderful conversion, and 
bold temperament qualified him to be prominent in action 
and address. Such he appears throughout the narrative ; it 
is of what Paul said, and did, and suffered, that Luke chiefly 
speaks. Luke himself was declining in years, from the 
habits of his profession he was unused to public harangues, 
and although in his modesty he has hardly'said a word of 



66 THX <K>SPBL NABBATIYBS. 

himself, we know at least this much, that he minutely ob- 
served and carefully recorded every thing that came under 
his notice, that he was PauPs judicious, c<mfidential coun- 
sellor, and steady and supporting friend. 

With the imprisonment of Paul at Rome, the history in 
the book of Acts concludes. Here, also, terminate Liuke's 
incidental notices of his own life. The most credible ac- 
count which has been handed down of the remaining part 
of the life of this Evangelist leads us to conclude that he 
soon lefl Rome and settled in Greece. It is said that he 
here wrote his Grospel and the Acts, and soon after died, at 
the venerable age of eighty-four. 



CHAPTER XI. 



THE GOSPEL OF LITKS. 

From these brief notices of the life of Luke, we are now 
to turn to the Gospel which bears his name. We are struck 
at once with the manner in which he begins his narrative, it 
is so different from that of the other Evangelists. Accoid- 

• 

ing to the taste of the Greeks and Romans, which he doubt- 
less acquired in his Gentile education, he opens his history 
with a preface, from which we learn his intentions in writ- 
ing, the sources of his knowledge, and the name of the per- 
son for whose benefit the work was undertaken. It is a 
long, carefully written, and well-balanced sentence, of pure 
and well-chosen words. How would it have sounded, had it 
been placed at the beginning of the narrative of Matthew or 
of Mark I Neither of them appears to have giv^n a thou|^ 



THE GOSPEL NABRATITB8. S7 

to the selection of language, or to have cared any thing for 
style. Luke's preface is appropriate to no place but to that 
where it is. Here it is in perfect keeping with the man. 

The title '^ most excellent '^ was bestowed upon those who 
held offices of considerable importance under the Boman 
emperors, such offices as superintendents of sacred edifices, 
overseers of public revenue, deputy governors in the prov- 
inces ; and as Luke gives geographical notices of places not 
in the neighbourhood of Greece, it is probable th^t Theophi- 
lus resided in tlmt. country, and was some distinguished man 
converted and instructed by Luke, when he went there to 
spend the few last years of his old age. The following are 
references, in Luke's Grospel, to descriptions which would 
have been unnecessary had he been writing to one well ac- 
quainted with Judea: i. 26; iv. 31; viii. 26; xxiii. 51; 
xxiv. 13. So, too, in the Acts, we find that places in Judea 
and in Asia Minor are named as if they were less known 
than those in Greece and those between Greece and Eome, 
with which a public officer of Greece would naturally be 
acquainted. These facts sufficiendy indicate the residence 
of Theophilus. 

One other thing in this preface deserves our notice, as it 
throws light upon the state of feeling which then existed in 
regard to the Christian religion. Luke mentions, as one rea- 
son why he wrote his Gospel, that many had taken in hand 
to give account of the Saviour's life and words. Had these 
accounts been entirely trustworthy and satisfactory, his own 
' labor would have been unnecessary. No doubt these were 
brief and contradictory relations. Of course, he does not 
refer to the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and John. He would 
not so allude to the narratives of three writers, two of whom 
had better opportunities of information than himself, while 
the other had opportunities equally as good. Besides thiS| 



68 THE GOSPEL HAftKATITES. 

John^s Gospel was not at this time written, while the Gospels 
of Matthew and Mark, if then composed, of which there is 
much reason to douht, were published in countries remote 
from Greece, and were not then, it is probable, fstmiliarly 
known. 

There were, then, other, but imperfect, accounts of Christ^s 
life and words, known in Greece before Luke prepared his 
Gospel. How natural that such accounts should have ex- 
isted ! Thirty years had elapsed since the events of the 
Saviour^s life transpired in Judea. A knowledge of them 
must have been carried to all parts of the world by Jews and 
others. What could have been more natural than that brief, 
incorrect, and contradictory accounts of events so wonderful 
should have been frequently committed to writing, and that 
they should awaken much curiosity, and should be sought 
after by persons of various descriptions ? The fact named 
by Luke is of much importance, as it shows that the Chris- 
tian religion attracted the attention of mankind at the very 
time when its pretensions could be easily exposed if they 
were false. Our Gospels were not presented to the world 
at a time when an absolutely dead indifierence prevailed as 
to their contents. They had acquired no sanction of age, 
nor had opportunities to test their authenticity passed by, 
before their merits were discussed. On the contrary, at the 
very time they were written, men were asking what might 
be depended upon for truth. They were composed and 
published for this very purpose, to distinguish and preserve 
what was certain and worthy of reliance. And time, that 
trieth all things, has consigned to oblivion those accounts of 
the many^ to whic^ the occurrence of marvellous events 
always gives birth, and which were doubtless written in 
haste and from mere rumor, while it has safely handed 
down to us the carefully written narratives of those who 



THB GOSPEL ITARBATITBS. 59 

embalmed their words in the ever-living spirit of deep sin- 
cerity and truth. 

Of Luke^s Gospel as a book, the most striking peculiarity 
is the great research which it betrayi^ and the surprising 
care, precision, and fulness of detail with which it is written. 
Luke tells us that he had accurately informed himself of all 
things from the beginning (i. 3) ; and that he had taken 
great pains to do this is evident throughout. Indeed, Luke 
appears to have been a man who heartily loved dates, and 
names, and a statement of facts. A trait of character like 
this rarely. belongs to such men as Matthew and Mark ; but 
how very natural to find it in the old age of a man who had 
long followed that profession which, more than any other, 
creates habits of observing and recording facts ! A quo- 
tation of a verse or two from his Gospel will illustrate this 
trait of his character. It is found at the beginning of the 
third chapter. " Now in the fifteenth year of the reign of 
Tiberius Csesar, Pontius Pilate being governor of Judea, and 
Herod being tetrarch of Galilee, and his brother Philip 
being tetrarch of Iturea and of the region of Trachonitis, 
and Lysanias the tetrarch of Abilene, Annas and Caia- 
phas being the high-priests, the word of God came unto 
John, the son of Zacharias, in the wilderness.'' Could any 
man take greater pains to insure precision and fix a date ? 
He wishes to settle the precise time when a certain man 
began to preach ; he tells his name, the name of his father, 
the neighbourhood where he first appeared, who were high- 
priests at the time, the name of the offices and of the officers 
of the three highest civil stations in the country, the name of 
the emperor who ruled over all, and the very year of his reign. 

The same love of preciseness in recording facts is seen in 
the other book of this Evangelist, the Acts of the Apostles. 
ThiMy on one oocaaioQ, he gives account of his accompany- 



do THB GOSPEL NAKEATITES. 

iDg Paul, then a prisoner, on his way to Rome. Acts zxvii. 
1. They sail from Tyre under the care of Julius, a centu- 
rion, belonging to the band of Augustus ; the vessel was 
owned at Adramyttiym, and Aristarchus, a Macedonian of 
Thessalonica, was a fellow-passenger. The day after they 
launched, they touched at Sidon, sailed near the island of 
Cyprus, over the sea of Cilicia, and landed at Myra, a city 
of Lycia. All this is within the compass of five verses. 
Look at another extract from his journal. Acts xxviii. 11. 
They had been shipwrecked upon the island of Malta. 
They were obliged to remain here three months. They 
then obtained passage in a ship belonging to Alexandria ; 
her name was Castor and Pollux ; she had wintered at the 
isle. They soon landed at Syracuse; here they stopped 
three days. They then beat their way against opposing 
winds to Rhegium, where they remained one day ; then, a 
south wind blowing, they passed on towards Rome. 

This unusual minuteness in recording so many little facts, 
names, and places sprung from no design to accumulate 
evidence of the truth of his history ; still less was it an 
appeal, which, so oflen made, might have seemed vain and 
ostentatious, to hundreds of witnesses of his veracity, who 
might have then been found. Luke writes as if he never 
once thought that his statements would be called in question. 
Every thing is put down naturally, as the record of a very 
observing man, whose habit and delight it was to preserve 
all connected facts. It is true that every additicHial circum- 
stance he mentions furnished to his readers a new test of his 
credibility, but there is nowhere the slightest indication that 
Luke for a moment thought of this. Impressed with the 
reality of every thing he relates, he betrays no conscious- 
ness that it had ever occurred to him that his narrative could 
appear otherwise than as simple and consistent reaU^ to any 



THE GOSPBL NARRATITES. 61 

body. Accordingly, throughout his writings, as indeed 
throughout the writings of the other Evangelists, there is a 
quiet, unobtrusive confidence in his narrative, which could 
have sprung only from the profoundest conviction of its 
truth. 

To these traits of Luke^s character which have now been 
noticed, to his spirit of research, and love of minuteness, 
and precision in recording facts, we are very largely in- 
debted. They led him to gather up and preserve, many in- 
teresting particulars, of which the other Evangelists leave us 
uninformed. Thus the beautiful hymn of Mary before the 
birth of Jesus (Luke i. 46), Zacharias^s song of thanksgiving 
when he named his son John (Luke i. 67), and the devout 
address of good old Simeon in the temple (Luke ii. 29), 
are given by Luke alone. We may suppose that these 
words were written out in full ailerwards by these persons, 
as descriptive of what they felt and imperfectly expressed 
on the above-named occasions, and that Luke, when in 
Judea, obtained copies of them, and inserted them in their 
place near the beginning of his Gospel. Had it not been 
for his care, they would not have been preserved. 

So, also, no one can compare the Gospels together, with- 
out at once seeing how many more parables Luke gives 
than any of the other Evangelists. Those simple and most 
beautifully wrought allegories, — that of the rich man and 
Lazarus, the prodigal son, the Pharisee and the publican, 
the good Samaritan, — are found in Luke alone. Matthew 
and Mark did all that the necessities of the occasions that 
gave rise to their Gospels required or permitted ; the ab- 
sence of these parables from their narratives does not sur- 
prise us. But how well does it comport with all that we 
know of the taste and character of Luke, that, in his jour- 
neys in Judea and conversations with the Apostles, he should 

yoL. XXII. — NO. 254. 6 



02 THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES. 

treasure up these parables with minutest care, and that when 
he wrote, in the leisure of his old age, he should take so 
much pains to record them in full ! Thus it is through him 
that these divine lessons have given so much delight and 
wisdom to the world. 

To the same care of Luke in observing and recording 
facts, we owe a knowledge of many other particulars, — 
those relating to the birth of John, the occasion of Joseph^s 
being in Bethlehem when Jesus was born, the vision granted 
to the shepherds who watched their flocks by night, the jour- 
ney of the child Jesus when twelve years old to Jerusalem, 
the conversion of Zaccheus the publican, the repulse the 
Saviour and his disciples met when about to enter a Samar- 
itan city, the instructive rebuke he then gave to two of his 
disciples for their intemperate zeal, the mission of the sev- 
enty, and the affecting interview during the walk to £m- 
maus. All these are recorded in the Gospel of Luke alone. 

And yet it is worth our while to observe that this Evan- 
gelist, with all his minute attention to facts, sometimes makes 
most indefinite allusions to time and place in narrating the 
events of successive days in the life of Christ. Thus he 
has occasionally phrases like these, — '^ in a certain cUy^^ 
'* at a certain village^^ " on one of those days^^ " at that 
season^^'* &c., referring to times and places which are more 
exactly designated in the Grospel of Matthew. Compare 
Luke V. 12 with Matt. viii. 2 ; also, Luke xv. 1 with BAatt. 
ix. 10. The obvious conclusion is, that Luke had not seen 
Matthew^s Gospel. If he had, he would have been glad to 
learn the exact time and place from that Evangelist. How 
well does this different method of indicating the succession 
of events agree with what we have seen to be the origin of 
these two Gospels ! Luke, who received the history from 
the Apostles, as they preached on different occasions, for 






THE GOSPEL NARRATIVES, 68 

different purposes, and without regard to chronological order, 
was as minute and precise in his facts as he could he, hut 
was necessarily less exact in some inatters of time and 
place than Matthew, who knew when and where the events 
transpired, because he was an eyewitness of their occur- 
rence. 

It has been before remarked, that we see the influence of 
Luke^s Gentile education in prefixing to his Gospel a formal 
preface, so much after the taste of the Roman and Greek 
authors. We see the same thing in his marking events by 
the reign of the Roman emperor, or of Roman governors, 
— such as the birth of John, the birth of Christ, and the 
time when the Baptist began his ministry. We see the same 
thing, also, in the genealogy which Luke has given. Mat- 
thew, writing for Jews, traces the line from Abraham and 
David down to Christ, in order to prove that the ancient 
prophecies of a Messiah were fulfilled in him. But it was 
no part of Luke^s object to prove this, because the Gentile 
Theophilus knew nothing of these prophecies. Accordingly, 
he gives a genealogy after the Gentile manner, ascending 
from the person whose lineage is given, upward to the found- 
er of his family. Thus he entirely reverses the order of 
Matthew. These genealogies have been a great cause of 
perplexity to all commentators. On comparing them to- 
gether, we find that there are discrepancies between them. 
We cannot doubt that they were copied from family records, 
in keeping of which the Jews have ever been scrupulously 
exact, and that, whatever errors may have crept into their 
frequent transcription Mnce, they were originally correct. 
Else they would have been attacked, as they were notj by 
early Jewish and infidel opponents. The more common 
way of explaining these discrepancies id by supposing that 
several intermediate names have been dropped from the list 



64 TBS OOSFSL XrAHSATITSS. 

of Matthew ; and that, when Luke says that Joseph was the 
son of Heli (iii. 23), he means an adopted son, a son-in-law. 
Then Luke gives the pedigree of Mary^s line, as Matthew 
gives that of Joseph^s. 

The influence of Luke^s education is seen again through- 
out his Gospel in his style, structure of sentences, and use 
of words. His sentences are longer, more involved, and 
elaborated. He has a more copious use of words ; and al- 
though he sometimes adopts harsh Hebrew expressions, bor- 
rowed, no doubt, from his intercourse first with the Jews 
and then with the Apostles, yet his language generally is 
pronounced to be the purest Greek which the New Testa- 
ment contains, and shows that he had been trained to a cor- 
rect knowledge and careful use of that tongue. Traces 
have been found in his writings, it is thought, of his medical 
profession. Thus in Luke iv. 38 he distinguishes a fever 
by words employed by old medical writers, while in Acts 
xiii. 11 he uses a technical word for blindness. 

In Luke^s Gospel, therefore, we do not see so much of 
one kind of simplicity, — simplicity of language, — as we 
see in the Gospels of Matthew and Mark. In a man of 
Luke^s education and life this could not exist. But we see 
just as much of another kind of simplicity, — simplicity of 
design, simplicity of heart. He had the same object before 
him that the other Evangelists had, — to record the life and 
words of Christ ; and as with them, so with him, this great 
object engrossed all attention. He himself is as nobody. 
He introduces nothing as coming from himself, no opinions, 
no conjectures, no reasonings, no inferences, no surprise, no 
admiration. In the language in which he had been edu- 
cated, and with the minute accuracy of taste and habit, he 
gives nothing but the naked facts. 

These beta he transmitted to his friend Theophilus, that 



TBE GOUTBh NABRATIYES. 65 

he might know the certainty of the things in which he had 
been instructed. This Gospel was God's message to him. 
None the less is it God's message to us, that, by studying its 
words, pondering its truths, obeying its instructions, and 
imbibing its spirit, we also may know the certainty of these 
things. And their certainty we may know. We cannot, 
indeed, go to the places which this Eyangelist so minutely 
describes, nor inquire of the men with whom he journeyed. 
These are tests of his credibility which in their very nature 
are not perpetual, though by these his words were once 
tried, and they have abided. But there are other tests than 
these outward ones of the senses, by which we may deter- 
mine, and by which alone, after all, we can determine, what 
is true and right and good. We have the test of our reason 
and conscience and heart. Let us bring the Gospel mes- 
sage home to a personal trial and proof. We shall then 
have the witness in ourselves. For our guide in life, our 
help in weakness, our comfort in sorrow, our support in 
death, it is Grod's precious gift to us, and that by which the 
secrets of all hearts shall at last be judged. 



CHAPTER XII. • 



NOTICES OF THE LIFE OF JOHN. 

We come now to the life of one whose character is dis- 
tinguished at once from that of all the other followers of 
Christ, and betrays itself in almost every verse of his writ- 
ings. Mild and affectionate, faithful and confiding, a double 
porti<m of the Saviour's spirit seems to have rested upod* 

6* 



66 " TH£ GOSPEL NARKATIYBS. 

him ; and hence what a peculiar tie connected the Teacher 
and the pupil together ! Jesus was loved hy John with a 
love which only John^s deep heart could offer him, while 
John was the disciple whom Jesus loved. 

Notices of his life are more clear and satisfactory than 
those pertaining to the other Evangelists. Matthew, Mark, 
and Luke all tell us that John was the son of Zebedee and 
Salome, that he lived in Bethsaida, — a little £shing town on 
the northern shore of the lake of Gralilee, — and was brought 
up to his father^s business, which was that of a fisherman. 
This was the common occupation of those who lived near 
that lake ; and although it was an humble employment, it 
nevertheless appears, from various incidental notices, that 
John's father was not destitute of property, nor in a low 
condition of life. When called to be a disciple, we read 
that John lefl hired servants in Uie ship with his father. 
Mark i. 20. John appears always to have had a home of 
his own, to which he received Mary, the mother of his 
Lord, when she was commended to his care. John xix. 27. 

By his mother John was related to Christ, and by no dis- 
tant connection. Salome was a daughter of Joseph, bom to 
him with other children before his espousal to Mary, the 
mother of Jesus. Hence Salome was reckoned our Lord's 
sister, and John was his nephew. This relationship ex- 
plains several circumstances in this Gospel, and it is impoF- 
tant, therefore, that it be borne in mind. It gives us reason 
to suspect that John was early acquainted with Jesus. He, 
living with his parents at Nazareth, was but a few miles dis- 
tant from John, following his father's business on the lake. 
Being related, no doubt their families sometimes met, and 
thus John can hardly be supposed to have been ignorant of 
all the wonderful events preceding and following the birth 
qi Chnst, such as the appearance of the angel to his mother, 



TBB QOVTRL ITARBATIVBS. 87 

• 

the vbit of the Magi at Bethlehem, the mysterious and deeply 
pondered words said of him when he was presented in the 
temple, the divine communications that directed his flight 
into Egypt, and his ever memorahle visit, when twelve years 
old, to Jerusalem. Events in themselves so wonderful, and 
80 clearly showing that a peculiar providence was watching 
over Jesus, and was preparing hiih for some high work, 
must have been well known to near relatives, all of whom 
were then looking for the consolation of Israel ; and very 
naturally did they lead the mind of John to determine upon 
the course he pursued. He resolved to improve the first 
favorable opportunity that presented to connect himself with 
Jesus, that by intercourse with * him he might be prepared 
for that new order of events which it was so clear God was 
soon to establish. That opportunity was near at hand. Je- 
sus had been baptized, and liad passed through the scene of 
his temptation, and while on his way from Capernaum to 
visit the villages of Gralilee, he came to the lake, where he 
saw the two brothers, James and John, in a ship with their 
father, mending their nets. Upon invitation, they left the 
ship and followed Jesus. John was the fourth one now 
added to the number of disciples, and we are told that he 
was the youngest of the twelve. 

It is impossible, as has been beautifully said by Dr. Green- 
wood, in his Lives of the Apostles, that either John or his 
brother could have dreamed of the consequences to which 
the step they had now taken would lead. ^* Hitherto it had 
been their only care to rise up, day by day, to the contented 
exercise of their humble toil, to ply their oars, to spread 
their sails, to cast their nets, and to dispose of their freight 
in their native village or in the neighbouring towns, for the 
support of themselves and their families.^' The scene just 
around them^ the peaceful lake, the surrounding hills, their 



68 THB GOSPEL NAXSATIYXS. 

own low-roofed dwellings, looking out kindly upon them, 
and containing all that they loved, — this was their little 
world. Here they lived as their fathers lived before them ; 
and here, hoping for the long-promised deliverance of )heir 
nation, but for themselves anticipating no changes but the 
few vicissitudes of their calling, they expect to live, till they 
lie down to sleep^with Aeir fathers, as calmly, as unknow- 
ing, and as unknown as they. But what a change passes 
over their lives from the moment they connect themselves 
with Christ ! They become witnesses of the most wonder- 
ful events, and are in a school that will make them the most 
wonderful men of all recorded time. Soon a power is con- 
ferred upon them, and a work is intrusted to them, which 
cast into utter insigni£cance the authority and pomp of 
kings. "Home, kindred, country, they forsake. Their 
nets may hang and bleach in the sun ; their boats may rot 
piecemeal on the shore ; for the owners of them are far 
away, sailing over seas to which that of Grenesareth is a 
pond; exciting whole cities and countries to wonder and 
tumult ; answering before kings ; imprisoned, persecuted, 
tortured " ; but everywhere gloriously carrying on a woiIl 
as Grod^s instruments, which will hand down their names to 
all ages, and in time change the face of the whole woild. 
Instruments of God, indeed, they must have been, for how 
soon would a work so begun, and carried on by such men, 
have come to naught, if it had not been of Grod. 

We have said that these men were in a school. Such, 
indeed, was the influence of the great Teacher to which 
they were now subjected. Under him they acquired new 
principles of action. Gradually did the characters of all ther 
disciples experience a great change. They were made to 
feel that there was a bondage, worse than that of Rome, from 
which they were to be delivered ; that there was a more 



^ 



THS OOSPSL If ARBATIVS8* 6^ 

blessed kingdom than one of outward glory and power, 
which Christ came to set up ; and that into this they could 
be received only by most intimate acquaintance, in heart 
and life, with deep spiritual truth. How great a change, 
then, in the views and characters of these men, was wrought 
by their personal intercourse with the Saviour! Observe 
that it was brought about, not by any sudden and super- 
natural wrench of their natures, but by the natural processes 
of enlightening the mind, purifying the affections, and re- 
forming the life. And what a testimony to his power, and 
to the power of his religion, was it, that these humble and 
untutored fishermen of Galilee had their hearts filled with a 
sublime and world-embracing purpose, and were armed with 
a spirit by which they went forth to a greater work than man 
had ever before conceived, and by which they triumphed 
and were glorified. 

But of all the disciples there was no one upon whom the 
influences of the Saviour^s spirit and life seem to have pro- 
duced so great an effect as upon John. During the early 
part of his connection with Christ, this disciple is occasion- 
ally presented to us in a light which does not win our love. 
The youngest, as before said, of the twelve, with little expe- 
rience of life, and having strong feelings easily aroused, no 
doubt the title Boanerges, — son of thunder, — which Jesus 
early bestowed upon John (see Mark iii. 17), was suggested 
by his warm and impetuous temper. This same temper led 
him, when indignant at the conduct of the Samaritans, who 
refused to receive his Master into their city, to ask if fire 
from heaven should not descend, and destroy them. Luke 
ix. 54. So, also, on another occasion, we have a manifesta- 
tion of a spirit which we cannot commend. Eager for the 
establishment of the new kingdom, then supposed to be one 
of temporal power and greatness, it appears that John, with 



70 THE GOSPEL NAftAATIVBS. 

his brother James, made a request to Christ, either person- 
ally, as we infer from the account in Mark x. 35, or through 
their mother, as it would appear from Matthew xx. 20, ths^ 
they might be first, and sit one on his right hand and the 
other on his left It seems at first view difficult to believe 
that it could have been John, the gentle and affectionate dis- 
ciple whom Jesus loved, that manifested such a temper as 
this.' And yet have we not often found that persons, who 
possess naturally strong and easily excited feelings, become 
the loveliest characters we have ever known, if only those 
feelings are governed and balanced by a deep experience 
and discipline of religious truth ? 

In the latter part of his connection with Christ, John's 
character appears very different from what it appeared at 
first. We find no more instances of his . hasty temper. 
That was subdued and governed by the mild rebukes and 
faithful teachings of his Master. Henceforth he became, 
what we everywhere find him to be, gentle, meek, full of 
reverence, confiding in his Saviour with a trust that never 
once wavered, and penetrated in his whole being with the 
spirit of love. How oflen have we known those who have 
natures made up of the richest elements, but who are ex- 
posed, through some one weak point, to shipwreck and 
ruin 1 When we see such cases, how much do we feel that 
man 1^ need of a power to guide, guard, and preserve, to 
bind the conflicting elements within him into one well-devel- 
oped and well-fortified character I We may still find that 
power, where John found it, in communion with Christ. 

As we follow the history of this disciple, it is easy for us 
to mark the progress of the strong affection that grew up 
between him and his Master and Lord. Thus John was 
selected by Jesus to be, with Peter and James, a witness of 
some of the most important and trying scenes of his lifOf 



■■-^-'- ■ 



THB GOSPEL NABRATITBS. 71 

such as the transfiguration and the agony of the garden. 
So, also, at the ever memorable scene of the last supper, 
the position which John occupied at the table is a proof of 
the love which Jesus felt for him. He was leaning on his 
bosom ; that is, as it was the custom to recline at meals, and 
John was next to Jesus, his head was brought near his Mas- 
ter's breast ; and this was a position which was reserved by 
him who gave an entertainment for the person whom he 
most esteemed. It was while this disciple was thus leaning, 
that Peter beckoned to him that he should ask Jesus who it 
was that should betray him. John did as he was requested, 
and JesuB indicated who the traitor was by giving Judas a 
sop. All this seems to have been done in private, and apart 
from the knowledge of the other disciples, and proves the 
great measure of condescension and confidence which was 
exercised by the Master towards this his favorite follower. 
John, then, had reason to style himself '' the disciple whom 
Jesus loved '' (xx. 2). All the members of that little band 
were dear to Jesus, — dearer than his own life. But for 
this one — young, confiding, reflecting his own gentle and 
afiectionate spirit, with him in his trials and leaning upon 
his bosom — he felt a peculiar love. Who can say that our 
religion does not encourage particular fViendship between 
kindred hearts, when we have this beautiful example in its 
very Founder before our eyes ? And as this friendship was 
declared before all, and was acknowledged by all, and allu- 
sions to it therefore could give no offence, how gratefully 
sensible of its value does John prove himself to have been, 
by assuming no other name in his history than the disciple 
whom Jesus loved ! What other words could add any thing 
to these ? 

The next notice we have of John is at the crucifixion. 
He was the only one of all the twelve who had the fortitude 



72 THB GOSPEL NAKK1TITB8. 

to go to that scene of suffering and danger. Setys the writer 
before quoted, in his life of this Apostle, — ^How touch- 
ingly is it manifested on this awful occasion, that the softest 
natures are oflen the noblest and the most fearless too, and 
that those which are apparently the most daring and mascu- 
line may yet shrink away in the time of peril and distress ! 
Who in that hour of darkness, — darkness in the heavens 
and in the hearts of men, — who in that hour of abandonment, 
when even the Son of Grod cried out that he was forsaken, — 
who of all his followers were with him then, to support him 
by their sympathy, and prove to him their love? In the 
midst of scoffing soldiers and brutal executioners, under the 
lowering sky, and just below the frightful cross, we behold 
four weeping females and one disciple, the youngest and the 
gentlest of the twelve, braving the horrors of this place of 
blood, braving the anger of those in authority and the insults 
of those who do their bidding, determined to be near their 
Master in his agonies, and ready on the spot and at the mo- 
ment to share them. And what is it that braces up the 
nerves of this feeble company to such a singular pitch of 
fortitude and daring ? The simple but unconquerable 
strength of affection ; the generous omnipotence of their at- 
tachment and gratitude. In the might of their love they 
ascend the hill of Calvary, and take their station beneath 
the cross, hearing nothing amidst all that tumult but the 
promptings of their devoted hearts, seeing nothing but their 
dying Lord, remembering nothing but that he was dear to 
them, and that he was in misery. O, how loftily does cour- 
age like this rise above that ruder and earthly courage 
which rushes to the battle-field, and is crowned with the ap- 
plauses of the world ! It calls for none of those excitements 
and stimulants from without, which goad rough spirits into 
madness, but relies on those resources ^hat are within, those 



TUB GOSPEL NAUtATIYBS. 78 

precious stores and holy powers which are the strength of a 
single and foithful hreast That is the courage of the ani- 
mal ; this is of the soul. It is pure ; it is divine. It was 
such as moved the complacent regard of the Saviour him- 
self, even in the height of his sufferings. Hanging on the 
cross bleeding and exhausted, yet when he saw his mother 
and the disciple whom he loved standing by, he was touched 
by their constancy; his thoughts were recalled to earth; 
the domestic aflectiods rushed into his bosom ; and with a 
tender <^are, which provided at once a protection for his par- 
ent and a reward^ for his friend, ' he saith unto his mother. 
Woman, behold thy Son ! Then saith he to the disciple. 
Behold thy mother ! ' Where was there ever so affecting a 
bequest as was then made, when Idve and filial piety tri- 
umphed over sufiering ? Where was there ever so affecting 
an adoption as that which theh took place, when attachment 
and fidelity triumphed over fear ? The last earthly care of 
Jesus was accomplished. His mother was confided to the 
disciple whom he best loved. The fkvorite disciple eagerly 
accepted the honorable and precious charge, for * from that 
hour,^ as we are told by himself, he ' took her unto his own 
home.^ '' John xix. 27. 

We next meet with John at the resurrection of Christ. 
Informed by Mary Magdalene, who went early to the sep- 
ulchre, that the stone had been rolled away, both John and 
Peter ran eagerly to the spot, and found the tomb empty. 
And here a slight circumstance is mentioned, which shows 
that John was more quick than all the other disciples to un- 
derstand the words of Christ. They knew not the meaning 
of the saying that Christ must rise again from the dead. So 
unprepared were they for his resurrection, that Peter, when 
he saw the body was not there, did not ascribe the fact to its 
true cause. But John saw and believed. John zxviiL 8. 

TOL. XXII. — NO. 254. 7 



74 THE GOSPEL NARKATIVSS. 

^' It was into the mind of the beloved disciple that the light 
first broke. He first believed the glorious truth, that death 
was vanquished by the Son of God, and that Jesus of Naza- 
reth was the Prince of Life." 

Not long afler this, when Jesus appeared to his disciples 
for the last time before his ascension, he foretold Peter's 
violent death ; and that disciple, seeing John just behind 
him, desired to know what his lot was to be. The answer 
of Jesus was, ^^ If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that 
to thee ? " This answer caused a saying to go abroad that 
John should not die. We shall soon see what was the prob- 
able meaning oi these prophetic words. 

When finally the Saviour lefl the earth, and in obedience 
to his words the disciples came together at Jerusalem, John 
was there with them. His name is the third in the list given 
by Luke in the beginning of the book of Acts. But little is 
said of the part which John took in the missionary labors of 
the Apostles. We are only told, that once he was im- 
prisoned with Peter, and once went with that disciple to 
teach in Samaria. It is at this point that the Scripture ac- 
count of John closes. AH early testimonies agree that he 
continued to reside in Judea, constantly taking filial care oi 
Mary till the time of her death, which occurred about fifteen 
years after the ascension of Christ John does not appear 
to have become a preacher to the Gentiles until after the 
destruction of Jerusalem. This event occurred in the year 
70, and when John was about seventy years of age. It was 
this event, as is generally understood, to which Jesus refer- 
red, when he intimated that John should tarry until his com- 
ing, — his second coming in judgment upon the Jews. 
John was the only one of the first disciples who lived to see 
the holy city overthrown, her glorious temple destroyed, and 
the very ground on which it stood ploughed up by the hands 



THB GOSFXL NARRATIVES. 75 

of the Gentiles. Prior to this event, Matthew had published 
his Gospel in Judea, and had suffered martyrdom in Ethio- 
pia ; Mark had published his Gospel at Rome, and had died 
in Alexandria in Egypt ; the aged Luke had published his 
Grospel in Greece, and had there gone down to his grave ; 
and all the rest of the twelve, Peter, James, Andrew, Philip, 
Thomas, and Bartholomew, though meeting for the most 
part the death of martyrs, had yet finished their course with 
joy. John still survived to bear the testimony of an eye- 
witness of Jesus to a generation that succeeded these holy 
men. 

What remains to be said of him may be very briefly told. 
He journeyed to Ephesus, in Asia Minor, and presided over 
the church in that place. In the persecution of the Chris- 
tians under the Emperor Domitian, about the year 90, John 
was banished to the isle of Patmos. Here, as is commonly 
supposed, he wrote the book of Revelation. Under the suc- 
cessor of Domitian, John was permitted to return to Ephesus, 
where he soon published his Epistles, certainly the first 
Epistle, about which there has never been any dispute, 
though the genuineness of the other two has been sometimes 
called in question. Soon ailer this John wrote out his Gos- 
pel. We have been distinctly informed what was his object 
in doing this. It was to correct some errors prevalent at 
Ephesus, and to supply what was omitted in the three other 
Gospel histories, each of which he had seen. After this, 
John lived to attain the age of nearly one hundred years. 
His image is presented to us as a man bowed down with 
age, the sole living eyewitness of events the most memorable 
which the world has ever known, his whole heart and life 
imbued with Uie gentle, heavenly wisdom which he had 
learned from the lips of his Divine Friend, and devoting his 
failing strength to teaching that peculiar spirit of the Gospel 



76, THE eOSPEL NABRATIVSS. 

on which he so much delighted to dwell, — its spirit of holy 
love. The following story of his last days is well aothenti- 
Gated, and is fully recommended by its perfect conformity 
with his character. It is said, that, when the infirmities of 
age so grew upon him at Ephesus that he was no longer 
able to preach to hb converts, he used to be led to the 
church at every public meeting, that he might say to them 
only these few words, ^^ Little children, love one another,^' 
And when they, wearied with the constant repetition of the 
same thing, asked him why he persisted in saymg this, his 
reply was, " Because it is the command of our Lord ; and if 
we do nothing more, this alone is sufficient.*' 

He peacefully closed his long life, just at the beginning 
of the second century ailer Christ. 

Such was the life of that disciple whom Jesus loved. Let 
us not fail to mark what encouragement to the humblest 
Christian there is in the fact, thai the character which Jesus 
loved was such a character as Uiis. It was made up, not of 
those shining, brilliant qualities which are possessed only by 
the few, but of that gentleness, meekness, reverence, fsiith, 
love, which we all may acquire, and by which we, too, may 
eommend ourselves to the love of our Divine Master and 
Friend. So, also, in the fact that it was such a disciple as 
John that Jesus most loved, we may find new confirmation 
of the pure and holy purpose of Christ^s mission. Had 
Jesus been bent upon accomplishing some great outward 
change for his own glory and fame, it seems inconceivable that 
he should have attached himself to the gentle, humble, retir- 
ing spirit of John. Had the fishermen of Galilee contrived 
the whole Gospel history, we know that a far difierent spirit 
than this of John was the popular 'Jewish spirit of those 
times ; and how surely would they have represented some 
one like the bold and ambitious Peter as the fiivorite disci- 



THB 608FEL NASKITIVES. 77 

pie ! Or, in whatever age or land we suppose the Gospels 
to have heen forged, let us ask ourselves, where or when 
has such a man as John been one of the world's honored 
ones? The spirit which made him the beloved disciple 
could have been no other than that which looks beneath all 
outward distinctions to what is in man's heart and soul, 
which, far more than the noisy gifts that the world has al- 
ways honored, prizes humility, gentleness, and love, and 
which recognizes in manifestations of these the character 
that is truly good and great. Such we know was the 
spirit of Christ. The greatness which he loves, and to 
which he directs our aim, is the greatness that belongs to 
the highest part of our nature, which we share with children 
of Grod, with angels and spirits of the just made perfect. 



CHAPTER XIII 



THE GOSPEL OF /OHN. 



As respects the immediate motive which induced John to 
write his Grospel, we have the words of two independent 
authorities, which, as they come from an age soon succeed- 
ing the publication of this Grospel, and from the most distin* 
guished writers of those early times, have ever been regard- 
ed as throwing a trustworthy and highly important light upon 
this subject One of these writers has these words : — 
" John, desiring to extirpate the errors sown in the minds of 
men by^Cerinthus and his followers, published his Gospel.'' 
— IrencBus. 

This statement, that John had some reference in his Gos-' 

7* 



78 TSX 60aP£L NAE1AT1VB8. 

pel to a peculiar and pernicious philosophy that prevailed in 
his time at Ephesus, is confirmed by several other sources. 
What this philosophy was, we shall have occasion to see 
hereafter. The other writer to whom we referred has 
these words : — " The first three Gospels heiqg now deliv- 
ered unto all men, and to John himself, he approved of 
them, and confirmed the truth of their narrative by his own 
testimony." — Euaehius. 

We find this statement fully substantiated by aii examina- 
tion of John^s Gospel. It bears frequent marks that he had 
seen the three preceding histories. Matthew, Mark, and 
Luke, as we all know, have the same facts in common. It 
was John^s object, on the other hand, to pass by all that they 
had related, and to glean up what they had omitted. Ac- 
cordingly, in his whole Gospel, with the exception of the 
events attending the crucifixion, there are but three facts 
which he has in common with the other Evangelists. Two 
of these — the feeding of the five thousand (John vi. 5), and 
the voyage connected therewith (John vi. 17) — he has re- 
peated, because they were indispensable as introductory to 
the discourses that follow. The other is the account of Ma- 
ry's anointing Jesus (John xii. 3), which John has recorded 
fully for a reason to which we shall soon refer. The begin- 
ning of miracles in Cana of Galilee, the raising of La2aru8, 
the conversation with the woman of Samaria, the washing 
of the disciples' feet, and the discourses and prayers uttered 
by Jesus just before his crucifixion, — these are instances of 
his supplying what the other writers had omitted, all these 
being found in John's Gospel alone. 

This Gospel presents still another remarkable appearance, 
which confirms the historical account, that its author had 
seen the three preceding narratives. He frequently alludes 
to facts recorded in those narratives, without giving any 



relation of them himseUl Thus he presuppoees his readers 
to have knowledge of them by means of the other Gospels^ 
and without this knowledge his own history would be in 
many places unintelligible. A few illustrations of this re- 
mark may be here named. 

Before giving an account of the question that arose be* 
tween the disciples of John the Baptist and some of the Jews 
about purifying, our Evangelist says, ^^ John was not yet 
east into prison.^' John iii. 24. And yet in the whole of 
this Gospel there is nothing said about John's imprisonment. 
The Evangelist presupposes his readers acquainted with that 
fact from the other Grospels, in which it is distinctly related. 
Nor is this all. Why should this fact of John the Baptist 
be here inserted at all ? Evidently it is not required as an 
explanation of the narrative in this Gospel, for this nowhere 
implies that the Baptist was now or at any time imprisoned. 
It has the appearance, therefore, of a correction of other 
accounts, which had fallen into a slight inaccuracy. Such 
a correction is really applicable to two of our Grospels. 
Matthew says, directly after the temptation, before Jesus is 
related to hove gone to Capernaum, that John had been cast 
into prison. Matt. iv. 12. Mark retained the same state- 
ment. Mark i. 14. The Gospel of John represents that 
the discussion about purifying took place after our Lord had 
lef\ Capernaum, and had made a visit to Jerusalem, and was 
on his return to Galilee. John iii. 24 was intended to cor« 
rect the inaccuracy of Matthew and Mark, who had ante- 
dated the imprisonment of the Baptist. 

When Jesus washed the disciples' feet, we read (John 
xiii. 4), that he took a towel and girded himself, and poured 
water into a basin, the supper being ended^ as the words 
read with which this beautiful incident in the life of Christ 
begins. The supper here referred to was undoubtedly the 



80 tHB G08FSL NAKKATITB8. 

last supper, that supper at which John was present ; for he 
leaned upon his Master's hosom, and saw all that was done, 
and heard all that was said. Yet this Evangelist has given 
no account whatever of that event He found it correctly 
described by the other Evangelists, with whose accounts he 
presupposes his readers to be familiar, and hence his mere 
allusion to it would be at once understood. 

In like manner, also, John remotely alludes to Christ's 
baptism (John i. 32), although the history of that event is 
totally omitted by him. Indeed, we should not be able to 
understand to what the language of this passage referred, 
did we not possess from another quarter the information 
which is here presupposed. 

Thus there is a clear and marked agreement between the 
historical account, that John had seen the other narratives 
before writing his own, and the appearances of his Grospel 
itself. He evidently passes by what they related, supplies 
what they had omitted, alludes to facts attested by them as 
familiarly known, while in some cases he evidently retouches 
their narrative in order to correct some slight inaccuracies 
into which they had fallen. Beside the instances already 
given of such a revisal, two others may be here briefly al« 
luded to. One is the account of the anointing of Jesus. 
John xii. 3. This is one of the few faqts which John has in 
common with the dther Evangelists. They have related it 
imperfectly. Matthew and Mark state that the woman 
anointed the bead of Jesus ; Luke, that she anointed his 
feet, and that she wiped them with the hair of her head. 
The former state the dissatisfaction of Judas respecting it, 
while Luke mentions the reproach of the Pharisee, and the 
rebuke he received. Add to all, that these Evangelists do 
not agree in assigning the same period for the occurrence 
of this event. For this reason, John goes carefully over the 



TBB OOSPSL KAERATIYSS. 81 

whole history of the incident He combines in one clear 
narrative the broken and fragmentary accounts given by his 
predecessors, while he fixes the time of this anointing to be 
just before the betrayal of Christ, by showing that it was one 
of the causes which hurried on that event, since Judas, fail- 
ing of getting money, as he had hoped, by the sale of the 
ointment, goes directly and bargains, for thirty pieces of 
silver, to give his Master up. The history of the resurrec- 
tion is another example of John's revisal of the narrative of 
the other Evangelists. Matthew^s account of this event is 
hurried, and both Mark and Luke have neglected to indicate 
the exact order in which the occurrences succeeded one 
another. John departs from his usual rule of not repeating 
what the other Evangelists had already recorded, and re« 
writes their account, — tells the whole story over again. 
John XX. 1. When we compare his narrative with that of 
his predecessors, we shaU see that the former is the most 
intelligible and complete. 

These facts are minute in themselves, and yet how im- 
portant that they should be known ! What evidence do they 
give of John's great care that an exact narrative should be 
handed down! What stronger confidence may we place in 
the narratives of Matthew, Mark, and Luke, when we know, 
that, though written at different times, in different countries, 
by different men, and for different classes of readers, they 
yet needed such few, and for the most part unessential, cor- 
rections! And what an interesting fact is it, that in the 
good providence of God all these different histories, before 
they were committed to the ever-flowing stream of time, 
were seen by one of the first disciples and constant eyewit- 
nesses of all that they relate, and were by him carefully 
examined ! Nor is the manner in which he corrected their 
mistakes and supplied their deficienciea less worthy of our 



82 THE GOSFEL NABRATIVES. 

grateful notice. John did not destroy the writings of his 
predecessors, and give us a history that rests on his name 
alone. He drew up his own more accurate and independent 
account, to be placed hy the side of their histories, so that 
we might see both their text and his commentary, their er- 
rors and his corrections. Thus his Gospel sheds light upon 
their meaning, and gives new strength to their authority. 

John's Gospel has a peculiar interest and value from an- 
other source. His historical scene is different from that of 
the other Evangelists. He records for the most part only 
what is done in Judea, just around Jerusalem, while the other 
writers record for the most part only what is done in Galilee, 
around Capernaum and the lake. When they conduct Jesus 
to the borders of Judea they there lose sight of him, and 
John takes up the narrative and accompanies him in his 
course. He, however, does not follow him back into Gtali- 
lee, but forsakes him on the borders of that country, where 
the events of his life had already been related by Matthew, 
Mark, and Luke. How naturally does the explanation of 
this fact suggest itself to our minds ! As the disciples were 
natives of Galilee, what Jesus said and did there would most 
interest them, and would be by them most clearly understood. 
When after their Saviour's crucifixion they became preach- 
ers in Jerusalem, it was of what transpired in Galilee that 
they would more frequently speak. Their hearers had 
heard of the events that occurred in their own city and 
neighbourhood. For this reason, they would ask about the 
scenes that were witnessed in the remote province of Gali- 
lee, where Jesus spent most of his time and performed the 
most of his miracles. We have seen that the Evangelists 
afterwards wrote their histories very much as they had oral- 
ly told them, and hence it is easy to see why their historical 
scene was chiefly Gralilee. It was John's care, therefore. 



THS GOSPEL NABRATIVE8. 88 

in supplying the deficiencies of his predecessors, to describe 
what was said and done in Judea^ — a task for which his 
long residence in Jerusalem of fifteen years, when he had 
the affectionate charge of Mary, the mother of Jesus, pecu« 
liarly fitted him. Without John^s Gospel, the story of the 
Saviour's life would have been but little more than half told ; 
but with this, the history is made full and complete. 
- In noticing some of the peculiarities of John's Gospel, we 
must not pass by its introduction (John i. 1-18), though it 
would be wandering from our purpose to dwell upon it long. 
Before we can understand this proem, we must know some- 
thing of that peculiar philosophy to which we referred at 
the beginning of this chapter. This philosophy was called 
Gnosticism ; Ephesus was its seat ; and Cerinthus, one of 
its leading advocates, was expounding its doctrines in that 
city at the very time John was there writing his Gospel. It 
is not easy in a few words to describe this philosophy, be* 
cause it is so foreign to oui modes of thought. It may be 
sufficient to say, that the Gnostics referred all evil to matter, 
which they believed was created, not by God, but by an 
inferior divinity, called by them Demiurges. The space 
between this inferior God and Jehovah was occupied, as 
they supposed, by various orders of angels, to which they 
applied the names lights life^ and one of great distinction 
they named the logoSy or word^ whom they regarded as an 
impersonation of the power of God. All these angels ema- 
nated from God, as the light of one lamp emanates from 
another. They were employed in creating parts of the 
universe. They were not admitted into the presence of the 
Supreme, but inhabited a remote place in the heavens, called 
fulness. This philosophy was a subtile compound of Pagan, 
Jewish, and Christian doctrines, and throughout the early 
ages of the Church it threatened to be the most fatal foe to 
the flimplicity that is in Christ 



B4 THB GOSPEL NARKATIVSS. 

Not improperly, therefore, does John, writing in Ephesus, 
begin his Gospel with an allusion to this heresy. Every 
sentence of this introduction is an affirmation against some 
Gnostic tenet The logos or word was in the beginning, not 
created in time ; with God, not inhabiting a part of the re- 
mote heavens ; it was Grod himself, not a distinct angel ; and 
it was the same in the beginnmg as now, not something that 
has undergone an emanation. It made all things. Life 
and light flow from it, and are not distinct angels. And 
then the Evangelist proceeds to show how a witness to the 
true light was raised up, and how at length the power of 
Grod became incarnate, and dwelt among us in the glory of 
the Only Begotten of the Father. 

We have one mode of expression among us not wholly 
unlike those used by the Gnostics. We sometimes speak of 
nattsre as something distinct from God. We say nature 
caused the seasons to change, and the flowers to appear. If 
we annexed to our use of this word one or two other partic- 
ulars corresponding to those ancient beliefs, such as these, 
that nature is an angelic emanation from Grod, and made 
only a part of the visible universe, and lived remote from 
the Supreme, we could confute such a system in no better 
words than these : — '^ In the beginning was nature, and na- 
ture was with God, and nature was God. All things were 
made by nature. And nature became incarnate, and dwelt 
among us the Only Begotten of the Father.'' 

In this introduction we thus see nothing contradictory to 
what is so clearly and solemnly affirmed in the eighteenth 
verse of this chapter. Taken as a whole, instead of being 
obscure, it is of plain, weighty significance, and instead d 
being misplaced, it constitutes an appropriate introduction to 
the narrative that succeeds. 

Thus flur we have spdcen of causes that give interest aad 



THE G08PBL NA&RATITB8. 85 

Talue to the Grospel of John, arising from the circumstances 
under which it was composed. It also possesses great inter- 
est and value from the peculiar character of its author. 
How does his gentle and loving spirit hreathe from every 
part of it ! It has been called *^ a tale of the affections,^' 
and it merits this title. In all his descriptions, John appears 
to set forth those scenes, and to dwell fondly upon them, 
which appeal to the deepest and tenderest emotions, — the 
marriage supper at Cana, the conversation with the woman 
of Samaria, the raising of Lazarus, the last interviews the 
Saviour had with his disciples. So, also, John was preemi- 
nent in his comprehension of the entirely spiritual nature of 
the new religion. He saw and felt that this religion was an 
inward life, a principle in the heart, calming all passions, 
calling forth the deepest treasures of love, trust, and joy, and 
making the soul one with Jesus and one with Grod. The 
other Evangelists have given us a plain, straightforward 
statement of facts. The whole Gospel history passed through 
their minds without receiving any coloring from themselves. 
It is well for us that it did so. We have before observed 
how much we owe to the fact, that these waiters were sim- 
ple, nnlettered men, through whom the history of Christ 
comes down to us in the naked simplicity of bare facts, with- 
out any comment or coloring of their own. But when we 
have learned the facts from the other Gospels, what devout 
reader of the New Testament does not turn with refreshing 
interest to the warm, glowing writings of John ? In these 
we see the actbn of Christian truth upon his heart His 
remembrances of Christ's words and deeds clustered around 
the two great features of his own character, — love to God 
and love to man. And this spirit of love, presiding over 
every description and hallowing every scene, gives a sub- 
duing and quickening power to his namition. This it doubt* 
VOL. XXII. — NO. 254. 8 



86 THB GOSPSli MABIULTIYSC 

ksfl the reason why Christians in all ages haYe felt the great* 
est interest in the Gospel of John, have read it the most, and 
have dwelt with most fondness upon its words of tenderness 
and love. The early fathers of the Church used to say that 
the other Gospels were the letter, this waa the spirit ; the 
others were flesh, this was soul ; the others were earthy, 
this was heavenly. But all such comparisons are unjust 
They tend to exalt John^s narrative by depressing the works 
of his fellow-laborers* They are all of heaven, and of the 
spirit that maketh alive. They are all in remarkable Iwep- 
ing with the character of the men that wrote them. They 
all have that variety, and were composed under those pecu- 
liar circumstances, which may justly give us the greatest 
confidence that they contain words of soberness -and truth. 
We should thank God, then, for them all. They are his 
precious gift to us, providentially made in the beginnmg, 
and providentially handed down to us as the nob legacy of 
ages. 

Of John^s power of description, we may take bis aocouot 
of the raising of Lazarus as an exajoiple, John xi. 18-^44, 
The story is told with few words, with plain words ; y«t all is 
so natural, so graphic, so full of life, that we seem to see the 
whole scene before us. It se^ms, at first view, unaccounta- 
ble that this surprising event should have been omitted by 
the odier Evangelists. It was one of the most astonishing 
acts of the Saviour's life ; it was most publicly done, in the 
suburbs of the capital, in open day, in the presence of many 
witnesses. It is imppsui^ it shiMild have escaped the mem- 
ory of any Christian historian of the time. Why, then, 
have Matthew, Mark, and Luke passed it by ? 

How naturally does a circumstemce, mentioned inciden- 
tally by JobUf account for their profound silence ! We read 
that after tbe mir%Qt« ma^y of tb* cbbf prieats detenniaed 



THS OOS^filt. NASftATIVBt. 87 

to kill Lazarus, because his presence among the Jews had led 
many of them to beliere in Jesus^ John xii. 10, 11. Con- 
sequently, to publish this miracle while Lazarus and his sis- 
ters lived in Jerusalem was only to set up that worthy family 
as marks to the malice of the enemies of the Christian name. 
During their lifetime, therefore, the Evangelists, it is prolNU 
ble, refrained from descriptions of this event, and habits of 
narration may have led to its omisnon even in distant places, 
where, as in the case of Marie and Lidce, the full record of it 
might have brought no harm. But the reason for omissi<Hi 
here alluded to did not exist in the case of John; He mxf' 
vived Lazarus and his sisters, and when they had died and 
were beyond the reach of their foes, he gives a full history 
of the^ miracle. 

As another instance of John^s power of narration, look to 
the long interview Jesus had with his disciples just before the 
crucifixion, as described by this Evangelist, from the begin- 
ning of the thirteenth to the close of the seventeenth chapters 
of his Gospel. There is no part of the Grospel narrative 
more deeply affecting than this, and we shall do well to ob- 
serve the order of events and the train of reflection, which 
will be now stated in the words of another. 

*^ Judas, the betrayer, had left the company to commit his 
traitorous act Now, said Jesus, is the Son of Man glorified. 
I am but a little while with you. I leave you the command- 
ment of love which I have exemplified. He then exhorts 
his disciples not to despond at his death. He is going to his 
Father to prepare a piece for them. He then utters his 
farewell ; but says he will come again. Then he bids them 
rise and go hence. 

*'*' While they were seated, the discourse maintained the 
tender form of conversation. But after having risen he pro- 
ceeds to exhort them to united and persevering efforts in 



88 TEE GOSPEL NARBATIVES. 

concurrence with his purposes, and with increased earnest- 
ness he admonishes them to love each other and himself, and 
to expect, and to endure with a resigned temper, a cruel lot. 
Again he promises them the spirit, begins to mention more 
frequently his approaching death, and silence now reigns 
among the disciples. No one presumes to speak. Once 
only they question among themselves what is the meaning 
of the words, ^ A little while and ye shall not see me, and 
again a little while and ye shall see me.' He perceives 
this, and explains himself. They believe that they now un- 
derstand him. 

'^Then the occasion becomes more solenm. The dis- 
course takes a higher tone. Jesus stands at the goal of his 
career. His conscience bears him witness that he has ac- 
complished the mission given him by his Father, to bring 
truth into the world. With deep emotion he commends his 
disciples to his 'Father's protection, and not only they, but 
all who should believe in him. Every thought and feeling 
bears marks of belonging to that eventful hour, 

'^ And is not all this in accordance with the character of 
Christ ? Is it not the farewell of an exalted and noble soul, 
which, untroubled by the thought of impending suffering, oc- 
cupies itself wholly with its lofty pu4>oses, and with the 
business of instructing and consoling those whom it leaves 
behind ? Could the gradation in the conversation possibly 
be more natural ? Can there be imagined a more beautiful 
rise than is here presented, — first mutual remark, then in- 
creasing silence among the listeners, broken only by a low 
question, till ultimately the last whisper dies away, and in 
the universal stillness the soul mounts upward to its highest 
elevations ? " * 

* Hug'g Introduction, p. 435. 



TRS QOnrEL NABRATIVKS. 89^ 

Nothing but reality could have been the type of this. 
John wrote what he saw and what he heard, and on no other 
supposition can we possibly account for the wonderful record 
he has given us. And this same remark applies to all the 
Evangelists. That, in that rude age of the world, they 
should have conceived of a character like that of Christ, that 
all of them should have presented that one image, so sublime, 
so godlike, without one thing to mar its perfect naturalness 
and consistency, — no, it could not have been, if there had 
existed no outward reality to give them the image they de- 
scribe. And thus, how much easier is it to believe that the 
character made the biographers, than that the biographers 
made the character ! Hence it was the confbssion of Rous^ 
seau, that ^^ the fiction of such a character is a greater mira- 
cle than its reality." • Blessed be Grod that we have been 
taught to believe that it is a reality, that it was a living re- 
ality in the person of Jesus Christ, and may be now to a 
degree reproduced, a living reality, in ourselves ! And to 
sud us in this gi^t work, let us thank the Father of all 
mercies that we have these words written and sent down to 
us that we might have life. 

* Hifl predie words are, — ** L*inyenteur en seroit plai ^tonnant que 
Ieh6r08."— SmtZe,liv.iv. 



8 



90 THS GOSPEL NABRATIVM. 



CHAPTER XIV. 



VIEW OF THS GOSPELS AS A WHOLE. 

We have now looked at each of the Gospels as a separate 
and independent work. By combining the four narratives 
together, accepting whatever is peculiar to each, and drop- 
ping what is obviously mere repetition, we have. one com- 
plete history of the ministry of Christ. Which Gospel comes 
the nearest to exact chronological currangement, and for this 
reason should be selected as the basis of the rest ? At first 
thought, it may seem as if this question must be answered in 
favor of Luke. His habits of exactness, and his declaration 
in the preface to his Gospel of his intention to, write *'*' in or- 
der '' (Luke i. 3), appear to support such a claim. But the 
original word here translated " in order '* has no necessary 
reference to the order of time ; its meaning is as well ex- 
pressed by the adverb methodically; while Xiuke^s grouping 
parables together which we can hardly suppose to have 
been uttered at the same time, and his occasional indefinite 
allusions to times which are more carefully designated by 
Matthew, have led to the opinion that chronological order is 
not so generally marked by the former as by the latter 
Evangelist. In favor of Matthew it has likewise been 
urged, that, being a personal follower of Christ, he had 
means of knowing the exact chronology of events which 
neither Mark nor Luke possessed ; ard though Matthew 
shares this advantage with John, yet the purpose of this 
Apostle, as we have seen, was to supply what the other writ- 
ers had omitted, and to make Judea chiefly the scene of 
his narrative. John's Gospel, therefore, so far from furnish- 



THl 608P1L NAEEATIYS& M 

ing data for a chronology, needs a chronology elsewhere 
derived, to show the arrangement o£ its disconnected por^ 
tions. 

For these reasons, Matthew's Gospel has been preferred 
as the basis of a harmony. This point settled, every reader 
can easily make a harmony for himself. But little reference 
need be had to the Gospel of Mark. Only about twenty* 
four verses of this Grospel constitute additional matter ; all 
the rest is found, either in the same words or in substance, 
in the other Gospels. Both Luke's Gospel and John's can 
be distributed without difficulty, each portion in its proper 
place, according to the chronology of Matthew. There is 
but one point which will occasion any perplexity. While 
the record of Matthew and Luke covers but two passovere 
in the ministry of Christ, John, on the other hand, appears 
to refer to three. It is believed, however, that this latter 
Evangelist does not in fact extend the ministry of Chr»t 
over a longer space of time than Matthew and Luke. The 
passover referred to in John vi. 4 is taken to be the same as 
that on which Christ was crucified. There is reason to 
think that John antedated the miracle of the feeding of the 
five thousand ; and if we place the sixth chapter of his Gros- 
pel between those of the eleventh and twelAh, there is 
nothing to conflict with the chronology of Matthew. Many 
of the best authorities concur in this view of the case. 

These hints are sufficient to enable any one to form a 
view of the life of Christ as a consistent and connected 
whole. Our present purpose is to speak of the moral im- 
pression which such a view leaves on the heart. This ia 
one of the most convincing and satisfactory arguments for 
the truth of the whole Gospel history that can be offered. 
A plain, unlettered man is as good a judge of this argument, 
as is a scholar of the most extensive learning. ' Perhaps he 



9t TBB GOSFIL NABIATIYXS. 

is a better judges inasmuch as he would be mere likely to 
fkll back upon Uie simple, natural feelings of his conscieooe 
and heart. 

What, then, is the impression which a perusal of the Gos- 
pel history naturally leaves upon the heart ? It is that this 
is an honest book. Ten thousand unlettered and simple- 
minded persons read it, and they rise up with the impression 
that this is an honest bode. They feel a regard for it, just 
as we alt feel regard for a man in whom we discern marks 
of honesty, integrity, and truth, so clear and strong that we 
place the utmost confidence in him, and would trust him 
with any thing we possess. They believe it, just as some- 
times in a court of justice a jury believes a witness who de- 
livem his testimony with a simplicity, straight-forwardness, 
and sincerity which overwhelm all opposition, and carry 
ccmviction to the heart, even against much evidence on the 
other side. And they are right in placing reliance on these. 
There is a heart knowledge as well as a head knowledge. 
We all feel that there is something in Uie higher manifes- 
tations of truth and uprightness which fraud and dishonesty 
can never put on. At any rate, the garments of truth do 
not sit easy and natural on the shoulders of a lie« A lie 10 
something exaggerated and bloated; the dress it assumes 
will not stretch to cover it all up, and so the He peeps out.^ 
But there is an ease and naturalness, an openness, an air of 
eonscious integrity, which belong to truth akme^ These 
are traits which strike the beholder at once. They speak to 
us with a voice of authority. We reverence them. We 
confide in them as we confide in nothing else. We find 
them our truest and safest guides. 

It is not easy to analyze this impression which the Crcspel 
history makes upon our hearts, and to say what all the ele^ 
ments are of our c<Hiviction that this is a true and honest 



THE GOSPEL IVAERATIVB8. 9B 

account Consider what your experience has been with 
some persoiml friend. You are satisfied he is an honest 
man. You feel that your property and character would be 
perfectly safe in his hands. But why you feel so, you 
might not be able readily to tell. Your conviction is the re* 
suit of a thousand little circumstances which you would find 
it difiicult to name, though hardly any more formal and 
tangible evidence could make it stronger tlian it is. So is it 
when we read the records of the life of Jesus. We feel 
that they are honest and true ;. but how iAM we describe 
the causes which produce that impression, the delicate 
touches of reality and truth which we see on every page 
and in every verse, the sure tokens o( uprightness and sin* 
cerity which the heart feels, but of which we give so poor 
account when we come to set them down in words ? 

Some of the reasons, however, why we feel that the Gos* 
pel history is honest and true may be named, and on the 
more obvious of these we shall now proceed to offer a few 
words. 

The simplicity and aftlessness of manner in which the 
Grospel history is told may first be named. Like honest 
witnesses in a court of justice, the Evangelists give their tes- 
timony with a plainness and straight^forwardness which find 
their way at once to the heart. There is no attempt what- 
ever to set the story out, to dr^ss it up, to round it ofiT, to 
embellish it, no appearance of trying to make a show, of 
hunting after epithets, of straining for effect. Take any 
transaction they record, and an account of it cannot be given 
in fewer and plainer words than those which they use. 
They speak like men who speak from full hearts, who never 
ooce think how they shall speak, who only open their mouths 
and the fact speaks itself. 

Again, what candid writers are these historians of the life 



94 nOB QOSFEL KAS&ATIVXS. 

Off lesiMi! l%ey appear to tell the whole troth, even when 
it makes againat themaelTes and against the obgeet they had 
itt view in writing tiieir histoiries, with just as much fuloeas 
and freedoBi as they tell any part c^ it Thus, on sevend 
occasions, after our Lord had wrought some pf his most sur- 
prising works, they say, ^ Mmnp doubied^ some dMditved^ 
and wmM no hnger walk with kim.^^ This is narrated 
without the slightest appearance of reluctance and hesitattoe* 
k cannot he said with propriety that the informaticm is eon- 
teyed as a eonlession. it is given wilh the utmost freedoBs, 
with the dor of men whose only concern it is to give aH the 
Abets io the case. They freely tell us, likewise, of their 
own prejudices, OMstakes, gross ignorance,^ and fidthlessness 
to teir Murter; and all this with no attempt to conoeid their 
errors, widi no afiectatk>n of humility, and with no parade 
of traokuHm, It all comes in as part of the histdry, a the 
same simf^e,. nneooscious manner in which the whole reecHrd 
is made. 

Moreover, the narrative is not given hy these men lo if 
tliey Mi that th^ had a ease to make oat. There is no at* 
tempt whatever to win the favor of their readeis, no smooth- 
ing the story down so as to make it mcHPe aooeptaUef no fewr 
lest you shoukE draw wrong inferences,, and not the least 
amdety kst they riiocdd he disbelieved. Indeed, the hare 
possibility ^Mt they should be charged with falsehood seems 
never to have suggested itself to them^ Their only eoneera 
is to tell the foots in the case. When they have done this, 
they leave them, wi^ no preface, no argument, ik> ecnnment, 
no exhortation, •— without oqe single word asserting their 
veracity, or setting forth the importance and value of their 
history. They are witnesses and historians, and nothing 
else. Every thing is told with the air of importiali almost 
ot indifferent i^wetators. 



TBB GOftFXC JXAMMATirUB. W 

We haVe before noticed' the remarkable seJ^forgetfaiiieas 
of these writers. Excepting a mentioa of their errors and 
mirtakes, they never once, from beginning to end, aUude to 
themselves. They say nothing of their feelings, of the 
wonder and awe, of the alternate hopes and fears, which 
must have possessed their hearts. You cannot find one sin- 
gle word which has the appearance of having been pat in 
for the sa)ce of bringing themselves forward* They ate not 
brought forward. The reader of the Gospels does not feel 
that he is in the p]»seiice of Ma|;lliew, Mark, Luke, or John. 
He is hi the presMice of Jesus. He is a spectator of his 
wonderful works. He hears the words of one who spake 
as never man spake. And in Uiis presence, ^ disciples 
feh eveiy low, selfish, and personal motive subdued. Whea 
they came to write, they never cmce Uiought of themselves. 
** Filled wi& the gmnd truth of their suliject, tiidr own titda 
feelings are all forgotten, or rather are totally subdued* 
The natural passions of human nature, which mingle with 
the thoughts of the wisest and best men, seem with them to 
have sunk down and become huriied in a hallowed calm.^ 

In this life of Christ we discover no manifestations of any 
pMif feelings. These writers eherished a sUrong afiec^oil 
for their Master, but' they never magnify him, never praise 
him ; not one word of panegyric is there ftom beginning-to 
end. There is not the least attempt to hold him up to oast 
admiration; never once do they give exinression to their 
feelings, when Aiey saw him insulted, abused, smitten, and 
scourged. They give ^ bare fads in the case,«nd nothing 
more. So, on the other hand, they betray no desire to ex- 
cite the passions of the reader against tiiose who persecuted 
their Master. The Evangelists cherished ho bittemess of 
feeling towards them. Hie very nanies of those who bar- 
gained with Judas, of the men who i^prehended Jesus, ci 



M THl GOSPEL NAERATiySS. 

the officer who struck him, of those who aflterwards did spit 
upon him, and buffet him, and mock him, and were loudest 
in cr3ring " Away with him," — of those, too, who upbraided 
him on the cross, and pierced his side with a spear, — the 
very namei of those persons are not given. Even if these 
persons had been unknown to the disciples, angry and vin- 
dictive feelings ^ould naturally have prompted them to seek 
out the names of those who made themselves so prominent 
in these cruel and disgraceful acts. It does not appear that 
the Evangelists did any thing of the lund. Here is a beau- 
tiful trait in their character. The reader is directed to a 
dissertation prefixed to Campbell's Four Gospels, where he 
will see it strikingly unfolded. T^ writer shows, that, of 
all the enemies of our Lord, the names only of the high- 
priest and his coadjutor, of the Roman procurator, of the 
tetrarch of Galilee, and of the treacherous disciple, are men-' 
ticmed. In regard to the first four, the omission of their 
names could have made no difference, for the official title 
was equivalent in the case of such pubUc men to a designa- 
tion of the individual ; while the part which Judas acted was 
too notorious to permit the suppression oi his name, which, 
besides, would have cast a shade of suspicion over the mem- 
ories of the eleven. But the names of those who befriended 
Jesus are carefully recorded, such as Simon the Cyrenian, 
who carried the cross, Joseph of Arimathea, Nicodemus, 
Jairus, Bartimeus, Zaccheus, Lazarus, Mary, and Martha. 
How strong ibe proof it furnishes, that these writers cher- 
ished no vindictive feelings, — that they did not write in the 
spirit of blind partisans 1 . 

The wonderful harmony in the portraiture of the charac- 
ter of Christ is the last circumstance which can here be 
named, as giving an air of truth and reality to these Gospel 
narratives. It is the same Christ in all ; it is the same Christ 



THB 60SPJSL NAEBATIVSS. 97 

in humble scenes and in great ones, at the marriage feast in 
Cana, and on the mount of transfiguration, by the well of 
the woman of Samaria, and at the grave of Lazarus, wash- 
ing the feet of his disciples, and giving up his life on the 
cross. What a rare union of virtues seldom joined together, 
bending with grace to the lowliest act, and rising in majesty 
to the height of the sublimest ! That four writers leagued 
together to propagate a lie should sustain throughout so pe- 
culiar and elevated a character as Christ^s, should harmonize 
with each other in the delineation, and, not finding a type 
of truthfulness and purity in their own breasts, should draw 
a portrait so lof^y, so spotless, so practical, so perfect, surely 
this was a prodigy which they could not achieve. ^' The 
fiction of such a character would be a greater miracle than 
its reality,'' and that the Evangelists had a living model be- 
fore their eyes and hearts is the alternative of the most easy 
belief. 

These are some of the elements of our conviction, that 
this history of the life of Christ is an honest book. The 
Grospels bear the impress of truth upon themselves. They 
are their own witnesses. They confirm themselves. The 
geal of honesty and reality is stamped upon them. The 
purest and the most elevated minds see it and welcome it ; 
the very reading of this book lifts the mind up to its highest 
and noblest state, and the more we are enlightened and pu- 
rified, the deeper is our conviction that here are words of 
infinite moment and worth. Nor are they men of learning 
and research alone who can share this conviction. Thou* 
sands of unlettered and simple-minded believers can have 
the same confidence and peace. 



^ A man of subtils xeasoniiig asked 
A pea^a^t if h» knew 



70L. ZXU. — NO. 254. 



98 TBB 008FEL MABHATIVXB. 

"Where was the iftUerwd wUrnb^ 
That prored his Bible true. 

** The terms of dispntative art 
Had nerer reached his ear, 
He laid his hand upon his heart, 
And only anslrered, JSisyv." 



CHAPTER XV. 



THB TRANSMISSION OF THE GOSFBLS DOWN TO OUR TIMES. 

How were the Gospels at first received and noticed ? Into 
what hands from those of their authors did they pass ? With 
what care were they treated ? How were they kept ? How 
extensively were they multiplied? Where were they depos- 
ited in that long night of darkness that has intervened be- 
tween our times and the days of their authors? Where 
were they found, and how were they regarded, at the dawn 
of that light which awoke the nations from the slumber of 
ages ? What circumstances attended their translation and 
compilation in the form in which we now receive them ? 
These are questions of common importance to all Christians, 
and questions to which all ought to be able to reply. 

Christianity was made known by the preaching of Jissus 
Christ and his Apostles. It was not at first introduced by a 
written document, like the ten commandments, which were 
graven on tables of stone. It was preached^ in various 
countries, by men who had learned it from the mouth of its 
Founder. Hence their first duty was difierent from what it 
might have been had they lived in a country where printing 



THfi GOSPEL MAERATIVBS. 

and reading were as common as they are with us. Instead 
of writing the history of the life and words of Christ, we 
have seen that the Evangelists went everywhere preach- 
ing that history. When communities of believers were 
multiplied, and the Apostles had more demands than they 
could attend to personally, there arose the necessity of writ- 
ten documents, to ' go where they could not go, to answer 
inquiries, and to enlighten and confirm believers. The im- 
portance of securing these was still further apparent, by the 
approach of the time when all the first preachers of the Gos- 
pel would be removed by death. As soon as this event had 
taken place, and John, the last survivor of the disciples, had 
died, at the beginning of the second century, the writings 
of the Evangelists were held in the highest regard. These 
writings were appealed to as writings, as the received and 
authentic histories of Christ ; they were cited by name ; the * 
names of their, authors were given, and frequent quotations 
were made. These facts are important, as they show that 
our GrQspels were in the hands of the immediate successors 
of the Apostles, while many were yet living who were coii- 
temporary with at least one of the original witnesses of our 
Saviour, and companions of his life. 

The Christian writers who lived in the age next succe^ 
ing the Apostles are called the Apostolical Fathers. Quo- 
tations from their writings, amply confirming what we havei 
here stated, may be found in ^U works on the evidences of 
the genuuieness of the Grospels. A few may be here pre- 
sented. 

Papias was pastor of Hierapolis, A. D. 116. He was ac- 
quainted, as he says, with many of the disciples of the 
Apostles. In a treatise, entitled Explications of the Oracles 
of the Lord, he has these words : — '^ Matthew wrote the 
divine ozacles in the Hebrew tongue, and every one inters 



100 TUB GOSPEL IfARRATlYES. 

preted them as he was ahle.'* Again he writes, — " Maik, 
being the interpreter of Peter, carefully wrote down all that 
he retained in memory of the actions or discourses of 
Christ." 

Justin Martyr was a native of Samaria. In the year 150 
he addressed a Defence of Christianity to the Emperor, 
Antoninus Pius ; and in the year 162 made another defence, 
which was addressed to Marcus Antoninus. In these works 
he speaks of the memoirs which are called Gospels, and 
distinguishes between those written by the Apostles and 
those by the companions of the Apostles, that is, between 
Matthew and John, and Mark and Luke. He tells us how 
these sacred books were read in the assemblies of Christians 
on the Lord's day, and how reverently they were regarded. 

Another of these early Christian writers, whose works 
have come down to us, is Irenaeus. He was bom, as ia^ 
generally supposed, at Smyrna, about the year 150, received 
his Christian education from Polycarp, a disciple of St. 
John, was pastor of the church in Lyons, and, finally, suf- 
fered martyrdom, A. D. 202. Writing in the defence of 
the Christian faith, he says, — '* We have not received the 
knowledge of the way of our salvation by any others than 
those through whom the Gospel has come down to us; 
which Gospel they first preached, and aAerwards by the will 
of God transmitted to us in writing, that it might be the 
foundation and pillar of our faith. For afler our Lord had 
risen from the dead, and the Apostles were clothed with the 
power of the Holy Spirit descending upon them from on 
high, were filled with all gifls and possessed perfect knowl- 
edge, they went forth to the ends of the earth, spread- 
ing the glad tidings of those blessings which God has confer- 
red upon us, and announcing peace from heaven to men ; 
having all, and every one alike, the Gospel of God. Mat- 



TMM GOSPEL NABBATIYES. 101 

thew, then, among the Hebrews published a Gospel in their 
own language ; while Peter and Paul were preaching the 
Gospel at Rome and founding a church there. And aAer 
their departure, Mark, the disciple and interpreter of Peter, 
himself delivered to us in writing what Peter had preached ; 
and Luke, the companion of Paul, recorded the Grospel 
preached by him. Afterwards, John, the disciple of the 
Lord, who leaned upon his breast, likewise published a Gos- 
pel, while he dwelt at Ephesus in Asia. And all these 
have taught us that there is one Grod, the maker of heaven 
and earth, announced by the law and the prophets, and one 
Christ, the Son of Grod. And he who does not assent to 
them despises, indeed, those who knew the mind of the 
Lord, but he despises, also, Christ himself, the Lord, and he 
despises likewise the Father, and is self-condemned, resist- 
ing and opposing his own salvation; and this all heretics 
do." 

Only a fragment of this father's writings have come dowa 
to us ; yet so numerous are his quotations from the Grospels, 
that, when placed by themselves, they fill eleven closely 
printed folio columns. 

Tertullian, the most ancient and most eloquent of the 
Latin fiithers, was bom in Carthage, where he was presby- 
ter of the church, and where he became distinguished as a 
Christian writer about the close of the second century. No 
evidence from any writer, sa}r8 Mr. Norton, can be more 
full and satisfactory than that which he affords of the gener- 
al reception of the Gospels, and of their authority as the 
foundation of the Christian faith. There is not a chapter in 
the Gospels of Matthew, Luke, and John, from which he 
does not quote ; and from most of them his quotations are 
numerous. Tertullian says, — " We lay it down, in the first 
place, that the Evangelic record had for its authors Apos- 

9* 



102 THE GOSPEL NAEEATIYSS. 

ties, to whom this office of promulgating the Grospel was 
assigned by our Lord himself. And if some of them were 
companions of Apostles, yet they did not stand alone, but 
were connected with and guided by Apostles. Among the 
Apostles, John and Matthew form the faith within us. 
Among the companions of the Apostles, Luke and Mark 
renovate it.*' 

In Alexandria in Egypt, there was a celebrated school for 
the instruction of Christians, of which, near the close of the 
second century, Clement was the principal master. By him 
was preserved the same account of the formation and recep- 
tion of the Oospels. ^^ The Gospels containing the genealo- 
gies were written first The following providence gave oc- 
casion to that of Mark. While Peter was publicly preach- 
ing the word at Rome, and through the power of the spirit 
making known the Gospel, his hearers, who were numerous, 
exhorted Mark, on the ground of his having accompanied 
him for a long time, and having his discourses in memory, 
to write down what he had spoken ; and Mark, composing 
his Gospel, delivered it to those who made the request. 
Peter, knowing this, was earnest neither to forbid nor en- 
courage it. In the last place, John, observing that the 
things obvious to the senses had been clearly set forth in 
these Gospels, being urged by his friends, and divinely 
moved by the spirit, composed a spiritual Grospel.'' 

Qrigen was bom in Alexandria, A. D. 185, travelled ex- 
tensively in Palestine, Asia Minor, and Greece, became the 
most learned man of his age, and finally died about the year 
253. He cites each of the four Gospels by name, speidcs 
of them as " books in the most common use," " received 
without controversy,'' " believed in all the churches of 
God." 

To these few examples, running back to the apostdic 



THE 608PSL NARSATIVES. 103 

age, and drawn from di^rent countries, should be added 
the following important reflections by Mr. Norton. " In es- 
timating the weight of this evidence, we must keep in mind, 
what has not always been sufficiently attended to, that it is 
not the testimony of certain individual writers alone. These 
writers speak for a whole community, every member of 
which had the strongest reasons for ascertaining the correct- 
ness of his faith respecting the authenticity, and, conse- 
quently, the genuineness, of the Gospels. We quote the 
Christian fathers, not chiefly to prove their individual belief, 
but in evidence of the belief of the community to which they 
belonged. It is not, therefore, the simple testimony of Ire- 
nseus, and TertuUian, and Clement, and Origen, which we 
bring forward ; it is the testimony of thousands and tens of 
thousands of believers, many of whom were as well inform- 
ed as they were on this particular subject, and as capable of 
making a right judgment. All these believers were equally 
ready with the writers who have been quoted, to affirm the 
authority and genuineness of the Gospels. The most dis- 
tinguished Christians of the age, men held in high esteem 
by their contemporaries and successors, assert that the Gos- 
pels were received as genuine throughout the community of 
which they were members, and for which they were writing. 
That the assertion was made by such men, under such cir- 
cumstances, is sufficient evidence of its truth. But the 
proof of the general reception of the Gospels does not rest 
upon their assertions only, though these cannot be doubted. 
It is necessarily implied in their statements and reasonings 
respecting their religion. It is impossible that they should 
have so abundantly quoted the Gospels, as conclusive au- 
thority for their own faith and that of their fellow-Christians, 
if these books had not been regarded by Christians as con- 
clusive authority. We cannot infer more confidently from 



104 TBS OOSFSL IfAEXATIVXS. 

the sermons of Tillotson and Clarke the estimation in which 
the Gospels were held in their day, than we may infer from 
the writers before mentioned, that they were held in similar 
estimation during the period when they lived.^' * 

Nor is it in the writings of Christians alone that we find 
testimonies to the reception of the Gospel histories, in the 
age that succeeded the Apostles. It was about the year 176 
that Celsus wrote against Christianity. In his work, which 
has come down to us, he quotes the Grospels so frequently, 
as the admitted authority of Christians, that it has been said 
an abridgment of the history of Jesus might be made from 
his writings. 

Thus there can be no doubt that our present Grospels were 
in common use at the close of the second century. ^' The 
number of manuscripts then in existence bore some proper* 
tion to the number of Christians, and this to the whole pop- 
ulation of the Roman Empire.'^ Gibbon estimated the pop- 
ulation of the Empire, in the time of the Antonines, A. D. 
180, at one hundred and twenty millions, and supposed that 
about '^ one twentieth part of the subjects had enlisted 
themselves under the banner of the cross.'^ From these 
data, it has been estimated that there were at least three 
millions of Christians at the close of the second century. 
'^ There can be little doubt that copies of the Gospels were 
owned by a large portion of Christians who had the means 
of procuring them ; and in supposing only one copy of these 
books for every fifty Christians, the estimate is probably 
much within the truth. This proportion, however, will give 
us sixty thousand copies of the Gospels^' in existence at 
that time. See Norton, Vol. I. p. 52. 



* Evidences of the Grenuinenew of the GospeLi, Vol. I. pp. 160-158 
(2d ed.). 



THB 60SPSL NAHRATIYES. 105 

Ad we come down to a succeeding age, we find that the 
progress of the Christian religion, and especially the fierce 
and wide-spread controversies that marked the third and 
fourth centuries, called for a rapid multiplication of copies 
of the Gospels. Translations of them were made into all 
languages that were then spoken, so that the life and words 
of Christ might be read, not only in Judea, but in Greece, 
in Rome, in Asia Minor, in Africa, in Egypt, in Arabia, in 
Gaul. Thus were produced Syriac, Grecian, Latin, Arme- 
nian, Ethiopic, Egyptian, Arabic, and Gothic translations. 
Nor was this the only efiect of these controversies. They 
caused these Gospels to be most diligently studied ; copies 
were compared with copies ; the very words of the Evan- 
gelists were quoted as the ultimate authority to which all 
disputants must yield ; and so numerous and various are 
these quotations in the mass of the controversial writings 
which have come down to us from those times, that it is 
said, if every existing copy of the Gospels we^e now de- 
stroyed, the whole Evangelical narrative could be repro- 
duced from the quotations found in the works of five writers 
alone. It is pleasant to see how the strifes of these ages, 
though in such terrible contrast with the mild spirit of the 
Prince of Peace, were yet made subservient, by Him who 
brings good out of evil, to an unspeakably important end. 
The fact should reconcile us to the divisions and controver- 
sies which still prevail in the Christian world. Who can 
doubt that these, too, are overruled for good ? 

That seemed an evil day for the Christian world when 
there sprung up so extensively a passion for building vast 
and massive convents and monasteries. In these, the piety 
and virtue of the times, instead of being like leaven in the 
corrupt mass of society, seemed to be immured and buried ; 
and the active duties of a Christian life, which the world so 



106 TBX OOSFSL IfABBATIYKft. 

much needed, were neglected for the visions and dreams of 
monkish cells. The unnatural and secluded life which men 
there led must have heen unfriendly to the healthy piety 
even of the truly devout ; while with others it favored the 
vices and crimes of which we have all read in history. Yet 
how great is our indebtedness to these establishments 1 
They became the only safe depositories of th^ precious 
treasures of the past. Age after age these religious bouses 
were quiet and undisturbed. Invadmg armies never attack- 
ed them ; and while war demolished the fortresses and pal- 
aces of kings, the sword of the conqueror was niBver lifted 
against these shelters of peaceful piety dedicated to God. 
Within their walls alone were letters and science studiously 
cultivated, and thus they handed down the torch of learning 
from century to century. Every monastery had its library- 
room ; not only a place of deposit for manuscripts, but a 
place where manuscripts were copied. Here, shut out from 
the strifes and cares of the world, many monks were always 
employed, year after year, in the quiet and patient work, so 
well suited to the lives they led and to the tastes they cher- 
ished, of multiplying copies of important writings ; and by 
the vast number who were thus perpetually at work, copies 
were furnished with an abundance, and cheapness, and 
beauty, which even the bj% of printing has hardly rivalled. 
And then, when barbarous ages had passed away, and our 
modem civilization was established, and through the preva- 
lence of the arts and blessings of peace a better day began 
to dawn, it was from these houses of religion that were 
brought forth all that we have of the records of ancient his- 
tory, and poetry, and eloquence ; and with them the manu- 
scripts which bring down to us the life and words of Jesus. 
Vast numbers of them have been gathered from various 
lands, and in various tongues. Griesbach, a learned Ger« 



THE GOSPEL NABSATIVES. 107 

man scholar, consulted three hundred and fifty-five, in order 
to prepare his edition of the New Testament ; and Michaelis 
carefully collated the greater number of four hundred and 
fifly. This is but a small part of all which are known to 
exist. Even to this day additional copies are found. A 
year or two since, forty were discovered in an old monastery 
in Upper Egypt, of various languages, some in the very dia- 
lect which was spoken by Jesus and his Apostles, and as old 
as the beginning of the fourth century. The owners of 
these hianuscripts could not read the languages in which 
they were written, &nd probably these copies had been un- 
touched for centuries, in the stone scriptorium where they 
i\ere found. Had it not been for such arks of safety, thus 
provided, and guarded, and reverenced, we see not how 
these treasures of the past could have been so surely pre- 
served to us. They were the fit instruments to accomplish 
the very work that was then needed. The perpetuity of the 
Christian religion seems to be owing in part to that cause 
which threatened its total corruption and death. What can 
be a more i^iking proof of God's making even the follies 
and superstitions of mankind subserve his own designs ? 

In 1360, a translation of the New Testament into English 
was made by Wickliff, "the morning star of the Reforma- 
tion.'' He was bom in Yorkshire, England, in 1924, and 
was rector of Lutterworth, in the diocese of Lincoln, till his 
death, in 1384. His manuscript was a translation from the 
Latin, and was circulated until it was suppressed by the 
Pope. Copies of it are quite numerous in the public libira- 
ries of England, and in the collections of private individuals. 

The art of printing was invented in the early part of the 
sixteenth century ; and the New Testament was among the 
books which first received the benefit of the inventicm. It 
was printed in 1514, at Aleak, in Spain, under the cave of 



106 THE GOSPEL NAKRATIYES. 

Cardinal Ximenes, Archbishop of Toledo. Neither time, Ia« 
bor, nor expense was spared to make the work as perfect as 
the means would permit. Learned men were employed 
twelve years in comparing various manuscripts, and the ex- 
pense of a small edition was fifty thousand ducats. "A sin- 
gular fate attended the manuscripts from which this edition 
had been prepared. About fifty years ago, two German 
professors repaired to Alcala, to ascertain if they could be 
found. They learned, to their inexpressible disappointment, 
that, about thirty-five years before, the librarian, to whose 
care they had been intrusted, ignorant of their true value, 
sold them to a man engaged in preparing fireworks, and he 
had used them in making rockets.^' 

In 1516, the second printed copy of the New Testament 
was published by the l^med Erasmus, at Basil, in Switzer- 
land. In 1546, a third printed copy was published at Paris, 
by Robert Stephens, who formed his edition by collating fif- 
teen different manuscripts. In 1582, the fourth printed 
copy was published at Geneva, by Theodore Beza, who 
compared all the former editions with manuicripts which 
had not been consulted before. 

The copy of the New Testament first printed in England 
was published in 1526, by William Tyndale. In 1535, it 
was again published in that country by Miles Coverdale. In 
1611, the translation made by the authority of King James 
was publish^ ; and this is the version which is in general 
use to this day. The utmost care was takep by the king to 
secure an accurate translation. For this purpose he select- 
ed fifly-four of the best classical and BibUcal scholars, in 
order, as he said, ^^ that our intended translation may have 
the help and furtherance of all our principal learned men in 
this our kingdom." This number was reduced to forty-seven 
before they entered upon their labors. They were tbQn 



THB OOSFBL NARRATIVBS. 109 

divided into six companies, to which equal portions of the 
Bible were assigned. They held their sessions at West- 
minster, Cambridge, and Oxford, and were employed three 
years. Upon the completion of their work, a committee of 
six, chosen from the joint companies, began to review the 
whole. They met daily for nine months ; and when at 
length the translation was published, it had such a character 
for accuracy, that, by general consent, all other translations 
have fallen into disuse. 

At the present day. Biblical scholars find a few texts, in 
the received translation, which are of doubtful authority, 
some passages, also, which are obscurely expressed, and not 
unfrequently a word or phrase inconsistent with the present 
use of our language. These evils are slight, however, com- 
pared with the immense advantages of having the same 
translation used wherever the English language is spoken. 
Among these must be included, not only its efiect in per- 
petuating the original character of the Anglo-Saxon tongue, 
but its moral effect, also, in preserving the unity of the An- 
glo-Saxon rAe. 

Such has been the transmission down to us of the mes- 
sage which was brought from heaven by the mouth of the 
Son of Grod, and which was designed for the children of 
men in all aAer times. It would seem as if it was intrusted 
to very unsafe keeping, judging merely ailer the manner of 
men. It had no permanent memorials of br^^s or marble ; 
it was in words only, and in words merely spoken, — cast 
forth upon the air. But those words were gathered up by 
faithful men, and though committed to frail materials of 
parchment, they have been handed down to us through ages 
which have crumbled marble to dust, and rusted all inscrip- 
tions from brass. Through what a long and revolutionary 
period of history have these words found their sure way ! -— 

VOL. XXII. — NO. 254. 10 



110 THS GOSPEL HABXATITB8. 

the coQtroveniet of the first centuries, the irruption of the 
barbariaDs, the dismemberment of the Roman Empire, the 
night of the Dark Ages, the revival of letters, the wars of 
the Reformation, the discovery and peopling of a new world. 
Indeed, the whole (ace of the earth has been changed, — 
all manners, customs, institutions, arts, and empire ! Have 
the records of the Grospels been changed, or do we read the 
same words now which were read by the first Christian be- 
lievers ? 



CHAPTER XVI. 



THE EVIDENCE THAT THE GOSPELS HATE BEEN TRANSMIT- 
TED WITHOUT CORRUPTION. 

How do we know that, through all these countless 
changes, the Grospels have come down to us unchanged? 
May they not have been corrupted, by addilii^s or perver- 
sions, so that we cannot now know whether they are worthy 
of implicit trust ? The early rapid spread of Christianity 
\ is one security on this point. Before the Apostles died, 
churches had been established, not only in the principal 
places of Judea, but along the whole coast of Asia Mincnr, 
in Italy, and Greece ; and before the generation that suc- 
ceeded the Apostles had passed away, there were commu- 
nities of believers in every part of the then known world. 
When these faithful preachers had gone to their reward, we 
have seen that their writings were at once the subject of a 
wide-spread interest By every Christian they were regard- 
ed as of unspeakaMe importance. They were sought for 
and read, not only for the light and comfort d believevs m 



TBS COSrSL NASBJITIYXS. Ill 

their private derotioDs, but as a part of the regular sendee 
of the religious asseml^y on the Sabbath. We have before 
noticed the estimate which has been made, that, within a 
century after the Ap<)Btles, there probably existed fifty thou- 
sand copies of the Grospels, in different tongues, and in dif- 
ferent parts of the world. 

Now had Christianity possessed only a local interest, and 
been acknowledged only by a single neighbourhood of be- 
lievers, who had but a few manuscripts of the Gospels, it 
would have been less difRcult to corrupt these manuscripts, 
and deceive the community of Christians. But as it was, 
while we cannot suppose that the writings of the Apostles 
would be universally corrupted in the very age in which 
their authors themselves lived, so it seems utterly incredible 
that it cotdd have been done in the age that succeeded. In 
our day, how impossible that a single false reading could 
creep, or be forced, into all Bibles, used in all families and 
churches, not in this nation only, but in all lands, and in all 
tongues! Human hands could just as easily introduce a 
new star into the firmament of heaven, or expunge one of 
those shining lights from the sky. Doubtless this impossi- 
bility is greater now than it was in the earlier days of Chris- 
tianity ; for such is the accumulative nature of this evidence, 
the uncorrupted preservation of the Scriptures has been ren- 
dered more safe by every step the world has taken from the 
time of their origin. More copies have been made, and 
they have circulated over wider portions of the globe. But 
the same kind of security against a corruption of our sacred 
writings has always existed, and it existed in the very age 
that succeeded the Apostles. In the thousand copies that 
were then made, translated into various languages, and sent 
into all parts of the then known world, we have a convincing 
proof that no accident or design could universally impair 



112 THB GOSPEL NASSATIVBS. 

their purity and authority. It is true, that, by this multipli- 
cation of copies, the chances were increased for verbal er- 
rors to be committed. By the comparison of various manu- 
scripts, many errors of this kind are found. A word is 
sometimes omitted, or misspelled, or transposed, a letter or 
part of a verse is lefl out. These various readings, as they 
are called, are counted by thousands. But not one in a 
thousand affects the sense, and not one in the whole number 
constitutes a turning-point of any doctrine or duty. Of so 
little consequence are the various readings occasioned by a 
multiplication of copies, while, in consequence of this multi- 
plication, no essential errors could be introduced by design, 
or could creep in through mistake. 

But who are the persons to be suspected of undertaking 
the work of corrupting the Gospels ? '' Human beings do 
not act without motive. If we suspect that our sacred writ- 
ings were at an early period tampered with,.either unauthor- 
ized additions made to them, or. portions erased from them, 
we can probably give some reason for such an opinion. 
Who, then, are the persons that would undertake this work ? 
Not Christians, certainly. They must have felt the strongest 
interest in preserving the purity of these writings. The re- 
ligion they had embraced sepeurated them from all other men, 
called them to a new life, gave them new sentiments, and 
hopes, and desires, demanded of them such a conscientious 
discharge of duty as had hardly before been conceived of, 
subjected them to privations and insults, to danger and 
death. That they should have been indifferent to the purity 
of those writings on which their faith rested, on which they 
had staked all their interests and all their hopes, is certainly 
most incredible.^' Not only would they not cause, but, as 
far as their watchfulness could go, they would not permit, 
the slightest change to be made in books whose sacredness 
and trustworthiness would be thereby impaired. 



THE GOSPBL NARRATIVES. 113 

Shall we, then, say that corrupt changes of the sacred 
writings were made in the early ages hy the enemies of the 
Grospel ? But why should they set themselves to alter and 
corrupt what it was so much easier for them to destroy ? 
Why resort to a process so tedious and difRcult, and of ex- 
tremely douhtful success, as that of attempting to weaken 
the authority and pervert the design of all existing copies of 
the Gospels hy corrupting the text, while the far more obvi- 
ous and practicable scheme for accomplishing their purpose 
was before them, — that of destroying the writings them- 
selves ? That this alone would appear the practicable course 
is not mere conjecture and opinion. It is proved to us by 
evidence and fact. In the persecutions to which the early 
Christians were exposed, we know that the destruction of 
their books was often attempted, and, so far as it could be 
done, it was carried into effect. They were time and time 
again burned, and all were forbidden to copy them under 
penalty of death. But we have no evidence and no hint, 
that the plan of destroy mg their value and use by corrupting 
the text was ever attempted, or even once thought of. 

But it may be said, that in past ages all who have called 
themselves friends of the Scriptures have not agreed, any 
more than such persons agree now, in the interpretation of 
the Gospels ; that we read that there were those in very- 
early times who " wrested the Scripture " to favor their 
own views ; and that, in the zeal of party strife, the sacred 
writings may have oflen been corrupted to support the opin- 
ions of particular sects. 

We will not forget, however, that the very idea of a sect 
is a number of Christians cut off, or divided from, the body 
of believers ; that the Scriptures have been in the hands of 
this body, as well as in the hands of the sect ; and that if 
ever it has been for the interest of the minority to alter the 

10* 



4 



114 THE GOSPEL NARBJlTiyXflk 

reading of the Grospels, it has heen equally for the interest 
of the majority to prevent such changes, and to preserve the 
purity and integrity of the text. The division of Christians 
into sects, then, so far from having endangered, has, in fact, 
secured the uncorrupted preservation of the Gospels. Some 
division has existed ever since some were of Paul and others 
were of Apollos. The Epistles furnish proof how many 
subjects of controversy agitated the first communities of be- 
lievers. No one, who has read the history of the Church, 
will forget how early great and grave questions arose, which 
continued to divide the opinions of Christians down even to 
the establishment of the Romish Church. During the gen- 
eral sway of this church, there always existed independent 
communities that came not under its dominion, while many 
of the orders embraced in its folds were as much opposed to 
each other as have since been the Protestant sects. Thus, 
there has never been a time when an attempt to alter the 
text of the Gospels, even if otherwise practicable, would not 
have raised an outcry in some quarter or other. There has 
never been a time when Providence has trusted the legacy 
of the Scriptures even to their friends, without some safe- 
guard for their protection and unadulterated transmission. 
One portion of believers has been a check upon another. 
In their mutual strifes, they have but one interest in com- 
mon, — to exercise a jealous vigilance to keep the Scriptures 
in the same state in which they came into their hands. 
Any attempt, therefore, to alter them, for the purpose of 
favoring any particular scheme of doctrines, must have been, 
in the very nature of things, discovered and exposed. 

We have before alluded to the great number of quotations 
from the Scriptures made by the early Christian writers. 
The first two hundred years afler the death of the Apostles 
were most prolific of works of controversy, sermons, com- 



THE OOSFEL IfARRATIVXS. 115 

mentarles, annotations, and histories, — a whole body of 
literature, furnished by writers of different countries and of 
different tongues. Their writings have come down to us ia 
manuscripts which are as authentic as any remains whatever 
of ancient letters. In these we find the words of the Gos- 
pels quoted just as we read them now in our Bibles, and so 
numerous are these quotations, that, as was before remarked, 
if the New Testament should at any time be annihilated, we 
could recover the book from the writings of that age. Here, 
then, is a most important and valuable test of the purity in 
which the Gospels have been preserved. Had those early 
authors cited many texts from the New Testament which we 
do not now find in our copies, we should know that parts of 
this book, in the course of its transmission to us, have been 
lost or suppressed. On the other hand, had they quoted 
other passages in different words, and as conveying different 
meanings from what we now find in our copies, we should 
know that such texts have been corrupted, either through 
accident or fraud. But as the quotations they make agree 
substantially with the text that we possess, and include al- 
most every passage that we possess, how satisfactory the 
proof that the Gospels have suffered no essential changes, as 
they have passed from one generation to euiother, and are 
now what they were at first ! This evidence is open to no 
uncertainty, and admits of no refutation. If we will not say 
that all remains of s€u;red and profane literature, of the first 
centuries of the Christian era, were the forgeries of some 
subsequent age, we must admit that these quotations bridge 
over the whole period of the Middle Ages, and carry us up 
to the generations immediately succeeding the Apostles, and 
show them reading the same Gospels which are now in our 
hands. 

It is a still further important consideration, that the Gos- 



116 THE G08FBL NABRATIYES. 

pels bear no marks of an age later than that in which it is 
affirmed that they were written. If they had suffered muti- 
lations and additions from the hands of successive copyists, 
these aherations, it is likely, would be detected. Especial- 
ly if they were numerous, if they were thrust in by igno- 
rant transcribers, having different views and feelings, and 
more or less interested and excited about the opinions and 
controversies of their own times, how surely would these 
alterations have been discovered by something not consistent 
with the character of the sacred writer, by an expression of 
opinions and feelings which it is not probable that he enter- 
tained, by the use of language and the introduction of modes 
of conception not known at the period to which they are 
assigned, by an implied reference to opinions and events of 
a later age, or by some bearing and purpose not consistent 
with the time when they are alleged to have been written ! 
These are but a few of the ways by which the work of those 
who had tampered with our sacred writings would surely 
have been detected. But no traces like these of corrupt 
changes of the text can be discerned. Says Mr. Norton, in 
the valuable treatise before referred to, and to which this 
chapter is so largely indebted, — "No one has yet appeared 
who has found any thing here which does not correspond to 
the age in which their authors lived, and to the circumstan- 
ces in which we must believe them to have been placed." 

So, also, had our Grospel histories suffered mutilations 
from many successive hands, their unity both of design and 
style would have been lost. Each writer has a way that is 
peculiar to himself; his style, mode of narration, choice of 
expressions, and form of presenting a subject, are all pecu- 
liar to himself. So strikingly is this the case, that it has 
been said, if a chapter from one book should be transferred 
to another book, having a different author, the transposition 



THE GOSPEL NABRATIYSS. 117 

would, by the dissimilitude of the style, be at once detected 
by a critic. How irreconcilable with all this is the notion 
that these books have been brought to their present state by 
additions and alterations of successive copyists ! Instead of 
the one distinctive character which each work has, a diver- 
sity of hands would have produced a diversity of style ; and 
the patchwork of unknown and successive transcribers 
would have been a perfect contrast to the simple, uniform, 
unbroken narrative of the sacred penman. 

The same general conclusion is fortified by one more con- 
sideration. It is impossible that the records of our faith 
should have been much corrupted, for whenever and wher- 
ever they have been read, men have gathered from them 
substantially the same Christian religion. Is there a single 
copy of the Scriptures, in any language, in any land, from 
which the honest inquirer would draw a difierent system of 
faith and practice, or a different representation of the Divine 
government, from that which he finds in the copy before 
him ? Is there a copy from ^yhich a single article of our 
faith is absent ? He who would weaken our confidence in 
the sacred writings, by suspicions of their corruption, should 
bring forward these conflicting and imperfect versions if he 
can find them. But this cannot be done. Wherever in %e 
past ages we find men believing in the Christian religion, 
we find that they believed in the same religion that we be- 
lieve in ; they held to the same rule of life, referred to the 
same prophecies, related the same miracles, ascribed the 
same character to Christ, and were rejoicing in the same 
immortal hopes. How idle, then, to speak of corruptions 
which the text of Scripture may have sufiered, when we see 
that it has thus spoken one and the same language to all 1 
It is true, the mere letter has passed through many hands of 
copyists and printers, and has been rendered into many dif- 
ferent tongues. But ever has it quickened the same spirit ; 



118 THE OOSFBL WABBATIYEa. 

the piety that it kindled a thousand yean ago is the same 
jMety that it kindles now, and thus has the essential Gospel 
heen, like Jesus himself, the same yesterday, to-day, and 
for ever. 

How can we think of these things without reflecting with 
gpratitude upon the course which Divine Providence adopted^ 
to hand down the Gospel truth from one generation to 
another? Those frail records of the Evangelists were in 
fact the most secure means for the preservation of the life 
and words of Christy which could he employed. ** A 
temple, a statue, a monument, is hut one, and however 
durable may be the material, it continually decays, and is 
always destructible. The touch of the sculptor moulders 
from the chiselled surface, and the time will come when 
every monument of his genius shall have crumbled to the 
earth. The Pyramids themselves have grown old with age, 
have forgotten the names of their builders, and have long 
stnce betrayed their trust^' 

But written records are less liable to extinction than any 
other memorial of the past that can be devised. The sacred 
words, inseribed of old on parchment, soon found their way 
to every land, and the time has never been when they could 
peflsh or suffer corruption, except by a devastation that vis- 
ited at once the whole face of the earth. 

Thus has the past ever been safe. Thus, too, is the fu- 
ture ever secure. Amid all the revolutions and vicissitudes 
of earth, the Grospel will still be accomplishing the thing 
wherefor it was sent, and no one can turn it aside from its 
silent and steadfast way. The assaults of its enemies are in 
vain, l^he gates of death shall not prevail against it The 
mouldering fingers of time, that efface every thing else, 
shall not destroy this. The grass withereth, the flower fad- 
eth, but tiie word of the Lord abideth for ever. 




iimiiiiiii 

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