The
Bible as a Divine Revelation
Viewed in the Light of Reason
The Claims of the Bible and its
Surface Evidence of Credibility
• Its
Antiquity and Preservation
• Its
Moral Influence
• Motives
of the Writers
• General
Character of the Writings
• The
Books of Moses
• The
Law of Moses
• Peculiarities
of the Government
Instituted by Moses
• It
was not a System of Priestcraft
• Instructions
to Civil Rulers
• Rich
and Poor on a Common Level
Before the
Law
• Safeguards
Against Tampering with the Rights of
the People
• The
Priesthood Not a Favored
Class, How Supported, etc.
• Oppression
of Foreigners, Widows, Orphans and
Servants Guarded Against
• The
Prophets of the Bible
• Is
There a Common Bond of Union Between
the Law, the Prophets and
the New Testament Writers?
• Miracles
Not Unreasonable
• The
Reasonable Conclusion
|
The
Bible is the torch of civilization
and liberty. Its influence for good
in society has been recognized by
the greatest statesmen, even though
they for the most part have looked
at it through the various glasses of
conflicting creeds, which, while
upholding the Bible, grievously
misrepresent its teachings.
The
grand old book is unintentionally
but woefully misrepresented by its
friends, many of whom would lay down
life on its behalf; and yet they do
it more vital injury than its foes,
by claiming its support to their
long-revered misconceptions of its
truth, received through the
traditions of their fathers.
Would
that such would awake, re-examine
their oracle, and put to confusion
its enemies by disarming them of
their weapons!
Since
the light of nature leads us to
expect a fuller revelation of God
than that which nature supplies, the
reasonable, thinking mind will be
prepared to examine the claims of
anything purporting to be a divine
revelation, which bears a reasonable
surface evidence of the truthfulness
of such claims.
The
Bible claims to be such a revelation
from God, and it does come to us
with sufficient surface evidence as
to the probable correctness of its
claims, and gives us a reasonable
hope that closer investigation will
disclose more complete and positive
evidence that it is indeed the Word
of God.
The
Bible is the oldest book in
existence; it has outlived the
storms of thirty centuries. Men have
endeavored by every means possible
to banish it from the face of the
earth: they have hidden it, burned
it, made it a crime punishable with
death to have it in possession, and
the most bitter and relentless
persecutions have been waged against
those who had faith in it; but still
the book lives.
Today,
while many of its foes slumber in
death, and hundreds of volumes
written to discredit it and to
overthrow its influence, are long
since forgotten, the Bible has found
its way into every nation and
language of earth, over two hundred
different translations of it having
been made.
The
fact that this book has survived so
many centuries, notwithstanding such
unparalleled efforts to banish and
destroy it, is at least strong
circumstantial evidence that the
great Being whom it claims as its
Author has also been its Preserver.
It is
also true that the moral influence
of the Bible is uniformly good.
Those who become careful students of
its pages are invariably elevated to
a purer life.
Other
writings upon religion and the
various sciences have done good and
have ennobled and blessed mankind,
to some extent; but all other books
combined have failed to bring the
joy, peace and blessing to the
groaning creation that the Bible has
brought to both the rich and the
poor, to the learned and the
unlearned.
The
Bible is not a book to be read
merely: it is a book to be studied
with care and thought; for God’s
thoughts are higher than our
thoughts, and his ways than our
ways. And if we would comprehend the
plan and thoughts of the infinite
God, we must bend all our energies
to that important work. The richest
treasures of truth do not always lie
on the surface.
This
book throughout constantly points
and refers to one prominent
character, Jesus of Nazareth, who,
it claims, was the Son of God. From
beginning to end his name, and
office, and work, are made
prominent. That a man called Jesus
of Nazareth lived, and was somewhat
noted, about the time indicated by
the writers of the Bible, is a fact
of history outside the Bible, and it
is variously and fully corroborated.
That
this Jesus was crucified because he
had rendered himself offensive to
the Jews and their priesthood is a
further fact established by history
outside the evidence furnished by
the New Testament writers. The
writers of the New Testament (except
Paul and Luke) were the personal
acquaintances and disciples of Jesus
of Nazareth, whose doctrines their
writings set forth.
The
existence of any book implies motive
on the part of the writer. We
therefore inquire, What motives
could have inspired these men to
espouse the cause of this person?
He was
condemned to death and crucified as
a malefactor by the Jews, the most
religious among them assenting to
and demanding his death, as one
unfit to live. And in espousing his
cause, and promulgating his
doctrines, these men braved
contempt, deprivation and bitter
persecution, risked life itself, and
in some cases even suffered
martyrdom.
Admitting that while he lived Jesus
was a remarkable person, in both his
life and his teaching, what motive
could there have been for any to
espouse his cause after he was
dead?—especially when his death was
so ignominious?
And if
we suppose that these writers
invented their narratives, and that
Jesus was their imaginary or ideal
hero,
—how absurd it would be to
suppose that sane men, after
claiming that he was the Son of
God, that he had been begotten
in a supernatural way, had
supernatural powers by which he
had healed lepers, restored
sight to those born blind,
caused the deaf to hear, and
even raised the dead
—how very absurd to suppose that
they would wind up the story of
such a character by stating that
a little band of his enemies
executed him as a felon, while
all his friends and disciples,
and among them the writers
themselves, forsook him and fled
in the trying moment?
The
fact that profane history does not
agree in some respects with these
writers should not lead us to regard
their records as untrue. Those who
do thus conclude should assign and
prove some motive on the part of
these writers for making false
statements.
What
motives could have prompted them?
Could they reasonably have hoped
thereby for fortune, or fame, or
power, or any earthly advantage? The
poverty of Jesus’ friends, and the
unpopularity of their hero himself
with the great religionists of
Judea, contradict such a thought.
The facts that he died as a
malefactor, a disturber of the
peace, and that he was made of no
reputation, held forth no hope of
enviable fame or earthly advantage
to those who should attempt to
re-establish his doctrine.
On the
contrary, if such had been the
object of those who preached Jesus,
would they not speedily have given
it up when they found that it
brought disgrace, persecution,
imprisonment, stripes and even
death?
Reason
plainly teaches that men who
sacrificed home, reputation, honor
and life; who lived not for present
gratification; but whose central aim
was to elevate their fellowmen, and
who inculcated morals of the highest
type, were not only possessed of a
motive, but further that their
motive must have been pure and their
object grandly sublime.
Reason
further declares that the testimony
of such men, actuated only by pure
and good motives, is worthy of ten
times the weight and consideration
of ordinary writers. Nor were these
men fanatics: they were men of sound
and reasonable mind, and furnished
in every case a reason for their
faith and hope; and they were
perseveringly faithful to those
reasonable convictions.
And
what we have here noticed is
likewise applicable to the various
writers of the Old Testament. They
were, in the main, men notable for
their fidelity to the Lord; and this
history as impartially records and
reproves their weaknesses and
shortcomings as it commends their
virtues and faithfulness. This must
astonish those who presume the Bible
to be a manufactured history,
designed to awe men into reverence
of a religious system.
There
is a straightforwardness about the
Bible that stamps it as truth.
Knaves, desirous of representing a
man as great, and especially if
desirous of presenting some of his
writings as inspired of God, would
undoubtedly paint such a one’s
character blameless and noble to the
last degree. The fact that such a
course has not been pursued in the
Bible is reasonable
evidence that it was not
fraudulently gotten up to deceive.
Having,
then, reason to expect
a revelation of God’s will and plan,
and having found that the Bible,
which claims to be that revelation,
was written by men whose motives we
see no reason to impugn, but which,
on the contrary, we see reason to
approve, let us examine the
character of the writings claimed as
inspired, to see whether their
teachings correspond with the
character we have reasonably
imputed to God, and whether they
bear internal evidence of their
truthfulness.
The
first five books of the New
Testament and several of the Old
Testament are narratives or
histories of facts known to the
writers and vouched for by their
characters. It is manifest to all
that it did not require a special
revelation simply to tell the truth
with reference to matters with which
they were intimately and fully
acquainted.
Yet,
since God desired to make a
revelation to men, the fact that
these histories of passing events
have a bearing on that revelation
would be a sufficient ground to make
the inference a reasonable one, that
God would supervise, and so arrange,
that the honest writer whom he
selected for the work should be
brought in contact with the needful
facts.
The
credibility of these historic
portions of the Bible rests almost
entirely upon the characters and
motives of their writers. Good men
will not utter falsehoods. A pure
fountain will not give forth bitter
waters. And the united testimony of
these writings silences any
suspicion that their authors would
say or do evil, that good might
follow.
It in
no way invalidates the truthfulness
of certain books of the Bible, such
as Kings, Chronicles, Judges, etc.,
when we say that they are simply
truthful and carefully kept
histories of prominent events and
persons of their times. When it is
remembered that the Hebrew
Scriptures contain history, as well
as the law and the prophecies, and
that their histories, genealogies,
etc., were the more explicit in
detailing circumstances because of
the expectancy that the promised
Messiah would come in a particular
line from Abraham, we see a reason
for the recording of certain facts
of history considered indelicate in
the light of this twentieth century.
For
instance, a clear record of the
origin of the nations of the
Moabites and of the Ammonites, and
of their relationship to Abraham and
the Israelites, was probably the
necessity in the historian’s mind
for a full history of their
nativity. Genesis 19:36-38
Likewise, a very detailed account of
Judah’s children is given, of whom
came David, the king, through whom
the genealogy of Mary, Jesus’
mother, as well as that of Joseph,
her husband (Luke 3:23,31,33,34;
Matthew 1:2-16), is traced back to
Abraham.
Doubtless the necessity of
thoroughly establishing the pedigree
was the more important, since of
this tribe (Genesis 49:10) was to
come the ruling King of Israel, as
well as the promised Messiah, and
hence the minutiae of detail not
given in other instances. Genesis 38
There
may be similar or different reasons
for other historic facts recorded in
the Bible, of which by and by we may
see the utility, which, were it not
a history, but simply a treatise on
morals, might without detriment be
omitted; though no one can
reasonably say that the Bible
anywhere countenances impurity.
It is
well, furthermore, to remember that
the same facts may be more or less
delicately stated in any language.
While the translators of the Bible
were, rightly, too conscientious to
omit any of the record, yet they
lived in a day less particular in
the choice of refined expressions
than ours.
The
same may be surmised of the early
Bible times and habits of
expression. Certainly the most
fastidious can find no objection on
this score to any expression of the
New Testament.
The Books of
Moses
and the Laws Therein Promulgated
The
first five books of the Bible are
known as the Five Books of Moses,
though they nowhere mention his name
as their author. That they were
written by Moses, or under his
supervision, is a reasonable
inference; the account of his death
and burial being properly added by
his secretary.
The
omission of the positive statement
that these books were written by
Moses is no proof against the
thought. Had another written them
to deceive and commit a fraud, he
would surely have claimed that they
were written by the great leader and
statesman of Israel, in order to
make good his imposition. See
Deuteronomy 31:9-27.
Of one
thing we are certain, Moses did lead
out of Egypt the Hebrew nation. He
did organize them as a nation under
the laws set forth in these books.
The Hebrew nation, by common
consent, for over three thousand
years, has claimed these books as a
gift to them from Moses, and has
held them so sacred that a jot or
tittle must not be altered—thus
giving assurance of the purity of
the text.
These
writings of Moses contain the only
credible history extant, of the
epoch which it traverses.
Chinese
history affects to begin at
creation, telling how God went out
on the water in a skiff, and, taking
in his hand a lump of earth, cast it
into the water. That lump of earth,
it claims, became this world, etc.
But the entire story is so devoid of
reason that the merest child of
intelligence would not be deceived
by it.
On the
contrary, the account given in
Genesis starts with the reasonable
assumption that a God, a Creator, an
intelligent First Cause, already
existed. It treats not of God’s
having a beginning, but of his work
and of its beginning and its
systematic orderly progress—
“In
the beginning God created the
heavens and the earth.”
Then
stepping over the origin of the
earth without detail or explanation,
the narrative of the six days
[epochs] of preparing it for man
proceeds. That account is
substantially corroborated by the
accumulating light of science for
four thousand years.
Hence
it is far more reasonable to accept
the claim that its author, Moses,
was divinely inspired, than to
assume that the intelligence of one
man was superior to the combined
intelligence and research of the
rest of the race in three thousand
years since, aided by modern
implements and millions of money.
Look next at the system of laws laid
down in these writings. They
certainly were without an equal,
either in their day or since, until
this twentieth century. The laws of
this century are based upon the
principles laid down in the Mosaic
Law, and framed in the main by men
who acknowledged the Mosaic Law as
of divine origin.
The
Decalogue is a brief synopsis of the
whole law. Those Ten Commandments
enjoin a code of worship and morals
that must strike every student as
remarkable.
If
never before known, and now found
among the ruins and relics of
Greece, or Rome, or Babylon (nations
which have risen and fallen again,
long since those laws were given),
they would be regarded as marvelous
if not supernatural. But familiarity
with them and their claims has
begotten measurable indifference, so
that their real greatness is
unnoticed except by the few.
True, those commandments do not
teach of Christ; but they were
given, not to Christians, but to
Hebrews; not to teach faith in a
ransom, but to convince men of their
sinful state, and need of a ransom.
The substance of those commandments
was grandly epitomized by the
illustrious founder of Christianity,
in the words:
The
government instituted by Moses
differed from all others, ancient
and modern, in that it claimed to be
that of the Creator himself, and the
people were held accountable to
him. Their laws and institutions,
civil and religious, claimed to
emanate from God, and, as we shall
presently see, were in perfect
harmony with what reason teaches us
to be God’s character.
The Tabernacle, in the center of the
camp, had in its “Most Holy”
apartment a manifestation of
Jehovah’s presence as their King,
whence by supernatural means they
received instruction for the proper
administration of their affairs as a
nation. An order of priests was
established, which had complete
charge of the Tabernacle, and
through them alone access and
communion with Jehovah was
permitted.
The
first thought of some in this
connection would perhaps be: “Ah!
there we have the object of their
organization: with them, as with
other nations, the priests ruled the
people, imposing upon their
credulity and exciting their fears
for their own honor and profit.”
But
hold, friend; let us not too hastily
assume anything. Where there is such
good opportunity for testing this
matter by the facts, it would not be
reasonable to jump to conclusions
without the facts. The unanswerable
evidences are contrary to such
suppositions.
The
rights and the privileges of the
priests were limited. They were
given no civil power whatever, and
wholly lacked opportunity for using
their office to impose upon the
rights or consciences of the
people. This arrangement was made
by Moses, a member of the priestly
line.
As
God’s representative in bringing
Israel out of Egyptian bondage, the
force of circumstances had
centralized the government in his
hand, and made the meek Moses an
autocrat in power and authority,
though from the meekness of his
disposition he was in fact the
overworked servant of the people,
whose very life was being exhausted
by the onerous cares of his
position.
At
this juncture a civil government was
established, which was virtually a
democracy. Let us not be
misunderstood: Regarded as
unbelievers would esteem it,
Israel’s government was a democracy,
but regarded in the light of its own
claims, it was a theocracy, i.e., a
divine government. The laws given
by God, through Moses, permitted of
no amendments: they must neither add
to nor take from their code of laws.
Thus seen, Israel’s government was
different from any other civil
government, either before or since.
“The
Lord said unto Moses, Gather
unto me seventy men of the
elders of Israel, whom thou
knowest to be elders of the
people and officers over them;
and bring them unto the
Tabernacle of the congregation,
that they may stand there with
thee.
“And
I will come down and talk with
thee there, and I will take of
the spirit which is upon thee
and will put it upon them, and
they shall bear the burden of
the people with thee, that thou
bear it not alone.”
Numbers 11:16,17
See also verses 24 to 30 for an
example of true and guileless
statesmanship and meekness.
Moses, rehearsing this matter, says:
“So
I took the chief of your tribes,
wise men, and known [of
influence], and made
them heads over you: captains
over thousands, and captains
over hundreds, and captains over
fifties, and captains over tens,
and officers among your tribes.”
Deuteronomy 1:15; Exodus
18:13-26
Thus it
appears that this distinguished
lawgiver, so far from seeking to
perpetuate or increase his own power
by placing the government of the
people under the control of his
direct relatives, of the priestly
tribe, to use their religious
authority to fetter the rights and
liberties of the people, on the
contrary introduced to the people a
form of government calculated to
cultivate the spirit of liberty.
The
histories of other nations and
rulers show no parallel to this. In
every case the ruler has sought his
own aggrandizement and greater
power. Even in instances where such
have aided in establishing
republics, it has appeared from
subsequent events that they did it
through policy, to obtain favor with
the people and to perpetuate their
own power.
Circumstanced as Moses was, any
ambitious man, governed by policy
and attempting to perpetuate a fraud
upon the people, would have worked
for greater centralization of power
in himself and his family.
Especially as this would have seemed
an easy task from the religious
authority being already in that
tribe, and from the claim of this
nation to be governed by God, from
the Tabernacle. Nor is it supposable
that a man capable of forming such
laws, and of ruling such a people,
would be so dull of comprehension as
not to see what the tendency of his
course would be.
So
completely was the government of the
people put into their own hands,
that though it was stipulated that
the weightier cases which those
governors could not decide were to
be brought unto Moses, yet they
themselves were the judges as to
what cases went before Moses:
“The
cause which is too hard for you,
bring it unto me, and I will
hear it.”
Deuteronomy 1:17
Thus
seen, Israel was a republic whose
officers acted under a divine
commission. To the confusion of
those who ignorantly claim that the
Bible sanctions an established
empire rule over the people, instead
of “a government of the people by
the people,” be it noted that this
republican form of civil government
continued for over four hundred
years.
It was
then changed for that of a kingdom
at the request of “The Elders,”
without the Lord’s approval, who
said to Samuel, then acting as a
sort of informal president,
“Hearken
unto the voice of the people in
all that they shall say unto
thee, for they have not rejected
thee, but they have rejected Me,
that I should not reign over
them.”
At
God’s instance, Samuel explained to
the people how their rights and
liberties would be disregarded, and
how they would become servants by
such a change. Yet they had become
infatuated with the popular idea,
illustrated all around them in other
nations. 1 Samuel 8:6-22
In
considering this account of their
desire for a king, who is not
impressed with the thought that
Moses could have firmly established
himself at the head of a great
empire without difficulty?
While
Israel as a whole constituted one
nation, yet the tribal division was
ever recognized after Jacob’s death.
Each family, or tribe, by common
consent, elected or recognized
certain members as its
representatives, or chiefs. This
custom was continued even through
their long slavery in Egypt.
These
were called chiefs or elders, and it
was to these that Moses delivered
the honor and power of civil
government; whereas, had he desired
to centralize power in himself and
his own family, these would have
been the last men to honor with
power and office.
The
instructions given those appointed
to civil rulership as from God are a
model of simplicity and purity.
Moses declares to the people, in the
hearing of these judges:
“I
charged your judges at that
time, saying, Hear the causes
between your brethren, and judge
righteously between every man
and his brother, and the
stranger [foreigner]
that is with him.
“Ye
shall not respect persons in
judgment; but ye shall hear the
small as well as the great; ye
shall not be afraid of the face
of man, for the judgment is
God’s; and the cause that is too
hard for you, bring it unto me,
and I will hear it.”
Deuteronomy 1:16,17
Such
hard cases were, after Moses’ death,
brought directly to the Lord through
the High Priest, the answer being
Yes or No, by the Urim and Thummim.
In view
of these facts, what shall we say of
the theory which suggests that these
books were written by knavish
priests to secure to themselves
influence and power over the people?
Would
such men for such a purpose forge
records destructive to the very aims
they sought to advance—records which
prove conclusively that the great
Chief of Israel, and one of their
own tribe, at the instance of God,
cut off the priesthood from civil
power by placing that power in the
hands of the people?
Does any one consider such a
conclusion reasonable?
Again,
it is worthy of note that the laws
of the most advanced civilization,
in this twentieth century, do not
more carefully provide that rich and
poor shall stand on a common level
in accountability before the civil
law. Absolutely no distinction was
made by Moses’ laws
As for
the protection of the people from
the dangers incident to some
becoming very poor and others
excessively wealthy and powerful, no
other national law has ever been
enacted which so carefully guarded
this point.
Moses’
law provided for a restitution every
fiftieth year—their Jubilee year.
This law, by preventing the absolute
alienation of property, thereby
prevented its accumulation in the
hands of a few. Leviticus
25:9,13-23,27-30
In
fact, they were taught to consider
themselves brethren, and to act
accordingly; to assist each other
without compensation, and to take no
usury of one another. See Exodus
22:25; Leviticus 25:36,37; Numbers
26:52-56.
All the
laws were made public, thus
preventing designing men from
successfully tampering with the
rights of the people.
The
laws were exposed in such a manner
that any who chose might copy them.
In order that the poorest and most
unlearned might not be ignorant of
them, it was made the duty of the
priests to read them to the people
at their septennial festivals.
Deuteronomy 31:10-13
Is it
reasonable to suppose that such laws
and arrangements were designed by
bad men, or by men scheming to
defraud the people of their
liberties and happiness? Such an
assumption would be unreasonable.
In its
regard for the rights and interests
of foreigners, and of enemies, the
Mosaic law was thirty-two centuries
ahead of its times—if indeed the
laws of the most civilized of today
equal it in fairness and
benevolence. We read:
“Ye
shall have one manner of law as
well for the stranger
[foreigner] as for one
of your own country; for I am
the Lord your God.”
Exodus 12:49; Leviticus 24:22
“And
if a stranger sojourn with thee
in your land, ye shall not vex
him;
“But
the stranger that dwelleth with
you shall be unto you as one
born among you, and thou shalt
love him as thyself; for ye were
strangers in the land of Egypt.”
Leviticus 19:33,34
“If
thou meet thine enemy’s
ox or his ass going astray, thou
shalt surely bring it back to
him again.
“If
thou see the ass of him that
hateth thee lying under his
burden, wouldst thou cease to
leave thy business and help him?
Thou shalt surely leave it, to
join with [assist]
him.”
Exodus 23:4,5, margin
Even
the dumb animals were not forgotten.
Cruelty to these as well as to human
beings was prohibited strictly. An
ox must not be muzzled while
threshing the grain, for the good
reason that any laborer is worthy of
his food.
Even
the ox and the ass must not plow
together, because so unequal in
strength and tread: it would be
cruelty. Their rest was also
provided for. Deuteronomy 25:4;
22:10; Exodus 23:12
The
priesthood may be claimed by some to
have been a selfish institution,
because the tribe of Levites was
supported by the annual tenth, or
tithe, of the individual produce of
their brethren of the other tribes.
This fact, stated thus, is an unfair
presentation too common to skeptics,
who, possibly ignorantly, thereby
misrepresent one of the most
remarkable evidences of God’s part
in the organization of that system,
and that it was not the work of a
selfish and scheming priesthood.
Indeed, it is not infrequently
misrepresented by a modern
priesthood, which urges a similar
system now, using that as a
precedent, without mentioning the
condition of things upon which it
was founded, or its method of
payment.
It was,
in fact, founded upon the strictest
equity. When Israel came into
possession of the land of Canaan,
the Levites certainly had as much
right to a share of the land as the
other tribes. Yet, by God’s express
command, they got none of it, except
certain cities or villages for
residence, scattered among the
various tribes, whom they were to
serve in religious things.
Nine
times is this prohibition given,
before the division of the land.
Instead of the land, some equivalent
should surely be provided them, and
the tithe was
therefore this reasonable and just
provision. Nor is this all.
The
tithe, though, as we have seen, a
just debt, was not enforced as a
tax, but was to be paid as a
voluntary contribution. And no
threat bound them to make those
contributions. All depended upon
their conscientiousness. The only
exhortations to the people on the
subject are as follows:
“Take
heed to thyself that thou
forsake not the Levite as long
as thou livest upon the earth.”
Deuteronomy 12:19
“And
the Levite that is within thy
gates, thou shalt not forsake
him; for he hath no part nor
inheritance with thee”
[in the land].
Deuteronomy 14:27
Is it, we ask, reasonable to suppose that this order of things would have
been thus arranged by selfish and
ambitious priests?—an arrangement to
disinherit themselves and to make
them dependent for support upon
their brethren? Does not reason
teach us to the contrary?
In
harmony with this, and equally
inexplicable on any other grounds
than those claimed—that God is the
author of those laws—is the fact
that no special provision was made
for honoring the priesthood. In
nothing would imposters be more
careful than to provide reverence
and respect for themselves, and
severest penalties and curses upon
those who misused them. But nothing
of the kind appears: no special
honor, or reverence, or immunity
from violence or insult, is
provided.
The
common law, which made no
distinction between classes, and was
no respecter of persons, was their
only protection. This is the more
remarkable because the treatment of
servants, and strangers, and the
aged, was the subject of special
legislation. For instance:
“Thou
shalt not vex nor oppress a
stranger, or widow, or
fatherless child; for if
they cry at all unto me
[to God] I will surely
hear their cry; and my wrath
shall wax hot, and I will kill
you with the sword, and your
wives shall be widows and your
children fatherless.”
Exodus 22:21-24; 23:9; Leviticus
19:33,34
“Thou
shalt not oppress an hired
servant that is poor and
needy, whether he be of thy
brethren, or of strangers that
are in thy land, within thy
gates. At his day thou shalt
give him his hire, neither shall
the sun go down upon it, for he
is poor, and setteth his heart
upon it; lest he cry against
thee unto the Lord and it be sin
unto thee.”
Leviticus 19:13; Deuteronomy
24:14,15; Exodus 21:26,27
“Thou
shalt rise up before the hoary
head and honor the face of the
old man.”
Leviticus 19:32. See also
Leviticus 19:14.
All
this, yet nothing special for
Priests, or Levites, or their
tithes.
The
sanitary arrangements of the law, so
needful to a poor and long-oppressed
people, together with the
arrangements and limitations
respecting clean and unclean animals
which might or might not be eaten,
are remarkable, and would, with
other features, be of interest if
space permitted their examination,
as showing that law to have been
abreast with, if not in advance of,
the latest conclusions of medical
science on the subject.
The law
of Moses had also a typical
character, which we must leave for
future consideration. But even our
hasty glance has furnished
overwhelming evidence that this law,
which constitutes the very framework
of the entire system of revealed
religion, which the remainder of the
Bible elaborates, is truly a
marvelous display of wisdom and
justice, especially when its date is
taken into consideration.
In the
light of reason, all must admit that
it bears no evidence of being the
work of wicked, designing men, but
that it corresponds exactly with
what nature teaches to be the
character of God. It gives evidence
of his Wisdom, Justice and Love. And
further, the evidently pious and
noble lawgiver, Moses, denies that
the laws were his own, and
attributes them to God. Exodus
24:12; Deuteronomy 9:9-11; Exodus
26:30; Leviticus 1:1
In
view of his general character, and
his commands to the people not to
bear false witness, and to avoid
hypocrisy and lying, is it
reasonable to suppose that such a
man bore false witness and palmed
off his own views and laws for those
of God?
It
should be remembered also that we
are examining the present copies of
the Bible, and that therefore the
integrity for which it is so marked
applies equally to the successors of
Moses. For though bad men were
among those successors, who did seek
their own and not the people’s good,
it is evident that they did not
tamper with the Sacred Writings,
which are pure to this day.
The Prophets
of the Bible
Glance
now at the general character of the
prophets of the Bible and their
testimonies. A rather remarkable
fact is that the prophets, with few
exceptions, were not of the priestly
class. In their day their
prophecies were generally repugnant
to the degenerating and time-serving
priesthood, as well as to the
idolatrously inclined people.
The
burden of their messages from God to
the people was generally reproof for
sin, coupled with warnings of coming
punishments, intertwined with which
we find occasional promises of
future blessings, after they should
be cleansed from sin and should
return to favor with the Lord.
Their
experiences, for the most part, were
far from enviable. They were
generally reviled, many of them
being imprisoned and put to violent
deaths. See 1 Kings 18:4,10,17,18;
19:10; Jeremiah 38:6; Hebrews
11:32-38.
In some
instances it was years after their
death before their true character as
God’s prophets was recognized. But
we speak thus of the prophetic
writers whose utterances claim to be
the direct inspiration of Jehovah.
It is
well in this connection that we
should remember that in the giving
of the law to Israel there was no
priestly intervention It was given
by God to the people by the hand of
Moses. Exodus 19:17-25; Deuteronomy
5:1-5 Furthermore, it was made the
duty of every man seeing a violation
of the law to reprove the sinner.
Leviticus 19:17
Thus
all had the authority to teach and
reprove. But since, as in our own
day, the majority were absorbed in
the cares of business, and became
indifferent and irreligious, the few
comparatively fulfilled this
requirement by reproving sin and
exhorting to godliness. These
preachers are termed “prophets” in
both the Old and New Testaments.
The
term prophet, as generally used,
signifies public expounder,
and the public teachers of idolatry
were also so called. For instance,
“he prophets of Baal,” etc. See
1
Corinthians 14:1-6; 2 Peter 2:1;
Matthew 7:15; 14:5; Nehemiah 6:7; 1
Kings 18:40; Titus 1:12.
Prophesying, in the ordinary sense
of teaching, afterward became
popular with a certain class, and
degenerated into Phariseeism—
teaching, instead of God’s
commandments, the traditions of the
ancients, thereby opposing the truth
and becoming false prophets, or
false teachers. Matthew 15:2-9
Out of
the large class called prophets,
Jehovah at various times made choice
of some whom he specially
commissioned to deliver messages,
relating sometimes to things then at
hand, at other times to future
events. It is to the writings of
this class, who spoke and wrote as
they were moved by the holy Spirit,
that we are now giving attention.
They might with propriety be
designated
Divinely Commissioned Prophets or
Seers.
When it
is remembered that these prophets
were mainly laymen, drawing no
support from the tithes of the
priestly tribe, and when, added to
this, is the fact that they were
frequently not only the reprovers of
kings and judges, but also of
priests (though they reproved not
the office, but the personal sins of
the men who filled it), it becomes
evident that we could not reasonably
decide that these prophets were
parties to any league of priests, or
others, to fabricate falsehood in
the name of God. Reason in the light
of facts contradicts such a
suspicion.
If,
then, we find no reason to impeach
the motives of the various writers
of the Bible, but find that the
spirit of its various parts is
righteousness and truth, let us next
proceed to inquire whether there
exists any link, or bond of union,
between the records of Moses, those
of the other prophets, and those of
the New Testament writers.
If we
shall find one common line of
thought interwoven throughout the
Law and the Prophets and the New
Testament writings, which cover a
period of fifteen hundred years,
this, taken in connection with the
character of the writers, will be a
good reason for admitting their
claim—that they are divinely
inspired — particularly if the theme
common to all of them is a grand and
noble one, comporting well with what
sanctified common sense teaches
regarding the character and
attributes of God.
This we
do find: One plan, spirit, aim and
purpose pervades the entire book.
Its opening pages record the
creation and fall of man. Its
closing pages tell of man’s recovery
from that fall. Its intervening
pages show the successive steps of
the plan of God for the
accomplishment of this purpose.
The
harmony, yet contrast, of the first
three and the last three chapters of
the Bible is striking.
—The one describes the first
creation, the other the renewed
or restored creation, with sin
and its penal-curse removed.
—The one shows Satan and evil
entering the world to deceive
and destroy, the other shows his
work undone, the destroyed ones
restored, evil extinguished and
Satan destroyed.
—The one shows the dominion lost
by Adam, the other shows it
restored and forever established
by Christ, and God’s will done
in earth as in heaven.
—The one shows sin the producing
cause of degradation, shame and
death, the other shows the
reward of righteousness to be
glory, honor and life.
Though
written by many pens, at various
times, under different
circumstances, the Bible is not
merely a collection of moral
precepts, wise maxims and words of
comfort.
It is
more. It is a reasonable,
philosophical and harmonious
statement of the causes of present
evil in the world, its only remedy
and the final results as seen by
divine wisdom, which saw the end of
the plan from before its beginning,
marking as well the pathway of God’s
people, and upholding and
strengthening them with exceeding
great and precious promises to be
realized in due time.
The
teaching of Genesis, that man was
tried in a state of original
perfection in one representative,
that he failed, and that the present
imperfection, sickness and death are
the results, but that God has not
forsaken him, and will ultimately
recover him through a redeemer, born
of a woman (Genesis 3:15), is kept
up and elaborated all the way
through.
The
necessity of the death of a redeemer
as a sacrifice for sins, and of his
righteousness as a covering for our
sin, is pointed out
—in
the clothing of skins for Adam
and Eve;
—in
the acceptance of Abel’s
offerings;
—in
Isaac on the altar; in the death
of the various sacrifices by
which the patriarchs had access
to God, and of those instituted
under the law and perpetuated
throughout the Jewish age.
The
prophets, though credited with
understanding but slightly the
significance of some of their
utterances (1 Peter 1:12), mention
the laying of the sins upon a person
instead of a dumb animal, and in
prophetic vision they see him who is
to redeem and to deliver the race
led “as
a lamb to the slaughter,”
that “the
chastisement of our peace was upon
him,” and that
“by
his stripes we are healed.”
They
pictured him as
“despised
and rejected of men, a man of
sorrows and acquainted with grief,”
and declared that
“The
Lord hath laid on him the iniquity
of us all.” Isaiah
53:3-6
They
told where this deliverer would be
born (Micah 5:2), and when he should
die, assuring us that it would be
“not
for himself.” Daniel
9:26
They
mention various peculiarities
concerning him
—that he would be “righteous,”
and free from “deceit,” “violence,” or any just cause of
death (Isaiah 53:8,9,11);
—that he would be betrayed for
thirty pieces of silver
(Zechariah 11:12);
—that he would be numbered among
transgressors in his death
(Isaiah 53:12);
—that not a bone of him should
be broken (Psalms 34:20; John
19:36);
—and that though he should die
and be buried, his flesh would
not corrupt, neither would he
remain in the grave. Psalms
16:10; Acts 2:31
The New
Testament writers clearly and
forcibly, yet simply, record the
fulfillment of all these predictions
in Jesus of Nazareth, and by logical
reasonings show that such a
ransom price as he gave was
needful, as already predicted in the
Law and the Prophets, before the
sins of the world could be blotted
out. Isaiah 1:18
They
trace the entire plan in a most
logical and forcible manner,
appealing neither to the prejudices
nor to the passions of their
hearers, but to their enlightened
reason alone, furnishing some of the
most remarkably close and cogent
reasoning to be found anywhere on
any subject. See Romans 5:17-19, and
onward to the 12th chapter.
Moses,
in the Law, pointed not alone to a
sacrifice, but also to a blotting
out of sins and a blessing of the
people under this great deliverer,
whose power and authority he
declares shall vastly exceed his
own, though it should be
“like
unto” it.
Deuteronomy 18:15,19 The promised
deliverer is to bless not only
Israel, but through Israel
“all
the families of the earth.”
Genesis 12:3; 18:18; 22:18; 26:4
And
notwithstanding the prejudices of
the Jewish people to the contrary,
the prophets continue the same
strain, declaring that Messiah shall
be also “for
a light to lighten the Gentiles”
(Isaiah 49:6; Luke 2:32); that the
Gentiles should come to him
“from
the ends of the earth”
(Jeremiah 16:19); that his name
“shall
be great among the Gentiles”
(Malachi 1:11); and that
“the
glory of the Lord shall be revealed
and all flesh shall see it together.”
Isaiah 40:5. See also
Isaiah 42:1-7.
New
Testament Writers Specially
Enlightened
The New
Testament writers claim a divine
anointing which enabled them to
realize the fulfillment of the
prophecies concerning the sacrifice
of Christ. They, though prejudiced
as Jews to think of every blessing
as limited to their own people (Acts
11:1-18), were enabled to see that
while their nation would be blessed,
all the families of the earth should
be blessed also, with and through
them.
They
saw also that, before the blessing
of either Israel or the world, a
selection would be made of a “little
flock” from both Jews and Gentiles,
who, being tried, would be found
worthy to be made joint-heirs of the
glory and honor of the Great
Deliverer, and sharers with him of
the honor of blessing Israel and all
the nations. Romans 8:17
These
writers point out the harmony of
this view with what is written in
the Law and the Prophets; and the
grandeur and breadth of the plan
they present more than meets the
most exalted conception of what it
purports to be–
“Good
tidings of great joy, which
shall be unto all people.”
The
thought of Messiah as a ruler of not
only Israel, but also of the world,
suggested in the books of Moses, is
the theme of all the prophets. The
thought of the kingdom was uppermost
also in the teaching of the
apostles; and Jesus taught that we
should pray, “Thy Kingdom
come,” and promised
those a share in it who would first
suffer for the truth, and thus prove
themselves worthy.
This
hope of the coming glorious kingdom
gave all the faithful ones courage
to endure persecution and to suffer
reproach, deprivation and loss, even
unto death. And in the grand
allegorical prophecy which closes
the New Testament, the worthy
“Lamb
that was slain”
(Revelation 5:12), the worthy
“overcomers” whom he will make kings and priests
in his kingdom, and the trials and
obstacles which they must overcome
to be worthy to share that kingdom,
are all faithfully portrayed.
Then
are introduced symbolic
representations of the blessings to
accrue to the world under that
Millennial reign, when Satan shall
be bound and Adamic death and sorrow
wiped out, and when all the nations
of earth shall walk in the light of
the heavenly kingdom—the new
Jerusalem.
The
Bible, from first to last, holds out
a doctrine found nowhere else, and
in opposition to the theories of all
the heathen religions—that a future
life for the dead will come through
a RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD.
All the
inspired writers expressed their
confidence in a redeemer, and one
declares that
“in the
morning,” when God
shall call them from the tomb, and
they shall come forth, the wicked
shall no longer hold the rulership
of earth; for
“The
upright shall have dominion over
them, in the morning.”
Psalms 49:14
The
resurrection of the dead is taught
by the prophets. The writers of the
New Testament base all their hopes
of future life and blessing upon it.
Paul expresses it thus:
“If
there be no resurrection of the
dead, then is Christ not risen;
“And
if Christ be not risen, then is
our preaching vain and your
faith is also vain;
“...Then
they which are fallen asleep in
Christ are perished.
“But
now is Christ risen from the
dead, and become the firstfruits
of them that slept;
“...For
as in Adam all die, even so in
Christ shall all be made alive.”
1 Corinthians 15:13-22
Like a
watch, whose many wheels might at
first seem superfluous, but whose
slowest moving wheels are essential,
so the Bible, composed of many
parts, and prepared by many pens, is
one complete and harmonious whole.
Not a single part is superfluous,
and though some parts take a more
active and prominent place than
others, all are useful and
necessary.
It is
becoming popular among the so-called
“advanced thinkers” and “great
theologians” of the present day to
treat lightly, or to ignore if they
do not deny, many of the “miracles”
of the Old Testament, calling them
“old wives’ fables.”
Of
these are the accounts of Jonah and
the great fish, Noah and the ark,
Eve and the serpent, the standing
still of the sun at the command of
Joshua, and Balaam’s speaking ass.
Seemingly these wise men overlook
the fact that the Bible is so
interwoven and united in its various
parts that to tear from it these
miracles, or to discredit them, is
to destroy or discredit the whole.
For if
the original accounts are false,
those who repeated them were either
falsifiers or dupes, and in either
case it would be impossible for us
to accept their testimony as
divinely inspired. To eliminate from
the Bible the miracles mentioned
would invalidate the testimony of
its principal writers, besides that
of our Lord Jesus.
—The story of the fall is
attested by Paul (Romans 5:17);
—also Eve’s beguilement by the
serpent (2 Corinthians 11:3; 1
Timothy 2:14). See also our
Lord’s reference to the latter
in Revelation 12:9 and 20:2.
—The standing of the sun at the
overthrow of the Amorites, as an
evidence of the Lord’s power,
was evidently typical of the
power to be displayed in the
future, in “ the day of the
Lord,” at the hand of him whom
Joshua typified. This is
attested by three prophets. Isaiah 28:21; Habakkuk
2:1-3,13,14 and 3:2-11;
Zechariah 14:1,6,7
—The account of the speaking ass
is confirmed by Jude (verse 11),
and by Peter. 2 Peter 2:16
—And the great teacher, Jesus,
confirms the narratives of Jonah
and the great fish and of Noah
and the flood. Matthew 12:40;
24:38,39; Luke 17:26. See also 1
Peter 3:20.
Really
these are no greater miracles than
those performed by Jesus and the
apostles, such as the turning of
water into wine, the healing of
diseases, etc.; and as a miracle,
the awakening of the dead is most
wonderful of all.
These
miracles, not common to our
experience, find parallels about us
every day, which, being more common,
are passed by unnoticed. The
reproduction of living organisms,
either animal or vegetable, is
beyond our comprehension,
as well as beyond our power—hence
miraculous. We can see the exercise
of life principle, but can neither
understand nor produce it.
We
plant two seeds side by side; the
conditions, air, water, and soil,
are alike; they grow,
we cannot tell how,
nor can the wisest philosopher
explain this miracle. These seeds
develop organisms of opposite
tendencies; one creeps, the other
stands erect; form, flower,
coloring, everything differs, though
the conditions were the same.
Such
miracles grow common to us, and we
cease to remember them as such as we
leave the wonderment of childhood.
Yet they manifest a power as much
beyond our own, and beyond our
limited intelligence, as the few
miracles recorded in the Bible for
special purposes, and as intended
illustrations of omnipotence, and of
the ability of the great Creator to
overcome every obstacle and to
accomplish all his will, even to our
promised resurrection from the dead,
the extermination of evil, and the
ultimate reign of everlasting
righteousness.
Here we rest the case. Every step
has been tested by reason.
We have
found that there is a God, a
supreme, intelligent Creator, in
whom wisdom, justice, love and power
exist in perfect harmony.
We have
found it reasonable to expect a
revelation of his plans to his
creatures capable of appreciating
and having an interest in them.
We have
found the Bible, claiming to be that
revelation, worthy of consideration.
We have
examined its writers, and their
possible objects, in the light of
what they taught; we have been
astonished; and our reason has told
us that such wisdom, combined with
such purity of motive, was not the
cunning device of crafty men for
selfish ends.
Reason
has urged that it is far more
probable that such righteous and
benevolent sentiments and laws must
be of God and not of men, and has
insisted that they could not be the
work of knavish priests.
We have
seen the harmony of testimony
concerning Jesus, his
ransom-sacrifice, and the
resurrection and blessing of all as
the outcome, in his glorious kingdom
to come.
Reason
has told us that a scheme so grand
and comprehensive, beyond all we
could otherwise have reason to
expect, yet built upon such
reasonable deductions, must be the
plan of God for which we seek. It
cannot be the mere device of men,
for even when revealed, it is almost
too grand to be believed by men.
When
Columbus discovered the Orinoco
river, some one said he had found an
island. He replied: “No such river
as that flows from an island. That
mighty torrent must drain the waters
of a continent.“So the depth and
power and wisdom and scope of the
Bible’s testimony convince us that
not man, but the Almighty God, is
the author of its plans and
revelations.
We have
taken but a hasty glance at the
surface claims of the Scriptures to
be of divine origin, and have found
them reasonable. Succeeding chapters
will unfold the various parts of the
plan of God, and will, we trust,
give ample evidence to every candid
mind that the Bible is a divinely
inspired revelation. That the
length and breadth and height and
depth of the plan it unfolds
gloriously reflect the divine
character, hitherto but dimly
comprehended, but now more clearly
seen in the light of the dawning
Millennial Day.
Truth Most Precious
Great truths are dearly
bought. The common
truth,
Such as men give and
take from day to day,
Comes in the common walk
of easy life,
Blown by the careless
wind across our way.
Great truths are dearly
won; not found by
chance,
Nor wafted on the breath
of summer dream;
But grasped in the great
struggle of the soul,
Hard buffeting with
adverse wind and stream.
Sometimes, ’mid
conflict, turmoil, fear
and grief,
When the strong hand of
God, put forth in might,
Ploughs up the subsoil
of the stagnant heart,
It brings some buried
truth-seeds to the
light.
Not in the general mart,
’mid corn and wine;
Not in the merchandise
of gold and gems;
Not in the world’s gay
hall of midnight mirth,
Nor ’mid the blaze of
regal diadems;
Not in the general clash
of human creeds,
Nor in the merchandise
’twixt church and world,
Is truth’s fair treasure
found, ’mongst tares and
weeds;
Nor her fair banner in
their midst unfurled.
Truth springs like
harvest from the
well-ploughed fields,
Rewarding patient toil,
and faith and zeal.
To those thus seeking
her, she ever yields
Her richest treasures
for their lasting weal. |
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