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CHAPTER I
THE HISTORY OF THE HIGHER
CRITICISM
BY CANON DYSON HAGUE, M. A.,
RECTOR OF THE MEMORIAL CHURCH, LONDON, ONTARIO.
LECTURER IN LITURGICS AND ECCLESIOLOGY, WYCLIFFE COLLEGE, TORONTO, CANADA.
EXAMINING CHAPLAIN TO THE BISHOP OF HURON.
What is the meaning of the Higher
Criticism? Why is it called higher? Higher than what?
At the outset it must be
explained that the word “Higher” is an academic term, used in this connection in
a purely special or technical sense. It is not used in the popular sense of the
word at all, and may convey a wrong impression to the ordinary man. Nor is it
meant to convey the idea of superiority. It is simply a term of contrast. It is
used in contrast to the phrase, “Lower Criticism.”
One of the most important branches of theology is called the science of Biblical
criticism, which has for its object the study of the history and contents, and
origins and purposes, of the various books of the Bible. In the early stages of
the science Biblical criticism was devoted to two great branches, the Lower, and
the Higher. The Lower Criticism was employed to designate the study of the text
of the Scripture, and included the investigation of the manuscripts, and the
different readings in the various versions and codices and manuscripts in order
that we may be sure we have the original words as they were written by the
Divinely inspired writers.
(See Briggs, Hex., page 1). The term generally used now-a-days is Textual
Criticism. If the phrase were used in the twentieth century sense, Beza,
Erasmus, Bengel, Griesbach, Lachmann, Tregelles, Tischendorff, Scrivener,
Westcott, and Hort would be called Lower Critics. But the term is not now-a-days
used as a rule. The Higher Criticism, on the contrary, was employed to designate
the study of the historic origins, the dates, and authorship of the various
books of the Bible, and that great branch of study which in the technical
language of modern theology is known as Introduction. It is a very valuable
branch of Biblical science, and is of the highest importance as an auxiliary in
the interpretation of the Word of God. By its researches floods of light may be
thrown on the Scriptures.
The term Higher Criticism, then, means nothing more than the study of the
literary structure of the various books of the Bible, and more especially of the
Old Testament. Now this in itself is most laudable. It is indispensable. It is
just such work as every minister or Sunday School teacher does when he takes up
his Peloubet’s Notes, or his Stalker’s St. Paul, or Geikie’s Hours with the
Bible, to find out all he can with regard to the portion of the Bible he is
studying; the author, the date, the circumstances, and purpose of its writing.
WHY IS HIGHER CRITICISM IDENTIFIED WITH UNBELIEF?
How is it, then, that the Higher Criticism has become identified in the popular
mind with attacks upon the Bible and the supernatural character of the Holy
Scriptures?
The reason is this. No study perhaps requires so devout a spirit and
so exalted a faith in the supernatural as the pursuit of the Higher Criticism.
It demands at once the ability of the scholar, and the simplicity of the
believing child of God. For without faith no one can explain the Holy
Scriptures, and without scholarship no one can investigate historic origins.
There is a Higher Criticism that is at once reverent in tone and scholarly in
work. Hengstenberg, the German, and Horne, the Englishman, may be taken as
examples. Perhaps the greatest work in English on the Higher Criticism is
Horne’s Introduction to the Critical Study and Knowledge of the Holy Scripture.
It is a work that is simply massive in its scholarship, and invaluable in its
vast reach of information for the study of the Holy Scriptures. But Horne’s
Introduction is too large a work. It is too cumbrous for use in this hurrying
age. (Carter’s edition in two volumes contains 1,149 pages, and in ordinary book
form would contain over 4,000 pages, i.e., about ten volumes of 400 pages each).
Latterly, however, it has been edited by Dr. Samuel Davidson, who practically
adopted the views of Hupfield and Halle and interpolated not a few of the modern
German theories. But Horne’s work from first to last is the work of a Christian
believer; constructive, not destructive; fortifying faith in the Bible, not
rationalistic. But the work of the Higher Critic has not always been pursued in
a reverent spirit nor in the spirit of scientific and Christian scholarship.
SUBJECTIVE CONCLUSIONS
In the first place, the critics who were the leaders, the men who have given
name and force to the whole movement, have been men who have based their
theories largely upon their own subjective conclusions. They have based their
conclusions largely upon the very dubious basis of the author’s style and
supposed literary qualifications. Everybody knows that style is a very unsafe
basis for the determination of a literary product. The greater the writer the
more versatile his power of expression; and anybody can understand that the
Bible is the last book in the world to be studied as a mere classic by mere
human scholarship without any regard to the spirit of sympathy and reverence on
the part of the student. The Bible, as has been said, has no revelation to make
to unbiblical minds. It does not even follow that because a man is a
philological expert he is able to understand the integrity or credibility of a
passage of Holy Scripture any more than the beauty and spirit of it.
The
qualification for the perception of Biblical truth is neither philosophic nor
philological knowledge, but spiritual insight. The primary qualification of the
musician is that he be musical; of the artist, that he have the spirit of art.
So the merely technical and mechanical and scientific mind is disqualified for
the recognition of the spiritual and infinite. Any thoughtful man must honestly
admit that the Bible is to be treated as unique in literature, and, therefore,
that the ordinary rules of critical interpretation must fail to interpret it
aright.
GERMAN FANCIES
In the second place, some of the most powerful exponents of the modern Higher
Critical theories have been Germans, and it is notorious to what length the
German fancy can go in the direction of the subjective and of the conjectural.
For hypothesis-weaving and speculation, the German theological professor is
unsurpassed. One of the foremost thinkers used to lay it down as a fundamental
truth in philosophical and scientific enquiries that no regard whatever should
be paid to the conjectures or hypotheses of thinkers, and quoted as an axiom the
great Newton himself and his famous words, “Non fingo hypotheses”: I do not
frame hypotheses. It is notorious that some of the most learned German thinkers
are men who lack in a singular degree the faculty of common sense and knowledge
of human nature. Like many physical scientists, they are so preoccupied with a
theory that their conclusions seem to the average mind curiously warped. In
fact, a learned man in a letter to Descartes once made an observation which,
with slight verbal alteration, might be applied to some of the German critics:
“When men sitting in their closet and consulting only their books attempt
disquisitions into the Bible, they may indeed tell how they would have made the
Book if God had given them that commission. That is, they may describe chimeras
which correspond to the fatuity of their own minds, but without an understanding
truly Divine they can never form such an idea to themselves as the Deity had in
creating it.” “If,” says Matthew Arnold, “you shut a number of men up to make
study and learning the business of their lives, how many of them, from want of
some discipline or other, seem to lose all balance of judgment, all common
sense.”
The learned professor of Assyriology at Oxford said that the
investigation of the literary source of history has been a peculiarly German
pastime. It deals with the writers and readers of the ancient Orient as if they
were modern German professors, and the attempt to transform the ancient
Israelites into somewhat inferior German compilers, proves a strange want of
familiarity with Oriental modes of thought. (Sayce, “Early History of the
Hebrews,” pages 108-112).
ANTI-SUPERNATURALISTS
In the third place, the dominant men of the movement were men with a strong bias
against the supernatural. This is not an ex-parte statement at all. It is simply
a matter of fact, as we shall presently show. Some of the men who have been most
distinguished as the leaders of the Higher Critical movement in Germany and
Holland have been men who have no faith in the God of the Bible, and no faith in
either the necessity or the possibility of a personal supernatural revelation.
The men who have been the voices of the movement, of whom the great majority,
less widely known and less influential, have been mere echoes; the men who
manufactured the articles the others distributed, have been notoriously opposed
to the miraculous.
We must not be misunderstood. We distinctly repudiate the
idea that all the Higher Critics were or are anti-supernaturalists. Not so. The
British-American School embraces within its ranks many earnest believers. What
we do say, as we will presently show, is that the dominant minds which have led
and swayed the movement, who made the theories that the others circulated, were
strongly unbelieving.
Then the higher critical movement has not followed its true and original
purposes in investigating the Scriptures for the purposes of confirming faith
and of helping believers to understand the beauties, and appreciate the
circumstances of the origin of the various books, and so understand more
completely the Bible?
No. It has not; unquestionably it has not.
It has been deflected from that, largely owing to the character of the men whose
ability and forcefulness have given predominance to their views. It has become
identified with a system of criticism which is based on hypotheses and
suppositions which have for their object the repudiation of the traditional
theory, and has investigated the origins and forms and styles and contents,
apparently not to confirm the authenticity and credibility and reliability of
the Scriptures, but to discredit in most cases their genuineness, to discover
discrepancies, and throw doubt upon their authority.
THE ORIGIN OF THE MOVEMENT
Who, then, were the men whose views have molded the views of the leading
teachers and writers of the Higher Critical school of today?
We will answer this as briefly as
possible.
It is not easy to say who is the first
so-called Higher Critic, or when the movement began. But it is not modern by any
means. Broadly speaking, it has passed through three great stages:
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The French-Dutch
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The German
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The British-American
In its origin it was Franco-Dutch, and
speculative, if not skeptical. The views which are now accepted as axiomatic by
the Continental and British-American schools of Higher Criticism seem to have
been first hinted at by Carlstadt in 1521 in his work on the Canon of Scripture,
and by Andreas Masius, a Belgian scholar, who published a commentary on Joshua
in 1574, and a Roman Catholic priest, called Peyrere or Pererius, in his
Systematic Theology, 1660. (LIV. Cap. i.)
But it may really be said to have
originated with Spinoza, the rationalist Dutch philosopher. In his Tractatus
Theologico-Politicus (Cap. vii-viii), 1670, Spinoza came out boldly and impugned
the traditional date and Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch and ascribed the
origin of the Pentateuch to Ezra or to some other late compiler.
Spinoza was
really the fountain-head of the movement, and his line was taken in England by
the British philosopher Hobbes. He went deeper than Spinoza, as an outspoken
antagonist of the necessity and possibility of a personal revelation, and also
denied the Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch. A few years later a French
priest, called Richard Simon of Dieppe, pointed out the supposed varieties of
style as indications of various authors in his Historical Criticism of the Old
Testament, “an epoch-making work.” Then another Dutchman, named Clericus (or Le
Clerk), in 1685, advocated still more radical views, suggesting an Exilian and
priestly authorship for the Pentateuch, and that the Pentateuch was composed by
the priest sent from Babylon (2 Kings, 17),
about 678, B.C., and also a kind of later editor or redactor theory. Clericus is
said to have been the first critic who set forth the theory that Christ and his
Apostles did not come into the world to teach the Jews criticism, and that it is
only to be expected that their language would be in accordance with the views of
the day.
In 1753 a Frenchman named Astruc, a medical man, and reputedly a free-thinker of
profligate life, propounded for the first time the Jehovistic and Elohistic
divisive hypothesis, and opened a new era. (Briggs’ Higher Criticism of the
Pentateuch, page 46). Astruc said that the use of the two names, Jehovah and
Elohim, shewed the book was composed of different documents. (The idea of the
Holy Ghost employing two words, or one here and another there, or both together
as He wills, never seems to enter the thought of the Higher Critic!) His work
was called “Conjectures Regarding the Original Memoirs in the Book of Genesis,”
and was published in Brussels.
Astruc may be called the father of the
documentary theories. He asserted there are traces of no less than ten or twelve
different memoirs in the book of Genesis. He denied its Divine authority, and
considered the book to be disfigured by useless repetitions, disorder, and
contradiction. (Hirschfelder, page 66). For fifty years Astruc’s theory was
unnoticed. The rationalism of Germany was as yet undeveloped, so that the body
was not yet prepared to receive the germ, or the soil the weed.
THE GERMAN CRITICS
The next stage was largely German. Eichhorn is the greatest name in this period,
the eminent Oriental professor at Gottingen who published his work on the Old
Testament introduction in 1780. He put into different shape the documentary
hypothesis of the Frenchman, and did his work so ably that his views were
generally adopted by the most distinguished scholars. Eichhorn’s formative
influence has been incalculably great. Few scholars refused to do honor to the
new sun. It is through him that the name Higher Criticism has become identified
with the movement He was followed by Vater and later by Hartmann with their
fragment theory which practically undermined the Mosaic authorship, made the
Pentateuch a heap of fragments, carelessly joined by one editor, and paved the
way for the most radical of all divisive hypotheses.
In 1806 De Wette, Professor of Philosophy and Theology at Heidelberg, published
a work which ran through six editions in four decades. His contribution to the
introduction of the Old Testament instilled the same general principles as
Eichhorn, and in the supplemental hypotheses assumed that Deuteronomy was
composed in the age of Josiah (2
Kings22:8). Not long after, Vatke and Leopold George (both Hegelians)
unreservedly declared the post-Mosaic and post-prophetic origin of the first
four books of the Bible. Then came Bleek, who advocated the idea of the
Grundschift or original document and the redactor theory; and then Ewald, the
father of the Crystallization theory; and then Hupfield (1853), who held that
the original document was an independent compilation; and Graf, who wrote a book
on the historical books of the Old Testament in 1866 and advocated the theory
that the Jehovistic and Elohistic documents were written hundreds of years after
Moses’ time. Graf was a pupil of Reuss, the redactor of the Ezra hypothesis of
Spinoza.
Then came a most influential writer, Professor Kuenen of Leyden in
Holland, whose work on the Hexateuch was edited by Colenso in 1865, and his
“Religion of Israel and Prophecy in Israel,” published in England in 1874-1877.
Kuenen was one of the most advanced exponents of the rationalistic school. Last,
but not least, of the continental Higher Critics is Julius Wellhausen, who at
one time was a theological professor in Germany, who published in 1878 the first
volume of his history of Israel, and won by his scholarship the attention if not
the allegiance of a number of leading theologians. (See Higher Criticism of the
Pentateuch, Green, pages 59-88).
It will be observed that nearly all these
authors were Germans, and most of them professors of philosophy or theology.
THE BRITISH-AMERICAN CRITICS
The third stage of the movement is the British-American. The best known names
are those of Dr. Samuel Davidson, whose “Introduction to the Old Testament,”
published in 1862, was largely based on the fallacies of the German
rationalists. The supplementary hypothesis passed over into England through him
and with strange incongruity, he borrowed frequently from Baur. Dr. Robertson
Smith, the Scotchman, recast the German theories in an English form in his works
on the Pentateuch, the Prophets of Israel, and the Old Testament in the Jewish
Church, first published in 1881, and followed the German school, according to
Briggs, with great boldness and thoroughness. A man of deep piety and high
spirituality, he combined with a sincere regard for the Word of God a critical
radicalism that was strangely inconsistent, as did also his namesake, George
Adam Smith, the most influential of the present-day leaders, a man of great
insight and scriptural acumen, who in his works on Isaiah, and the twelve
prophets, adopted some of the most radical and least demonstrable of the German
theories, and in his later work, “Modern Criticism and the Teaching of the Old
Testament,” has gone still farther in the rationalistic direction.
Another well-known Higher Critic is Dr. S. R. Driver, the Regius professor of
Hebrew at Oxford, who, in his “Introduction to the Literature of the Old
Testament,” published ten years later, and his work on the Book of Genesis, has
elaborated with remarkable skill and great detail of analysis the theories and
views of the continental school. Driver’s work is able, very able, but it lacks
originality and English independence. The hand is the hand of Driver, but the
voice is the voice of Kuenen or Wellhausen.
The third well-known name is that of Dr. C. A. Briggs, for some time Professor
of Biblical Theology in the Union Theological Seminary of New York. An equally
earnest advocate of the German theories, he published in 1883 his “Biblical
Study”; in 1886, his “Messianic Prophecy,” and a little later his “Higher
Criticism of the Hexateuch.” Briggs studied the Pentateuch, as he confesses,
under the guidance chiefly of Ewald. (Hexateuch, page 63).
Of course, this list is a very partial one, but it gives most of the names that
have become famous in connection with the movement, and the reader who desires
more will find a complete summary of the literature of the Higher Criticism in
Professor Bissell’s work on the Pentateuch (Scribner’s, 1892).
Briggs, in his “Higher Criticism of the Hexateuch” (Scribner’s, 1897), gives an
historical summary also.
We must now investigate another question, and that is
the religious views of the men most influential in this movement. In making the
statement that we are about to make, we desire to deprecate entirely the idea of
there
being anything uncharitable, unfair, or unkind, in stating what is simply a
matter of fact.
THE VIEWS OF THE CONTINENTAL CRITICS
Regarding the views of the Continental Critics, three things can be confidently
asserted of nearly all, if not all, of the real leaders.
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They were men who denied the validity
of miracle, and the validity of any miraculous narrative. What Christians
consider to be miraculous they considered legendary or mythical; “legendary
exaggeration of events that are entirely explicable from natural causes.”
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They were men who denied the reality of prophecy and the validity of any
prophetical statement. What Christians have been accustomed to consider
prophetical, they called dexterous conjectures, coincidences, fiction, or
imposture.
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They were men who denied the reality of
revelation, in the sense in which it has ever been held by the universal
Christian Church. They were avowed unbelievers of the supernatural. Their
theories were excogitated on pure grounds of human reasoning. Their hypotheses
were constructed on the assumption of the falsity of Scripture. As to the
inspiration of the Bible, as to the Holy Scriptures from Genesis to Revelation
being the Word of God, they had no such belief. We may take them one by one.
Spinoza repudiated absolutely a supernatural revelation. And Spinoza was one
of their greatest. Eichhorn
discarded the miraculous, and considered that the so-called supernatural
element was an Oriental exaggeration; and Eichhorn has been called the father
of Higher Criticism, and was the first man to use the term. De Wette’s views
as to inspiration were entirely infidel. Vatke and Leopold George were
Hegelian rationalists, and regarded the first four books of the Old Testament
as entirely mythical. Kuenen, says Professor Sanday, wrote in the interests of
an almost avowed Naturalism. That is, he was a free-thinker, an agnostic; a
man who did not believe in the Revelation of the one true and living God.
(Brampton Lectures, 1893, page 117). He wrote from an avowedly naturalistic
standpoint, says Driver (page 205). According to Wellhausen the religion of
Israel was a naturalistic evolution from heathendom, an emanation from an
imperfectly monotheistic kind of semi-pagan idolatry. It was simply a human
religion.
THE LEADERS WERE RATIONALISTS
In one word, the formative forces of the Higher Critical movement were
rationalistic forces, and the men who were its chief authors and expositors, who
“on account of purely philological criticism have acquired an appalling
authority,” were men who had discarded belief in God and Jesus Christ Whom He
had sent. The Bible, in their view, was a mere human product. It was a stage in
the literary evolution of a religious people. If it was not the resultant of a
fortuitous concourse of Oriental myths and legendary accretions, and its Jahveh
or Jahweh, the excogitation of a Sinaitic clan, it certainly was not given by
the inspiration of God, and is not the Word of the living God. “Holy men of God
spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost,” said Peter. “God, who at sundry
times and in diverse manners spake by the prophets,” said Paul. Not so, said
Kuenen, the prophets were not moved to speak by God. Their utterances were all
their own. (Sanday, page 117).
These then were their views and these were the views that have so dominated
modern Christianity and permeated modern ministerial thought in the two great
languages of the modern world. We cannot say that they were men whose
rationalism was the result of their conclusions in the study of the Bible. Nor
can we say their conclusions with regard to the Bible were wholly the result of
their rationalism. But we can say, on the one hand, that inasmuch as they
refused to recognize the Bible as a direct revelation from God, they were free
to form hypotheses ad libitum. And, on the other hand, as they denied the
supernatural, the animus that animated them in the construction of the
hypotheses was the desire to construct a theory that would explain away the
supernatural. Unbelief was the antecedent, not the consequent, of their
criticism.
Now there is nothing unkind in this. There is nothing that is
uncharitable, or unfair. It is simply a statement of fact which modern
authorities most freely admit.
THE SCHOOL OF COMPROMISE
When we come to the English-writing Higher Critics, we approach a much more
difficult subject. The British-American Higher Critics represent a school of
compromise. On the one hand they practically accept the premises of the
Continental school with regard to the antiquity, authorship, authenticity, and
origins of the Old Testament books. On the other hand, they refuse to go with
the German rationalists in altogether denying their inspiration. They still
claim to accept the Scriptures as containing a Revelation from God. But may they
not hold their own peculiar views with regard to the origin and date and
literary structure of the Bible without endangering either their own faith or
the faith of Christians? This is the very heart of the question, and, in order
that the reader may see the seriousness of the adoption of the conclusions of
the critics, as brief a resume as possible of the matter will be given.
THE POINT IN A NUTSHELL
According to the faith of the universal church, the Pentateuch, that is, the
first five books of the Bible, is one consistent, coherent, authentic and
genuine composition, inspired by God, and, according to the testimony of the
Jews, the statements of the books themselves, the reiterated corroborations of
the rest of the Old Testament, and the explicit statement of the Lord Jesus (Luke
24:44; John 5:46-47) was
written by Moses (with the exception, of course, of Deuteronomy 34, possibly written by
Joshua, as the Talmud states, or probably by Ezra) at a period of about fourteen
centuries before the advent of Christ, and 800 years or so before Jeremiah. It
is, moreover, a portion of the Bible that is of paramount importance, for it is
the basic substratum of the whole revelation of God, and of paramount value, not
because it is merely the literature of an ancient nation, but because it is the
introductory section of the Word of God, bearing His authority and given by
inspiration through His servant Moses. That is the faith of the Church.
THE CRITICS’ THEORY
But according to the Higher Critics:
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The Pentateuch consists of four
completely diverse documents. These Completely different documents were the
primary sources of the composition which they call the Hexateuch:
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The Yahwist or Jahwist,
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the Elohist,
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the Deuteronomist,
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and the Priestly Code, the Grundschift, the work of the first Elohist (Sayce
Hist. Heb., 103), now generally known as J. E. D. P., and for convenience
designated by these symbols.
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These different works were composed at
various periods of time, not in the fifteenth century, B.C., but in the ninth,
seventh, sixth and fifth centuries; J. and E. being referred approximately to
about 800 to 700 B.C.; D to about 650 to 625 B.C., and P. to about 525 to 425
B.C. According to the Graf theory, accepted by Kuenen, the Elohist documents
were post-exilian, that is, they were written only five centuries or so before
Christ. Genesis and Exodus as well as the Priestly Code, that is, Leviticus and
part of Exodus and Numbers were also post-exilic.
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These different works, moreover, represent different traditions of the
national life of the Hebrews, and are at variance in most important particulars.
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And, further. They conjecture that these four suppositive documents were not
compiled and written by Moses, but were probably constructed somewhat after this
fashion: For some reason, and at some time, and in some way, some one, no one
knows who, or why, or when, or where, wrote J. Then someone else, no one knows
who, or why, or when, or where, wrote another document, which is now called E.
And then at a later time, the critics only know who, or why, or when, or where,
an anonymous personage, whom we may call Redactor I, took in hand the
reconstruction of these documents, introduced new material, harmonized the real
and apparent discrepancies, and divided the inconsistent accounts of one event
into two separate transactions. Then some time after this, perhaps one hundred
years or more, no one knows who, or why, or when, or where, some anonymous
personage wrote another document, which they style D. And after a while another
anonymous author, no one knows who, or why, or when, or where, whom we will call
Redactor II, took this in hand, compared it with J. E., revised J. E., with
considerable freedom, and in addition introduced quite a body of new material.
Then someone else, no one knows who, or why, or when, or where, probably,
however, about 525, or perhaps 425, wrote P.; and then another anonymous Hebrew,
whom we may call Redactor III, undertook to incorporate this with the
triplicated composite J. E. D., with what they call redactional additions and
insertions. (Green, page 88, cf. Sayce, Early History of the Hebrews, pages
100-105).
It may be well to state at this point that this is not an exaggerated
statement of the Higher critical position. On the contrary, we have given here
what has been described as a position “established by proofs, valid and
cumulative” and “representing the most sober scholarship.” The more advanced
continental Higher Critics, Green says, distinguish the writers of the primary
sources according to the supposed elements as J1 and J2, E1 and E2, P1, P2 and
P3, and D1 and D2, nine different originals in all. The different Redactors,
technically described by the symbol R., are Rj., who combined J. and E.; Rd.,
who added D. to J. E., and Rh., who completed the Hexateuch by combining P. with
J. E. D. (H. C. of the Pentateuch, page 88).
A DISCREDITED PENTATEUCH
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These four suppositive documents are, moreover, alleged to be internally
inconsistent and undoubtedly incomplete. How far they are incomplete they do not
agree. How much is missing and when, where, how and by whom it was removed;
whether it was some thief who stole, or copyist who tampered, or editor who
falsified, they do not declare.
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In this redactory process no limit apparently is assigned by the critic to
the work of the redactors. With an utter irresponsibility of freedom it is
declared that they inserted misleading statements with the purpose of
reconciling incompatible traditions; that they amalgamated what should have been
distinguished, and sundered that which should have amalgamated. In one word, it
is an axiomatic principle of the divisive hypothesizers that the redactors “have
not only misapprehended, but misrepresented the originals” (Green, page 170).
They were animated by “egotistical motives.” They confused varying accounts, and
erroneously ascribed them to different occasions. They not only gave false and
colored impressions; they destroyed valuable elements of the suppositive
documents and tampered with the dismantled remnant.
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And worst of all. The Higher Critics are unanimous in the conclusion that
these documents contain three species of material:
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The probably true.
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The certainly doubtful.
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The positively spurious.
“The narratives of the Pentateuch are
usually trustworthy, though partly mythical and legendary. The miracles recorded
were the exaggerations of a later age.” (Davidson, Introduction, page 131). The
framework of the first eleven chapters of Genesis, says George Adam Smith in his
“Modern Criticism and the Preaching of the Old Testament,” is woven from the raw
material of myth and legend. He denies their historical character, and says that
he can find no proof in archaeology for the personal existence of characters of
the Patriarchs themselves. Later on, however, in a fit of apologetic repentance
he makes the condescending admission that it is extremely probable that the
stories of the Patriarchs have at the heart of them historical elements. (Pages
90-106).
Such is the view of the Pentateuch that is accepted as conclusive by
“the sober scholarship” of a number of the leading theological writers and
professors of the day. It is to this the Higher Criticism reduces what the Lord
Jesus called the writings of Moses.
A DISCREDITED OLD TESTAMENT
As to the rest of the Old Testament, it may be briefly said that they have dealt
with it with an equally confusing hand. The time-honored traditions of the
Catholic Church are set at naught, and its thesis of the relation of inspiration
and genuineness and authenticity derided. As to the Psalms, the harp that was
once believed to be the harp of David was not handled by the sweet Psalmist of
Israel, but generally by some anonymous post-exilist; and Psalms that are
ascribed to David by the omniscient Lord Himself are daringly attributed to some
anonymous Maccabean. Ecclesiastes, written, nobody knows when, where, and by
whom, possesses just a possible grade of inspiration, though one of the critics
“of cautious and well-balanced judgment” denies that it contains any at all. “Of
course,” says another, “it is not really the work of Solomon.” (Driver,
Introduction, page 470). The Song of songs is an idyll of human love, and
nothing more. There is no inspiration in it; it contributes nothing to the sum
of revelation. (Sanday, page 211). Esther, too, adds nothing to the sum of
revelation, and is not historical (page 213). Isaiah was, of course, written by
a number of authors. The first part, chapters 1 to 40, by Isaiah; the second by
a Deutero-Isaiah and a number of anonymous authors. As to Daniel, it was a
purely pseudonymous work, written probably in the second century B.C.
With
regard to the New Testament: The English writing school have hitherto confined
themselves mainly to the Old Testament, but if Professor Sanday, who passes as a
most conservative and moderate representative of the critical school, can be
taken as a sample, the historical books are “yet in the first instance strictly
histories put together by ordinary historical methods, or, in so far as the
methods on which they are Composed, are not ordinary, due rather to the peculiar
circumstances of the case, and not to influences, which need be specially
described as supernatural” (page 399). The Second Epistle of Peter is
pseudonymous, its name counterfeit, and, therefore, a forgery, just as large
parts of Isaiah, Zechariah and Jonah, and Proverbs were supposititious and
quasi-fraudulent documents. This is a straightforward statement of the position
taken by what is called the moderate school of Higher Criticism. It is their own
admitted position, according to their own writings.
The difficulty, therefore,
that presents itself to the average man of today is this: How can these Critics
still claim to believe in the Bible as the Christian Church has ever believed
it?
A DISCREDITED BIBLE
There can be no doubt that Christ and His Apostles accepted the whole of the Old
Testament as inspired in every portion of every part; from the first chapter of
Genesis to the last chapter of Malachi, all was implicitly believed to be the
very Word of God Himself. And ever since their day the view of the Universal
Christian Church has been that the Bible is the Word of God; as the twentieth
article of the Anglican Church terms it, it is God’s Word written. The Bible as
a whole is inspired. “All that is written is God-in-spired.” That is, the Bible
does not merely contain the Word of God; it is the Word of God. It contains a
revelation. “All is not revealed, but all is inspired.” This is the conservative
and, up to the present day, the almost universal view of the question. There
are, it is well known, many theories of inspiration. But whatever view or theory
of inspiration men may hold, plenary, verbal, dynamical; mechanical,
superintendent, or governmental, they refer either to the inspiration of the men
who wrote, or to the inspiration of what is written. In one word, they imply
throughout the work of God the Holy Ghost, and are bound up with the concomitant
ideas of authority, veracity, reliability, and truth divine. (The two strongest
works on the subject from this standpoint are by Gaussen and Lee. Gaussen on the
Theopneustia is published in an American edition by Hitchcock and Walden, of
Cincinnati; and Lee on the Inspiration of Holy Scripture is published by
Rivingtons. Bishop Wordsworth, on the “Inspiration of the Bible,” is also very
scholarly and strong. Rivingtons, 1875).
The Bible can no longer, according to
the critics, be viewed in this light. It is not the Word in the old sense of
that term. It is not the Word of God in the sense that all of it is given by the
inspiration of God. It simply contains the Word of God. In many of its parts it
is just as uncertain as any other human book. It is not even reliable history.
Its records of what it does narrate as ordinary history are full of
falsifications and blunders. The origin of Deuteronomy, e.g., was “a consciously
refined falsification.” (See Moller, page 207).
THE REAL DIFFICULTY
But do they still claim to believe that the Bible is inspired? Yes. That is, in
a measure. As Dr. Driver says in his preface, “Criticism in the hands of
Christian scholars does not banish or destroy the inspiration of the Old
Testament; it pre-supposes it.” That is perfectly true. Criticism in the hands
of Christian scholars is safe. But the preponderating scholarship in Old
Testament criticism has admittedly not been in the hands of men who could be
described as Christian scholars. It has been in the hands of men who disavow
belief in God and Jesus Christ Whom He sent. Criticism in the hands of Horne and
Hengstenberg does not banish or destroy the inspiration of the Old Testament.
But, in the hands of Spinoza, and Graf, and Wellhausen, and Kuenen, inspiration
is neither pre-supposed nor possible. Dr. Briggs and Dr. Smith may avow earnest
avowals of belief in the Divine character of the Bible, and Dr. Driver may
assert that critical conclusions do not touch either the authority or the
inspiration of the Scriptures of the Old Testament, but from first to last, they
treat God’s Word with an indifference almost equal to that of the Germans. They
certainly handle the Old Testament as if it were ordinary literature. And in all
their theories they seem like plastic wax in the hands of the rationalistic
moulders. But they still claim to believe in Biblical inspiration.
A REVOLUTIONARY THEORY
Their theory of inspiration must be, then, a very different one from that held
by the average Christian.
In the Bampton
Lectures for 1903, Professor Sanday of Oxford, as the exponent of the later and
more conservative school of Higher Criticism, came out with a theory which he
termed the inductive theory. It is not easy to describe what is fully meant by
this, but it appears to mean the presence of what they call “a divine element”
in certain parts of the Bible. What that really is he does not accurately
declare. The language always vapors off into the vague and indefinite, whenever
he speaks of it. In what books it is he does not say. “It is present in
different books and parts of books in different degrees.” “In some the Divine
element is at the maximum; in others at the minimum.” He is not always sure. He
is sure it is not in Esther, in Ecclesiastes, in Daniel. If it is in the
historical books, it is there as conveying a religious lesson rather than as a
guarantee of historic veracity, rather as interpreting than as narrating. At the
same time, if the histories as far as textual construction was concerned were
“natural processes carried out naturally,” it is difficult to see where the
Divine or supernatural element comes in. It is an inspiration which seems to
have been devised as a hypothesis of compromise. In fact, it is a tenuous,
equivocal, and indeterminate something, the amount of which is as indefinite as
its quality. (Sanday, pages 100-398; cf. Driver, Preface, ix.)
But its most
serious feature is this: It is a theory of inspiration that completely overturns
the old-fashioned ideas of the Bible and its unquestioned standard of authority
and truth. For whatever this so-called Divine element is, it ap- pears to be
quite consistent with defective argument, incorrect interpretation, if not what
the average man would call forgery or falsification.
It is, in fact,
revolutionary. To accept it the Christian will have to completely readjust his
ideas of honor and honesty, of falsehood and misrepresentation. Men used to
think that forgery was a crime, and falsification a sin. Pusey, in his great
work on Daniel, said that “to write a book under the name of another and to give
it out to be his is in any case a forgery, dishonest in itself and destructive
of all trustworthiness.” (Pusey, Lectures on Daniel, page 1). But according to
the Higher Critical position, all sorts of pseudonymous material, and not a
little of it believed to be true by the Lord Jesus Christ Himself, is to be
found in the Bible, and no antecedent objection ought to be taken to it.
Men
used to think that inaccuracy would affect reliability and that proven
inconsistencies would imperil credibility. But now it appears that there may not
only be mistakes and errors on the part of copyists, but forgeries, intentional
omissions, and misinterpretations on the part of authors, and yet, marvelous to
say, faith is not to be destroyed, but to be placed on a firmer foundation. (Sanday,
page 122). They have, according to Briggs, enthroned the Bible in a higher
position than ever before. (Briggs, “The Bible, Church and Reason,” page 149).
Sanday admits that there is an element in the Pentateuch derived from Moses
himself. An element! But he adds, “However much we may believe that there is a
genuine Mosaic foundation in the Pentateuch, it is difficult to lay the finger
upon it, and to say with confidence, here Moses himself is speaking.” “The
strictly Mosaic element in the Pentateuch must be indeterminate.” “We ought not,
perhaps, to use them (the visions of
Exodus 3 and 33) without reserve
for Moses himself” (pages 172-174-176). The ordinary Christian, however, will
say: Surely if We deny the Mosaic authorship and the unity of the Pentateuch we
must undermine its credibility. The Pentateuch claims to be Mosaic. It was the
universal tradition of the Jews. It is expressly stated in nearly all the
subsequent books of the Old Testament. The Lord Jesus said so most explicitly. (John
5:46-47).
IF NOT MOSES, WHO?
For this thought must surely follow to the thoughtful man: If Moses did not
write the Books of Moses, who did?
If there were three or four, or six, or nine
authorized original writers, why not fourteen, or sixteen, or nineteen? And then
another and more serious thought must follow that. Who were these original
writers, and who originated them? If there were manifest evidences of
alterations, manipulations, inconsistencies and omissions by an indeterminate
number of unknown and unknowable and undateable redactors, then the question
arises, who were these redactors, and how far had they authority to redact, and
who gave them this authority? If the redactor was the writer, was he an inspired
writer, and if he was inspired, what was the degree of his inspiration; was it
partial, plenary, inductive or indeterminate. This is a question of questions:
What is the guarantee of the inspiration of the redactor, and who is its
guarantor? Moses we know, and Samuel we know, and Daniel we know, but ye
anonymous and pseudonymous, who are ye? The Pentateuch, with Mosaic authorship,
as Scriptural, divinely accredited, is upheld by Catholic tradition and
scholarship, and appeals to reason. But a mutilated cento or scrap-book of
anonymous compilations, with its pre-and post-exilic redactors and redactions,
is confusion worse confounded.
At least that is the way it appears to the
average Christian. He may not be an expert in philosophy or theology, but his
common sense must surely be allowed its rights. And that is the way it appears,
too, to such an illustrious scholar and critic as Dr. Emil Reich. (Contemporary
Review, April, 1905, page 515).
It is not possible then to accept the Kuenen-Wellhausen theory of the structure
of the Old Testament and the Sanday-Driver theory of its inspiration without
undermining faith in the Bible as the Word of God. For the Bible is either the
Word of God, or it is not. The children of Israel were the children of the Only
Living and True God, or they were not. If their Jehovah was a mere tribal deity,
and their religion a human evolution; if their sacred literature was natural
with mythical and pseudonymous admixtures; then the Bible is dethroned from its
throne as the exclusive, authoritative, Divinely inspired Word of God. It simply
ranks as one of the sacred books of the ancients with similar claims of
inspiration and revelation. Its inspiration is an indeterminate quantity and any
man has a right to subject it to the judgment of his own critical insight, and
to receive just as much of it as inspired as he or some other person believes to
be inspired. When the contents have passed through the sieve of his judgment the
inspired residuum may be large, or the inspired residuum may be small. If he is
a conservative critic it may be fairly large, a maximum; if he is a more
advanced critic it may be fairly small, a minimum. It is simply the ancient
literature of a religious people containing somewhere the Word of God; “a
revelation of no one knows what, made no one knows how, and lying no one knows
where, except that it is to be somewhere between Genesis and Revelation, but
probably to the exclusion of both.” (Pusey, Daniel, xxviii.)
NO FINAL AUTHORITY
Another serious consequence of the Higher Critical movement is that it threatens
the Christian system of doctrine and the whole fabric of systematic theology.
For up to the present time any text from any part of the Bible was accepted as a
proof-text for the establishment of any truth of Christian teaching, and a
statement from the Bible was considered an end of controversy. The doctrinal
systems of the Anglican, the Presbyterian, the Methodist and other Churches are
all based upon the view that the Bible contains the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth. (See 39 Articles Church of England, vi, ix, xx, etc.)
They accept as an axiom that the Old and New Testaments in part, and as a whole,
have been given and sealed by God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy
Ghost. All the doctrines of the Church of Christ, from the greatest to the
least, are based on this. All the proofs of the doctrines are based also on
this. No text was questioned; no book was doubted; all Scripture was received by
the great builders of our theological systems with that unassailable belief in
the inspiration of its texts, which was the position of Christ and His apostles.
But now the Higher Critics think they have changed all that.
They claim that the
science of criticism has dispossessed the science of systematic theology. Canon
Henson tells us that the day has gone by for proof-texts and harmonies. It is
not enough now for a theologian to turn to a book in the Bible, and bring out a
text in order to establish a doctrine. It might be in a book, or in a portion of
the Book that the German critics have proved to be a forgery, or an anachronism.
It might be in Deuteronomy, or in Jonah, or in Daniel, and in that case, of
course, it would be out of the question to accept it. The Christian system,
therefore, will have to be re-adjusted if not revolutionized, every text and
chapter and book will have to be inspected and analyzed in the light of its
date, and origin, and circumstances, and authorship, and so on, and only after
it has passed the examining board of the modern Franco-Dutch-German criticism
will it be allowed to stand as a proof-text for the establishment of any
Christian doctrine. But the most serious consequence of this theory of the
structure and inspiration of the Old Testament is that it overturns the juridic
authority of our Lord Jesus Christ.
WHAT OF CHRIST’S AUTHORITY?
The attitude of Christ to the Old Testament Scriptures must determine ours. He
is God. He is truth. His is the final voice. He is the Supreme Judge. There is
no appeal from that court. Christ Jesus the Lord believed and affirmed the
historic veracity of the whole of the Old Testament writings implicitly (Luke
24:44). And the Canon, or collection of Books of the Old Testament, was
precisely the same in Christ’s time as it is today. And further. Christ Jesus
our Lord believed and emphatically affirmed the Mosaic authorship of the
Pentateuch (Matthew 5:17-18; Mark12:26-36; Luke 16:31; John 5:46-47). That is true, the
critics say.
But, then, neither Christ nor His Apostles were critical scholars! Perhaps not
in the twentieth century sense of the term. But, as a German scholar said, if
they were not critici doctores, they were doctores veritatis who did not come
into the world to fortify popular errors by their authority. But then they say,
Christ’s knowledge as man was limited. He grew in knowledge (Luke
2:52). Surely that implies His ignorance. And if His ignorance, why not His
ignorance with regard to the science of historical criticism? (Gore, Lux Mundi,
page 360; Briggs, H. C. of Hexateuch, page 28). Or even if He did know more than
His age, He probably spoke as He did in accommodation with the ideas of His
contemporaries! (Briggs, page 29).
In fact, what they mean is practically that
Jesus did know perfectly well that Moses did not write the Pentateuch, but
allowed His disciples to believe that Moses did, and taught His disciples that
Moses did, simply because He did not want to upset their simple faith in the
whole of the Old Testament as the actual and authoritative and Divinely revealed
Word of God. (See Driver, page 12). Or else, that Jesus imagined, like any other
Jew of His day, that Moses wrote the books that bear his name, and believed,
with the childlike Jewish belief of His day, the literal inspiration, Divine
authority and historic veracity of the Old Testament, and yet was completely
mistaken, ignorant of the simplest facts, and wholly in error. In other words,
He could not tell a forgery from an original, or a pious fiction from a genuine
document. (The analogy of Jesus speaking of the sun rising as an instance of the
theory of accommodation is a very different thing).
This, then, is their
position: Christ knew the views He taught were false, and yet taught them as
truth. Or else, Christ didn’t know they were false and believed them to be true
when they were not true. In either case the Blessed One is dethroned as True God
and True Man. If He did not know the books to be spurious when they were
spurious and the fables and myths to be mythical and fabulous; if He accepted
legendary tales as trustworthy facts, then He was not and is not omniscient. He
was not only intellectually fallible, He was morally fallible; for He was not
true enough “to miss the ring of truth” in Deuteronomy and Daniel.
And further.
If Jesus did know certain of the books to be lacking in genuineness, if not
spurious and pseudonymous; if He did know the stories of the Fall and Lot and
Abraham and Jonah and Daniel to be allegorical and imaginary, if not
unverifiable and mythical, then He was neither trustworthy nor good. “If it were
not so, I would have told you.” We feel, those of us who love and trust Him,
that if these stories were not true, if these books were a mass of historical unveracities, if Abraham was an eponymous hero, if Joseph was an astral myth,
that He would have told us so. It is a matter that concerned His honor as a
Teacher as well as His knowledge as our God. As Canon Liddon has conclusively
pointed out, if our Lord was unreliable in these historic and documentary
matters of inferior value, how can He be followed as the teacher of doctrinal
truth and the revealer of God? (John
3:12). (Liddon, Divinity of Our Lord, pages 475-480).
AFTER THE KENOSIS
Men say in this connection that part of the humiliation of Christ was His being
touched with the infirmities of our human ignorance and fallibilities. They
dwell upon the so-called doctrine of the Kenosis, or the emptying, as explaining
satisfactorily His limitations. But Christ spoke of the Old Testament Scriptures
after His resurrection. He affirmed after His glorious resurrection that “all
things must be fulfilled which were written in the law of Moses, and in the
prophets, and in the Psalms Concerning Me” (Luke
24:44). This was not a statement made during the time of the Kenosis, when
Christ was a mere boy, or a youth, or a mere Jew after the flesh (1
Corinthians 13:11). It is the statement of Him Who has been declared the Son
of God with power. It is the Voice that is final and overwhelming. The
limitations of the Kenosis are all abandoned now, and yet the Risen Lord not
only does not give a shadow of a hint that any statement in the Old Testament is
inaccurate or that any portion thereof needed revision or correction, not only
most solemnly declared that those books which we receive as the product of Moses
were indeed the books of Moses, but authorized with His Divine imprimatur the
whole of the Old Testament Scriptures from beginning to end.
There are, however, two or three questions that must be raised, as they will
have to be faced by every student of present day problems. The first is this: Is
not refusal of the higher critical conclusions mere opposition to light and
progress and the position of ignorant alarmists and obscurantists?
NOT OBSCURANTISTS
It is very necessary to have our minds made perfectly clear on this point, and
to remove not a little dust of misunderstanding.
The desire to receive all the
light that the most fearless search for truth by the highest scholarship can
yield is the desire of every true believer in the Bible. No really healthy
Christian mind can advocate obscurantism. The obscurant who opposes the
investigation of scholarship, and would throttle the investigators, has not the
spirit of Christ. In heart and attitude he is a Mediaevalist. To use Bushnell’s
famous apologue, he would try to stop the dawning of the day by wringing the
neck of the crowing cock. No one wants to put the Bible in a glass case. But it
is the duty of every Christian who belongs to the noble army of truth-lovers to
test all things and to hold fast that which is good. He also has rights even
though he is, technically speaking, unlearned, and to accept any view that
contradicts his spiritual judgment simply because it is that of a so-called
scholar, is to abdicate his franchise as a Christian and his birthright as a
man. (See that excellent little work by Professor Kennedy, “Old Testament
Criticism and the Rights of the Unlearned,” F. H. Revell). And in his right of
private judgment he is aware that while the privilege of investigation is
conceded to all, the conclusions of an avowedly prejudiced scholarship must be
subjected to a peculiarly searching analysis. The most ordinary Bible reader is
learned enough to know that the investigation of the Book that claims to be
supernatural by those who are avowed enemies of all that is supernatural, and
the study of subjects that can be understood only by men of humble and contrite
heart by men who are admittedly irreverent in spirit, must certainly be received
with caution. (See Parker’s striking work, “None Like It,” F. H. Revell, and his
last address).
THE SCHOLARSHIP ARGUMENT
The second question is also serious: Are we not bound to receive these views
when they are advanced, not by rationalists, but by Christians, and not by
ordinary Christians, but by men of superior and unchallengeable scholarship?
There is a widespread idea among younger men that the so-called Higher Critics
must be followed because their scholarship settles the questions. This is a
great mistake. No expert scholarship can settle questions that require a humble
heart, a believing mind and a reverent spirit, as well as a knowledge of Hebrew
and philology; and no scholarship can be relied upon as expert which is
manifestly characterized by a biased judgment, a curious lack of knowledge of
human nature, and a still more curious deference to the views of men with a
prejudice against the supernatural. No one can read such a suggestive and
sometimes even such an inspiring writer as George Adam Smith without a feeling
of sorrow that he has allowed this German bias of mind to lead him into such an
assumption of infallibility in many of his positions and statements. It is the
same with Driver. With a kind of sic volo sic jubeo airy ease he introduces
assertions and propositions that would really require chapter after chapter, if
not even volume after volume, to substantiate. On page after page his “must be,”
and “could not possibly be,” and “could certainly not,” extort from the average
reader the natural exclamation: “But why?” “Why not?” “Wherefore?” “On what
grounds?” “For what reason?” “Where are the proofs?” But of proofs or reason
there is not a trace. The reader must be content with the writer’s assertions.
It reminds one, in fact, of the “we may well suppose,” and “perhaps” of the
Darwinian who offers as the sole proof of the origination of a different species
his random supposition! (“Modern Ideas of Evolution,” Dawson, pages 53-55).
A GREAT MISTAKE
There is a widespread idea also among the younger students that because Graf and
Wellhausen and Driver and Cheyne are experts in Hebrew that, therefore, their
deductions as experts in language must be received. This, too, is a mistake.
There is no such difference in the Hebrew of the so-called original sources of
the Hexateuch as some suppose. The argument from language, says Professor
Bissell (“Introduction to Genesis in Colors,” page vii), requires extreme care
for obvious reasons. There is no visible cleavage line among the supposed
sources. Any man of ordinary intelligence can see at once the vast difference
between the English of Tennyson and Shakespeare, and Chaucer and Sir John de
Mandeville. But no scholar in the world ever has or ever will be able to tell
the dates of each and every book in the Bible by the style of the Hebrew. (See
Sayce, “Early History of the Hebrews,” page 109). The unchanging Orient knows
nothing of the swift lingual variations of the Occident. Pusey, with his
masterly scholarship, has shown how even the Book of Daniel, from the standpoint
of philology, cannot possibly be a product of the time of the Maccabees. (“On
Daniel,” pages 23-59). The late Professor of Hebrew in the University of
Toronto, Professor Hirschfelder, in his very learned work on Genesis, says: “We
would search in vain for any peculiarity either in the language or the sense
that would indicate a two-fold authorship.” As far as the language of the
original goes, “the most fastidious critic could not possibly detect the
slightest peculiarity that would indicate it to be derived from two sources”
(page 72). Dr. Emil Reich also, in his “Bankruptcy of the Higher Criticism,” in
the Contemporary Review, April, 1905, says the same thing.
NOT ALL ON ONE SIDE
A third objection remains, a most serious one. It is that all the scholarship is
on one side. The old-fashioned conservative views are no longer maintained by
men with pretension to scholarship. The only people who oppose the Higher
Critical views are the ignorant, the prejudiced, and the illiterate. (Briggs’
“Bible, Church and Reason,” pages 240-247).
This, too, is a matter that needs a
little clearing up. In the first place it isnot fair to assert that the
upholders of what are called the old-fashioned or traditional views of the Bible
are opposed to the pursuit of scientific Biblical investigation. It is equally
unfair to imagine that their opposition to the views of the Continental school
is based upon ignorance and prejudice.
What the Conservative school oppose is
not Biblical criticism, but Biblical criticism by rationalists. They do not
oppose the conclusions of Wellhausen and Kuenen because they are experts and
scholars; they oppose them because the Biblical criticism of rationalists and
unbelievers can be neither expert nor scientific. A criticism that is
characterized by the most arbitrary conclusions from the most spurious
assumptions has no right to the word scientific. And further. Their adhesion to
the traditional views is not only conscientious but intelligent. They believe
that the old-fashioned views are as scholarly as they are Scriptural. It is the
fashion in some quarters to cite the imposing list of scholars on the side of
the German school, and to sneeringly assert that there is not a scholar to stand
up for the old views of the Bible.
This is not the case. Hengstenberg of Basle and Berlin, was as profound a
scholar as Eichhorn, Vater or De Wette; and Keil or Kurtz, and Zahn and
Rupprecht were competent to compete with Reuss and Kuenen. Wilhelm Moller, who
confesses that he was once “immovably convinced of the irrefutable correctness
of the Graf-Wellhausen hypothesis,” has revised his former radical conclusions
on the ground of reason and deeper research as a Higher Critic; and Professor
Winckler, who has of late overturned the assured and settled results of the
Higher Critics from the foundations, is, according to Orr, the leading
Orientalist in Germany, and a man of enormous learning.
Sayce, the Professor of
Assyriology at Oxford, has a right to rank as an expert and scholar with Cheyne,
the Oriel Professor of Scripture Interpretation. Margoliouth, the Laudian
Professor of Arabic at Oxford, as far as learning is concerned, is in the same
rank with Driver, the Regius Professor of Hebrew, and the conclusion of this
great scholar with regard to one of the widely vaunted theories of the radical
school, is almost amusing in its terseness.
“Is there then nothing in the
splitting theories,” he says in summarizing a long line of defense of the unity
of the book of Isaiah; “is there then nothing in the splitting theories? To my
mind, nothing at all!” (“Lines of Defense,” page 136).
Green and Bissell are as
able, if not abler, scholars than Robertson Smith and Professor Briggs, and both
of these men, as a result of the widest and deepest research, have come to the
conclusion that the theories of the Germans are unscientific, unhistorical, and
unscholarly. The last words of Professor Green in his very able work on the
“Higher Criticism of the Pentateuch” are most suggestive. “Would it not be wiser
for them to revise their own ill-judged alliance with the enemies of evangelical
truth, and inquire whether Christ’s view of the Old Testament may not, after
all, be the true view?”
Yes. That, after all, is the great and final question.
We trust we are not ignorant. We feel sure we are not malignant. We desire to
treat no man unfairly, or set down aught in malice.
But we desire to stand with
Christ and His Church. If we have any prejudice, we would rather be prejudiced
against rationalism. If we have any bias, it must be against a teaching which
unsteadies heart and unsettles faith. Even at the expense of being thought
behind the times, we prefer to stand with our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ in
receiving the Scriptures as the Word of God, without objection and without a
doubt. A little learning, and a little listening to rationalistic theorizers and
sympathizers may incline us to uncertainty; but deeper study and deeper research
will incline us as it inclined Hengstenberg and Moller, to the profoundest
conviction of the authority and authenticity of the Holy Scriptures, and to cry,
“Thy word is very pure; therefore, Thy servant loveth it.”
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