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CHAPTER V
HOLY SCRIPTURE AND MODERN NEGATIONS
BY PROFESSOR JAMES
ORR, D.D.,
UNITED FREE CHURCH COLLEGE, GLASGOW, SCOTLAND
Is there today in the midst of criticism and
unsettlement a tenable doctrine of Holy Scripture for the Christian Church and
for the world; and if there is, what is that doctrine? That is unquestionably a
very pressing question at the present time. “Is there a book which we can regard
as the repository of a true revelation of God and an infallible guide in the way
of life, and as to our duties to God and man?” is a question of immense
importance to us all. Fifty years ago, perhaps less than that, the question
hardly needed to be asked among Christian people. It was universally conceded,
taken for granted, that there is such a book, the book which we call the Bible.
Here, it was believed, is a volume which is an inspired record of the whole will
of God for man’s salvation; accept as true and inspired the teaching of that
book, follow its guidance, and you cannot stumble, you cannot err in attaining
the supreme end of existence, in finding salvation, in grasping the prize of a
glorious immortality.
Now, a change has come. There is no disguising the fact that we live in an age
when, even within the Church, there is much uneasy and distrustful feeling about
the Holy Scriptures — a hesitancy to lean upon them as an authority and to use
them as the weapons of precision they once were; with a corresponding anxiety to
find some surer basis in external Church authority, or with others, in Christ
Himself, or again in a Christian consciousness, as it is named, — a surer basis
for Christian belief and life. We often hear in these days reference to the
substitution, in Protestantism, of an “INFALLIBLE BIBLE FOR AN INFALLIBLE
CHURCH”, and the implication is that the one idea is just as baseless as the
other. Sometimes the idea is taken up, quite commonly perhaps, that the thought
of an authority external to ourselves — to our own reason or conscience or
spiritual nature — must be wholly given up; that only that can be accepted which
carries its authority within itself by the appeal it makes to reason or to our
spiritual being, and therein lies the judge for us of what is true and what is
false.
That proposition has an element of truth in it; it may be true or may be false
according as we interpret it. However, as it is frequently interpreted it leaves
the Scriptures — but more than that, it leaves Jesus Christ Himself — without
any authority for us save that with which our own minds see fit to clothe Him.
But in regard to the INFALLIBLE BIBLE AND THE INFALLIBLE CHURCH, it is proper to
point out that there is a considerable difference between these two things —
between the idea of an authoritative Scripture and the idea of an infallible
Church or an infallible Pope, in the Roman sense of that word. It may be a
clever antithesis to say that Protestantism substituted the idea of an
infallible Book for the older Romish dogma of an infallible Church; but the
antithesis, the contrast, unfortunately has one fatal inaccuracy about it. The
idea of the authority of Scripture is not younger, but older than Romanism. It
is not a late invention of Protestantism. It is not something that Protestants
invented and substituted for the Roman conception of the infallible Church; but
it is the original conception that lies in the Scriptures themselves.
There is a great difference there. It is a belief — this belief in the Holy
Scripture — which was accepted and acted upon by the Church of Christ from the
first. The Bible itself claims to be an authoritative Book, and an infallible
guide to the true knowledge of God and of the way of salvation. This view is
implied in every reference made to it, so far as it then existed, by Christ and
His Apostles. That the New Testament, the work of the Apostles and of apostolic
men, does not stand on a lower level of inspiration and authority than the Old
Testament, is, I think, hardly worth arguing. And in that sense, as a body of
writings of Divine authority, the books of the Old and the New Testament were
accepted by the Apostles and by the Church of the post-apostolic age.
Take the writings of any of the early Church fathers — I have waded through them
wearily as teacher of Church History — take Tertullian or Origen, or others, and
you will find their words saturated with references to Scripture. You will find
the Scriptures treated in precisely the same way as they are used in the
Biblical literature of today; namely, as the ultimate authority on the matters
of which they speak. I really do the fathers an injustice in this comparison,
for I find things said and written about the Holy Scriptures by teachers of the
Church today which those early fathers would never have permitted themselves to
utter. It has now become fashionable among a class of religious teachers to
speak disparagingly of or belittle the Holy Scriptures as an authoritative rule
of faith for the Church. The leading cause of this has undoubtedly been the
trend which the criticism of the Holy Scriptures has assumed during the last
half century or more.
By all means, let criticism have its rights. Let purely literary questions about
the Bible receive full and fair discussion. Let the structure of books be
impartially examined. If a reverent science has light to throw on the
composition or authority or age of these books, let its voice be heard. If this
thing is of God we cannot overthrow it; if it be of man, or so far as it is of
man, or so far as it comes in conflict with the reality of things in the Bible,
it will come to naught — as in my opinion a great deal of it is fast coming
today through its own excesses. No fright, therefore, need be taken at the mere
word, “Criticism.”
On the other hand, we are not bound to accept
every wild critical theory that any critic may choose to put forward and assert,
as the final word on this matter. We are entitled, nay, we are bound, to look at
the presuppositions on which each, criticism proceeds, and to ask, How far is
the criticism controlled by those presuppositions? We are bound to look at the
evidence by which the theory is supported, and to ask, Is it really borne out by
that evidence? And when theories are put forward with every confidence as fixed
results, and we find them, as we observe them, still in constant process of
evolution and change, constantly becoming more complicated, more extreme, more
fanciful, we are entitled to inquire, Is this the certainty that it was alleged
to be? Now that is my complaint against much of the current criticism of the
Bible — not that it is criticism, but that it starts from the wrong basis,
that it proceeds by arbitrary methods, and that it arrives at results which I
think are demonstrably false results. That is a great deal to say, no doubt, but
perhaps I shall have some justification to offer for it before I am done.
I am not going to enter into any general tirade against criticism; but it is
useless to deny that a great deal of what is called criticism is responsible for
the uncertainty and unsettlement of feeling existing at the present time about
the Holy Scriptures. I do not speak especially of those whose philosophical
standpoint compels them to take up an attitude of negation to supernatural
revelation, or to books which profess to convey such a revelation. Criticism of
this kind, criticism that starts from the basis of the denial of the
supernatural, has of course, to be reckoned with. In its hands everything is
engineered from that basis. There is the denial to begin with, that God ever has
entered into human history, in word and deed, in any supernatural way. The
necessary result is that whatever in the Bible affirms or flows from such
interposition of God is expounded or explained away.
The Scriptures on this showing, instead of being, the living oracles of God,
become simply the fragmentary remains of an ancient Hebrew literature, the chief
value of which would seem to be the employment it affords to the critic to
dissect it into its various parts, to overthrow the tradition of the past in
regard to it, and to frame ever new, ever changing, ever more wonderful theories
of the origin of the books and the so-called legends they contain. Leaving,
however, such futile, rationalistic criticism out of account — because that is
not the kind of criticism with which we as Christian people have chiefly to deal
in our own circles — there is certainly an immense change of attitude on the
part of many who still sincerely hold faith in the supernatural revelation of
God. I find it difficult to describe this tendency, for I am desirous not to
describe it in any way which would do injustice to any Christian thinker, and it
is attended by so many signs of an ambiguous character. Jesus is recognized by
the majority of those who represent it as “the Incarnate Son of God,” though
with shadings off into more or less indefinite assertions even on that
fundamental article, which make it sometimes doubtful where the writers exactly
stand. The process of thought in regard to Scripture is easily traced. First,
there is an ostentatious throwing overboard, joined with some expression of
contempt, of what is called the verbal inspiration of Scripture — a very much
abused term. Jesus is still spoken of as the highest revealer, and it is allowed
that His words, if only we could get at them — and on the whole it is thought we
can — furnish the highest rule of guidance for time and for eternity. But even
criticism, we are told, must have its rights. Even in the New Testament the
Gospels go into the crucible, and in the name of synoptical criticism,
historical criticism; they are subject to wonderful processes, in the course of
which much of the history gets melted out or is peeled off as Christian
characteristics. Jesus, we are reminded, was still a man of His generation,
liable to error in His human knowledge, and allowance must be made for the
limitations in His conceptions and judgments. Paul is alleged to be still
largely dominated by his inheritance of Rabbinical and Pharisaic ideas. He had
been brought up a Pharisee, brought up with the rabbis, and when he became a
Christian, he carried a great deal of that into his Christian thought, and we
have to strip off that thought when we come to the study of his Epistles. He is
therefore a teacher not to be followed further than our own judgment of
Christian truth leads us. That gets rid of a great deal that is inconvenient
about Paul’s teaching.
THE OLD TESTAMENT AND THE
CRITICS
If these things are done in the “green tree”
of the New Testament, it is easy to see what will be done in the “dry tree” of
the Old. The conclusions of the more advanced school of critics are here
generally accepted as once for all settled, with the result — in my judgment, at
any rate — that the Old Testament is immeasurably lowered from the place it once
held in our reverence. Its earlier history, down to about the age of the kings,
is largely resolved into myths and legends and fictions. It is ruled out of the
category of history proper. No doubt we are told that the legends are just as
good as the history, and perhaps a little better, and that the ideas which they
convey to us are just as good, coming in the form of legends, as if they came in
the form of fact.
But behold, its laws, when we come to deal with them in this manner, lack Divine
authority. They are the products of human minds at various ages. Its prophecies
are the utterances of men who possessed indeed the Spirit of God, which is only
in fuller degree what other good men, religious teachers in all countries, have
possessed — not a spirit qualifying, for example, to give real predictions, or
to bear authoritative messages of the truth to men. And so, in this whirl and
confusion of theories — you will find them in our magazines, you will find them
in our encyclopedias, you will find them in our reviews, you will find them in
many books which have appeared to annihilate the conservative believers — in
this whirl and confusion of theories, is it any wonder that many should be
disquieted and unsettled, and feel as if the ground on which they have been wont
to rest was giving way beneath their feet? And so the question comes back with
fresh urgency. What is to be said of the place and value of Holy Scripture?
IS THERE A TENABLE DOCTRINE
FOR THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF TODAY?
One of the urgent needs of our time, and a
prime need of the Church, is just a replacement of Holy Scripture, with due
regard, I grant, to any really ascertained facts in regard to its literary
history, in the faith and lives of men, as the truly inspired and divinely
sealed record of God’s revealed will for men in great things of the soul. But
then, is such a position tenable? In the fierce light of criticism that beats
upon the documents and upon the revelation of God’s grace they profess to
contain, can this position be maintained? I venture to think, indeed, I am very
sure, it can. Let me try to indicate — for I can do hardly any more — the lines
along which I would answer the question, Have we or can we have a tenable
doctrine of Holy Scripture?
For a satisfactory doctrine of Holy Scripture — and by that I mean a doctrine
which is satisfactory for the needs of the Christian Church, a doctrine which
answers to the claim the Scripture makes for itself, to the place it holds in
Christian life and Christian experience, to the needs of the Christian Church
for edification and evangelization, and in other ways — I say, for a
satisfactory doctrine of Holy Scripture it seems to me that three things are
indispensably necessary. There is necessary, first, a more positive view
of the structure of the Bible than at present obtains in many circles. There is
necessary, second, the acknowledgment of a true supernatural revelation
of God in the history and religion of the Bible. There is necessary, third,
the recognition of a true supernatural inspiration in the record of that
revelation. These three things, to my mind, go together — a more positive view
of the structure of the Bible; the recognition of the supernatural revelation
embodied in the Bible; and a recognition in accordance with the Bible’s own
claim of a supernatural inspiration in the record of the Bible. Can we affirm
these three things? Will they bear the test? I think they will.
THE STRUCTURE OF THE BIBLE
First as to the structure of the Bible, there
is needed a more positive idea of that structure than is at present prevalent.
You take much of the criticism and you find the Bible being disintegrated in
many ways, and everything like structure falling away from it. You are told, for
example, that these books — say the Books of Moses are made up of many
documents, which are very late in origin and cannot claim historical value. You
are told that the laws they contain are also, for the most part, of tolerably
late origin, and the Levitical laws especially are of post-exilian construction;
they were not given by Moses; they were unknown when the Children of Israel were
carried into captivity. Their temple usage perhaps is embodied in the Levitical
law, but most of the contents of that Levitical law were wholly unknown. They
were the construction — the invention, to use a term lately employed of priests
and scribes in the post-exilian period. They were put into shape, brought before
the Jewish community returned from Babylon, and accepted by it as the law of
life. Thus you have the history of the Bible turned pretty much upside down, and
things take on a new aspect altogether.
Must I then, in deference to criticism, accept these theories, and give up the
structure which the Bible presents? Taking the Bible as it stands, I find and
you will find if you look there also, without any particular critical learning
you will find it — what seems to be evidence of a very definite internal
structure, part fitting into part and leading on to part, making up a unity of
the whole in that Bible. The Bible has undeniably a structure as it stands. It
is distinguished from all other books of the kind, from all sacred books in the
world, from Koran and Buddhist scriptures and Indian scriptures and every other
kind of religious books. It is distinguished just by this fact, that it is the
embodiment of a great plan or scheme or purpose of Divine grace extending from
the beginning of time through successive ages and dispensations down to its
culmination in Jesus Christ and the Pentecostal outpourings of the Spirit. The
history of the Bible is the history of that development of God’s redemptive
purpose. The promises of the Bible mark the stages of its progress and
its hope. The covenants of the Bible stand before us in the order of its
unfolding. You begin with Genesis. Genesis lays the foundation and leads up to
the Book of Exodus; and the Book of Exodus, with its introduction of the
law-giving, leads up to what follows. Deuteronomy looks back upon the history of
the rebellions and the laws given to the people, and leads up to the conquest. I
need not follow the later developments, coming away down through the monarchy
and the prophecy and the rest, but you find it all gathered up and fulfilled in
the New Testament. The Bible, as we have it, closes in Gospel and Epistle and
Apocalypse, fulfilling all the ideas of the Old Testament. There the circle
completes itself with the new heaven and the new earth wherein dwelleth
righteousness. Here is a structure; here is the fact; here is a structure, a
connected story, a unity of purpose extending through this Book and binding all
its parts together. Is that structure an illusion? Do we only, and many with us,
dream that it is there? Do our eyes deceive us when we think we see it? Or has
somebody of a later date invented it, and put it all, inwrought it all, in these
earlier records, legends and stories, or whatever you like to call it —
skillfully woven into the story until it presents there the appearance of
naturalness and truth? I would like to find the mind capable of inventing it,
and then the mind capable of putting it in and working it into a history once
they got the idea itself. But if not invented, it belongs to the reality and the
substance of the history; it belongs to the facts; and therefore to the Book
that records the facts. And there are internal attestations in that structure of
the Bible to the genuineness of its contents that protest against the efforts
that are so often made to reduce it to fragments and shiver up that unity and
turn it upside down. “Walk about Zion ... tell the towers thereof; mark ye well
her bulwarks;” you will find there’s something there which the art of man will
not avail to overthrow.
“Now, that is all very well,” I hear some one say, “but there are facts on the
other side; there are those manifold proofs which our critical friends adduce
that the Bible is really a collection of fragments and documents of much later
date, and that the history is really quite a different thing from what the Bible
represents it to be.” Well, are we to sit down and accept their dictum on that
subject without evidence? When I turn to the evidence I do not find them to have
that convincing power which our critical friends assign to them.
I am not rejecting this kind of critical
theory because it goes against my prejudices or traditions; I reject it simply
because it seems to me the evidence does not sustain it, and that the stronger
evidence is against it. I cannot go into details; but take just the one point
that I have mentioned — this post-exilian origin of the Levitical law. I have
stated what is said about that matter — that those laws and institutions that
you find in the middle of the Books of the Pentateuch — those laws and
institutions about priests and Levites and sacrifices and all that — had really
no existence, had no authoritative form, and to a large extent had not existence
of any kind until after the Jews returned from Babylon, and then they were given
out as a code of laws which the Jews accepted. That is the theory which is
stated once and again. But let the reader put himself in the position of that
returned community, and see what the thing means. These exiles had returned from
Babylon. They had been organized into a new community. They had rebuilt their
Temple, and then long years after that, when things had got into confusion,
those two great men, Ezra and Nehemiah, came among them, and by and by Ezra
produced and publicly proclaimed this law of Moses — what he called the law of
Moses, the law of God by the hand of Moses — which he had brought from Babylon.
A full description of what happened is given in the eighth chapter of the Book of Nehemiah.
Ezra reads that law from his pulpit of wood day after day to the people, and the
interpreter gives the sense. Now, mind you, most of the things in this law, in
this book that he is reading to the people, had never been heard of before —
never had existed, in fact; priests and Levites such as are there described had
never existed. The law itself was long and complicated and burdensome, but the
marvelous thing is that the people meekly accept it all as true — meekly accept
it as law, at any rate — and submit to it, and take upon themselves its burdens
without a murmur of dissent.
That is a very remarkable thing to start
with. But remember, further, what that community was. It was not a community
with oneness of mind, but it was a community keenly divided in itself. If you
read the narrative you will find that there were strong opposing factions in
that community; there were parties strongly opposed to Ezra and Nehemiah and
their reforms; there were many, as you see in the Book of Malachi, who were
religiously faithless in that community. But marvelous to say, they all join in
accepting this new and burdensome and hitherto unheard of law as the law of
Moses, the law coming down to them from hoary antiquity. There were priests and
Levites in that community who knew something about their own origin; they had
genealogies and knew something about their own past. According to the new
theory, these Levites were quite a new order; they had never existed at all
before the time of the exile, and they had come into existence through the
sentence of degradation that the prophet Ezekiel had passed upon them in the
44th chapter of his book. History is quite silent about this degradation. If
anyone asks who carried out the degradation, or why was it carried out, or when
was it done, and how came the priests to submit to the degradation, there is no
answer to be given at all. But it came about somehow, so we are told.
And so these priests and Levites are there, and they stand and listen without
astonishment as they learn from Ezra how the Levites had been set apart long
centuries before in the wilderness by the hand of God, and had an ample tithe
provision made for their support, and cities, and what not, set apart for them
to live in. People know a little about their past. These cities never had
existed except on paper; but they took it all in. They are told about these
cities, which they must have known had never existed as Levitical cities. They
not only hear but they accept the heavy tithe Burdens without a word of
remonstrance, and they make a covenant with God pledging themselves to faithful
obedience to all those commands. Those tithes laws, as we discover, had no
actual relation to their situation at all. They were drawn up for a totally
different case. They were drawn up for a state of things in which there were few
priests and many Levites. The priests were only to get the tithe of a tenth, But
in this restored community there were a great many priests and few Levites. The
tithe laws did not apply at all, but they accepted these as laws of Moses.
And so I might go over the provisions of the law one by one — tabernacle and
priests and ritual and sacrifices and Day of Atonement — these things, in their
post-exilian form, had never existed; they were spun out of the inventive brains
of scribes; and yet the people accepted them all as the genuine handiwork of the
ancient law-giver. Was ever such a thing heard of before? Try it in any city.
Try to get the people to take upon themselves a series of heavy burdens of
taxation or tithes or whatever you like, on the ground that it had been handed
down from the middle ages to the present time. Try to get them to believe it;
try to get them to obey it, and you will find the difficulty. Is it credible to
anyone who leaves books and theories in the study and takes a broad view of
human nature with open eyes? I aver that for me, at any rate, it is not; and it
will be a marvel to me as long as I am spared to live, how such a theory has
ever gained the acceptance it has done among unquestionably able and
sound-minded men. I am convinced that the structure of the Bible vindicates
itself, and that these counter theories break down.
A SUPERNATURAL REVELATION
I think it is an essential element in a
tenable doctrine of Scripture, in fact the core of the matter, that it contains
a record of a true supernatural revelation; and that is what the Bible claims to
be not a development of man’s thoughts about God, and not what this man and that
one came to think about God, how they came to have the ideas of a Jehovah or
Yahveh, who was originally the storm-god of Sinai, and how they manufactured out
of this the great universal God of the prophets — but a supernatural revelation
of what God revealed Himself in word and deed to men in history. And if that
claim to a supernatural revelation from God falls, the Bible falls, because it
is bound up with it from beginning to end. Now, it is just here that a great
deal of our modern thought parts company with the Bible. I am quite well aware
that many of our friends who accept these newer critical theories, claim to be
just as firm believers in Divine revelation as I am myself, and in Jesus Christ
and all that concerns Him. I rejoice in the fact, and I believe that they are
warranted in saying that there is that in the religion of Israel which you
cannot expunge, or explain on any other hypothesis but Divine revelation.
But what I maintain is that this theory of the religion of the Bible which has
been evolved, which has peculiarly come to be known as the critical view, had a
very different origin in men who did not believe in the supernatural revelation
of God in the Bible. This school as a whole, as a wide-spread school, holds the
fundamental position — the position which its adherents call that of the modern
mind that miracles did not happen and cannot happen. It takes the ground that
they are impossible; therefore its followers have to rule everything of that
kind out of the Bible record.
I have never been able to see how that
position is tenable to a believer in a living personal God who really loves His
creatures and has a sincere desire to bless them. Who dare to venture to assert
that the power and will of such a Being as we must believe God to be the God and
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ — is exhausted in the natural creation? That
there are no higher things to be attained in God’s providence than can be
attained through the medium of natural law? That there is in such a Being no
capability of revealing Himself in words and deeds beyond nature? If there is a
dogmatism in the world, it is that of the man who claims to limit the Author of
the universe by this finite bound. We are told sometimes that it is a far higher
thing to see God in the natural than to see Him in something that transcends the
natural; a far higher thing to see God in the orderly regular working of nature
than to suppose that there has ever been anything transcending that ordinary
natural working. I think we all do see God, and try to see Him more and more, in
the ordinary and regular working of nature. I hope all try every day to see God
there. But the question is, Has this natural working not its limits? Is there
not something that nature and natural workings cannot reach, cannot do for men,
that we need to have done for us? And are we so to bind God that He cannot enter
into communion with man in a supernatural economy of grace, an economy of
revelation, an economy of salvation? Are we to deny that He has done so? That is
really the dividing line both in Old Testament and New between the different
theories. Revelation, surely, all must admit if man is to attain the clear
knowledge of God that is needed; and the question is one of fact, Has God so
revealed Himself? And I believe that it is an essential part of the answer, the
true doctrine of Scripture, to say, “Yes, God has so revealed Himself, and the
Bible is the record of that revelation, and that revelation shines in its light
from the beginning to the end of it.” And unless there is a whole-hearted
acceptance of the fact that God has entered, in word and deed, into human
history for man’s salvation, for man’s renovation, for the deliverance of this
world, a revelation culminating in the great Revealer Himself — unless we accept
that, we do not get the foundation for the true doctrine of Holy Scripture.
THE INSPIRED BOOK
Now, just a word in closing, on Inspiration.
I do not think that anyone will weigh the evidence of the Bible itself very
carefully without saying that at least it claims to be in a peculiar and
especial manner an inspired book. There is hardly anyone, I think, who
will doubt that Jesus Christ treats the Old Testament in that way. Christ treats
it as an imperfect stage of revelation, no doubt. Christ, as the Son of Man,
takes up a lordly, discretionary attitude towards that revelation, and He
supersedes very much what is in, it by something higher, but Christ recognizes
that there was true Divine revelation there, that He was the goal of it all; He
came to fulfill the law and the prophets. The Scriptures are the last word with
Him — “Have ye not read?" “Ye do err, not knowing the Scriptures.” And it
is just as certain that the Apostles treated the Old Testament in that way, and
that they claimed in a peculiar sense the Spirit of God themselves. They claimed
that in them and in their word was laid “the foundation on which the Church was
built,” Jesus Christ Himself, as the substance of their testimony, being the
chief corner-stone; “built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets.”
And if you say, “Well, are these New Testament Apostles and Prophets?” That is
in Ephesians, 2nd chapter. You go to
the fifth verse of the third chapter
and you find this mystery of Christ which God had revealed to His holy Apostles
and Prophets by His Spirit; and it is on that the Church was built. And when you
come to Timothy (II Timothy 3:14-17)
to that classical passage, you find the marks there by which inspired Scripture
is distinguished.
Take the book of Scripture and ask just this question: Does it answer to the
claim of this inspired volume? How are we to test this? I do not enter here into
the question that has divided good men as to theories of inspiration — questions
about inerrancy in detail, and other matters. I want to get away from these
things at the circumference to the center. But take the broader test.
THE BIBLE’S OWN TEST OF
INSPIRATION
What does the Bible itself give us as the
test of its inspiration? What does the Bible itself name as the qualities that
inspiration imparts to it? Paul speaks in Timothy of the Sacred Writings that
were able to make wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.
He goes on to tell us that ALL Scripture is given by inspiration of God and
is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in
righteousness, in order that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished
unto all good works. When you go back to the Old Testament and its praise of
the Word of God you will find the qualities of inspiration are just the same.
“The law of the Lord is perfect”, etc. Those are the qualifies which the
inspired Book is alleged to sustain — qualities which only a true inspiration of
God’s Spirit could give; qualities beyond which we surely do not need anything
more.
Does anyone doubt that the Bible possesses these qualities? Look at its
structure; look at its completeness; look at it in the clearness and fullness
and holiness of its teachings; look at it in its sufficiency to guide every soul
that truly seeks light unto the saving knowledge of God. Take the Book as a
whole, in its whole purpose, its whole spirit, its whole aim and tendency, and
the whole setting of it, and ask, Is there not manifest the power which you can
only trace back, as it traces back itself, to God’s Holy Spirit really in the
men who wrote it?
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