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CHAPTER VII
OLD TESTAMENT CRITICISM AND NEW TESTAMENT
CHRISTIANITY
BY PROFESSOR W. H. GRIFFITH
THOMAS, D.D.,
WYCLIFFE COLLEGE, TORONTO, CANADA
A large number of Christians feel compelled to demur to
the present attitude of many scholars to the Scriptures of the Old Testament. It
is now being taught that the patriarchs of Jewish history are not historic
persons; that the records connected with Moses and the giving of the law on
Sinai are unhistorical; that the story of the tabernacle in the wilderness is a
fabricated history of the time of the Exile; that the prophets cannot be relied
on in their references to the ancient history of their own people, or in their
predictions of the future; that the writers of the New Testament, who assuredly
believed in the records of the Old Testament, were mistaken in the historical
value they assigned to those records; that our Lord Himself, in His repeated
references to the Scriptures of His own nation, and in His assumption of the
Divine authority of those Scriptures, and of the reality of the great names they
record, was only thinking and speaking as an ordinary Jew of His day, and was as
liable to error in matters of history and of criticism as any of them were.
The present paper is intended to give expression to some
of the questions that have arisen in the course of personal study, in connection
with collegiate work and also during several years of ordinary pastoral
ministry. It is often urged that problems of Old Testament criticism are for
experts alone, and can only be decided by them. We venture to question the
correctness of this view, especially when it is remembered that to many people
"experts" means experts in Hebrew philology only. By all means let .us have all
possible expert knowledge; but, as Biblical questions are complex, and involve
several considerations, we need expert knowledge in archaeology, history,
theology, and even spiritual experience, as well as in philology. Every
available factor must be taken into account, and the object of the present paper
is to emphasize certain elements which appear liable to be overlooked, or at
least insufficiently considered.
We do not question for an instant the right of Biblical
criticism considered in itself. On the contrary, it is a necessity for all who
use the Bible to be "critics" in the sense of constantly using their "judgment"
on what is before them. What is called "higher" criticism is not only a
legitimate but a necessary method for all Christians, for by its use we are able
to discover the facts and the form of the Old Testament Scriptures. Our
hesitation, consequently, is not intended to apply to the method, but to what is
believed to be an illegitimate, unscientific, and unhistorical use of it. In
fact, we base our objections to much modern criticism of the Old Testament on
what we regard as a proper use of a true higher criticism.
1. IS THE TESTIMONY OF NINETEEN
CENTURIES OF CHRISTIAN HISTORY AND EXPERIENCE OF NO ACCOUNT IN THIS QUESTION? For nearly eighteen centuries these modern views of the
Old Testament were not heard of. Yet this is not to be accounted for by the
absence of intellectual power and scholarship in the Church. Men like Origen,
Jerome, Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, Erasmus, Calvin, Luther, Melancthon, to say
nothing of the English Puritans and other divines of the seventeenth century,
were not intellectually weak or inert, nor were they wholly void of critical
acumen with reference to Holy Scripture. Yet they, and the whole Church with
them, never hesitated to accept the view of the Old Testament which had come
down to them, not only as a heritage from Judaism, but as endorsed by the
apostles. Omitting all reference to our Lord, it is not open to question that
the views of St. Paul and St. Peter and St. John about the Old Testament were
the views of the whole Christian Church until the end of the eighteenth century.
And, making every possible allowance for the lack of historical spirit and of
modern critical methods, are we to suppose that the whole Church for centuries
never exercised its mind on such subjects as the contents, history, and
authority of the Old Testament?
Besides, this is a matter which cannot be decided by
intellectual criticism alone. Scripture appeals to conscience, heart and will,
as well as to mind; and the Christian consciousness, the accumulated spiritual
experience of the body of Christ, is not to be lightly regarded, much less set
aside, unless it is proved to be unwarranted by fact. While we do not say that
"what is new is not true," the novelty of these modern critical views should
give us pause before we virtually set aside the spiritual instinct of centuries
of Christian experience.
2. DOES THE NEW CRITICISM READILY
AGREE WITH THE HISTORICAL POSITION OF THE JEWISH NATION? The Jewish nation is a fact in history, and its record is
given to us in the Old Testament. There is no contemporary literature to check
tile account there given, and archaeology affords us assistance on points of
detail only, not for any long or continuous period. This record of Jewish
history can be proved to have remained the same for many centuries. Yet much of
modern criticism is compelled to reconstruct the history of the Jews on several
important pints. It involves, for instance, a very different idea of the
character of the earliest form of Jewish religion from that seen in the Old
Testament as it now stands; its views of the patriarchs are largely different
from the conceptions found on the face of the Old Testament narrative; its views
of Moses and David are essentially altered from what we have before us in the
Old Testament.
Now what is there in Jewish history to support all this
reconstruction? Absolutely nothing. We see through the centuries the great
outstanding objective fact of the Jewish nation, and the Old Testament is at
once the means and the record of their national life. It rose with them, grew
with them, and it is to the Jews alone we can look for the earliest testimony to
the Old Testament canon.
In face of these facts, it is bare truth to say that the
fundamental positions of modern Old Testament criticism are utterly incompatible
with the historic growth and position of the Jewish people. Are we not right,
therefore, to pause before we accept this subjective reconstruction of history?
Let anyone read Wellhausen's article on "Israel" in the Encyclopaedia
Britannica, and then ask himself whether he recognizes at all therein the story
as given in the Old Testament.
3. ARE THE RESULTS OF THE MODERN VIEW OF THE OLD
TESTAMENT REALLY ESTABLISHED?
It is sometimes said that modern criticism is no longer a
matter of hypothesis; it has entered the domain of facts. Principal George Adam
Smith has gone so far as to say that "modern criticism has won its war against
the traditional theories. It only remains to fix the amount of the indemnity."
But is this really so? Can we assert that the results of modern criticism are
established facts? Indeed Dr. Smith has himself admitted, since writing the
above words, that there are questions still open which were supposed to be
settled and closed twenty years ago.
In the first place, is the excessive literary analysis of
the Pentateuch at all probable or even thinkable on literary grounds? Let anyone
work through a section of Genesis as given by Dr. Driver in his "Introduction",
and see whether such a complex combination of authors is at all likely, or
whether, even if likely, the various authors can now be distinguished? Is not
the whole method far too purely subjective to be probable and reliable?
Further, the critics are not agreed as to the number of
documents, or as to the portions to be assigned to each author. A simple
instance of this may be given. It is not so many years ago when criticism was
content to say that Isaiah 40-66, though not by Isaiah, was the work of one
author, an unknown prophet of the Exile. But the most recent writers like Duhm,
Macfadyen and Wade consider these chapters to be the work of two writers, and
that the whole Book of Isaiah (from three authors) did not receive its present
form until long after the return from the Exile.
Then, these differences in literary analysis involve
differences of interpretation and differences of date, character, and meaning of
particular parts of the Old Testament. To prove this, we ask attention to the
following extracts from a review of a work on Genesis by Professor Gunkel of
Berlin. The review is by Professor Andrew Harper of Melbourne, and appeared in
the "Critical Review" for January, 1902. Professor Harper's own position would,
we imagine, be rightly characterized as generally favorable to the moderate
position of the critical movement. His comments on Gunkel's book are, therefore,
all the more noteworthy and significant.
"It will change the whole direction of the conflict as
to the early books of the Pentateuch and lead it into more fruitful
directions, for it has raised the fundamental question whether the narratives
in Genesis are not far older than the authors of the documents marked J. E.
P., and whether they are not faithful witnesses to the religion of Israel
before prophetic times." "His conclusion will, in many respects, be welcome to
those who have felt how incredible some of the assumptions of the
Kuenen-Wellhausen school of critics are."
"It will be obvious at a glance what an upsetting of
current conceptions in regard to the history of religion must follow if it be
accepted."
"They are sufficient, if made good, to upset the whole
of the current reconstructions of the religion of Israel. To most readers it
will be seen that he has in large part made them good."
"There can be no doubt that his book most skilfully
begins a healthy and much-needed reaction. It should, therefore, be read and
welcomed by all students of the Old Testament whose minds are open."
In view of Gunkel's position thus endorsed by Professor
Harper, is it fair to claim victory for the modern critical theories of the
Old Testament? When an able scholar like Professor Harper can speak of a new
work as "sufficient to upset the whole of the current reconstructions of the
religion of Israel," it is surely premature to speak even in a moment of
rhetorical enthusiasm, as Dr. George Adam Smith does, of "victory" and
"indemnity." Dr. Smith himself now admits that Gunkel has overturned the
Wellhausen theory of the patriarchal narratives. And the same scholar has told
us that distinction in the use of the name for God is "too precarious" as the
basis of arguments for distinctions of sources. For ourselves we heartily
endorse the words of an American scholar when he says:
"We are certain that there will be no final settlement
of Biblical questions on the basis of the higher criticism that is now
commonly called by that name. Many specific teachings of the system will
doubtless abide. But so far forth as it goes upon the assumption that
statements of fact – in the Scriptures are pretty generally false, so far
forth it is incapable of establishing genuinely permanent results."
1 Sir W. Robertson Nicoll, editor of the "British
Weekly," remarked quite recently that the "assured results" seem to be
vanishing, that no one really knows what they are.
4. IS THE POSITION OF MODERN CRITICISM REALLY COMPATIBLE
WITH A BELIEF IN THE OLD TESTAMENT AS A DIVINE REVELATION?
The problem before us is not merely literary, nor only
historical; it is essentially religious, and the whole matter resolves itself
into one question: Is the Old Testament the record of a Divine revelation? This
is the ultimate problem. It is admitted by both sides to be almost impossible to
minimize the differences between the traditional and the modern views of the Old
Testament. As a reviewer of Dr. George Adam Smith's book, "Modern Criticism and
the Preaching of the Old Testament", rightly says:
"The difference is immense; they involve different
conceptions of the relation of God to the world; different views as to the
course of Israel's history, the process of revelation, and the nature of
inspiration. We cannot be lifted from the old to the new position by the
influence of a charming literary style, or by the force of the most
enthusiastic eloquence." 2
In view of this fundamental difference, the question of
the trustworthiness of the Old Testament becomes acute and pressing. In order to
test this fairly and thoroughly, let us examine some of the statements made on
behalf of the modern view.
We may consider first the rise and progress of religion in
Israel. Dr. G. A. Smith says: "It is plain, then, that to whatever heights the
religion of Israel afterwards rose, it remained before the age of the great
prophets not only similar to, but in all respects above-mentioned identical
with, the general Semitic religion; which was not a monotheism, but a polytheism
with an opportunity for monotheism at the heart of it, each tribe being attached
to one god, as to their particular Lord and Father." 3
Consider what is meant by the phrase, "in all respects
above-mentioned identical with the general Semitic religion," as applied to the
religion of Israel previous to the eighth century B. C. Can this view be fairly
deduced from the Old Testament as we now have it? Still more, is such a view
conceivable in the. light of the several preceding centuries of God's special
dealings with Israel? Wherein, on this assumption, consisted the uniqueness of
Israel from the time of Abraham to the eighth century B.C.?
We may next take the character of the narratives of
Genesis. The real question at issue is the historical character. Modern
criticism regards the account in Genesis as largely mythical and legendary. Yet
it is certain that the ,Jews of the later centuries accepted these patriarchs as
veritable personages, and the incidents associated with them as genuine history.
St. Paul and the other New Testament writers assuredly held the same view. If,
then, they are not historical, surely the truths emphasized by prophets and
apostles from the patriarchal stories are so far weakened in their supports?
Take, again, the legislation which in the Pentateuch is
associated with Moses, and almost invariably introduced by the phrase, "The Lord
spake unto Moses." Modern criticism regards this legislation as unknown until
the Exile, or a thousand years after the time of Moses. Is it really possible to
accept this as satisfactory? Are we to suppose that "The Lord spake to Moses" is
only a well-known literary device intended to invest the utterance with greater
importance and more solemn sanction? This position, together with the generally
accepted view of modern criticism about the invention of Deuteronomy in the days
of Josiah, cannot be regarded as in accordance with historial fact or ethical
principle.
Canon Driver and Dr. G. A. Smith, it is true, strongly
assert the compatibility of the new views with a belief in the Divine authority
of the Old Testament, and so far as they themselves are concerned we of course
accept their statements ex animo. But we wish they would give us more
clearly and definitely than they have yet done, the grounds on which this
compatibility may be said to rest. To deny historicity, to correct dates by
hundreds of years, to reverse judgments on which a nation has rested for
centuries, to traverse views which have been the spiritual sustenance of
millions, and then to say that all this is consistent with the Old Testament
being regarded as a Divine revelation, is at least puzzling, and does not afford
mental or moral satisfaction to many who do not dream of questioning the bona
fides of scholars who hold the views now criticized. The extremes to which
Dr. Cheyne has gone seem to many the logical outcome of the principles with
which modern criticism, even of a moderate type, starts. Facilis descensus
Averno, and we .should like to be shown the solid and logical halting-place
where those who refuse to go with Cheyne think that they and we can stand.
Sir W. Robertson Nicoll, commenting March 12, 1903, on a
speech delivered by the then Prime Minister of Great Britain (Mr. Balfour) in
connection with the Bible Society's Centenary, made the following significant
remarks: "The immediate results of criticism are in a high degree disturbing. So
fat they have scarcely been understood by the average Christian. But the plain
man who has been used to receive everything in the Bible as a veritable Word of
God cannot fail to be perplexed, and deeply perplexed, when he is told that much
of the Old Testament and the New is unhistorical, and when he is asked to accept
the statement that God reveals Himself by myth and legend as well as by the
truth, of fact. Mr. Balfour must surely know that many of the higher critics
have ceased to be believers. More than twenty years ago the present writer,
walking with Julius Wellhausen in the quaint streets of Greifswald, ventured to
ask him whether, if his views were accepted, the Bible could retain its place in
the estimation of the common people. `I cannot see how that is possible,' was
the sad reply."
It is no mere question of how we may use the Old Testament
for preaching, or how much is left for use after the critical views are
accepted. But even our preaching will lack a great deal of the note of
certitude. If. we are to regard certain biographies as unhistorical, it will not
be easy to draw lessons for conduct, and if the history is largely legendary,
our deductions about God's government and providence must be essentially
weakened. But the one point to be faced is the historic cre6ibility of those
parts of the Old Testament questioned by modern criticism, and the historical
and religious value of the documents of the Pentateuch. Meanwhile, we ask to
have char proof of the compatibility of the modern views with the acceptance of
the Old Testament as the record of a Divine revelation.
5. MODERN CRITICISM BASED ON A SOUND PHILOSOPHY SUCH AS
CHRISTIANS CAN ACCEPT?
At the foundation of much modern thought is the philosophy
known as Idealism, which, as often interpreted, involves a theory of the
universe that finds no room for supernatural interpositions of any kind. The
great law of the universe, including the physical, mental, and moral realms, is
said to be evolution, and though this doubtless presupposes an original Creator,
it does not, on the theory now before us, permit of any subsequent direct
intervention of God during the process of development. This general
philosophical principle applied to history has assuredly influenced, if it has
not almost moulded, a great deal of modern criticism of the Old Testament. It is
not urged that all who accept even the position of a moderate criticism, go the
full length of the extreme evolutionary theory; but there can be no reasonable
doubt that most of the criticism of the Old Testament is materially affected by
an evolutionary theory of all history which tends to minimize Divine
intervention in the affairs of the people of Israel. It is certainly correct to
say that the presupposition of much present-day critical reasoning is a denial
of the supernatural, and especially of the predictive element in prophecy.
As to the theory of evolution regarded as a process of
uninterrupted differentiation of existences, under purely natural laws, and
without any Divine intervention, it will suffice to say that it is "not proven"
in the sphere of natural science, while in the realms of history and literature
it is palpably false. The records of history and of literature reveal from time
to time the great fact and factor of personality, the reality of personal power,
and this determinative element has a peculiar way of setting at naught all
idealistic theories of a purely natural and uniform progress in history and
letters. The literature of today is not necessarily higher than that produced in
the past; the history of the last century is not in every way .and always
superior to that of its predecessors. Even a "naturalistic" writer like
Professor Percy Gardner testifies to the fact and force of personality in the
following remarkable terms:
"There is, in fact, a great force in history which is
not, so far as we can judge, evolutional, and the law of which is very hard to
trace-the force of personality and character." And quite apart from such
instances of personality as have arisen from time to time through the
centuries, there is one Personality who has not yet been accounted for by any
theory of evolution – the Person of Jesus of Nazareth.
There are sufficient data in current Old Testament
criticism to warrant the statement that it proceeds from presuppositions
concerning the origins of history, religion, and the Bible, which, in their
essence, are subversive of belief in a Divine revelation. And such being the
case, we naturally look with grave suspicion on results derived from so unsound
a philosophical basis.
6. CAN PURELY NATURALISTIC PREMISES BE ACCEPTED WITH OUT
COMING TO PURELY NATURALISTIC CONCLUSIONS?
Kuenen and Wellhausen are admittedly accepted as masters
by our leading Old Testament "higher critics" in England, Scotland, and America,
and the results of their literary analysis of the Pentateuch are generally
regarded as conclusive by their followers. On the basis of this literary
dissection, certain conclusions are formed as to the character and growth of Old
Testament religion, and, as a result, the history of the Jews is reconstructed.
The Book of Deuteronomy is said to be mainly, if not entirely, a product of the
reign of Josiah, the accounts of the tabernacle and worship are of exilic date;
monotheism in Israel was of late date, and was the outcome of a growth from
polytheism; and the present Book of Genesis reflects the thoughts of the time of
its composition or compilation in or near the date of the Exile.
Now it is known that Kuenen and Wellhausen deny the
supernatural element in the Old Testament. This is the "presupposition" of their
entire position. Will anyone say that it does not materially affect their
conclusions? And is there any safe or logical halting-ground for those who
accept so many of their premises? The extreme subjectivity of Canon Cheyne ought
not to be a surprise to any who accept the main principles of modern higher
criticism; it is part of the logical outcome of the general position. We gladly
distinguish between the extremists and the other scholars who see no
incompatibility between the acceptance of many of the literary and historical
principles of Kuenen and Wellhausen and a belief in the Divine source and
authority of the Old Testament. But we are bound to add that the unsatisfying
element in the writings of moderate men like Canon Driver and Principal George
Adam Smith is that, while accepting so much of the "naturalism" of the German
school, they do not give us any clear assurance of the strength of the
foundation on which they rest and ask us to rest. The tendency of their position
is certainly towards a minimizing of the supernatural in the Old Testament.
Take, as one instance, the Messianic element. In spite of
the universal belief of Jews and Christians in a personal Messiah, a belief
derived in the first place solely from the Old Testament, and supported for
Christians by the New, modern criticism will not allow much clear and undoubte(4
prediction of Him. Insight into existing conditions is readily granted to the
prophets, but they are not allowed to have had much foresight into future
conditions connected with the Messiah. Yet Isaiah's glowing words remain, and
demand a fair, full exegesis such as they do not get from many modern scholars.
Dr. James Wells, of Glasgow, wrote in the "British Weekly" some time ago of the
new criticism on this point:
"The fear of prediction in the proper sense of the term
is ever before its eyes. It gladly enlarges on fore-shadowings, a moral
historical growth which reaches its culmination in Christ; and anticipations
of the Spirit of Christ; but its tendency. is always to minimize the prophetic
element in the Old Testament."
Another example of the tendency of modern criticism to
minimize and explain away the supernatural element may be given from a book
entitled, "The Theology and Ethics of the Hebrews," by Dr. Archibald Duff,
Professor in the Yorkshire College, Bradford. This is his account of Moses at
the burning bush:
"He was shepherding his sheep among the red granite
mountains . . . . The man sat at dawn by the stream, and watched the fiery
rocks. Yonder gleamed the level sunlight across the low growth. Each spine
glistened against the rising sun. The man was a poet, one fit for inspiration.
He felt that the dreams of his soul were the whisperings of his God, the place
His sanctuary. He bowed and worshipped," (p. 6.) This, at least, is not the
prima facie impression derived from the account given in Exodus.
One more illustration may be given of modern critical
methods of dealing with narratives of the Old Testament which were evidently
intended to be regarded as historical. In the "International Critical
Commentary" on Numbers, Dr. G. B. Gray, of Mansfield College, Oxford, thus
writes on what he terms "the priestly section of the book":
"For the history of the Mosaic age the whole section is
valueless." "The historical impression given by (P) of the Mosaic age is
altogether unhistorical, and much of the detail . . . can . . . be
demonstrated to be entirely unreal, or at least untrue of the age in
question." "This history is fictitious."
These statements at once set aside the history contained
in more than three-quarters of the whole Book of Numbers, while as to the rest
Dr. Gray's verdict is by no means reassuring, and he clearly does not possess
much confidence in even the small quantity that escapes his condemnation. The
brazen serpent is said to be an invention on the part of some "who had come
under the higher prophetic teaching" before Hezekiah, and is meant "to
controvert the popular belief" in the healing power of the serpent by ascribing
it to Jehovah. As to the story of Balaam, Dr. Gray wrote:
"It may, indeed, contain other historical features, such
as the name of Balak, who may have been an actual king of Moab; but no means
at present exist for distinguishing any further between the historical or
legendary elements and those which are supplied by the creative faculty and
the religious feeling of the writers."
What is any ordinary earnest Christian to make of all
these statements? The writer of the Book of Numbers evidently composed what
professes to be history, and what he meant to be read as history, and yet
according to Dr. Gray all this has no historical foundation. We can only say
that the Christian Church will require very much more convincing proofs before
they can accept the critical position, and it does not facilitate our acceptance
of this wholesale process of invention to be told that it is due to "the
creative faculty and the religious feeling of the writers."
As to the fact that so many of our British and American
"higher critics" are firm believers in the Divine authority of the Old
Testament, and of a Divine revelation embodied in it, we cannot but feel the
force of the words of the late Dr. W. H. Green, of Princeton: "They who have
themselves been thoroughly grounded in the Christian faith may, by a happy
inconsistency, hold fast their old convictions, while admitting principles,
methods, and conclusions that are logically at war with them. But who can be
surprised if others shall with stricter logic carry what has been thus commended
to them to its legitimate conclusions?"
7. CAN WE OVERLOOK THE EVIDENCE OF ARCHAEOLOGY?
It is well known that during the last sixty years a vast
number of archaeological discoveries have been made in Egypt, Palestine,
Babylonia, and Assyria. Many of these have shed remarkable light on the
historical features of the Old Testament. A number of persons and periods have
been illuminated by these discoveries and are now seen with a clearness which
was before impossible.
Now it is a simple and yet striking fact that not one of
these discoveries during the whole of this tune has given any support to the
distinctive features and principles of the higher critical position, while, on
the other hand, many of them have afforded abundant confirmation of the
traditional and conservative view of the Old Testament.
Let us consider a few of these discoveries. Only a little
over forty years ago the conservative "Speaker's Commentary" actually had to
take into consideration the critical arguments then so prevalent in favour of
the late invention of writing. This is an argument which is never heard now in
critical circles. The change of attack is most striking. While forty or fifty
years ago it was argued that Moses could not possibly have had sufficient
learning to write the Pentateuch, now it is argued as the result of these modern
discoveries that he would have been altogether behind his contemporaries if he
had not been able to write. Again, the Babylonian story of the flood agrees in
long sections with the account in Genesis, and it is known that the Babylonian
version was in existence for ages before the dates assigned. to the Genesis
narrative by the critical school. Professor Sayce rightly calls this a crucial
test of the critical position. The historicity of the kings mentioned in Genesis
14 was once seriously questioned by criticism, but this is impossible today, for
their historical character has been proved beyond all question, and, in
particular, it is now known that the Amraphel of that chapter is the Hammurabi
of the Monuments and a contemporary with Abraham. The puzzling story of Sarah
and Hagar is also now seen to be in exact agreement with Babylonian custom. Then
again, the Egypt of Joseph and Moses is true to the smallest details of the life
of the Egypt of that day and is altogether different from the very different
Egypt of later ages. Sargon, who for centuries was only known from the one
reference to him in Isaiah 20:1,
is now seen to have been one of the most important kings of Assyria. And the
Aramaic language of Daniel and Ezra, which has so often been accused of
lateness, is proved to be in exact accord with the Aramaic of that age, as shown
by the Papyri discovered at Elephantine in Egypt.
Now these, and others like them, are tangible proofs which
can be verified by ordinary people. Hebrew philology is beyond most of us and is
too subjective for any convincing argument to be based upon it, but archaeology
offers an objective method of putting historical theories to the test.
Not the least important feature of the archaeological
argument is that a number of leading archaeologists who were formerly in hearty
agreement with the critical school, have now abandoned this view and oppose it.
As Sir William Robertson Nicoll has forcibly said:
"The significant fact is that the great first-hand
archaeologists as a rule do not trust the higher criticism. This means a great
deal more than can be put on paper to account for their doubt. It means that
they are living in an atmosphere where arguments that flourish outside do not
thrive."
Professor Flinders Petrie, the great Egyptologist, uttered
these words not long ago:
"I have come to the conclusion that there is a far more
solid basis than seems to be supposed by many critics . . . . I have not the
slightest doubt that contemporary documents give a truly solid foundation for
the records contained in the Pentateuch . . . . The essential point is that
some of these critical people support from an a priori basis instead of
writing upon ascertained facts. We should remember that writing at the time of
the Exodus was as familiar as it is now . . . . The fact is that it is
hopeless for these people by means merely of verbal criticism to succeed in
solving all difficulties that arise."
8. ARE THE VIEWS OF MODERN CRITICISM CONSISTENT WITH THE
WITNESS OF OUR LORD TO THE OLD TESTAMENT?
The Christian Church approaches the Old Testament mainly
and predominantly from the standpoint of the resurrection of Christ. We
naturally inquire what our Master thought of the Old Testament, for if it comes
to us with His authority, and we can discover His view of it, we ought to be
satisfied.
In the days of our Lord's life on earth one pressing
question was, "What think ye of the Christ?" Another was, "What is written in
the Law? How readest thou?" These questions are still being raised in one form
or another, and today, as of old, the two great problems – two "storm-centers";
as they have well been called – are Christ and the Bible.
The two problems really resolve themselves into one, for
Christ and the Bible are inseparable. If we follow Christ, He will teach us of
the Bible; and if we study our Bible, it will point us to Christ. Each is called
the Word of God.
Let us, first of all, be quite clear as to our meaning of
our Lord as "The Word of God." "In the beginning was the Word." A word is an
oral or visible expression of an invisible thought. The thought needs the word
for its expression, and the word is intended to represent the thought
accurately, even if not completely. We cannot in any degree be sure of the
thought unless we can be sure of the word. Our Lord as the Word, therefore, is
the personal and visible expression of the invisible God. (John
14; Hebrews 1:3.) We believe
that He is an accurate "expression" of God, and that as the Word He reveals God
and conveys God's will to us in such a way as to be inerrant and infallible. As
the Incarnate Word He is infallible.
He came, among other things, to bear witness to the truth
(John 18:37), and it is a
necessary outcome of this purpose that He should bear infallible witness. He
came to reveal God and God's will, and this implies and requires special
knowledge. It demands that every assertion of His be true. The Divine knowledge
did not, because it could not, undergo any change by the Incarnation. He
continued to subsist in the form of God even while He existed in the form of
man. 4
In view of this position, we believe that, as Bishop
Ellicott says ("Christus Comprobator") we have a right to make this appeal to
the testimony of Christ to the Old Testament. The place it occupied in His life
and ministry is sufficient warrant for referring to His use of it. It is well
known that, as far as the Old Testament canon is concerned, our highest
authority is that of our Lord Himself; and what is true of the Old Testament as
a whole, is surely true of these parts to which our Lord specifically referred.
Let us be clear, however, as to what we mean in malting
this appeal. We do not for an instant intend thereby to close all possible
criticism of the Old Testament. There are numbers of questions quite untouched
by anything our Lord said, and there is consequently ample scope for sober,
necessary, and valuable criticism. But what we do say is, that anything in the
Old Testament stated by our Lord as a fact, or implied as a fact, is, or ought
to be, thereby closed for those who hold Christ to be infallible. Criticism can
do anything that is not incompatible with the statements of our Lord; but where
Christ has spoken, surely "the matter is closed."
What, then, is our Lord's general view of the Old
Testament? There is no doubt that His Old Testament was practically, if not
actually, the same as ours, and that He regarded it as of Divine authority, as
the final court of appeal for all questions connected with it. The way in which
He quotes ft shows this. To the Lord Jesus the Old Testament was authoritative
and final, because Divine.
No one can go through the Gospels without being impressed
with the deep reverence of our Lord for the Old Testament, and with His constant
use of it in all matters of religious thought and life. His question, "Have ye
never read?" His assertion, "It is written," His testimony, "Ye search the
Scriptures" (R. V), are plainly indicative of His view of the Divine authority
of the Old Testament as we have it. He sets His seal to its historicity and its
revelation of God. He supplements, but never supplants it. He amplifies and
modifies, but never nullifies it. He fulfils, i.e. fills full, but never makes
void.
This general view is confirmed by His detailed references
to the Old Testament. Consider His testimonies to the persons, and to the facts
of the old covenant.
There is scarcely a historical book, from Genesis to II
Chronicles, to which our Lord does not refer; while it is perhaps significant
that His testimony includes references to every book of the Pentateuch, to
Isaiah, to Jonah, to Daniel, and to miracles-the very parts most called in
question today.
Above all, it is surely of the deepest moment that at His
temptation He should use three times as the Word of God the book about which
there has, perhaps, been most controversy of all.
Again, therefore, we say that everything to which Christ
can be said, on any honest interpretation, to have referred, or which He used as
a fact, is thereby sanctioned and sealed by the authority of our Infallible
Lord. "Dominus locutus est; causa finita est."
Nor can this position be turned by the statement that
Christ simply adopted the beliefs of His day without necessarily sanctioning
them as correct. Of this there is not the slightest proof, but very much to the
contrary. On some of the most important subjects of His day He went directly
against prevailing opinion. His teaching about God, about righteousness, about
the Messiah, about .tradition, about the Sabbath, about the Samaritans, about
women, about divorce, about the baptism of John, were diametrically opposed to
that of the time. And this opposition was deliberately grounded on the Old
Testament which our Lord charged them with misinterpreting. The one and only
question of difference between Him and the Jews as to the Old Testament was that
of interpretation. Not a vestige of proof can be adduced that He and they
differed at all in their general view of its historical character or Divine
authority. If the current Jewish views were wrong, can we think our Lord would
have been silent on a matter of such moment, about a book which He cites or
alludes to over four hundred times, and which He made His constant topic in
teaching concerning Himself? If the Jews were wrong, Jesus either knew it, or He
did not. If He knew it, why did He not correct them as in so many other and
detailed instances? If He did not know it – but I will not finish.
Nor can this witness to the Old Testament be met by
asserting that the limitation of our Lord's earthly life kept Him within current
views of the Old Testament which need not have been true views. This statement
ignores the essential force of His personal claim to be "the Word."
On more than one occasion our Lord claimed to
speak from God, and that everything He said had the Divine warrant. Let us
notice carefully what this involves. It is sometimes said that our Lord's
knowledge was limited, and that He lived here as man, not as God. Suppose we
grant this for argument's sake. Very well; as man He lived in God and on God,
and He claimed that everything He said and did was from God and through God. If,
then, the limitations were from God, so also were the utterances; and, as
God's warrant was claimed for every one of these, they are therefore Divine and
infallible. (John 5:19; 5:30; 7:13; 8:26; 12:49; 14:24; 17:8.) Even though we grant to the
full a theory that will compel us to accept a temporary disuse or non-use of the
functions of Deity in the Person of our Lord, yet the words actually uttered as
man are claimed to be from God, and therefore we hold them to be infallible. We
rest, therefore, upon our Lord's personal claim to say all and do all by the
Father, from the Father, for the Father.
There is, of course, no question of partial knowledge
after the resurrection, when our Lord was manifestly free from all limitations
of earthly conditions. Yet it was after His resurrection also that He set His
seal to the Old Testament. (Luke 24
:44)
We conclude that our Lord's positive statements on the
subject of the Old Testament are not to be rejected without charging Him with
error. If, on these points, on which we can test and verify Him, we find that He
is not reliable, what real comfort can we have in accepting His higher teaching,
where verification is impossible? We believe we are on absolutely safe ground
when we say that what the Old Testament was to our Lord, it must be and shall be
to us.
CONCLUSION
We ask a careful consideration of these eight inquiries.
Taken separately, they carry weight, but taken together they have a cumulative
effect, and should be seriously pondered by all who are seeking to know the
truth on this momentous subject.
We may be perfectly sure that no criticism of the Old
Testament will ever be accepted by the Christian Church as a whole, which does
not fully satisfy the following conditions:
-
It must admit in all its assumptions, and take fully
into consideration, the supernatural element which differentiates the Bible
from all other books.
-
It must be in keeping with the enlightened spiritual
experience of the saints of God in all ages, and make an effectual appeal to
the piety and spiritual perception of those who know by personal experience
the power of the Holy Ghost.
-
It must be historically in line with the general
tradition of Jewish history and the unique position of the Hebrew nation
through the centuries.
-
It must be in unison with that apostolic conception of
the authority and inspiration of the Old Testament,. which is so manifest in
the New Testament.
-
Above all, it must be in accordance with the universal
belief of the Christian Church in our Lord's infallibility as a Teacher, and
as "the Word made flesh."
If and when modern higher criticism can satisfy these
requirements, it will not merely be accepted, but will command the universal,
loyal, and even enthusiastic adhesion of all Christians. Until then, we wait,
and also maintain our position that "the old is better."
1. Dr. G. A. Smith, "Modern Criticism and
the Preaching of the Old Testament", p. 35. Dr. Willis J. Beecher, in "The Bible
Student and Teacher", January, 1904
2. "American Journal of Theology", Vol.
VI., p. 114
3. "Modern Criticism", p. 130
4. Philippians 2:6. See Dr. Gifford's "The
Incarnation:"
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