Chapter I

Revelation and Inspiration

BIBLIOLOGY.

CHAPTER I.

REVELATION AND INSPIRATION.

Augustine: City of God, XV.-XVIII. Calvin: Institutes, I. viiix. Gerhard: Loci (De Inspiratione). Lee: On Inspiration. Twesten: Dogmatik, I., §23-28. Nitzsch: Christian Doctrine, { 36-47. Herder: Spirit of Hebrew Poetry. Lewis : Divine-Human in Scripture. Smith, J.: Discourses (Of Prophecy). Gaussen: On Inspiration. Rogers: Superhuman Origin of the Bible; Reason and Faith. Martensen: Dogmatics, I 24-36. Warrington: On Inspiration. Given: Revelation and Inspiration. Van Oosterzee: Dogmatics, I., 388-394. Dorner: Christian Doctrine, J 57-00. Bissell: Historic Origin of the Bible. Ladd: The Doctrine of Sacred Scripture. Wordsworth: On Inspiration. Neander: Church History, II., 388-394. Hengstenberg: Christology (Prophecy). Alexander: Introduction to Isaiah (Prophetic Inspiration). Hayley: Discrepancies of the Bible. Hodge: Theology, I., 151-187. Ulrici: Glauben und Wissen. Christlieb: Modern Doubt, Lecture II. Bannerman: On Inspiration. Terry: Hermeneutics. Davidson: Hermeneutics, XII. Rawlinson: Introduction to Chronicles, \ 10 (Bible Commentary). Coleridge: Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit. Smith: Faith and Philosophy, pp. 1-48. Guizot: Meditations on Christianity, 1st Series. Briggs: Biblical Study. Henderson: On Inspiration. Taylor: Spirit of Hebrew Poetry. Robson: The Bible, Its Revelation, Inspiration, and Evidence. Horne-Tregelles: Introduction.

Bibliology (fiijSXlov \6yos) includes all the topics relating to the written revelation of God: namely, the Inspiration, Authenticity, Credibility, and Canonicity of the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments. As has already been observed, this division is not Bo strictly necessary as are the others to the integrity of a theological system, yet since theological science depends for its validity and credibility upon the contents of the Bible, it is requisite in order to comprehensiveness to devote some preliminary attention to the authority of these contents. The subject of Inspiration, in particular, cannot well be omitted.

The Scriptures are entitled a revelation, and hence it is necessary first of all to define this term. It is employed in two senses: 1. General, or unwritten revelation; 2. Special, or written revelation.

Revelation in its general and wide signification is any species of knowledge of which God is the ultimate source and cause. In this sense, all that man knows intuitively is revealed to him; for even his axiomatic knowledge does not originate from himself independently and apart from his Creator. All that he knows in this manner, he knows through his intellect, and this intellect is the workmanship of God. Man cognizes in accordance with the laws of human intelligence, and these laws are established by his Maker.

General or unwritten revelation, consequently, includes all that belongs to ethics and natural religion. In Scripture, that moral and religious truth which man perceives immediately by reason of his mental constitution is called a "revelation." For example, the knowledge of future retribution possessed by the pagan is so denominated. "The wrath of God," says St. Paul, " is revealed (diroKaXvuTercu) from heaven," Rom. 1: 18; and this wrath is subsequently described as operating in the workings of an accusing conscience, Rom. 2: 15. The pagan's knowledge of the unity of God, and of such attributes as eternity, omnipotence, and sovereignty (Sei6rV<;) is also represented as a Divine teaching. "That which may be known of God [in this intuitive manner] is manifest in them; for God hath showed it unto them," Rom. 1: 19, 20. This inward knowledge is also denominated a " law written in the heart," Rom. 2:15; which has led to its being called an unwritten law. Turrettin (II. 1, 6) denominates it "revelatio naturalis."

Unwritten or general revelation, then, is a particular form of human consciousness that is ultimately referable to God. It is denominated by English writers the "moral" or "religious " consciousness; by which is meant, a mode of consciousness that relates to moral and religious objects and truths, and is determined by them. The Germans call it the " God-consciousness;" meaning thereby a form of conciousness of which God is the object. As the "sense-consciousness" denotes the sum-total of all the inward experience that results from the impression made upon man by the material world, so the God-consciousness denotes the inward experience resulting from the impression made by God upon the human spirit. This mode of man's consciousness not only has God for the object of it, but for the cause of it. And this in two ways: 1. First, the object generally is the cause of the subjective impression, by reason of the correlation between subject and object. The objective coal of fire is the cause of the subjective sensation. The consciousness of physical pain is not produced by an act of will. The man is not the author of the sensation, but the object that causes it is. In like manner, man's consciousness of God is not produced by man's volition, but by God as an object that impresses him.

2. Secondly, God is not only the object of knowledge, but he is also a personal and active agent who operates on the human mind so that it shall have this knowledge of Himself. In the phrase of St. Paul, God "reveals" and "manifests" his being and attributes within the human spirit. The coal of fire is the cause of the sense-consciousness, by the mere correlation between itself and the physical sense. But God is the cause of man's knowledge of God not merely by the correlation between the two beings, but also by a direct energy operating upon man. An irrational object like a stone or a planet exerts no direct efficiency upon the cognizing mind of man; and neither does a rational object like a human person. Sensation and cognition, in these instances, result from a passive impression made by the object. But in the God-consciousness, the object actively assists in the cognition. God causes the human mind to know God by an inward and immediate efficiency, in addition to the correlation which he has established between the finite and Infinite Spirit. In St. Paul's phrase, he " shows," " reveals," and " manifests " himself.

The Scriptures go yet further than this, and refer all the operations of reason to the Author of the human intellect. Nothing in human consciousness is independent of God, and isolated. God is the "Father of lights," of every kind. James 1:17. God " shows " whatever is known by virtue of the human constitution. Even human reason, which in the intuitions of mathematics and in the laws of logic seems to be a self-sufficient faculty, is represented in Scripture as dependent. Man is able to perceive intuitively, only because the Supreme Reason illumines him. "The Logos," says St. John (1 : 4, 9), "is the light of men, and coming into the world enlightens every man." "There is a spirit in man," says Elihu who in this instance speaks truly, "and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth them understanding," Job 32: 8.

Human knowledge, then, considered from this point of view, is an unwritten revelation because it is not aboriginal and self-subsistent, but derived. It issues ultimately from a higher source than the finite intelligence. Human reason has the ground of its authority in the Supreme Reason. This is seen particularly in that form of reason which Kant denominates "practical," and whose judgments are given in conscience. This faculty has an authority for man that cannot be accounted for, except by its being the voice of God. If conscience were entirely isolated from the Deity, and were independent of Him, it could not make the solemn and sometimes terrible impression it does. No man would be afraid of himself, if the self were not connected with a higher Being than self. Of the judgments of conscience, it may be said literally, that God reveals his own holy judgment through them. "Whence comes the restraint of conscience?" asks Selden (Table Talk). "From a higher Power; nothing else can bind. I cannot bind myself, for I may untie myself again; an equal cannot bind me, for we may untie one another. It must be a superior Power, even God Almighty." 1

The wide use of the term revelation was more common in the Patristic church than it has been since. The first defenders of Christianity were called to vindicate it against polytheism. They would naturally, therefore, select for defence such of its truths as were more particularly combated by paganism, such as the unity of God, and the first principles of natural religion generally. This led them to point out the grounds of these first truths of morals and religion in the human constitution; so that the distinction between natural and revealed religion though recognized was not emphasized. All religious knowledge was represented as a revelation from God, partly through the light of nature, and partly in a supernatural manner. The first Apology of Justin Martyr is an example of this. See chapters viii., xviii., lvii. But when polytheism ceased to be the great foe of Christianity, and deism took its place, it became necessary to lay special stress upon the distinction between the unwritten and the written revelation. When the skeptic himself defended the claims of natural religion, and asserted the Heedlessness of the gospel, then the Christian apologist was compelled to discriminate carefully between that knowledge which comes to man in the structure of his mind, and that

1 See Twesten: Dogmatik, H 148; Shedd: Theological Essays, 303, 304; Neander: Apostel-Geschichte, Absohnitt Sechuter (Veraohnung).

which he receives through a supernatural source, and in a written word, in order to show the insufficiency of the former to meet the wants of man as a sinner.

General or unsvritten revelation, though trustworthy, is not infallible. This differentiates it from the special or written revelation.

1. In the first place, the ethical and religious teaching of God through the structure of the human mind is vitiated more or less by human depravity, (a). Sin darkens the intellect, so that there is not that clear perception which characterizes the angelic intuition, and which was possessed by the unfallen Adam. (b). Sin gives a bias to the will against the truth, so that even when there is an accurate perception, there is an endeavor to get rid of it. Men know God to be holy, but do not like to retain this knowledge. Rom. 1: 28. (c). Sin weakens the power of intuition itself. Vice debilitates the spiritual and rational faculty, by strengthening the sensuous nature. (d). It is a part of the punishment of sin, that God withdraws for a time his common grace, so that there is little or no intuitive perception of moral truth. The human mind is left to sin. God "gave up to uncleanness those who changed the truth of God into a lie," Eoni. 1:24. God "gave them over to a reprobate mind," Hom. 1: 28.

2. Secondly, infallibility cannot be attributed to the unwritten revelation, because of the limitations of the finite mind. Natural religion cannot be any more trustworthy than the human intellect itself is.1 But the human intellect cannot be infallible, unless it is preserved from all error by an extraordinary exertion of Divine power. That ordinary operation of God in the human mind which is seen in ethics and natural religion, though sometimes reaching a high degree of certainty and validity, never reaches the point of absolute infallibility. Even when the unwritten revelation is rectified by the written revelation, we cannot attribute to it the absolute authority of the latter, because

1 See Conybeare: Reply to Tindal, in Shedd: History of Doctrine, I. 208.

the rectification is more or less imperfect. The purest form of ethics and natural religion is to be found in Christendom, not in Paganism. The ethical system of Plato is not as correct as that of Butler. But infallibility cannot be attributed to either, as it is to the ethics of the decalogue, and the sermon on the mount. See Ursinus: Christian Religion, Question 92.

3. Thirdly, the unwritten revelation is inadequate to the needs of man as a sinner, because it does not include those truths which relate to redemption. Its doctrines are sufficient only for a sinless being. Natural religion is silent respecting the exercise of mercy. It reveals only law and justice: opyq not ar/wirq. St. Paul affirms that the wrath, not the compassion of God, is taught to men in the workings of conscience. This is the fatal lack in all the natural religions of mankind. Many current treatises on Comparative Religion are erroneous and misleading here. It is frequently contended that Boodhism and Confucianism are co-ordinate religions with Christianity, because they teach the golden rule, and other principles of ethics. But this does not prove the point. The distinguishing characteristic of Christianity is not the teaching of sound ethics, but the offer of mercy through a Divine mediator, and a radical change of human character. Christianity is gospel, not law; but Confucianism and Boodhism, so far as they contain truth, are law, not gospel. If it can be shown that Boodhism and Confucianism actually secure the forgiveness and extirpation of human sin, then they may be classed with Christianity. But there is no pardon and no regeneration in any religion but that of Jesus Christ. "Who is he that forgiveth sins, but God only?" Hence the modern Christian, like the primitive, cannot concede that Christianity is merely one among several religions; merely one of the religiones licitae. Christianity is an exclusive religion for man, because it is the only redemptive religion for him. Shedd: Theological Essays, 374-376.

In the common use of the term, revelation is employed in the restricted signification, and signifies the written word of God. The contents of the written revelation are as follows:

1. Scripture includes among its teachings those of unwritten revelation: namely the first truths of ethics and natural religion. It assumes the validity of the doctrines of the divine existence, the unity of God, the immortality of the soul, the freedom of the will, and future reward and punishment.

But these doctrines as taught in Scripture differ from the same doctrines as taught in Plato, for example: (a). By stronger evidence, and greater certainty. Immortality in the Phaedo is a hope and aspiration. In the gospel of John, it is the absolute assurance of personal knowledge and experience. Christ is an eye-witness, in respect to the other world and the other life. The Son of man speaks that which he knows, and testifies that which he has seen, John 3:11. (I). By freedom from erroneous elements. Morality in the decalogue, and in the sermon on the mount, is not mixed with false ethics. In Plato and Aristotle it is: e.g., the destruction of sick infants and the community of wives (Republic, V.); and the justifying of slavery (Ethics, I. 4-8), and of abortion, and the destruction of feeble offspring (Ethics, VIII. 16). Natural religion in the unwritten form is vitiated by its connection with the impure reason of man; in the written form, it is the pure reason of God. The Bible gives an inspired statement of natural religion; Plato gives an uninspired statement. The first is infallible; the second is more or less trustworthy, but not free from error. Whether polygamy is intrinsically immoral, cannot perhaps be determined by natural religion as deduced from the human mind alone; but natural religion as enunciated by Christ makes polygamy to be wrong. "From the beginning it was not so," Matt . 19 : 8. Christ teaches that monogamy is founded in the created nature and constitution of man. Again, the monotheism- of the Bible is without error; that of natural religion is more or less vitiated: either in teaching too much severity in God, as in Paganism; or too much indulgence in Him, as in the deistical schools of Christendom.

2. The written revelation contains many truths and facts that result from human observation and reflection. All that is historical, in both the Old Testament and the New, is of this kind. The narrative, for example, of the journeyings of the children of Israel, is the record of eye-witnesses. The history of the rise of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah, as recorded in the books of Samuel, Kings, and Chronicles, is an account drawn from contemporary sources. All that is geographical is of this kind; and all that is chronological. The natural history of the Scriptures is also the product of man's observation.

But all this Biblical history, chronology, and geography, differs from corresponding matter in uninspired literature, by being unmixed with error. Biblical history is not legendary like that of early Greece and Rome. Biblical chronology is not extravagant like that of Egypt, as reported to Herodotus by the priests. Here the influence of inspiration is very apparent. Moses was guided in collecting and composing the historical narratives in the Pentateuch. Herodotus was not thus preserved from error in gathering and writing his acconnts of the Egyptians, Persians and Greeks. "Many of the sacred writers," says Hodge (1.155), " although inspired, received no revelation. This was probably the fact with the authors of the historical books of the Old Testament. The evangelist Luke does not refer his knowledge of the events which he records to revelation, but says he derived it from those ' who from the beginning were eye-witnesses and ministers of the word,' Luke 1:2. It is immaterial to us where Moses obtained his knowledge of the events recorded in the book of Genesis; whether from early documents, from tradition, or from direct revelation. If the sacred writers had sufficient knowledge in themselves, or in those about them, there is no need to assume any direct revelation. It is enough for us, that they were rendered infallible as teachers."

3. The written word, besides the truths of natural religion, and the facts and truths that come within the ken of the ordinary human intelligence, contains a series of truths that are altogether different from these. These are the most important part of the contents of Scripture, and constitute the most strictly supernatural element in the written word. Speaking generally, they are those truths and facts that relate to man's salvation from sin: viz., the trinity; the creation and apostasy of man; the incarnation; and redemption. The doctrine of sin, though a fact of consciousness, and thus belonging also to natural religion, has in the Scriptures certain features that imply special teaching, since human consciousness unassisted could not discover them: viz., the account of the temptation by Satan, and the fall in Adam; and a profound analysis and delineation of sin itself, such as is given in the seventh and eighth chapters of Romans. The doctrine of sacrificial atonement for sin is also a truth of natural religion; but the Mosaic system of sacrifices, so peculiar in its features, was given by the teaching of the Holy Spirit. "The Holy Ghost signified this, that the way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest, while the first tabernacle was yet standing," Heb. 9:8.

This twofold variety in the contents of the Bible necessitates two varieties or modes of Divine operation upon the human mind: 1. Inspiration; 2. Revelation (proper). The distinction between these two is important, and the neglect of it has led to confusion.

Inspiration is like Revelation, in that it is a superhuman influence upon the particular person selected to be the organ of the Divine mind. But inspiration goes no further than to insure freedom from error in presenting that truth which has been obtained in the ordinary ways in which men obtain truth; while revelation discloses new truth that is inaccessible to the ordinary human mind. A man may be inspired, and yet not reveal anything. Much of the Bible is of this kind. But a man to whom a revelation is communicated, is also inspired to express and record it. Inspiration is more of the nature of superintendence; revelation is more of the nature of instruction and information.

The distinction between inspiration and revelation is an old one. Edwards (Mysteries of Scripture) marks the distinction in the following manner. "We ought to distinguish between those things which were written in the sacred books by the immediate inspiration of the Holy Spirit, and those which were only committed to writing by the direction of the Holy Spirit. To the former class belong all the mysteries of salvation, or all those things which respect the means of our deliverance taught in the gospel, which could not be known from the principles of reason, and therefore must be revealed. But to the other class those things belong, which either are already known from natural religion, but are of service to inculcate duty on man, and to demonstrate the necessity of a revelation of the means of salvation; or all histories, useful to illustrate and assure us of the doctrines revealed, and which point out the various degrees of revelation, the different dispensations of salvation, and the various modes of governing the church of God; all of which are necessary to be known in the further explanation of mysteries."

Claude Frassen, a Franciscan monk and theologian of the 17th century, assumed three kinds of inspiration: 1. Inspiratio antecedens, or the revelation of things before unknown. This is revelation proper. 2. Inspiratio concomitans, or the security against error in the statement of truths or facts known in the ordinary way. This is inspiration in distinction from revelation. 3. Inspiratio consequens, or the divine authority stamped by inspired men upon writings composed without inspiration ; e.g., the gospels of Mark and Luke approved by Peter and Paul. See Knapp: Theology (Introduction).

Lee, in his work on Inspiration has made the distinction with care. But he errs in contending that it is not found in the older writers. Citing Quenstedt as one who holds the "mechanical" theory, he quotes the following from him: "res quae in scriptura continentur, non solum per assistentiam et directionem divinam infallibilem Uteris consignatae sunt, sed singulari Spiritus Sancti suggestioni, inspiration!, et dictamini, acceptae ferendae sunt." Lecture I. Here, evidently, "suggestio" denotes "revelation," and "inspiratio" denotes "inspiration." In the same connection, Quenstedt speaks of: "res sanctis scriptoribus naturaliter prorsus incognitae; naturaliter quidem cognoscibiles, actu tamen incognitae; non tantum naturaliter cognoscibiles, sed etiam actu ipso notae," and brings them all under the head of inspiration.

Marking this distinction, the first position to be taken respecting the Bible is, that it is all of it inspired. The original autograph-volume of inspiration was free from error. This does not mean that every sentence or proposition in Scripture contains a truth. The words of Satan to Eve (Gen. 3 : 4) were a falsehood. But those words were actually spoken, and they are recorded with infallible accuracy. Some of the reasonings and inferences of Job's friends were false, but they occurred as they are related by the inspired penman.

This theory of plenary inspiration has been the generally received doctrine of the Church. The following statement of Turrettin (II. iv. 5) contains it: "The sacred writers were so moved and inspired by the Holy Ghost, both in respect to thought (res ipsas) and language, that they were kept from all error, and their writings are truly authentic and divine." Quenstedt defines in a similar manner. "Scripture is infallible truth, free from all error; each and everything contained in it is absolute truth (verissima); be it doctrine, morals, history, chronology, topography, proper names." Similarly llollaz remarks, that "matters of genealogy, of astronomy, of politics, though the knowledge of them is not necessary to salvation, are yet divinely revealed [inspired], because they serve to interpret and illustrate the truths that are necessary to salvation." Hase: Ilutterus, § 44j These theologians, in these affirmations, have reference to the original autograph. The statement, be it doctrinal, historical, chronological, or geographical, as it came from the inspired person himself, was accurate. But they concede that some minor errors have subsequently come into the scripture manuscripts, from copyists and translators, and that some have been introduced by critics and exegetes.

The Westminster Confession (I. ii. vi.) teaches that " all the books of the Old and New Testament are given by inspiration of God, to be the rule of faith and life ;" and that "our full persuasion and assurance of the infallible truth and divine authority thereof is from the inward work of the Holy Spirit, bearing witness by and with the word in our hearts." The Scripture proofs of the authority and infallibility of the scriptures are: 2 Tim. 3 : 16, "All scripture is given by inspiration of God." Heb. 1:1, 2, "God, who at sundry times and in divers manners, spake in times past unto the fathers by the prophets, hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son." 1. Cor. 2 :13, " Which things we speak, not in the words which man's wisdom teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost teacheth." 2. Pet. 1: 21, "Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost." John 5: 39, " Search the scriptures." Rom. 3:2, "Unto them were committed the oracles of God." Isa. 8 : 20, "Look ye to the law and to the testimony."

The theory of plenary inspiration prevailed in the Patristic, Mediaeval, and Reformation periods. Luther has sometimes been cited as adopting a different view, because of his opinion respecting the authority of the Apocalypse and the Epistle of James. But he questioned the canonicity of these portions of scripture. All scripture that he conceded to be canonical, he held to be infallible.

The Christian fathers are sometimes said to. have held a loose view of inspiration. But the view of Augustine was certainly a strict one, and it had high authority in the patristic and mediaeval churches. In his De Consensu Evangelistarum (I. xxxv.), he says: "Christ is the head and his apostles are the members. Whatever he wished us to read concerning his words and deeds, he ordered to be written down as if with his own hands; and he who reads the narratives of the evangelists will believe them as if he saw Christ himself writing by their hands and pens."

Calixtus (1650), in Germany, introduced a less strict middle theory; according to which the sacred writers were preserved from all error in regard to doctrine necessary to salvation, but not in regard to subjects that have no such importance. His view found few advocates in his own day. Baumgarten (1725) reaffirmed it, maintaining that the Divine influence preserved the sacred writers from error only so far as the purpose of a revelation required, which is the salvation of the soul from sin; this purpose, he said, would not be frustrated by unimportant errors in chronology, history, topography, etc. This view, during this century, has gained ground particularly in Germany. Such evangelical theologians as Tholuck, Twesten, and Mtiller adopt it. Dorner accepts it in part. "There are historical matters which stand in essential connection with the meaning and spirit of revelation. In this case, inspiration does not apply merely to non-historic eternal truths." Christian Doctrine, § 59. The theory is presented eloquently by Coleridge in his Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit. For a criticism, see Shedd: Literary Essays, 336-342.

The objections to this middle theory of inspiration are the following: 1. The primary and the secondary matter in Scripture, such as doctrine and history, are so indissolubly connected with each other, that uncertainty in respect to the latter casts uncertainty upon the former. If for example the history of the residence of the Israelites in Egypt, and of their exodus and wanderings, is mythical and exaggerated like the early history of Assyria and Babylon, this throws discredit upon the decalogue as having been received from the lips of God on Sinai. If the history, geography, and chronology, in the midst of which the doctrinal elements of the Pentateuch are embedded, contain fictions and contradictions, these doctrinal elements will not be accepted as an infallible revelation from God.

The same reasoning applies to the history and chronology of the New Testament. If the narrative by the four evangelists of the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ is more or less legendary, it will be impossible to secure for the doctrines of Christ that undoubting belief which the church in every age has exercised in regard to them. This is clearly perceived by the skeptic. Strauss well knew that if he could succeed in proving the mythical character of the New Testament history, he would have little difficulty in destroying human confidence in the New Testament dogmas.

To say that if the doctrines of Scripture are held to be infallible, it is of no consequence whether the history and geography of Scripture are free from error, is like Schenkel's assertion that if the spirit of Christ is with the church, it is of no consequence whether his body rose from the grave or not. It would be impossible for the church to believe that the spirit of Christ dwells and operates in his people, if the church at the same time were denying or doubting that Christ rose from the tomb. The primary and the secondary, the doctrinal and the historical elements of Scripture stand or fall together. This is illustrated by a fact in the history of rationalistic criticism. Graf "assigned a postexilian origin to the great body of legislation found in Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers. The historical portion of this Grundschrif t, he still maintained to be the oldest part of the Pentateuch. But here, as Kuenen said, was the Achilles heel of his theory. Hence Riehm and others insisted that he had no right to separate the legislative from the historical portions, unless he renounced the leading principles of analysis as hitherto employed. Graf then yielded, and announced his conviction that the whole of the first Elohist, history as well as laws, is post-exilian. This view was afterwards elaborated by Wellhausen." Chambers: Pentateuchal Criticism. Essay I. 14.

2. It is improbable that God would reveal a fact or doctrine to the human mind, and do nothing towards securing an accurate statement of it. This is particularly the case, when the doctrine is one of the mysteries of religion. Such profound truths as the trinity, the incarnation, vicarious atonement, etc., require the superintendence and guidance of an infallible Spirit to secure an enunciation that shall not be misleading. Hence it is more natural to suppose that a prophet or an apostle who has received directly from God a profound and mysterious truth inaccessible to the human intellect, will not be left to his own unassisted powers in imparting what he has received. Especially is it improbable that communications from the deity would be veiled in extravagant and legendary costume.

3. The middle theory of a partial inspiration is more difficult to be maintained, than is the theory of plenary inspiration. Because if only a part of Scripture is infallible, it becomes necessary to point out which part it is. If any one asserts that there are errors in the Bible, he must demonstrate them. This is an arduous task. It is more difficult to prove that the narratives of the Pentateuch are forgeries of later writers, than to prove that they were composed by Moses. No one can demonstrate that the history of the exodus is legendary. The evidence for it as history is much greater than against it as fable. The arguments in favor of the scripture chronology are stronger than those against it. If they were not, the chronology would long ago have been rejected by the majority of students of the Bible; the number of believers would have been as small as the existing number of skeptics.

It must bo remembered that unsolved difficulties are not equivalent to a proof of the falsity of Scripture. Because a particular link in the chain of Biblical chronology, for example, cannot now be put in, it does not follow that this chronology as a whole is erroneous. The mere absence of complete proof of the affirmative is not a proof of the negative. When there is a strong body of proof for a proposition, the mere fact that at a certain point the proof is weak, or lacking, is not sufficient to discredit the demonstrative force of this body of proof. The fact that the skeptic can ask a question which the believer cannot answer, is not a proof that the skeptic's own position is the truth, or that the believer's position is false. The unsolved difficulties respecting inspiration have often been palmed off as positive arguments for his own position, by the unbeliever.

In maintaining the plenary inspiration of the Bible, we shall consider it first as containing matter that is revealed, in distinction from inspired. All such revealed truth is infallible, that is, free from error.

Revelation in the restricted sense, we have seen, denotes the communication of truth or facts hitherto unknown to man, and incapable of being deduced from the structure of the human intellect, or derived through the ordinary channels of human information. It is generally indicated in the Old Testament by such phraseology as the following: "The vision of Isaiah which he saw concerning Judah and Jerusalem," Isaiah 1:1. "The burden of Tyre," Isa. 23 :1. "The word of the Lord that came to Jeremiah, concerning the dearth," Jer. 14:1. "Then was the secret revealed to Daniel, in a night vision," Dan. 2 :19; 10 :1. "Thus saith Jehovah, Call unto me, and I will answer thee, and shew great and mighty things which thou knowest not," Jer. 33:2, 3. In the New Testament, St. Paul describes a revelation as a species of divine communication. ""What shall I profit you, except I shall speak either by revelation (ev aiTOKaXinfrei), or by knowledge," 1 Cor. 14: 6. "When ye come together, every one of you hath a doctrine, hath a revelation (airoKoKip^iv), hath an interpretation," 1 Cor. 14 : 26. "I will come to visions and revelations of the Lord," 2 Cor. 12:1. The product of a revelation is denominated a "mystery." "We speak the wisdom of God in a mystery," 1 Cor. 2:7. "Let a man so account of us as stewards of the mysteries of God," 1 Cor. 4:1. "Behold I show you a mystery," 1 Cor. 15 : 51. A mystery is a truth or fact revealed without an explanation of it. The trinity is such. Oftentimes when a proof of a revealed truth is demanded, it is really an explanation that is asked for. The objector requires that the fact or truth be made clear to his mind; in which case, the mystery is at an end.

As an example of a revelation, consider 2 Thess. 2:3. St. Paul here informs the Thessalonian church of a fact that had been divulged to him from God: viz., that the second advent of Christ to the final judgment will not occur, until after a great apostasy in Christendom has taken place. He could not have obtained the knowledge from any human source. It was a secret which God disclosed to him. And it was infallible information. The future history of the world will evince that it is. Other examples of revelation are seen in the account of the resurrection of the body, in 1 Cor. 15 : 35-55; of the cessation of the work of redemption, in 1 Cor. 15: 24-28; and of the conversion of the Jews after the conversion of the Gentiles, in Rom. 11: 25. The account, in Gen. 1, of the order and succession of events in the creation of the world, is a revelation. This is a history which is both revealed and inspired. In this respect it differs from the history of the exodus of the Israelites, and similar histories in Scripture, which are inspired but not revealed. There was no human observer to witness the process of creation, and to compose an account of it. The information of what was done in the six days must have been imparted by the Creator himself, who was the only actor and the only spectator. It could not have been derived from human records, or human science. Again the doctrine of the trinity is a truth not deduciblc by rational reflection, and therefore it is a revelation. In this respect, it differs from the doctrine of the unity of God. This latter is a truth capable of being inferred by the human intellect, as St. Paul (Rom. 1:19) teaches, from a contemplation of the works of creation outwardly and the operations of the human soul inwardly. The trinity is a part of the written revelation; but the divine unity is a truth of natural religion, or unwritten revelation. The doctrine of the trinity as stated in the Bible is both revealed and inspired; the doctrine of the divine unity as stated in the Bible is inspired but not revealed.

Again, the doctrine of vicarious atonement is a revelation. The doctrine of personal atonement, namely, that the transgressor must himself suffer, is a truth of natural religion; but that another competent person may and will suffer for him is a truth only of revealed religion. "The soul that sinneth it shall die" (Ezek. 18 : 4), is natural religion. Christ "was made a curse for us" (Gal. 3:13); Christ "is the propitiation for our sins" (1 John 2:2); is revelation. Whether God will pardon sin, and in what way he will do it, can no more be determined by a priori reasoning, than it can be determined by a priori reasoning whether another poet like Shakespeare will appear. It is a question of fact and of intention on the part of God; and a fact must be known either by history, or by prophecy, which is history beforehand. And the only historical statement respecting the fact that God will forgive sin, is that of God himself in the written revelation. There may be conjectures and hopes in regard to the Divine mercy, but no certain knowledge except by a word from the Divine lips. The exercise of justice being necessary, the fact that it will be exercised is a part of the unwritten revelation. The wrath of God is revealed in the human conscience, Rom. 1:18. But the exercise of mercy being optional, and contingent upon the Divine will, the fact that it will be exercised is a part of the written revelation only.

To determine then how much of the Bible is revelation proper, and how much is only inspiration, we have but to examine its contents. Anything in its pages that may indisputably be deduced by human reasoning, or be drawn from human sources of information, is not revealed. But everything else is. The genealogical tables in Matthew and Luke are not revelation. Much of the historical narrative in the Old Testament and New Testament is not revelation. Geographical and statistical data are no part of revelation in distinction from inspiration.

Revelation in the restricted and technical use of the term is not human education and development. When the human mind unfolds its own powers and manifests its own internal resources, the product is human. Philosophy, ethics, and natural theology are not an extraordinary communication from the Supreme Reason. They are the evolution of finite reason, and the product of human inquiry and investigation. It is true that inasmuch as the human intellect is the workmanship of God, and its laws of thinking are imposed by its author, the result may be denominated a revelation in the wide sense of the term. But while it is an unwritten revelation, it is also a natural operation of the human mind. It has the characteristics of the human mind, and is associated with the darkness and error of the fallen human mind. For apostasy has hindered the pure development of the finite reason, so that while the unwritten revelation is sufficiently valid and trustworthy to render man inexcusable for his polytheism and sensuality, it is not an infallible and unerring light.

The theory of Lessing, in his tract entitled Erziehnng des Menschengeschlechts, that revelation, meaning by it the Christian system, is education or human development, is exactly wrong. He regards the Scriptures as only anticipating what the human mind could find out for itself, only more slowly and much later. But the distinguishing truths of the Christian Scriptures are of such a nature that they cannot be deduced from premises furnished by man's intellect. They are historical, not a priori. They must be made known by testimony, not by reasoning. The mathematician by mathematical calculation cannot discover in what order the different species of creatures were made. The a priori method can do nothing here. If any man had happened to be present, and witnessed the creative work, he could have reported what he had seen. But no man can in an a priori manner discover the way and manner in which the world was created. Similarly, no man can deduce in an a priori manner from the nature and structure of the human mind, the doctrines of the trinity, the incarnation, the vicarious atonement, and redemption. These are not an evolution of the human mind, but a disclosure from the Divine mind.

For the same reason, revelation is not the product of national education and development. The Old Testament is not Hebrew literature, in the sense that the Iliad and Greek Drama are Greek literature. The whole Hebrew nation was not inspired by the Holy Spirit, but only a chosen few individuals in it. The merely natural and national development of the Hebrew mind produced the Targums and Talmud, and the Rabbinic literature generally, not the Old Testament scriptures. The latter were the work of Moses, Samuel, David, Isaiah and others—a small circle of Hebrews who were selected out of the Hebrew nation, and supernaturally taught in order that they might instruct their own people, and through them all other peoples. The sacred writers claim this for themselves, and it was conceded by the nation. See Josephus: Contra Apionem, 1.8. That the Old Testament scriptures are merely one of the literatures of the world, the work of the Hebrew nation and not a special revelation, is the postulate and foundation of all rationalistic criticism. "The Old Testament," says Maurice (Moral and Metaphysical Philosophy, Ch. I.), "is not the history of men's thoughts about God, or desires after God, or affections towards him. It professes to be a history of God's unveiling of himself to men. If it is not that, it is nothing; it is false from beginning to end. To make it the history of the speculations of a certain tribe about God, we must deny the very root of any speculations which that tribe ever had. For this root is the belief that they could not think of him, unless he had first thought of them; that they could not speak of him, unless he were speaking to them."

An error of the same general nature is found in some evangelical critics, such as Weiss, for example. In his Biblical Theology of the New Testament, he assumes that the Gospels, primarily, were the product of the Primitive church as a whole, not of the Apostolic circle exclusively. In its first form, the Life of Christ was a narrative floating about in the first Christian brotherhood, and not a narrative composed directly or indirectly by four apostles under the guidance of inspiration. The primitive account of Christ's words and deeds was very fragmentary, and was subsequently supplemented and worked over into the four Gospels as the church now has them. There was an original Mark, from which the present Mark was derived, and that original came from the oral tradition of the first Christian brotherhood. "Our synoptic Gospels in their present form are probably of later origin than most of the other books of the New Testament, and it is possible that many sayings of Jesus have been taken up into them which were either altogether, or at least in their present shape, foreign to the earliest tradition. The Johannean tradition is altogether excluded from the earliest tradition." Weiss: Theology of N. T.§ 10,11. This view makes the Life of Christ to be the product not of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, but of the Primitive church; and this requires this church to have been divinely guided in describing the life and actions of Christ, if the description is an infallible one. Accordingly, the advocates of this view do not claim that the biography of our Lord is free from error, though truthful in the main.

But the fact in the case is, that the first Christian brotherhood obtained all the knowledge it had of the life of Christ from its instructors and guides, the Apostles. The Christian brotherhood came into existence only because the Apostles related what they had seen and heard during their discipleship and intercourse with the ascended Redeemer. The twelve apostles were expressly commissioned by their Master to prepare an accoxmt of his life and teachings, and were promised divine aid and guidance in doing it. Matt. 10: 520; John li: 25, 26; 15 :13-15. This important work was not left to the random method of an early ecclesiastical tradition—a method that would inevitably have mingled legend with true history, as is seen in the apocryphal Gospels. This theory of Weiss and others, is exposed to the same objection that the Protestant urges against the Romish view of ecclesiastical tradition. To go back to a fallible tradition of the first Christian brotherhood for the Life of Christ, which is the foundation of Christianity and of Christendom, is like going back to the fallible tradition of the Romish church for Christian doctrine and polity.

That the Gospels had an apostolical not an ecclesiastical origin, is proved by the fact that there was a SiSaxv T5>v airocnokiov, in which the first brotherhood "continued." Acts 2 : 42. This was the common narrative of the Twelve Apostles respecting the life, teachings, and miracles of their Lord. This common oral account given by the Twelve, "which from the beginning were eye-witnesses and ministers of the word," Luke 1: 2, some of the brotherhood attempted to commit to writing (avardi-affSai Snjyrjaiv, Luke 1:1); and to prevent the errors that would inevitably creep into the life of Christ by this method, Luke under the superintendence of Paul writes the third Gospel. In ordex that the original number of eye-witnesses might be kept full after the death of Judas, a twelfth apostle was chosen out of those who had "companied with them all the time that the Lord Jesus went in and out among them." Matthias was chosen and ordained as an apostle, "to be a witness of Christ's resurrection," Acts 1: 22. This testimony "with great power gave the apostles" in witnessing "of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus," Acts 4: 33. This SiZaffl rcov arroaroXav was committed to writing by those four of the Twelve Apostles to whom the four canonical Gospels have been attributed by the church for nearly twenty centuries. These four Evangelists put into a fixed form the oral gospel which the Twelve had been teaching in their missionary work. The four were the agents of the Apostolic college, in doing what Christ commanded them to do when he promised "to bring all things to their remembrance whatsoever he had said unto them." Justin Martyr, as early as 160, expresses the common belief of the church on this point, when he says that "the Apostles in the memoirs composed by them, which are called Gospels, have thus delivered unto us what was enjoined upon them." Apology I. lxvi. See Presbyterian Review, Jan. 1887, 164-167.

That the Bible as containing revealed truths and facts is infallible, is allowed by those who hold the middle theory of inspiration. All truths and doctrines of Scripture that are necessary to salvation are certainly without mixture of error, and are the infallible rule of faith and practice. It is not therefore the fact of infallible revelation that is disputed, but the fact of infallible inspiration. We turn to the consideration of this, which is the more difficult part of the general subject.

1. Inspiration is not sanctification. It is the operation of the Holy Spirit upon the human mind, for the purpose of conveying religious truth to mankind. It has therefore a certain resemblance to regeneration, in having a Divine author and source. But it differs from it, in that the aim is not to impart holiness but information. Inspiration is intellectual, while regeneration is spiritual. When the Holy Spirit inspires a person, he does not necessarily sanctify him; he only instructs him and conveys truth by him. Balaam was inspired temporarily upon a certain occasion: "The Lord put words into his mouth," Num. 23 : 5. And all that he said while under the influence of the Lord was free from error. Caiaphas also was temporarily inspired: "This he spake not of himself, but prophesied" (John 11: 51); and the prophecy was fulfilled. Nay more, even a dumb animal may be employed as the organ through which God conveys truth to men, as was the case with Balaam's ass. "The Lord opened the mouth of the ass" (Num. 22 : 28); and her expostulation was full of sense and truth. The ass made no mistake in anything she said to Balaam. The Divine message through her, as an instrument, was infallible. In the same manner, even a piece of unconscious matter like the pillar of cloud, or the burning bush, may be employed as the medium of a theophany and of divine instruction through symbols.

This shows that inspiration is only intellectual illumination, and is entirely distinct from sanctification. H inspiration involved sanctification, the degree of each must be equal, and infallibility in knowledge would require sinlessness in character. Most of the organs of inspiration were in point of fact good men. "Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost." None of them however were sinless and perfect men, and yet they were infallible. They had a perfect knowledge on the points respecting which they were inspired, but they had not a perfect character. Peter was inspired, but he was defective in character, and was rebuked by Paul for his inconsistency in conduct. If we compare the result of the Apostolic council related in Acts 15, with the individual action subsequently of Peter spoken of in Gal. 2:11-13, we see that the same person may as an imperfectly sanctified man recede from a position which he had taken previously as an inspired man. The decision of the council respecting the Mosaic ceremonial law was the teaching of the Holy Ghost; but the weak yielding of Peter to the demands of Jewish Christians was the working of sinful imperfection—of which Peter subsequently repented under the fraternal rebuke of Paul. Solomon was inspired to teach a certain class of truths, mainly ethical in distinction from evangelical, but his religious character, particularly in his old age, has led some to doubt his salvation.

The fact that inspiration is instruction, not sanctification, and that revelation is an objective information from God which does not depend on subjective characteristics in the person chosen as the medium of communication, explains how it is that a volume containing the most profound views of God and man that have yet been published on earth, could have been produced amongst a people comparatively low in knowledge, civilization, and culture. The Hebrews were inferior to the Greeks and Romans, in merely humanistic characteristics; inferior in literature, art, and science. They produced very little in these provinces. But nothing in Greek or Roman theology and ethics will compare with the Scriptures of the Old Testament. The decalogue is the highest of moral codes; but Moses was the leader and head of a half civilized and degraded body of Egyptian slaves. Had his theological and religious knowledge been only that which his own environment in Egypt at the court of Pharaoh would have furnished, he could no more have composed the decalogue, or the account of the creation in the opening of Genesis, than he could have composed Hamlet or the Principia. The immense disparity between the Old Testament as a book and the Hebrew people as a nation, shows that the knowledge of God and divine things contained in the former, but wanting in the latter, came ab extra. It was communicated from on high.

2. Inspiration is not omniscience.1 The operation of the Holy Spirit does not impart all truth to the inspired mind, but only a portion of it. And it is religious truth that is principally conveyed. The Holy Spirit communicates secular truth only so far as this is necessary to the imparting of religious truth. "The scriptures principally teach what man is to believe concerning God, and what duty God requires of man." Westminster L. C. 5. They teach secular and scientific truth only in subserviency to this.

Again, the knowledge of one inspired man may be less than that of another. There is a gradation in imparting religions truth. In the beginning of the Old economy, the Holy Ghost disclosed the doctrine of the incarnation only to that extent in which it is seen in the promise respecting the "Seed of the woman." The doctrine continues to be divulged with increasing details, until in Isaiah it is greatly widened and enlarged. In the New Testament, the doctrine is as fully revealed as it will be, until the vision of the church by faith becomes the vision face to face. The apostle John knew more than Moses, respecting the pre-existence, incarnation, and death of the Son of God. Yet the latter was infallibly inspired upon all points respecting which he has said anything. But he has not spoken upon as many points as St. John has.

3. Inspired truth is not necessarily completely comprehensible. A doctrine or fact may be infallible, and yet mysterious. Because the Bible is not level to human intelligence in all its teachings, it does not follow that it is not free from error. In 1 Pet. 1:10, 11, the Old Testament prophets themselves are described as "inquiring and

1 Immer, Hermeneutics p. 18, argues against the infallibility of St. Paul, because of the failure of his memory in regard to a certain particular. 1 Cor. 14:16. Because the apostle could not remember how many persons he had baptized, therefore his teaching in 1 Cor. 15 respecting the resurrection is fallible! Upon the same principle, he should deny St. Paul's infallibility beoause he was ignorant of the steam engino and telegraph.

searching" into the meaning of the prophecies taught them by the Holy Spirit. The "sufferings of Christ, and the glory that should follow" are points that are mentioned.

Defining inspiration positively, it may be described as the influence of the Holy Spirit upon a human person, whereby he is infallibly moved and guided in all his statements while under this influence. The general notion is that of an afflatus. There is an imbreathing of the Holy Spirit upon the human spirit. The epithet employed by St. Paul (2 Tim. 3 :16) is SeoirvevoTos. The consequence is an inward impulse and actuation of the mind. "Holy men of God spake as they were moved (carried along, cf>epofievoi) by the Holy Spirit," 2 Pet. 1: 21.

Analyzing, there is: (a). Suggestion of matter, both as to thought and language; aiding the memory is included in this (John 14: 26);1 (J). Impulse to speak or write; (c). Direction, by which the mind is preserved from error. We are aided in conceiving of the operation of the Holy Spirit in inspiration, by its analogy with his operation in regeneration. (a). It violates no laws of thought. (5). It leaves the individual peculiarities as it finds them. (c). It is thorough and all-pervading. Hence it affects the language as well as the thought.

At this point, there is a difference of opinion among those who hold to plenary inspiration; some affirming, and some denying the doctrine of verbal inspiration, in connec

'"In his extreme old age, the elder Adams was asked for an analysis of James Otis's speech in 1761 on the acts of the Board of Trade, which was five hours long. He answered that no man could have written the argument from memory 'the day after it was spoken,' much less 'after a lapse of fifty-seven years.' Adams then proceeded to compose a series of Letters on the subject filling thirty-three closely printed pages. Comparing these letters with letters written at or near the time, I am obliged to think that the venerable man blended together his recollections of the totality of the influence and doctrines of Otis during the years 1761-6. I own that I have had embarrassment in adjusting the authorities." Bancroft: History, IV. 416. If St. John did not compose and write his Gospel until A.d. 80, or 90, he certainly would have needed supernatural assistance in reporting so minutely and fully as he has the last discourse of Christ, some fifty or more years after its delivery.

tion with it. Everything depends, in settling this question, upon the view taken of the connection between thought and language. If words are merely arbitrary signs of ideas, like the algebraic symbols plus and minus,—mere marks, having no affinity with the ideas, and not prompted by them—then an idea might be suggested by inspiration without any prompting or suggestion of a word to express it. Thought and language in this case are wholly diverse and disconnected, and if words are given to the prophet by which to exhibit the wordless thoughts that have been started in his mind, it must be by dictation. Dictation is the standing objection to verbal inspiration. Upon this theory of language, it is assumed that the two processes of thinking and expressing thought can each go on by itself independently of the other, and that the thought does not naturally and inevitably prompt the word. When an author dictates to a scribe, the scribe does not go through the mental process along with the author; any more than does the type-setter in setting up type; any more than does the parrot in repeating human words. The scribe does not think the author's thoughts along with him, but mechanically writes down what he hears with his ear. In this instance, the ideas and the words, for the scribe, are entirely separated from each other. If this be the true theory of the relation of language to thought, then verbal inspiration would be dictation.

But if it be held that there is a natural affinity and a necessary connection between thought and language, then whatever prompts thought prompts language, and an influence upon one is an influence upon the other. The suggestion of ideas inevitably involves the suggestion of words. Thought and language upon this theory are inseparable, so that when the Holy Spirit inspires a prophet, the mind of the prophet is so moved that he not merely thinks, but utters his thinking in language that is suitable and simultaneously imbreathed and prompted along with the thought. Both alike are theopneustic.1 This is wholly different from dictation. Dictation separates thought and language; verbal inspiration unites them. Verbal inspiration is the truth, if thought is prior to and suggests language; but not if language is prior to and suggests thought. The inspired writer in this latter case does not have the thought until he has had the word, and the word is dictated to him by the Spirit, not prompted in him by the inspired thought in his own mind.

That words are not arbitrary signs of ideas, having no natural connection and affinity with the ideas expressed by them, is proved: 1. By Scripture. According to the Bible, an idea and its word are the same thing essentially. They are human thought in two different modes or forms. When a thought is in the mind, or unuttered, it is an idea. When that same thought is out of the mind, or uttered, it is a word. An idea is an internal word; and a word is an external idea. To speak, is to think externally; and to think, is to speak internally. Accordingly, the Scriptures denominate thinking internal speaking. "The fool hath said in his heart, there is no God," Ps. 14:1. "Begin not to say within yourselves," Luke 3:8. "Afterwards he said within himself," Luke 18 : 4. In these instances, thinking is mental speaking, and consequently speaking is vocal thinking. With this agrees our own modern usage. In common parlance, when men utter their thoughts in words, they are said to "think aloud." In Greek, Xoyo? signifies both reason and word. Reason is internal thought (Xoyo? iv&idSeros); word is external thought (Xoyo? irpofopiKo<;).

2. By comparing the sounds of human language with

1 Says Philippi (Glaubenslehre, Zwciter Kapitel), "While we maintain verbal inspiration (Wortinspiration), we do not mean the inspiration of each word separately and by itself (WBrterinspiration)." As he explains his meaning, it seems to be, that an apostle, or prophet, under the impulse of the Divine Spirit, originated a product that as a unity and a whole was inspired both in matter and form, thought and language. But each particular word, one by one, was not mechanically and separately suggested to him. The process of inspiration was dynamical, continuous, and flowing.

other sounds. Human language is not mere unmeaning noise, like the sounds in material nature, such as that of falling water, or of thunder. These sounds have no sense or signification for the human reason. Nor is human language like the cries of animals, or the singing of birds. These sounds, though approaching nearer to human speech than do the sounds of material nature, yet contain no intellectual ideas or conceptions. They are thoughtless inarticulate cries, not language proper. But the sounds of every human language are thoughtful, and waken thought. They are not mere sounds, but sounds filled with sense and meaning for the human mind. See Torrey: Theory of Fine Art, 236.

3. By the fact that shades of an idea suggest varieties of words. This explains the origin of synonyms. The author of Proverbs denominates the second trinitarian person Wisdom; St. John denominates him Reason. The two phases of the revealed idea suggest the two different terms for it.

4. By the fact that men think in words. (a). If an Englishman reads or speaks the French language, his thinking is connected with English words alone, unless he has made the French language as familiar as his own, and can think in it. Before he can grasp the idea, he must transfer it from the French word to the corresponding English one. Not until this process has been gone through, is he master of the thought. Here, thought is necessarily connected with language. The following from a work of fiction illustrates this. "Madame de Lalouve spoke very good English indeed, and her accent, especially, was all but faultless, but she had the defect of thinking in French, and translating afterwards into our vernacular, and hence her speech occasionally lapsed into Gallic idioms and turns of language. It was quite otherwise with that other linguist whose nickname was Chinese Jack. He was one of those polyglot talkers who are possessed of the rare gift of thinking in any articulate tongue, from Hebrew to Japanese, and therefore of expressing his thoughts as a Malay, or a Persian, or a Spaniard would do, and not as a scholar with an elaborate acquaintance with the language would do." (b). Intense thinking often causes audible wording or phrasing of the thought; for example, whispering, or speaking aloud to one's self, (c). The dumb person, attempts to utter his thoughts in an inarticulate murmur or sound of some kind. His ideas struggle for utterance, implying that an idea is incomplete without its word. (d). A tribe of men without an articulate language, if such could be found, would be without human ideas. Their range of consciousness would be like that of the brutes. Sometimes a particular word is found to be wanting in a language, and it is also found that the particular idea is wanting also. The missionary Riggs reports that the Dakota language contained no word for one quarter, or one eighth, and so on, because the people had no idea of such fractions. They stopped with the notion of one half, in their calculations, and went no further mentally. "Only one word," he says, "exists—hankay, half. We missionaries in writing out and improving the language can say hankay-hankay, the half of a half; but the tribe do not. Besides hankay, there is nothing but the word for a piece. But this is an indefinite word, and not suited for the certainties of mathematics. The poverty of the language has been a great obstacle in teaching arithmetic. But the poorness of the language shows their poverty of thought in the same line."

5. By the fact that a peculiar kind of thought expresses itself spontaneously in a particular kind of phraseology. Poetic thought suggests and prompts poetic forms of language; philosophic thought suggests and prompts philosophic forms, etc.1

1 On the necessary connection of thought and language, compare MUller: Science of Language, Firet Series, Lectures I. II. IX.; Science of Thought, L 284, sq. Westoott: Study of the Gospels (Introduction). Shedd : Literary Essays, 149-168.

Scripture itself asserts verbal inspiration. Jer. 1: 9, "I have put words in thy mouth ;" Luke 21:12-15, "I will give you a mouth and wisdom "—both language and thought; Matt. 10:20, "It is not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in you ;" Acts 2 :4, "They spake as the Spirit gave them utterance ;" 2 Peter 1: 21, "Holy men spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost." "Words are carefully selected by the inspired mind, under divine guidance. In John 10: 35, stress is laid upon the use of the word " gods" as applied to prophets and magistrates; and iu Gal. 3:16, upon the use of the singular "seed," not the plural "seeds." The neuter is employed instead of the masculine, when the idea of the impersonal becomes of great consequence; e.g.: Luke 1: 35, To yewdiuevov aytov; John 10 : 30, h> instead of It?. In Phil. 2: 6, fj-opcf)Tj Seov is used instead of ova ia Seov, because the idea is that of a particular trinitarian person, not of the divine essence simply. In John 17: 24, the Eeceptus reads o£? SeoWti?, and the uncials read 6 Se'Sco/ea?. If the idea in the mind of the inspired writer was that of the church as a collective unity, the thought suggested the word 6. If it was that of particular individuals, the thought suggested the word ofc.

The objections urged against the plenary inspiration of the Bible are the following:

1. There are discrepancies and errors in the history, geography, and chronology. In replying to this objection, it is to be remarked in the outset, that the correction of a book by itself is different from its correction by other books. There is only apparent error in the first case; in the second there is real error. If the witness himself while upon the stand explains satisfactorily certain variations in his own testimony, this does not invalidate his testimony. But if another witness contradicts or corrects him, this awakens doubt and may invalidate.

Now it is a fact that many of the difficulties of which we are speaking do not arise from a discrepancy between the Bible and other books, but between parts of the Bible itself. For example, 2. Kings 8:26 asserts that Ahaziah was twenty-two years old when he began to reign, and 2 Chron. 22 : 2 asserts that he was forty-two years old at that time. One of these must be corrected by the other. Again, Luke relates that one of the malefactors reviled Christ, and the other did not; Mark says that " they that were crucified with him reviled him;" and Matthew that "the thieves also which were crucified with him " insulted him. These variations can be shown to be consistent with one another, by comparing scripture with scripture, as is done in the ordinary Harmonies of the Gospels. It is plain, in reference to such seeming discrepancies, that inasmuch as each sacred writer knew what had been said by his predecessors, what appears to be contradiction to a modern reader must have been none for the original author. He evidently was not aware of any real discrepancy. For had he been, he would either have referred to it and harmonized it with his own, or else would have avoided it altogether by verbally conforming his own statement to that of his predecessor.

The Bible then is self-rectifying. The book furnishes the materials for its own verification. This is wholly different from rectification from human sources, such as profane literature. When scripture explains or if need be corrects scripture, the divine explains and verifies the divine; inspiration explains inspiration; spiritual things are compared with spiritual, 1 Cor. 2:13. But if scripture requires to be explained and corrected by human authorities, then the divine is rectified by the human. In the first case, the error is only seeming; in the last, it is real.

Another preliminary remark is, that minor and unessential variations are positive proofs of truthfulness in a witness. Had the Gospels been forged, there would not have been even seeming discrepancies, because pains would have been taken to avoid them. Discrepancies of a certain kind, are sure proof of an absence of collusion and previous agreement between the evangelists. Variations are not necessarily contradictions. The testimony of witnesses in court who agree in the general, is not rejected because of some unessential diversity. If each witness exactly and parrotlike repeated the other's testimony, he would be suspected for the very reason of exact similarity. There may be too much agreement between witnesses, as well as too little.

Minor variations, consequently, are not inconsistent with plenary inspiration. As they are compatible with a true account, they are also compatible with an infallible account. In saying that the Holy Spirit inspired both Matthew and John in writing a memoir of Christ, it is not meant that he guided them in such a way that each related the very same incidents in the very same manner, and in the very same words; that he inspired them to produce two facsimiles. But the meaning is, that he guided each in such a manner that the individuality of each writer was preserved in the choice of incidents, in their arrangement, and in the phraseology; and yet in such a manner that neither writer attributes to Christ a parable which he did not teach, a miracle which he did not work, or describes him as concerned in occurrences with which he really had nothing to do. Luke's order differs in some particulars from that of Matthew, but this does not prove that there is historical error in either of them. A biographer may know the actual and true order, and yet alter it for logical or rhetorical reasons. He may, for such reasons, throw together in one group a series of parables or miracles which were spoken or wrought at different times, and still his account of the parables and miracles cannot be charged with mistake, because the grouping is apparent on the face of his narrative.

Four different persons may be inspired to relate the biography of Christ, and may produce four narratives that are infallible, or free from error, without mentioning the very same incidents, in the very same order, in the same degree of detail, and in the same phraseology. The objector oftentimes seems to suppose that infallibility means not only freedom from error, but such an identity of statement as would amount to a fac-simile. The inscription on the cross is an example. Matthew reports that it was, "This is Jesus, the King of the Jews." Mark, that it was, "The King of the Jews." Luke, that it was, "This is the King of the Jews." John, that it was, "Jesus of Nazareth the King of the Jews." Now if infallibility means freedom from error in the statement actually made, and not the exclusion of every kind of variety in the manner of stating a fact, and so the production of a mere facsimile, these four reports are infallible. Mark is not in error when he says that the inscription was, " The King of the Jews." These words were in the inscription, as the other reports show. He states the truth, though not the whole truth. Had he said in addition that these were the ipsissima verba, and were all the words, he would have stated an error.

From the list therefore of alleged discrepancies and errors, must be deducted all such as scripture itself enables the reader to correct. To these belong: (a). Errors of copyists. 2 Kings 8:26, "Ahaziah was two and twenty years old when he began to reign," compared with 2 Chron. 22 : 2, "Forty and two years old when he began to reign." According to 1 Sam. 6 :19, 50070 men were slain for looking into the ark; seventy men probably being the number. Speaker's Commentary in loco. Says Kawlinson (Introduction to Chronicles), "The condition of the text of Chronicles is far from satisfactory. Various readings are frequent, particularly the names of persons and places which occur in different forms not likely to have been used by the same writer. Numerous omissions are found, especially in the genealogies, where sometimes important names have dropt out; and sometimes the names which remain do not agree with the numerical statement attached to them. But the most important corruptions are in the numbers in Samuel or Kings, sometimes unreasonably large, and therefore justly suspected. Other defects are a derangement in the order of the words, and the substitution of a more familiar term for one less known." (5). Errors in translation.

(c). Discrepancies which greater fulness of detail in the narrative would remove. "Brevis esse laboro, obscurus no," says Horace. A harmony of the four Gospels that removes every difficulty without exception is probably not possible, because of the sketch-like nature of the narrative. The Gospels are memorabilia, and were called dirofivrjfiovevfiara at first. A series of memoranda, though agreeing in principal features, are generally difficult to reconcile in all particulars. The conciseness and brevity of one evangelist at a particular point, sometimes makes it difficult or even impossible to show his agreement in this particular with another evangelist who is fuller at this point. But no evangelist ever differs so greatly from the others as to destroy his own historical credibility, or that of the others. Differences sometimes arise from silence on the part of a writer, and these are alleged to be contradictions. Mark and John give no account of the miraculous conception of Christ by the Holy Ghost, yet both of them imply it. He is a supernatural and divine person for them both. There is nothing in Mark and John that contradicts the miraculous conception. John gives no account of the institution of the Lord's Supper, but he records conversations of Christ that involve the fact. See John 6: 48-58. Two inspired narratives may be each infallible, and yet one contain more information than the other. Had Matthew, for example, related two of Christ's temptations in the desert, and omitted the third, while Luke related all three, both accounts would have been inerrant, provided that Matthew had not positively asserted that there were only two temptations. There would be no just ground for saying that the two accounts contradicted each other. It is not necessary that an inspired person should know all things, or even report all that he does know; but only that what he does report should be true. The evangelists were permitted and thus inspired to omit some incidents in Christ's life ; for it is improbable that the contents of the four Gospels contain all that the four evangelists knew concerning him. "There are also many other things which Jesus did, the which, if they should be written every one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written," John 21:25.

(d) . Discrepancies arising from a general statement by one witness, and a particular statement by another, and sometimes by one and the same witness. Matthew (27: 44), and Mark (15:32), say that the thieves crucified with Christ reviled him. The reference here is to a class of men. Luke (23:39-43) says that one of them reviled him, and the other did not. He enters into detail, as the other evangelists do not. According to Acts 9: 7, the companions of Saul heard the heavenly voice but " saw no man ;" according to Acts 22:9, they saw the light, but "heard not the voice." The very same person, namely Luke, who made the first statement made the last, and was not aware of any contradiction between the two. In the first passage, an indistinct sound from heaven is intended, as in Matt. 24: 31 (a£Kirvffo<; tpavrj); in the last passage, articulate words are meant. The companions of Saul saw the light, but not a human form; they heard a sound, but not intelligible language.

(e) . Difficulties arising from an incorrect interpretation of scripture. The explanation of the word " day " in Genesis 1, is a marked instance. Exegetes for many years interpreted it to mean a day of twenty-four hours, thereby bringing Genesis and geology into collision. But so far as the text is concerned, there is full right and reason to explain it as a period. This was the first interpretation, because it was the most natural one. The patristic exegetes so understood the word. "The meaning," says Whewell (Inductive Sciences, I. 286), "which any generation puts upon the phrases of scripture, depends more than is at first sight supposed upon the received philosophy of the time. Hence while men imagine that they are contending for revelation, they are in fact contending for their own interpretation of revelation. At the present day, we can hardly conceive how reasonable men should have imagined that religious reflections in scripture respecting the stability of the earth, and the beauty and use of the luminaries which revolve around it, would be interfered with by the acknowledgment that this rest and motion are apparent only."

(/'). Difficulties in Biblical chronology arise from the fact that the sacred writer does not give a full list of all the names in a series, but only a selected list. Sometimes he omits the name of the son and passes to that of the grandson, or great-grandson, whom he calls a "son." In Gen. 46:16-18, three generations, sons, grandsons, and greatgrandsons, are all called the " sons " of Zilpah. The genealogical tables of the Jews were drawn up artificially. That of our Lord by Matthew is an example. Fourteen names are selected in each of the three periods mentioned. But it would be a great error to infer that Matthew intended to teach that there were exactly fourteen generations, no more and no less, in each of these periods, and should calculate the time accordingly. Gardiner: Harmony, Pt. I. 39. The evangelist took the catalogue of names given in the temple records, and modified it to suit his purpose. This method makes it impossible for one living many centuries later, to construct a Biblical chronology that shall be mathematically precise down to a year, or a score of years. Only an approximation was intended by the writer himself, and the Holy Spirit who guided him. Sometimes, in quoting, a round number is given instead of the exact. Stephen says 400 for 430, in Acts 7 :6. Speaker's Commentary in loco. In addition to this, there is the difference between the Hebrew text from which the modern versions have been made, and that from which the Septuagint version was made. There is a difference of 1500 years. Which is the original text? Only the original is the inspired text.

But while the Biblical chronology is only approximately, not mathematically accurate, it does not follow that it is erroneous. There can be no mathematically exact chronology. The Scripture chronology is free from the fatally damaging error which characterizes all the early ethnical chronology—namely, of attributing an immense antiquity to man and nations. The inspired writers bring all human history within a period of six or eight thousand years. In so doing, they teach no error. This chronology is confirmed by the monuments and records of Assyria, Babylon, and Egypt. Speaker's Commentary: Introduction to Kings and Hosea. Beecher: Presbyterian Review, July, 1881.

(g). Difficulties arising from attributing to the sacred writer statements that are not his, but which he merely records. These make a large list, and furnish some of the most specious objections to the doctrine of plenary inspiration. It is objected, for example, that the discourse of Stephen, in Acts 7, contains chronological and other errors. Even if this can be made out, these errors are not imputable to Luke who reports the discourse. Stephen is indeed said to have been " full of the Holy Ghost," Acts 6:5; and so is Barnabas, Acts 11: 24. But neither of them belonged to the apostolic college of infallible teachers of the Church. This is one of a multitude of statements in Scripture, both of fact and of opinion, whose authorship is not referable to the inspired writers who merely report them.

(A). Variations in citations from the Old Testament in the New. These are neither errors nor contradictions, because the variation is intended by the New Testament writer. The statement of Davidson in the earlier edition of his Hermeneutics expresses the catholic opinion. "Every mode of quotation has been employed, from the exactest to the loose; from the strictly verbal method to the widest paraphrase; but in no case is violence done to the meaning of the original." In the later editions of his work, Davidson recedes from this position, and agrees with the rationalist, who affirms that the meaning of an Old Testament passage is sometimes wrested in quotation by St. Paul. Immer (Hermeneutics) so asserts. That a New Testament writer quotes an Old Testament passage by way of accommodation, does not disprove his inspiration. He may be divinely guided to do this, as well as to quote strictly. The passage which he cites, even if not taken in its first and strictest sense, is yet suited to teach the particular truth which he is inspired to convey. An apostle may adapt a text to his present purpose, as a preacher may, provided the text as so adapted aids him in imparting truth, not error. The same remark holds respecting verbal variation in quoting. That a Is ew Testament writer quotes Moses ad sensum and not ad verbum, does not prove that he is uninspired and fallible upon the subject which he is presenting.

Respecting the difficulties in Scripture that are still unsettled, it is to be noticed that there is no alleged error in doctrine, history, chronology, and physics, that has been demonstrated to be such so irrefragably that it is absurd to attempt a reply. There is no list of conceded errors in scripture. There are perplexities remaining, but while there is not an instance in which the controversy with the skeptic has resulted in establishing the fact of undoubted error in revelation, there are many instances in which it has resulted in demonstrating its truth and accuracy. The skeptical criticism to which the canon has been subjected for a period of nineteen centuries has strengthened, not weakened, the doctrine of plenary inspiration. The discoveries in Nineveh, Babylon, and Egypt, in particular, evince this.

The infallibility of Scripture is denied upon the ground that it contains a human element. The human is fallible and liable to error. If therefore the Bible has a human element in it, as is conceded, it cannot be free from all error. This is one of the principal arguments urged by those who assert the fallibility of Scripture.

This objection overlooks the fact, that the human element in the Bible is so modified by the divine element with which it is blended, as to differ from the merely ordinary human. The written Word is indeed Divine-human, like the incarnate Word. But the human element in Scripture, like the human nature in our Lord, is preserved from the defects of the common human, and becomes the pure and ideal human. The human mind alone and by itself is fallible, but when inspired and moved by the Holy Spirit becomes infallible, because it is no longer alone and by itself. The written word, in this respect, is analogous to the incarnate Word. The humanity of Christ, by reason of its assumption into personal union with the eternal Logos, while remaining really and truly human, is yet not the ordinary sinful humanity. It is perfectly sanctified humanity, free from sin. Similarly, when the Holy Spirit inspires a human mind, though this human mind is not freed from all sin, because inspiration is not sanctification, yet it is freed from all error on the points involved. It is no longer the fallibly human, but is infallible upon all subjects respecting which it is inspired to teach. The inspired human differs from the uninspired human, similarly as the human nature that is united with the second trinitarian person differs from the human nature that is found in an ordinary man. Christ's human soul thought and felt like a real man, but without sin. The Divine-human, in this instance, is sinless. Isaiah's human mind when under inspiration thought and perceived like a real man, but without error. He was not without sin; for inspiration does not sanctify. But he was infallible; for inspiration enlightens without any mixture of untruth.

The "human element" in Scripture means, that an inspired man in perceiving and conveying truth employs his own human mind, his own native language, the common figures of speech, and exhibits his own individual peculiarities, but without misconception and error upon the subject of which he treats, because his human mind is actuated and guided by the Divine Mind. The doctrine, both ethical and evangelical, which the human mind under this superhuman influence teaches, is infallible. The history which it relates is according to facts, and unmixed with legend. The physics which it sets forth contains no pantheism or polytheism. The chronology which it presents has no immense and fabulous antiquity, like that of Egypt and India.

Those who contend that the Bible is fallible because it contains a human element commit the same error, in kind, with those who assert that Jesus Christ was sinful because he had a human nature in his complex person. Both alike overlook the fact that when the human is supernaturally brought into connection with the divine, it is greatly modified and improved, and obtains some characteristics that do not belong to it of and by itself alone. When the Logos would assume a human nature into union with himself, this nature was first prepared for the union by being perfectly sanctified by the Holy Spirit in the miraculous conception. And when the Holy Spirit selects a particular person— Moses, Samuel, David, Isaiah, John, Paul—as his organ for communicating religious truth to mankind, he first makes him infallible, though he does not make him sinless. Consequently, the human element in the prophecy, or the history, or the dogma, which this inspired person gives to the Church, is not a fallible element, because it is blended with the divine element of inspiration and kept free from human error.

2. A second objection urged against the doctrine of plenary inspiration is, that there is a conflict between the Biblical physics and natural science.1 Upon this subject, the following is to be remarked:

1. The inspired writers were permitted to employ the astronomy and physics of the people and age to which they themselves belonged, because the true astronomy and physics would have been unintelligible. If the account of the miracle of Joshua had been related in the terms of the Copernican astronomy; if Joshua had said, "Earth stand thou still," instead of, "Sun stand thou still"; it could not have been understood. The modern astronomer himself describes the sun as rising and setting.

2. If the inspired writers had distinctly and formally represented the popular physics of their day to be the absolute and scientific physics for all time, as they represent the gospel to be the absolute and final religion for all time; if they had endorsed and defended the Ptolemaic astronomy; this would have proved them to be fallible and uninspired. But this they never do. Except in a few places which we shall specify, the Bible does not commit itself to any system of physics. The purpose of the scriptures, says Baronius, is "to teach man how to go to heaven, and not how the heavens go." The sacred writers employ the geocentric physics in their descriptions of natural phenomena, as Kepler and Newton do when they speak of sunrise and sunset, but they nowhere set forth this popular physics as revealed and infallible truth. Because the sacred writer (Josh. 10:1214) describes the sun as standing still, it does not follow that he taught the Ptolemaic astronomy. He had no particular astronomical sjstem whatever in view. Kepler so understood him. "The only thing which Joshua prayed for, was that the mountains might not intercept the sun from him. It had been very unreasonable at that time to think of astronomy, or of the errors of sight and sense; for if any one had told him that the sun could not really move on

1 See Whewell: Inductive Sciences, V. UL 4 (The Copemican System opposed on theological grounds).

the valley of Ajalon except only in reference to sense, would not Joshua have answered that his desire was that the day might be prolonged, so it were by any means whatever." Kepler: On Rash Citations from Scripture. Stanley: Jewish Church, 1st Series, 277.

Lord Bacon, alluding to "the school of Paracelsus and some others that have pretended to find the truth of all natural philosophy in scripture," remarks that in so doing "they do not give honor to the scriptures as they suppose, but much embase them. For to seek heaven and earth, in the word of God, whereof it is said 'heaven and earth shall pass away, but my word shall not pass,' is to seek temporary things amongst eternal; and as to seek divinity in philosophy is to seek the living amongst the dead, so to seek philosophy in divinity is to seek the dead amongst the living; neither are the pots or lavers, whose place was in the outward part of the temple, to be sought in the holiest place of all, where the ark of the testimony was seated. The scope or purpose of the Spirit of God is not to express matters of nature in the scriptures otherwise than in passage, and for application to man's capacity, and to matters moral or divine." Advancement of Learning, II. (sub. fine).

3. At the same time, physical science is to some extent taught by revelation and recorded by inspiration. It is erroneous to say that the Bible commits itself to no physics whatever. Certain truths and facts in regard to the material universe were revealed to some of the writers of the Bible, and these have infallibility. Most of these disclosures relating to physics are made in the beginning of the scriptures. The book of Genesis contains the principal of them. The Holy Spirit having revealed as much respecting the material world as seemed good to him, preparatory to his revelations respecting the spiritual world, is afterwards silent. Christ himself, "by whom all things were made, and without whom was not anything made that was made," makes no further disclosures than those which were granted to Moses.

The positive and distinct teachings of revelation, in the opening of Genesis, respecting the physical universe, differ remarkably from the popular physics of the ancient world. Moses does not present a cosmogony like that of Assyria, or Egypt, or India, or Greece and Rome. His idea of the relation which matter sustains to God is wholly different from that of even as deep a thinker as Plato.

Among the peculiarities that distinguish the revealed physics are the following:

1. The doctrine of creation ex nihilo; in sharp contrast: (a). To the eternity of matter, in atheism; (&). To emanation from the deity, in pantheism; (c). To fanciful fabrications by a multitude of gods, in polytheism. If the sacred writers had been left to themselves, their physics would have been tinctured with one or all of these. But there is nothing of these theories in the Bible. The doctrine of creation from nothing appears everywhere. "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth," Gen. 1:1. "Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting thou art God," Ps. 90 : 2. "The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way, before his works of old, or ever the earth was. When there were no depths I was brought forth. Before the mountains were settled, before the hills, was I brought forth: while as yet he had not made the earth, and the highest part of the dust of the world. When he prepared the heavens I was there, when he set a compass upon the face of the earth, when he gave the sea his decree, then I was by him as one brought up with him," Proverbs 8 : 23-30. "Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth?" Job 38 :4. "All things were made by him," John 1:3. "God calleth those things which be not, as though they were," Rom. 4:17. "By him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible," Col. 1:10. Mosheim, in a learned dissertation annexed to his translation of Cudworth (Ed. Tegg, III. 144), shows that none of the heathen philosophers taught that the world was created ex nihilo.

2. The absolute independence of God in relation to the universe. He is before all things, and by him all things exist. This is in marked contrast to the common view in the ancient physics, and in the skeptical schools in modern physics. In the physics of Plato and Aristotle, the deity is conditioned by the V\tj, though a comparatively lofty and spiritual view of the deity is held. In the cruder physics of Lucretius, mind is wholly subject to matter. The deity is not a free and independent being, so far as the material nniverse is concerned. Material law rules everything, Bo that a supernatural act is impossible.

3. The absolute omnipotence of God in relation to the universe. Forces and laws of nature are under his entire control. They can be originated, or altered, or suspended by their Creator. This feature is also utterly antagonistic to the natural science of the ancient world. See Isaiah 40: 12, 15, 22; Ps. 104.

4. In the opening chapters of Genesis, the order of creation that is given is wholly different from that in the heathen cosmogonies. The Mosaic account begins with the origin of light. Had man been left to conjecture whether the principle of life was originated before that of light, he would have been in doubt which to place first in the order. Moses places it second. Even when the Mosaic account is adopted, there is a propensity to alter it. Coleridge (Table Talk, Apr. 30, 1823), after remarking that the Zendavesta must have been copied in parts from the writings of Moses, says that "in the description of creation, the first chapter of Genesis is taken almost literally, except that the sun is created before the light, and then the herbs and the plants after the sun: which are precisely the two points they did not understand, and therefore altered as errors." A theorist having only the ordinary data would unquestionably have placed the sun in the heavens, before he placed grass, herbs, and trees, upon the earth. Moses would naturally have done the same, if his information had been merely human. God revealed the fact to him as it actually was. And physical science now finds a geological period of warm-water oceans, dense mists, aud high temperature, extremely favorable to vegetable life and growth, long before the sun was able to penetrate the thick and dark vapor with its rays. Again, a theorist might very naturally have placed the creation of marine life on the third day, in connection with the gathering together of the waters, and the formation of the seas and oceans. The element in which fishes and reptiles live would suggest their origination. But Moses places it on the fifth day, in connection with the creation of air animals and man. The order and succession of creative acts as represented by Moses evinces its originality. It is not copied from human schemes, but often runs counter to them. But this difference and contrariety proves that the Biblical account of the creation proceeded from a different source from that of the Egyptian, or the Hindoo, or the Greek and Roman cosmogony.

The Scriptures, then, as an inspired sum-total, are to be referred to God as their author. They are not a national literature, like that of Greece, Rorne, or England. This view, ably presented by Ewald, makes the Bible merely the development of a national mind; in which case, infallibility and authority could no more belong to it than to any other national literature. But the Bible was not produced by the Hebrew nation. It was the product of a select number chosen from time to time out of the nation, and specially informed and inspired by God. The Old and New Testaments were composed by a college of prophets and apostles, not by the people of Israel. Inspiration belongs to an inspired circle of Hebrews, not to the Hebrews generally. Moses, and Samuel, and David, and Isaiah, and their inspired associates, were enlightened by the Holy Spirit, in order that they might impart to the people to which they belonged a knowledge that was otherwise inaccessible to that people, and to all peoples. It is true that the Bible is tinged with Hebrew coloring. It is not a Latin or an English book. And this, because the inspired persons through whose instrumentality it was originated were Hebrews. But this does not prove that the truths and facts which it contains, were derived merely from the operation of the common national mind.

The infallibility and authority which distinguish the Scriptures from all other books, are due to the Divine authorship. But God employed various modes in this authorship. This is taught in Hebrews 1:1, 2. "God, who at sundry times and in divers manners (iro\vfiepa><; Kal iroXvrpoirws) spake in times past unto the fathers by the prophets, hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son." Here, the prophets of the Old Testament, and Christ, the subject of the revelation, are mentioned as the media through whom the Divine Mind was communicated. To these, must be added the apostles of the New Testament.

The "divers manners," in which God made the communications now included in the Bible, are the following:

1. By a theophany or personal appearance of God. (a). God appears in a form, and directly speaks words to an individual in his waking and ordinary condition. Gen. 18:117; Ex. 3:4; 19:20. (5). God appears in a form, and directly speaks to an individual in a dream. Gen. 28:12. (c). God appears in a form, and directly speaks to an individual in an extatic vision. Ezek. 8:1. It is the second person of the trinity who appears in these theophanies, and speaks words to an individual. It is in this reference that he is called the Word, John 1:1; and the "image of the invisible God," Col. 1:15; and the "express image of the Father's person," Heb. 1: 3. Compare Edwards: Work of Redemption, I. i. Owen: Holy Spirit in Prayer, II. Martensen: Dogmatics, § 125.

2. Without any theophany or personal appearance of God. (a). By the high-priest with Urim and Thummim. Ex. 28 : 30; 1 Sam. 28 : 6. (5). By the prophets under an afflatus. 2 Kings 21:10; Rom. 1: 2; 1 Peter 1:11, 12; 2 Peter 1: 21; 1 Cor. 2:13. (c). By the apostles under an afflatus. 1 Cor. 2 :13; Gal. 1:12; Eph. 3 : 3; 1 Thess. 2:13.

3. By the incarnation. Christ's communications of tmth, in their manner, were like the direct utterances of God in the theophanies of the Old Testament, and not like those indirect communications which were made through the prophets and apostles. The Jehovah in the theophany was the same trinitarian person who is in the incarnation. The theophany was the harbinger of the incarnation. God in the form of angel, bush, or dove, prepared for God in a human form. Christ differed from the prophets and apostles, in that he did not speak under an afflatus, but from the divine nature itself. The eternal Word is the infinite fulness of all knowledge. "That was the true Light," John 1:9. "God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him," John 3 : 34. As Christ wrought miracles not as an agent, but as deity itself, so he spake truth from himself, and not as an inspired man receiving it from God.