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Hassells
History of the Church of God |
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C.B.
Hassell |
INTRODUCTION |

Sylvester Hassell |
The Bible is of
incomparably more value than all the literature of the world. Composed of
sixty-six books, which are not literally, but spiritually united, written in all
the forms of literary composition, during a period of at least sixteen
centuries, by about forty inspired authors, in all the ranks of society, from
the highest to the lowest, in Egypt, Arabia, Palestine, Babylon, Asia Minor,
Greece and Rome, indited in three languages, Hebrew, Chaldee and Greek, and
translated into about three hundred languages, it unfolds the history of the
world and of the church from the beginning to the end of time, contains "the
spiritual biography of every human heart," authoritatively declares the
character of God and of His salvation, and portrays the opposite conditions of
the two divisions of the human race in eternity. It is of equal interest and
profit "to king and beggar, to philosopher and child."
During the eighteen centuries
that have elapsed since the close of the Scripture canon, not a single statement
of the written word of God has been disproved by any human discovery. All the
attempts of scoffers and critics and historians and scientists and philosophers
to throw discredit upon the inspired volume have only rebounded upon themselves,
and illustrated the impiety, virulence, ignorance, shallowness, and
conceitedness of their authors. Next after the assaults of the first three
centuries upon the Christian Church, the most vigorous, learned, and persistent
efforts to undermine the religion of the Bible have been made by some votaries
of (1) Criticism, (2) Science, and (3) Philosophy during the last hundred
years. Led on by the enmity of the unrenewed and unspiritual mind against God,
and by the strategy of the prince of the power of the air, these assailants of
divine revelation have left the solid ground-work of facts, and pretentiously
soared into the aerial regions of speculation and conjecture, and, by the
ordination of the Most High, they have become so bereft of that common sense or
reason which they idolize, as to suppose themselves able by their unsubstantial
gossamer theories to overturn the everlasting foundations of the Zion of our
God. Eliminate the guess-work from their baseless fabrics, and all their
splendid structures are at once reduced to airy nothingness. "The path of every
possible hostile theory has been pursued to its utmost limit and has returned
upon itself." The conjectures have been changed as often as the seasons, and
are either admitted to be mere assumptions, or have been abandoned by their
authors or their successors. Along all the lines of intellectual skepticism a
disastrous retreat is sounding. As in ancient times, so now, a few men raised
by God to occupy the very highest eminences of human thought have become valiant
champions for the truth of the Scriptures, and are gifted with wisdom to rout
the armies of the aliens. We know, however, from the Scriptures, that these
broken hosts will be rallied by the arch-enemy again, but that their final
overthrow by the power of God will be signal and complete.
1. CRITICISM -- "Niebuhr,
the founder of modern historical criticism, recognized the atheistic unbelief of
his day as a species of demoniacal frenzy."
As the evening precedes the
morning in each of the six creative days, so the Old Testament, the evening
dispensation of the world, preceded the New Testament, the morning
dispensation. Malachi, the last Old Testament prophet, expressly predicts, in
his last chapter, the rising of the Sun of Righteousness with healing in his
wings. Four hundred years afterwards that blessed and glorious Sun did arise in
the person of Jesus of Nazareth, the incarnate Son of God, and usher in the
heavenly morning of the Gospel Day. Let it never be forgotten, however, that
the Old Testament was the first or evening dispensation- shadowy, rudimentary,
introductory, insufficient, imperfect, external, local, formal, temporal,
typical and prophetic, though, with interruptions, continually rising in
inwardness and spirituality, the feeble light of God’s revelation gradually
increasing from the protevangelium in Eden to the perfect day. In the dim light
of the old economy, men could not see clearly- "it was difficult to discriminate
between evil persons and evil principles- there was much prevalence of personal
revenge, a kind of wild justice less evil than torpidity of conscience-
prudential motives and temporal rewards were prominent- the dispensation was,
not wholly, but predominantly a system of law and justice, and achieved its
triumph in demonstrating (as God had designed) its own failure, and in thus
preparing the way for a better, a higher, a brighter, a perfect and a final
dispensation." Under the inscrutable ordination of the Most High, the nocturnal
heavens of the ancient heathen world were enshrouded in black and heavy clouds-
the obscure rays of nature and providence, to their sin-blinded, proud, foolish,
and idolatrous minds (Romans i. 20-32) became almost totally eclipsed- and
pandemonium reigned throughout Gentile civilization. But, in the land of God’s
chosen people, under divine ordination, the clouds were more or less rolled
away, and the moon and stars appeared and poured down their heavenly light; the
types and prophecies fragmentarily yet multifariously declared to spiritual
Israel the nature of God and His salvation, and the old patriarchs and elders
walked haltingly, yet trustingly, with God, feeling themselves to be strangers
and pilgrims on earth, and looking for a better, even a heavenly country.
Gradually the ceremonial law was distinguished from and subordinated to the
moral law; mere formalism in religion was denounced in the most scathing
terms; the necessity of a hearty spiritual worship of God was tremendously
emphasized; and the poor, humble and needy soul was directed to the Holy One of
Israel as the Lord his Righteousness, his Redeemer, his Strength, and his
Salvation, who was to be manifested in human flesh, and smitten by the sword of
divine justice for the transgressions of His covenant people, make an end of
their sins, make reconciliation for their iniquities, and bring in for them an
everlasting righteousness, and then to re-ascend, as the King of glory, to His
eternal throne; and, in unchanging faithfulness, as time rolled on, to gather
around Him all the jewels of His mercy in that blessed land whose walls are
salvation and whose gates are praise; where the Lord shall be their everlasting
light, and the days of their mourning shall be ended. "The unrivaled loftiness,
authority, directness, and pungency of the Old Testament Prophets, as well as of
the New Testament Apostles, strikes the spiritual mind as a voice from within
the veil."
The religious books of the
ancient Hebrews are utterly distinct in their tone and essence, their spirit and
monotheism, from those of all other ancient peoples. The religions of the most
cultivated ancient heathens, the Egyptians and the Greeks, degenerated into the
most multitudinous and debasing polytheism, the Egyptians deifying brutes, and
the Greeks making gods of such crimes as drunkenness, fraud, sensuality, and
murder. The Decalogue is, on the other hand, the moral core of the Hebrew
Scriptures which represent God as the High and Holy One that inhabiteth
eternity. The freshly exhumed and deciphered monuments of ancient Assyria and
Egypt are furnished daily corroboration of the historical truth of the Old
Testament Scriptures. The original Iranian or Persian religion of dualism,
teaching that there were two original, uncreated, creative spirits, one good and
the other evil, approached more nearly, both in theory and in purity, to the
Hebrew monotheism, but it became mixed and corrupted with Magism, or the worship
of the elements. "Monotheism and expiatory sacrifice," says Prof. George
Rawlinson, of Oxford University, "were parts of the primitive religion, and
except among the Hebrews, these principles were everywhere variously corrupted
through the manifold and multiform deterioration of human nature in different
races and places." "All the founders of the false religions of the world," says
the Duke of Argyle in his magnificent work on the "Unity of Nature," "were
themselves nothing but Reformers; and the reforms they instituted have
themselves all more or less again yielded to new developments of decay. From
Brahminical Pantheism Buddhistic Atheism was an extreme revolt; but the latter
has become equally idolatrous and degraded. Scholars who have begun their
search into the origin of religion in the full acceptance of what may be called
the savage theory of the origin of man- who, captivated by a plausible
generalization, have taken it for granted that the farther we go back in time
the more certainly do we find all religion assuming one or other of the gross
and idolatrous forms which have been indiscriminately grouped under the
designation of Fetishism- have been driven from this belief by discovering to
their surprise that facts do not support the theory. They have found on the
contrary, that up to the farthest limits which are reached by records which are
properly historical, and far beyond those limits to the remotest distance which
is attained by evidence founded on the analysis of human speech, the religious
conceptions of men are seen, as we go back in time, to have been not coarser and
coarser, but simpler, purer, higher- so that the very oldest conceptions of the
divine Being of which we have any certain evidence are the simplest and the best
of all- the very oldest Egyptian and Hindoo compositions speaking of God in the
sublime language which forms the opening of the Lord’s Prayer; and it has been
ascertained that, to some extent, these pure, primitive, monotheistic
conceptions still survive even among the degraded and idolatrous tribes of
Africa."
Herbert Spencer, of England,
the chief human god of nineteenth century infidelity, the impersonation of the
most horrible blasphemy of the God of the Bible, the man who pretends to be the
most earnest and successful of all seekers after truth, in his last book,
entitled "Ecclesiastical Institutions," published in 1886, wherein he professes
to derive the religion of mankind from dreams and ghosts, shows an utter
ignorance or a willful suppression of the fact of the primitive monotheism of
the human race- a fact now thoroughly established and admitted by the ablest
scholars in the world- a fact which completely undermines and annihilates the
very foundation of all his false theory of the evolution of religion.
The composition of the New
Testament in the first century of the Christian era inevitably implies not only
the pre-existence of the Old Testament for hundreds of years before that time,
but the reverent belief of Christ and His Apostles in the divine inspiration of
the Old Testament. Christ is both the main substance and the chief witness and
guarantor of the truth of the Old Testament Scriptures. Believers before the
flood dimly beheld Him as the suffering but victorious seed of the woman.
Abraham rejoicingly saw Him as his own seed in whom all the families of the
earth were to be blessed. Jacob viewed Him as the descendant of his son Judah,
the Shiloh, unto whom the gathering of the people should be. Moses saw Him as
the Prophet whom the Lord God would raise up like unto him, from among his
brethren, to whom they were to give ear. Job, in the depth of his affliction,
beheld Him as his Divine Redeemer, who should stand at the latter day upon the
earth. David saw Him as his own Son and the Son of God, the anointed King of
Zion, yet agonizing before God, and pierced in His hands and feet by the
assembly of the wicked, and going down into the dust of death, but not seeing
corruption, and rising from all the humiliation of His earthly life, and
passing, as the King of Glory, within the everlasting gates, and sitting down on
the right hand of God, the almighty and gentle Shepherd of Israel, ruling in the
midst of His enemies, making His people willing in the day of His power, making
them lie down in green pastures, leading them beside the still waters, restoring
their souls, leading them in the paths of righteousness for His name’s sake,
accompanying them all the days of their lives with His goodness and mercy,
giving them the victory over every foe, even death, and making them dwell in the
house of the Lord forever. Isaiah beheld Him as Immanuel, God with us, a child
born, a son given, whose name was Wonderful, Counsellor, the mighty God, the
Everlasting Father and the Prince of Peace, the sure foundation-stone laid in
Zion, tried and precious, and as the man of sorrows and acquainted with grief,
bruised for our iniquities and healing us with His stripes. Jeremiah saw Him as
the Lord our Righteousness. Ezekiel beheld Him as a man and yet as the Lord, of
a bright, fiery appearance, seated upon a sapphire throne, and encircled with a
rainbow. Daniel saw Him as a little stone cut out of the mountain, breaking in
pieces the iron, the brass, the clay, the silver, and the gold of
Nebuchadnezzar’s image, and as the Son of man coming with the clouds of heaven
to the Ancient of days, and acquiring universal and everlasting dominion, and as
Messiah the Prince, who should come to the holy city, and be cut off but not for
Himself, and should make an end of sins, and bring in an everlasting
righteousness, and seal up the vision and prophecy, a short time before the
destruction of the city and sanctuary. Micah beheld Him as the Ruler of Israel,
whose goings forth had been from everlasting, coming out of Bethlehem-Ephratah.
Haggai saw Him as the Desire of all nations, coming to the second temple, and
filling it with greater spiritual glory than the first temple, and in that place
giving peace. Zechariah saw Him as the King of Zion, just and having salvation,
lowly, and riding upon a colt the foal of an ass into Jerusalem, betrayed for
thirty pieces of silver, pierced by the house of David and the inhabitants of
Jerusalem, but bringing them to mourn with a great and solitary mourning for
Him, and opening to them a fountain for sin and for uncleanness- as the Shepherd
of God, a man, and yet the equal of the Lord of hosts, smitten by the sword of
God, who them turns his hand of mercy upon the little ones. And Malachi beheld
Him as the Messenger of the covenant, the Lord suddenly coming to His temple,
and purifying the sons of Levi as gold and silver in the furnace, that they
might offer unto the Lord an offering in righteousness, and as the Sun of
Righteousness arising, unto all that fear His name, with healing in His wings.
And Jesus always refers, in the most reverential manner, to the Hebrew
Scriptures as the infallible, the literally and perfectly true testimony of
God. The same books of the Old Testament that we now receive were then received
by the Jews and by Christ as canonical and inspired. Christ, in His sayings
recorded in the New Testament, alludes to every period of the Old Dispensation.
"He speaks of the creation of man, the institution of marriage, the death of
Abel, the flood in the days of Noah, the destruction of Sodom, the history of
Abraham, the appearance of God in the burning bush, the manna in the wilderness,
the miracle of the brazen serpent, the wanderings of David, the glory of
Solomon, the ministry of Elijah and Elisha, the sign of Jonah, and the martyrdom
of Zechariah- events which embrace the whole range of the Jewish record."
Whatever, therefore, may be said by self-constituted, pretentious, ungodly and
ignorant critics in regard to what they presume to call the incredible myths of
the Bible, the children of God may be as perfectly assured of the literal truth
of every word of the Old Testament, as well as of the New Testament, as if every
word had been written by the Lord Jesus Christ Himself.
"The Fourfold Gospel is the
central portion of divine revelation. Into it, as a reservoir, all the
foregoing revelations pour their full tide; and out of it, as a fountain, flow
all subsequent revelations. The genuineness of the Four Gospels is attested by
a mass of evidence, external and internal, altogether unparalleled and quite
overpowering. No work of classical antiquity, even the most undoubted, is half
so well attested, or can lay claim, one might say, to a tithe of the evidence
which the Gospels possess. Every ancient writer referring to the Gospels
possessed all four of them. Their genuineness and apostolic authority are
attested by the evidence, in the second century, of Papias, Irenaeus, the author
of the Muratorian Fragment, Clement of Alexandria, Tertullian, and Origen, who
expressly name them; and by the evidence of the Syriac and the old Latin
versions of them; and by the evidence, in the latter part of the first century
and in the second century, of Clement of Rome, Barnabas, Ignatius, Polycarp, the
author of the Epistle to Diognetus and Justin Martyr, who quote from or refer to
them; by the Jewish Greek in which they are written, and which could have been
written only in the first century; by the accurate and numerous incidental
allusions which they make to the geography and topography of Palestine; the
mixed political condition of the people, their manners and customs, religious
principles, observances and prejudices, and the sects and parties into which
they were divided; by the great number of undesigned coincidences between
them; by the altogether unprecedented character of Christ, as the Divine and
suffering Savior of men from sin, which they describe, and which no human mind
could ever have imagined unless it had been a reality; by the fact that,
outside of the Christ whom they portray, there is no harbor of refuge for the
tossed and weary soul; and by their fresh and undying vigor triumphantly
surviving every form of antagonism for eighteen centuries."- David Brown, in
Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Bible Commentary.
It seems certain that at
least the Four Gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, thirteen Epistles of Paul, the
first Epistle of Peter, and the first Epistle of John, were in general public
use in the churches after the middle of the second century.
The fundamental hypotheses of
the (German) Tubingen criticism- the most respectable and formidable critical
assault ever made upon the New Testament- have entirely dissolved under later
and more careful researchers, so that the members of that theological school
have fled to secular fields. The composition of all the four gospels, as well
as of the epistles, must be referred to the first century, to eye-witnesses and
ear-witnesses of the life of Christ; not Paul, but Jesus, was the author of
Christianity, and there were no radically antagonistic Pauline and Petrine
parties in the Apostolic Church.
In his "Beginnings of
Christianity," Prof. G.P. Fisher, of Yale College, clearly points out three
unmistakable "water-marks of age" in the New Testament writings, proving that
they were composed in the first century of the Christian era: 1st. The
Apostles’ fleshly expectation of the speedy coming of Christ in final judgment
upon the world. 2d. The entire absence of any distinction between the terms
presbyter (or elder) and bishop (or overseer)- such distinction arising early in
the second century; and 3d. The New Testament allusions to only two formidable
perversions of Christianity, the Judaizing and the Gnostic, both of which
developed into open heresy in the second century.
As admitted by the highest
legal authorities, thoroughly trained in examining evidence, the few trifling
variations (apparent but not real contradictions) of the evangelists confirm,
instead of weakening, their testimony, by proving them to have been independent
witnesses, between whom there was no collusion. "More formal analytical
biographies could not possibly have equaled the four gospels in presenting an
authentic and vivid portraiture of Christ; the authors are lost in the subject;
they attempt no studied delineation of Jesus, but allow Him, in all their
narratives, to stand in the foreground, and speak and act for Himself." This is
of course the very next thing to the reader’s living on earth when Christ was in
the flesh, and actually hearing His words and seeing His deeds.
The latest and ablest
scholars place the four gospels in the following chronological order of
composition: Mark, Matthew, Luke and John; Mark and Matthew having been written
before A.D. 70, Luke before A.D. 80, and John before A.D. 100. "They are
plain, unadorned reports of facts in the life of Christ, impressed by a fourfold
repetition; especially the great facts of the death and resurrection of Christ
are rehearsed to us four times in the minuteness of circumstantial detail. The
sense of reality revives within us in reading the gospels, which furnish an
effectual antidote against abstraction and speculation. The gospels give us
four aspects of Christ, though but one portrait; in Matthew He is,
predominantly, the Royal Lawgiver; in Mark, the Mighty Worker; in Luke, the
Friend of man; in John, the Son of God. Matthew, the Hebrew gospel, is the
true commencement of the New Testament; it represents Jesus as the son of David,
the son of Abraham, and continually refers to the fulfillment of the Old
Testament Scriptures. Mark, Peter’s gospel, represents Jesus, as Peter said to
Cornelius, as anointed with the Holy Ghost and power, going about doing good and
healing all oppressed with the devil; it is the gospel of action- rapid,
vigorous and vivid. Luke, Paul’s gospel, presents Jesus, not as the son of
Abraham only, but as the son of Adam; it seems broader in its human sympathy,
and is pre-eminently a gospel for the Gentiles- the gospel of the Son of Man,
its key-note being mercy; the gospel for women, dwelling upon Elizabeth, the
Virgin Mary, Anna, Martha and her sister Mary, and the female disciples who
ministered to Christ and His Apostles; the gospel for children, dwelling upon
the birth and youth of John the Baptist and of Jesus; and the gospel of sacred
poetry, the first two chapters being a paradise of fragrant flowers, where the
air is resonant with the sweet melodies of heavenly gladness and thanksgiving;
the gospel of Luke, says the infidel Renan, is the most beautiful book in the
world."- T.D. Bernard.
The gospel of John dwells
especially upon the divine and eternal glory of the Lord Jesus Christ. Because
of this fact, and of its recording the astounding miracle of the resurrection of
Lazarus, and on account of its containing several long spiritual discourses of
Christ, the especial malevolence of modern skeptics has been most learnedly and
laboriously attempted to relegate its composition to the latter part of the
second century and to some unknown and unreliable author. But critics have been
forced to retreat from A.D. 170 to about A.D. 100, as the time when it was known
and used by the church- that is, to the lifetime, if not of John himself, of
many of his friends, upon whom such a work, if spurious, could not have been
imposed. The internal proof of its authenticity is stronger than that of any
classical work of antiquity. Its general structure and contents furnish a
convincing argument for its strict historical truth. It contains more touches
of an eye-witness than any other of the gospels; it is more observant of
chronological order, and, confessedly, the most valuable for consultation in the
scientific construction of the Savior’s history. It alone gives an adequate
explanation of the manner and time in which Christ’s death was brought about (by
His raising Lazarus from the dead, near Jerusalem, after the latter had been
dead four days, and thus presenting the strongest proof of His own divinity, and
offending the Jewish rulers more than ever before). Even Baur, the founder of
the Tubingen school, admits that the author of the fourth gospel was a man of
remarkable mind, of an elevated spirit, and penetrated with a warm adoring faith
in Christ as the Son of God, and the Savior of the world, and he compares him
with the Apostle Paul. Surely such a man could not have fabricated a life of
his Master. Baur and Keim give the gospel of John the highest praise as a
philosophy of religion. "Going from the first to the second century," says
Professor Fisher, "is passing into a far different atmosphere, descending from
the heights of inspiration to the level of ordinary and often feeble thinking,
so that setting a work like the fourth gospel in the second century is a
literary anachronism." No man but the Apostle John could have written it. "If
he did not write it," says Neander, "then its authorship is the greatest of
enigmas." "Through the Fourth Gospel, while the Apostle John is never mentioned
by name, there moves an unnamed, veiled form, which sometimes comes forward, yet
without the veil being entirely lifted; the author must have well known who
this person was, and he must have been the person himself, whom it was the whole
joy of his life to know that Jesus loved, but who modestly and delicately
suppresses his own name." The authenticity of this Gospel was abundantly
acknowledged in the second century, and was not disputed till the nineteenth
century; the first epistle of John is remarkably similar, and must have been by
the same author. The most radical critics admit that the Apocalypse or
Revelation was written by the Apostle John; and they maintain that the Fourth
Gospel is so much purer, calmer, and more grammatical Greek, that it could not
have had the same author. But the latest and profoundest scholars believe that
the Apocalypse was written by John, as Boanerges, a son of thunder, about A.D.
69, after the Neronian persecution (Rev. vi. 9-11), and amid the terrible and
portentous events just before the destruction of Jerusalem (Rev. xi. 1-14); and
that the Fourth Gospel was written by him some twenty or thirty years
afterwards, when he had been residing many years in the Grecian cities of Asia
Minor, and had acquired a much freer use of the Greek language, and when he was
in extreme old age, and, with memory refreshed by the Divine Spirit, according
to Christ’s latest promises, he was occupied with tranquil and delightful
reminiscences of his beloved Lord. Similarly, Paul’s Thessalonian Epistles,
which are eschatological, like the Apocalypse, and are, in our New Testament,
appropriately the last in order of his epistles to seven churches, were written
first. The Apocalypse was, expecting the gospel and epistles of John, and
possibly the gospel of Luke and the Acts, the last written of all the books of
the New Testament. The John of the Apocalypse and of the Fourth Gospel differ
no more than the Socrates of Xenophon and of Plato. John was the first and last
of the glorious company of the Apostles, the chosen one of the chosen three of
the chosen twelve, the bosom friend of Jesus, the protector of His widowed
mother, the survivor of all the Apostles, and Apostle of love, which is the
greatest of Christian virtues. "He was pre-eminently qualified to give to the
church the inside view of that most wonderful person that ever walked on earth.
In his early life he had absorbed the deepest words of his Master, and treasured
them in a faithful heart; in extreme old age, yet with the fire and vigor of
manhood, he reproduced them under the influence of the Holy Spirit, who dwelt in
him and led him into the unerring truth." "John’s Gospel," says Prof. Philip
Schaff, in his most valuable "History of the Christian Church," is the golden
sunset of the age of inspiration, and sheds its lustre into the second and all
the succeeding centuries of the church. It is as simple as a child and sublime
as a seraph, gentle as a lamb and bold as an eagle, deep as the sea and high as
the heavens- the most original, the most important, and the most influential
book in all literature. It lifts the veil from the Holy of Holies, and reveals
the glory of the Only Begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth. It
unites in harmony the deepest knowledge and the purest love of Christ. While
pure Greek in vocabulary and grammar, it is thoroughly Hebrew in temper and
spirit, even more so than any other book, and can be almost literally translated
into Hebrew without losing its force or beauty. It has the childlike
simplicity, the artlessness, the imaginativeness, the directness, the
circumstantiality and the rhythmical parallelism which characterize the writings
of the Old Testament. The sentences are short and weighty, co-ordinated, not
subordinated. There are no involved periods, no connecting links, no logical
argumentation, but a succession of self-evident truths declared as from
immediate intuition. There breathes through this book an air of calmness and
serenity, of peace and repose, that seems to come from the eternal mansions of
heaven."
The first century of the
Christian era was, above all others in human history, the age of miracles. Many
miracles are recorded in the Old Testament, but many more, performed by Christ
and His Apostles, are recorded in the New. The denial of the possibility of a
miracle or the supernatural in the universe, is a sheer assumption or arrogation
of omniscience, and the equivalent of atheism. Science does not know what
either matter or force is, and is therefore incompetent to deny what Omnipotence
can effect with or upon them. The will of man may change the combinations of
natural lays to accomplish its purposes; much more may the Divine will. The
high and worthy object of the miracles recorded in the Bible was to testify to
the divine commission of those inspired teachers who wrought them. As to even
the New Testament miracles being myths, as imagined by Strauss, whose theory
would annihilate all history, later and deeper historical research has shown
that the first century of the Christian era, when Christ and His Apostles lived
on earth and the New Testament was composed, was the most critical and skeptical
age of the world up to the sixteenth century after Christ- the age of Tacitus,
the most philosophical uninspired historian that ever lived- the period of the
old age and decline of the ancient world, when childish stories were not
believed.
"No other gospels than our
four canonical ones were accepted by the church teachers and the great body of
Christian people in the second century; the silliness and clumsiness of the
so-called apocryphal gospels, which deal mainly with the mother, the nativity
and the infancy of Jesus, set off the perfection of the true gospels."
The numberless undesigned
coincidences in the Acts of the Apostles and in Paul’s epistles, as shown in
Paley’s "Horeae Paulinae," afford an unanswerable argument for the genuiness
both of the Acts and of those epistles. No ancient history has so many
surprising internal proofs of having been written by a careful and accurate
contemporary author as the Acts of the Apostles. Even Baur admitted the
genuiness of Paul’s four epistles, to the Romans, the Corinthians and the
Galatians; and his successors have admitted the genuiness of several others of
Paul’s epistles.
2. SCIENCE -- If it was not
below the dignity of God to do His wonderful works in nature as well as in
grace, certainly it cannot be below the dignity of even His most intelligent and
holy creatures to investigate such works in order to see in them the reflection
of their Creator’s glory. The Scriptures make numerous allusions to the works
of God in nature, and refer to the kingdom of nature as an image or type of the
kingdom of grace. No discovery of science invalidates, but all corroborate and
illustrate the truth of the sacred Scriptures. While the faith of God’s elect
does not and should not stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God, it
is well enough, in order to help dissipate the vaporings of carnal reason, to
know that in the Bodleian Library at Oxford is deposited a manifesto, drawn up
and signed at the meeting of the British Scientific Association in 1865, by 617
scientific men, including some of the very highest eminence, declaring their
belief in the truth of the Holy Scriptures and the harmony of the Scriptures
with all the natural sciences. The most eminent professors in the Universities
of Halle, Bonn and Berlin have taken an emphatic stand for the truth of the
Bible against German rationalism and infidelity. While the utter falsity of all
heathen religions is demonstrated by the absolute monstrosity of their
cosmogonies or accounts of creation, the wonderful coincidence of the order of
fifteen creative events in Genesis and in science furnishes, according to the
law of permutations, 1,307,674,368,000 probabilities that God made a special
revelation to Moses of the facts which the latter records, against only one
probability that He did not make such revelation.
Prof. Arnold Guyot, of
Princeton College, who has had no superior as a scientist in America, says in
his last work (published in 1884) on "Creation, or the Biblical Cosmogony in the
Light of Modern Science:" "The conclusions of the so-called modern, higher
criticism, whose object is to shake the faith in the authenticity of the book of
Genesis, have often been fully refuted by more competent men than their
authors. The best explanation which science is now able to give of the creation
of the universe and the earth, is also that which best explains, in all its
details, the first chapter of Genesis, and does it justice. Whatever
modifications in our present view of the development of the universe and the
globe may be expected from new discoveries, the prominent features of this vast
picture will remain, and these only are delineated in the admirable account of
Genesis. The same divine hand which lifted, for Daniel and Isaiah, the veil
which covered the tableau of the time to come, unveiled to the eyes of the
author of Genesis, by a series of graphic visions and pictures, the earliest
ages of creation. Thus, Moses was the prophet of the past, as Daniel and Isaiah
and many others were the prophets of the future." Scientists, like the founders
of the pagan religions, make constant mistakes even in their own chosen and
limited departments of investigation; but the inspired writers of the Bible
never make any mistakes in either natural or spiritual matters. Science simply
measures the conditions of natural phenomena, and differs, not in kind, but only
in degree, from every man’s knowledge, and does not at all solve the mystery of
our relationship to the unseen and eternal. "These scientific individuals,"
says Thomas Carlyle in his "Sartor Resartus," "have been nowhere but where we
also are; have seen some handbreadths deeper than we see into the Deep that is
infinite, without bottom as without shore. Man knows not the Alphabet of the
Volume of Nature, whose Author and Writer is God. This fair Universe is in very
deed the star-domed City of God; and through every star, through every
grass-blade, and most through every living soul, the glory of a present God
still beams. But Nature, which is the time-vesture of God, and reveals Him to
the wise, hides Him from the foolish."
Science goes quite beyond its
province in attempting to explain the first origin or the final destiny of
things, and destroys itself in substituting vain imagination for sober truth.
Such a course marks the decay of the truly scientific spirit. Even Darwin
admits that the actual transmutation of one species into another is not
historical, but only inferential. The science of to-day, like the science of
past ages, furnishes not the slightest evidence of the self-origination and
self-maintenance of the universe independently of God. The drapery or setting
of the supernatural in Scripture, the correctness of the numberless allusions to
geography, chronology, history, literature, law and government, customs and
manners, is receiving stronger confirmation every day by scientific research;
and no skeptic has ever been able to satisfy himself, much less any one else, in
his impossible attempt to dissever the natural from the supernatural in
Scripture. "The time over which scientific observations can travel," says Mr.
C.H. Spurgeon in his "Clew of the Maze," "even if it be extended into ages, is
but as a watch in the night compared with the eternity of God; and the range of
human observation is but as a drop of the bucket compared with the circle of the
heavens; and therefore it may turn out, in a thousand instances, that there are
more things in heaven and earth than were ever dreamed of in the most accurate
philosophy of scientists. If it ever comes to a matter of decision whether we
shall believe God’s revelation or man’s science, we shall unhesitatingly cry,
"‘LET GOD BE TRUE, AND EVERY MAN A LIAR.’"
3. PHILOSOPHY -- The
greatest supernatural event recorded in Scripture is the creation of the
universe. As Immanuel Kant, the profoundest of German philosophers,
demonstrates in his "Critique of Pure Reason," the universe pre-supposes, for
both its origin and continuance, and almighty, intelligent, righteous, infinite,
eternal Spirit, whose purposes embrace and provide for all events, and who is
Himself a Person, and who may receive personal worship and affection, and reveal
Himself to His creatures by personal manifestations. Every man of common sense,
whether ancient or modern, heathen or Christian, sees design in nature. It
would be far more reasonable to consider a watch an accidental coming together
of pieces of metal than to regard the human body or the solar system or the
universe as accidental. The vigintillions of probabilities against the
fortuitous meeting of all the molecules in all the organs of all the creatures
on the earth make it as certain as mathematics can make it that these creatures
were brought into being by a wise and powerful Creator. A materialistic,
pantheistic, atheistic or agnostic theory of the spontaneous evolution of all
things out of nothing- a theory ignoring common sense, hypostasizing logical
abstractions into real agents, obliterating all the distinction between Creator
and creature, force and law, mind and matter, life and death, consciousness and
unconsciousness, right and wrong, good and evil- instead of illuminating,
intensifies the darkness which envelops the Great First Cause, by substituting a
mysterious, uncaused, omnific star-dust for God. A system of godless evolution
is but a mass of unproved and unprovable assumptions, and is rejected by very
many most eminent scientists as a bundle of romantic dreams. As ably shown by
President Noah Porter, of Yale College, this theory destroys conscience,
degrades man, strangles science, subjects all things to blind chance, makes the
educated more selfish and the uneducated more discontented, is pretentious,
dogmatic, specious, sophistical, incoherent and immoral; is not practically
believed by those who maintain it, and who thus only amuse themselves with
ingenious and frivolous speculations, brilliant but shallow kaleidoscopic
fancies; and, finally, as plainly set forth by President J.W. Dawson, of
Montreal University, it commits theoretical suicide, disproving itself, by
exhibiting, in its present nominal acceptance, not a progression, but a
retrogression to the crudest and most uncritical human cosmogonies found in
ancient heathen philosophy and poetry, seeking to string all our vast stores of
knowledge upon the thread of an antiquated hypothesis, and indicating, if it
were really believed, that the human mind has fallen into a state of senility,
and in its dotage mistakes for science the imaginations which were the dreams of
its youth. Agnostic or chance evolution rests on two subordinate hypotheses,
equally unverified and unverifiable- spontaneous generation (pronounced even by
Darwin absolutely inconceivable, and by Huxley and Tyndall altogether unproved),
and transmutation of species (pronounced by the profound biologist Mivart
irrational and puerile). It is impossible to prove the physical descent of
species from each other. The unity between them is not material but immaterial-
the unity of plan in the mind of the Creator. Dr. Beale, the foremost
microscopist of the English-speaking world, declares that Huxley’s protoplasmic
theories are in flagrant contradiction with the facts; that no one has proved or
can prove that life and mind are in any way related to chemistry and mechanics.
The able and learned English scientist, Dr. Elam, says: "That such verbal
hocus-pocus should be received as science will one day be regarded as evidence
of the low state of intelligence in the nineteenth century." "If man is a
materialist," says Professor Tholuck, "we Germans think he is not educated."
"The assumptiom of atoms,"
says the distinguished philosopher, Sir William Thomson, "can explain no
property of body which has not previously been attributed to the atoms
themselves." Says Prof. J.C. Maxwell, of Cambridge University, England: "No
theory of evolution can be found to account for the similarity of the molecules
throughout all time, and throughout the whole region of the stellar universe;
for evolution necessarily implies continuous change, and the molecule is
incapable of growth or decay, of generation or destruction (so far as human
observation extends). The exact equality of each molecule to all others of the
same kind precludes the idea of its being eternal and self-existent, and proves
that matter must have been created. The molecules of matter continue this day
as they were created, perfect in number, and measure, and weight; and from the
ineffaceable characters impressed on them we may learn that those aspirations
after truth in statement, and justice in action, which we reckon among our
noblest attributes as men, are ours because they are the essential constituents
of the image of Him who in the beginning created not only the heavens and the
earth, but the materials out of which heaven and earth consist." "Such is the
true outcome of the deepest, the most exact, and the most recent science of our
age. A grander utterance has not come from the mind of a philosopher since the
days when Newton concluded his Principia by his immortal scholium on the
majestic personality of the Creator and Lord of the Universe." "How came the
atoms or molecules to be what they are? Who preserves to them their absolute
identity, notwithstanding their infinite variety? Who endowed them with their
inalienable properties? This and every other fact in nature must previously
have been a thought of God. Nature is full of plan, and yet she plans not; she
is only plastic to a plan. Morphology and teleology are but revelations of
plan, and, as such, have guided to the most splendid of scientific discoveries.
Where science assumes a use, religion affirms an author. The prints of divine
forethought are scattered over the face of universal nature, and the convictions
of a Great First Cause which they engender, are ploughed into the very subsoil
of the human mind."- S. Wainwright.
"The process of the negative
philosophy," says the Duke of Argyll, "systematically suppress more than
one-half of the facts of nature; and as systematically they silence more than
one-half of the faculties of man. Moreover, the faculties which they
especially try to silence are the very highest faculties of discernment which
nature gives to us. In the physical sciences, we know what results would follow
from such methods of treatment; every fact has to be carefully kept and weighed,
and even then our results are imperfect. Yet in the far more difficult work of
interpreting the vast system of nature, with all its immeasurable wealth of
mind, the agnostic philosophy deliberately sets aside everything that is kindred
with the highest parts of our own moral and intellectual structure. These are
all absolutely excluded from the meanings and the sequences- from the
anticipations and the analogies of creation. To those who have grasped the
great doctrine of the unity of nature, and have sounded the depth of its meaning
and the sweep of its applications, this method of inquiry will appear
self-condemned."
"Men of science," says Mr.
Charles Kingsley, "are finding more and more- below their facts, below all
phenomena which the scalpel and the microscope can show- a something nameless,
invisible, imponderable, yet seemingly omnipresent and omnipotent, retreating
before them deeper and deeper, the deeper they delve- the mysterious and truly
miraculous element in nature which is always escaping them, though they cannot
escape it- that of which it was written of old, ‘Whither shall I go from Thy
presence, or whither shall I flee from Thy Spirit?’" In the modern doctrine of
the conservation of energy, and the convertibility of forces, science insists,
with increasing emphasis, that all kinds of force are but forms or
manifestations of some one central force, issuing from some one fountain-head of
power. Sir John Herschel has not hesitated to say that it is but reasonable to
regard the force of gravitation as the direct or indirect result of a
consciousness or a will existing somewhere. Such an omnipresent and omnific
will is required much more to account for the world of mind than even the world
of matter. In his masterly discourse, "As Regards Protoplasm," bristling in
fact and crushing in argument, Dr. J.H. Stirling, of Edinburgh, finely and
axiomatically remarks: "This universe is not an accidental cavity, into which
an accidental dust has been accidentally swept into heaps for the accidental
evolution of the majestic spectacle of organic and inorganic life. That
majestic spectacle is a spectacle as plainly for the eye of reason as any
diagram of mathematics. That majestic spectacle could have been constructed,
was constructed, only in reason, for reason, and by reason."
The entire agnostic
literature is, but a demonstration of the truth of the Apostle Paul’s
declaration, that "The world by wisdom knows not God," and that "The natural man
cannot know the things of the Spirit of God, for they are spiritually
discerned."- 1 Cor. i. 21; ii. 14. A godless human philosophy is a wilderness,
in which "the pupil’s hold the sieves while their masters milk the he goats,"
and which ends in darkness and death and nihilism. We need the light of heaven
to shine in this darkness, and direct our footsteps to a "land of rest, with
green fields and living rivers."-J. McCosh. "It is true," says Francis Bacon,
"that a little philosophy inclineth man’s mind to atheism; but depth in
philosophy bringeth men’s minds about to religion. For while the mind of man
looketh upon second causes scattered, it may sometimes rest in them, and go no
further; but when it beholdeth the chain of them, confederate and linked
together, it must needs fly to Providence and Deity."
"The evidences of the
truthfulness of the Bible are written where its enemies can never destroy them-
in the very framework of the universe; in the earth and in the sky; in the
stones and in the stars; in the experiences of millions of human hearts, and in
all the records of human history."- G.S. Bailey.
President J.W. Dawson, in his
"Origin of the World," presents the following learned summary of the religious
history of the human race:
"The Turanian or Hamitic
races (including the Mongolians of Northern Asia, the American Indians, and the
oldest historical populations of Western Asia and of Europe), are remarkable for
their permanent and stationary forms of civilization or barbarism, and for the
languages least developed in grammatical structure. These people had and still
have traditions of the creation and early history of man similar to those in the
earlier Biblical books; but the connection of their religions with that of the
Bible breaks off from the time of Abraham; and the earlier portions of
revelation which they possessed became disintegrated into a polytheism which
takes very largely the form of animism, or of attributing some special spiritual
indwelling to all natural objects, and also that of worship of ancestors and
heroes. The portion of primitive theological belief to which they have clung
most persistently is the doctrine of the immortality of the soul, which in all
their religious beliefs occupies a prominent place, and has always been
connected with special attention to rites of sepulture and monuments to the
dead. Their version of the revelation of creation appears most distinctly in
the sacred book of the Quiches of Central America, and in the creation myths of
the Mexicans, Iroquois, Algonquins, and other North American tribes; and it has
been handed down to us through the Semitic Assyrians from the ancient
Chaldaeo-Turanian population of the valley of the Euphrates.
"The Aryan or Japhetic races
(including the Hindoos, Persians, Medes, Scythians, Thracians, Greeks, Romans,
Celts, Teutons and Slavonians- the modern Europeans, in general, and their
descendants), have been remarkable for their changeable and versatile
character. Their religious ideas in primitive times appear to have been not
dissimilar from those of the Turanians; and the Hindoos, Persians, Greeks,
Scandinavians and Celts have all gone some length in developing and modifying
these, apparently by purely human imaginative and intellectual materials. But
all these developments were defective in a moral point of view, and had lost the
stability and rational basis which proceed from monotheism. Hence they have
given way before other and higher faiths; and at this day the more advanced
nations of the Aryan or Japhetic stock have adopted the Semitic faith; and, as
Noah long ago predicted, ‘dwell in the tents of Shem.’ No indigenous account of
the genesis of things remains among the Aryan races, with the exception of that
in the Avesta, and in some ancient Hindoo hymns, and these are merely variations
of the Turanian or Semitic cosmogony. God has given to the Aryans no special
revelations of His will, and they would have been left to grope for themselves
along the paths of science and philosophy, but for the advent, among them of the
prophets of ‘Jehovah, the God of Shem!’
"It is to (the Hebrew branch
of) the Semitic race that God has been most liberal in his gift of inspiration.
Gathering up and treasuring the old common inheritance of religion, and
eliminating from it the accretions of superstition, the children of Abraham at
one time stood alone, or almost alone, as adherents of a belief in one God the
Creator. Their theology was added to from age to age by a succession of
prophets, all working in one line of development, till it culminated in the
appearance of Jesus Christ, and then proceeded to expand itself over the other
races. Among them it has undergone two remarkable phases of retrograde
development- the one in Mohammedanism, which carries it back to a resemblance to
its own earlier patriarchal stage, the other in Roman and Greek ecclesiasticism,
which have taken it back to the Levitical system, along with a strong color of
paganism. Still its original documents survive, and retain their hold on large
portions of the more enlightened Aryan nations, while through their means these
documents have entered on a new career of conquest among the Semites and
Turanians. They are, however, it must be admitted, among the Aryan races of
Europe, growing in a somewhat uncongenial soil; partly because of the
materialistic organization of these races, and partly because of the abundant
remains of heathenism which still linger among them; and it is possible that
they may not realize their full triumphs over humanity till the Semitic races
return to the position of Abraham, and erect again in the world the standard of
monotheistic faith, under the auspices of a purified Christianity."- Romans xi.
12-15.
It is a mournful prediction
of the inspired writers that, in the latter days, formal godliness should
increase, while vital godliness should decline; and yet the entire New
Testament is a fervent protestation against the bondage of forms as a species of
self-righteousness, and a declaration of the all-sufficiency of Christ and the
essential spirituality of His religion. To represent our acceptance with God as
conditioned upon human works, either apart from or along with faith, Paul
regarded as a fatal error, as a dishonor to Christ, because setting the ground
of salvation, either in whole or in part, outside of Christ; it would imply that
man might truly believe in Christ and still be in his sins and unsaved; it would
imply that the work of redemption was not finished by Jesus on the cross. "The
false Jewish theory of the law as a source of life and salvation, is deeply
imbedded in every natural heart; and, therefore, to combat this fundamental,
universal and capital error, God raised up His most eminent Apostle, who was
designedly born out of due time, and who did not even know Christ after the
flesh, but only was Him in glory, that he might give the church the highest
spiritual instruction- who had full experience, in his own heart and life, of
the false Judaistic theory- and who was suddenly converted to the gospel that he
might teach, with the greatest distinctness, the contrast between salvation
sought by law through works, and salvation found by grace through faith, and the
mighty change in the world within when the law of the Spirit of life in Christ
Jesus makes a man free from the law of sin and death."-T.D. Bernard, in "The
Progress of Doctrine in the New Testament."
"A believing and attentive
reader of the New Testament could not have expected that the history of the
church after the close of the Scripture canon would have been essentially
different from what it has been. The closing words of Paul, Peter, Jude and
John forbode direful tribulation for the people of God; the distant hills are
black with the gathering multitudes of Apollyon’s forces; and the last
exhortations of those faithful soldiers, as they are about to fall at their
posts, call on their comrades and those who are to follow them to endure
hardness as good soldiers of Jesus Christ, to contend earnestly for the faith
once delivered to the saints, to be faithful unto death." Opposed and
persecuted by the world and its religions, they have, like the prophets and
Apostles of old, been slandered, reviled, tortured, put to death, with every
imaginable device of cruelty; the survivors have wandered about in sheepskins
and goatskins, in deserts and mountains and dens and caves of the earth,
destitute, afflicted, tormented. But by heaven-born and heaven-bound faith they
endured, as seeing Him who is invisible, and choosing rather to suffer
affliction in the service of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a
season, having respect unto the recompense of the reward. Thus has the Most
High never left Himself without a witness on the earth.
The period of the history of
the church of God from the creation to A.D. 100 is not only more than two-thirds
of the entire period from the creation to the present time, but it is
incomparably the most important part of church history; because we have the
infallible light of the Holy Scriptures to guide us during that period, pointing
out, without any mistake, the path of the true servants of God, their labors and
sufferings, their errors and chastisements, their repentance and salvation.
During the remaining period, from A.D. 100 to 1885, I have earnestly endeavored,
in tracing the footsteps of the flock of Christ, to be entirely guided, not by
the unscriptural writings and opinions of fallible men, but by the light of
Divine revelation. The humanly ascribed titles of spiritual father, confessor,
doctor, rabbi, pope, cardinal, archdeacon, archbishop, reverend, etc., which are
utterly out of place, and unscriptural, and worthless in the kingdom of God,
have exercised no influence in the composition of this volume. The tracing of
God’s spiritual or hidden people through the wilderness of the eighteen
centuries since the apostolic age is of course a most difficult undertaking;
and I do not suppose, neither do I claim, that I have made absolutely no
mistakes in this delicate and important delineation. The Scriptures mentioned
under "Footsteps of the Flock," before the Preface, have been, with the aid of
the Divine Spirit, as I hope, my chief guide. As for a nominal, natural,
outward, or mechanical succession, the God of providence and grace, eighteen
centuries ago, forever buried all such claims in the dark, impenetrable gulf of
the seculum obscurum, or obscure age, immediately succeeding the death of the
leading Apostles and the destruction of Jerusalem, A.D. 70, and extending to
A.D. 100, as freely acknowledged by the ablest scholars of Europe; the
irreconcilable inconsistencies and contradictions of the leading Roman Catholic
authorities in regard to the pretended Romish succession during this period
furnish a sufficient illustration of this fact. According to the entire tenor
of the New Testament Scriptures, what we are to look for is, not such outward
succession, but a spiritual succession of principles, of inward, vital,
heartfelt religion. Names are nothing, principles are everything, in the true
kingdom of God. In all ages and countries, that people who, in all spiritual
matters, acknowledge Christ as their only Head and King, form a part of the true
church of God. They have mostly been dissenters from "state churches" and
political religions- Christ having declared that His kingdom is not of this
world; and, like the prophets and Apostles and Christ Himself, and as he
predicted, they have been hated, slandered and persecuted to the death by
worldly religionists, not only by heathens and Mohammedans, but even far more
numerously by professed Christians, both Papists and Protestants (Matt. v.
10-12; xxiii. 34; Mark x. 30; Luke xxi. 12; John v. 16; xv. 18-21; xvi.
33; Acts vii. 52; viii. 1; ix. 5; xiv. 22; Gal. iv. 29; 2Cor. iv. 9;
2Tim. iii. 11,12; Heb. xi. 35-38; Rev. vii. 14; xii. 13; xiii. 7,15,17;
xvii. 6; xx.4); and, instead of persecuting their enemies in return, they have
returned good for evil and prayed for them.-Matt. v. 44-48; Luke xxiii. 34;
Acts vii. 60; Rom. xii. 14,18-21; 1Cor. iv. 12; xiii. 4-8; 1Pet. ii. 23;
iii. 9. So the inoffensive lamb and dove and sheep, used in the Scriptures to
represent the Son and the Spirit and the people of God, are slain and devoured
by predaceous animals and birds. These persecuted people of God have had, since
the first century, a variety of names, generally given them by their enemies,
and derived from their location, or from some of their leading ministers, or
from some doctrine or practice of theirs which distinguished them from worldly
religionists. Until the Protestant Reformation in the sixteenth century, they
were known as Montanists, Tertullianists, Novatians, Donatists, Paulicians,
Petrobrusians, Henricians, Arnoldists, Waldenses, Albigenses, United Brethren of
Bohemia, and Lollards; many of these were called by the general name of
Ana-Baptists (or Re-Baptizers), because they did not acknowledge the
scripturalness or validity of infant baptism, and therefore baptized (Paedobaptists
said they baptized again) those who joined them on a profession of faith.
While these various classes of people differed in minor particulars, and while
some of them were in much darkness and error on certain points of truth, they
yet held substantially to the same general doctrine and practice- insisting,
above all, upon the spirituality of the church of God and her heavenly
obligation to walk in humble and loving obedience to all His holy commandments,
both in an individual and a church capacity, and not in obedience to the
unscriptural traditions and commandments of men. For the last 365 years (since
A.D. 1520) they have been called Baptists (for about the first 100 years of this
period, also Ana-Baptists), because they baptized (that is, immersed in water,
in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost) all who, upon a credible
profession of their repentance towards God and faith in Christ, desired to unite
with them in a church capacity. The cardinal tenets of Bible Baptists, being
also those held by the apostolic churches, as set forth in the New Testament,
and those held, in the main, by the people of God in former times, are:
· The exclusive and
supreme authority of the Holy Scriptures;
· The exclusive
headship of Christ over His church;
· The three-oneness of
God as Father, Son and Spirit; the total depravity of all mankind since the fall
of Adam;
· The special and
effectual electing love of God the Father, redeeming love of God the Son, and
regenerating love of God the Spirit, manifested, in due time, to all the vessels
of mercy;
· The baptism of
believers, and the partaking of the Lord’s supper by those properly baptized and
in gospel order;
· Salvation by grace
and faith alone;
· A regenerated and
orderly-walking church membership;
· The universal
priesthood and brotherhood of believers;
· The divine call and
divine qualification and equality of the ministry, who feed and care for the
flock of God among them, not for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind, not as being
lords over God’s heritage, but as ensamples to the flock;
· The independence and
yet cordial brotherly association of gospel churches;
· The separation of
the church from the world,
· The non-alliance of
the former with the latter in any kinds of religious institutions; such
corrupting associations being pointedly forbidden in both the Old and New
Testament Scriptures (Exod. xii. 38 with Num. xi. 4-6; Exod. xxxiv. 12-16;
Deut. vii. 1-11; 2Chron. xviii. 1-3 with xix. 2; Ezra ix. 1-15; Neh. xiii.
1-3, 23-31; Psalm xxvi. 4,5; lvi. 35-43; Isa. viii. 12; Acts viii. 20,21;
2Cor. vi. 14-18); the separation of church and state;
· The liberty of every
human being, so far as other people are concerned, to worship God according to
the dictates of his own conscience;
· The resurrection of
the bodies both of the just and the unjust;
· The final and
general judgment of the world by the Lord Jesus Christ;
· The everlasting
blessedness of the righteous, and the everlasting punishment of the wicked.
In giving the history of the
church since the birth of Christ I have divided the periods into centuries, the
oldest, simplest, and clearest method. All methods of division are more or
less arbitrary, artificial and mechanical. The modern German periodologies are
endlessly diversified, inconsistent, and confused, and almost destroy any
profitable comparison with each other.
As portrayed by the
Scriptures of infallible truth, how unspeakably solemn is the condition of man,
as he stands upon these mortal shores, before launching upon the great ocean of
Eternity! As testified by the Inspired Word, he has entered upon an everlasting
career, either of happiness or of misery. Beyond the portals of natural death,
into which he may at any moment be ushered, his estate will be unchangeable.
"What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?
Or what shall he give in exchange for his soul?" is the momentous inquiry of God
manifest in the flesh. May the Lord Jesus, by His blessed Spirit of grace, seal
this most solemn question upon our hearts and upon those of our fellow-men;
give us to realize the vanity of earthly things, and the supreme and
transcendent importance of our spiritual and eternal interests; lead us, under
a deep sense of our sinfulness, with weeping and supplication, to the throne of
His mercy; enable us to count all things but loss for the excellency of the
knowledge of Christ Jesus our Lord, and to behold Him, by an eye of faith, as
pierced and dying for our sins and rising for our justification; may He shed
abroad His renewing and transforming love in our hearts, and elevate our
thoughts and affections above the corrupting and fading shadows of this world to
the pure and enduring realities of heaven; may He create within us a desire to
identify ourselves with His afflicted, lowly, despised, and persecuted church
and people; enable us to adorn the doctrine of God our Savior by loving
obedience to all His holy commandments, and thus prepare us for a blissful and
eternal communion with Himself in the General Assembly and Church of the
First-Born, who are written in heaven.
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