YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY This book was digitized by Microsoft Corporation in cooperation with Yale University Library, 2008. You may not reproduce this digitized copy ofthe book for any purpose other than for scholarship, research, educational, or, in limited quantity, personal use. You may not distribute or provide access to this digitized copy (or modified or partial versions of it) for commercial purposes. THE REVELATION OF LAW IN SCRIPTURE: CONSIDERED WITH RESPECT BOTH TO ITS OWN NATURE, AND TO ITS RELATIVE PLACE IN SUCCESSIVE DISPENSATIONS. %,\xt 'lltirh ^tms of the ' fflanmngham Jerittrcs.' PATKICK FAIRBAIBN, D. D. AUTHOR OF ' TYPOLOGY OF SCRIPTUKE,' ETC. NEW YORK: ROBERT CARTER AND BROTHERS, No. 530 BROADWAY. MDCCCLXIX. PREFACE. 'THE subject handled in the following Lectures enters so deeply into the whole scheme and objects of Divine Revelation, that no apology can be required for directing pubhc attention to it ; at any period, and in any circumstances of the church, it may fitly enough be chosen for particular inquiry and discussion. But no one acquainted with the recent phases of theological sentiment in this country, and with the prevailing tendencies of the age, can fail to perceive its special appropriateness as a theme for discussion at the present time. If this, however, has naturally led to a somewhat larger proportion of the controversial element than might otherwise have been necessary, I have endeavoured to give the discussion as httle as possible of a polemical aspect ; and have throughout been more anxious to unfold and establish what I conceive to be the true, than to go into minute and laboured refutations of the false. On this account, also, personal references have been omitted to some of the more recent advocates of the views here controverted, where it could be done without prejudice to the course of discussion. viii PREFACE. The terms of the Trust-deed, in connection with which the Lectures appear, only require that not fewer than six be delivered in Edinburgh, but as to publica tion wisely leave it to the discretion and judgment of the Lecturer, either to limit himself to that number, or to supplement it with others according to the nature and demands of his subject. I have found it necessary to avail myself of this liberty, by the addition of half as many more Lectures as those actually dehvered ; and one of these (Lecture IV.), from the variety and importance of the topics discussed in it, has unavoidably extended to nearly twice the length of any of the others. However unsuitable this would have been if addressed to an audience, as a component part of a book there will be found in it a sufficient number of breaks to relieve the attention of the reader. The Supplementary Dissertations, and the exposition of the more important passages in St Paul's writings in reference to the law, which follow the Lectures, have added considerably to the size of the volume ; but it became clear as I proceeded, that the discussion of the subject in the Lectures would have been incomplete without them. It is possible, indeed, that in this respect some may be disposed to note a defect rather than a superfluity, and to point to certain other topics or passages which appear to them equally entitled to a place. I have only to say, that as it was necessary to make a selection, I have endeavoured to embrace in this portion what seemed to be, for the present time, relatively the most important, and, as regards the passages of Scripture, PREFACE. ix have, I believe, included all that are of essential moment for the ends more immediately contemplated. But several topics, I may be allowed to add, very closely connected with the main theme of this volume, have been already treated in my work on the ' Typology of Scripture ;' and though it has been found impracticable to avoid coming here occasionally on the ground which had been traversed there, it was manifestly proper that this should not be done beyond what the present subject, in its main features, imperatively required. Glasgow, October 1868. ERRATA. age 78, line 18, for became read become. ,, HI, 12, sheddest sheddeth. „ 223, , , last, Meyer Tholuek. ,, 250, „ 6, earth earth. ' „ 255, ,, 1^, predictions predilections ,, 361, „ 25, parable the parable. EXTRACT DECLARATION OF TRUST. March 1, 1862. I, William Binnt Webster, late Surgeon in tbe H.E.I.C.S., presently residing in Edinburgh, — Considering that I feel deeply interested in tbe sncoess of the Free Church College, Edinburgh, and am desirous of advancing the Theological Literature of Scotland, and for this end to establish a Lectureship similar to those of a like kind connected with the Church of England and the Congregational body in England, and that I have made over to the General Trustees of the Free Church of Scotland the sum of £2000 sterling, in trust, for the purpose of founding a Lectureship in memory of the late Reverend William Cunningham, D.D., Principal of the Free Church College, Edinburgh, and Professor of Divinity and Church History therein, and under the following conditions, namely — First, The Lectureship Bhall bear the name, and be called, ' The Cunningham Lectureship.' Second, The Lecturer shall be a Minister or Professor of the Free Church of Scotland, and shall hold the appointment for not less than two years, nor more than three years, and be entitled for the period of his holding the appointment to the income of the endowment as declared by the General Trustees, it being understood that the Council after referred to may occasionally appoint a minister or professor from other denominations, provided this be approved of by not fewer than Eight Members of the Council, and it being further understood that the Council are to regulate the terms of payment of the lecturer. Third, The lecturer shall be at liberty to choose his own sub ject within the range of Apologetical, Doctrinal, Controversial, Exegetical, Pastoral, or Historical Theology, including what bears on missions, home and foreign, subject to the consent of the Council. Fourth, The lecturer shall be bound to deliver publicly at Edin burgh a course of lectures on the subjects thus chosen at some time immediately preceding the expiry of his appointment, and during the Session of the New College, Edinburgh ; the lectures to be not fewer than six in number, and to be delivered in presence of the professors and students under such arrangements as the Council may appoint ; the lecturer shall be bound also to print and publish, at his own risk, not fewer than 750 copies of the lectures within a year after then' delivery, and to deposit three copies of the same in the Library of the New College ; the form of the publication shall be regulated by the Council. Fifth, A Council shall be constituted consisting of (first) Two Members of their own body, to be chosen annually in the month of March, by the Senatus of the New College, other than the Principal ; (second) Five Members to be chosen annually by the General As sembly, in addition to the Moderator of the said Free Church of Scotland ; together with (third) the Principal of the said New College for the time being, the Moderator of the said General Assembly for the time being, the procurator or law adviser of the Church, and myself the said William Binny Webster, or such person as I may nominate to be my successor : the Principal of the said CoUege to be Convener of the Council, and any Five Members duly convened to be entitled to act notwithstanding the non-election of others. Sixth, The duties of the Council shall be the following : — (first), To appoint the lecturer and determine the period of his holding the appointment, the appointment to be made before the close of the Session of College immediately preceding the termination of the previous lecturer's engagement ; (second), To arrange details as to the delivery of the lectures, and to take charge of any additional income and expenditure of an incidental kind that may be connected therewith, it being understood that the obligation upon the lecturer is simply to deliver the course of lectures free of expense to himself. Seventh, The Council shall be at liberty, on the expiry of five years, to make any alteration that experience may suggest as desirable in the details of this plan, provided such alterations shall be approved of by not fewer than Eight Members of the Council. CONTENTS. LECTURE I. _.,.„. PAGE Introductory — Prevailing Views in respect to the Ascendency of Law (1) In the Natural ; (2) In the Moral and Religious Sphere ; and the Relation in which they stand to the Revelations of Scripture on the subject, ........ 1-33 LECTURE II. The Relation of Man at Creation to Moral Law — How far or in what respects the Law in its Principles was made known to him — The grand Test of his Rectitude, and his Failure under it, . . 34-60 LECTURE III. The Revelation of Law, strictly so called, viewed in respect to the Time and Occasion of its Promulgation, ..... 61-81 LECTURE IV. The Law in its Form and Substance —Its more Essential Characteristics — and the Relation of one Part of its Contents to another, 82-146 LECTURE V. The Position and Calling of Israel as placed under the Covenant of Law, what precisely involved in it — False Views on the subject Exposed — The Moral Results of the Economy, according as the Law was legitimately used or the reverse, . . . . 147-179 LECTURE VI. The Economical Aspect of the Law — The Defects adhering to it as such — The Relation of the Psalms and Prophets to it — Mistaken Views of this Relation — The great Problem with which the Old Testament closed, and the Views of different Parties respecting its Solution, 180-213 xu CONTENTS. LECTURE VII. PAGE The Relation of the Law to the Mission and Work of Christ — The Symbolical and Ritual finding in Him its termination, and the Moral its formal Appropriation and perfect Fulfilment, . 214-252 LECTUEE VIII. The Relation of the Law to the Constitution, the Privileges, and the Calling of the Christian Church, .... 253-291 LECTURE IX. The Re-introduction of Law into the Church of the New Testament, in the sense in which Law was abolished by Christ and His Apostles, 292-323 SUPPLEMENTARY DISSERTATIONS. I. The Double Form of the Decalogue, and the Questions to which it has given rise, ...... 325-334 II. The Historical Element in God's Revelations of Truth and Duty, considered with an especial respect to their Claim on Men's Responsibilities and Obligations, .... 335-355 III. Whether a Spirit of Revenge is countenanced in the Writings of the Old Testament, ..... 356-364 EXPOSITION OF THE MOST IMPORTANT PASSAGES ON THE LAW IN ST PAUL'S EPISTLES. PAGE PAGE 2 Cor. iii. 2-18, 366 Rom. v. 12-21, 415 Gal. ii. 14-21, 385 „ vi. 14-18, 421 „ iii. 19-26, 391 „ vii., 425 „ iv. 1-7, . 400 „ x. 4-9, . 442 „ v. 13-15, 403 „ xiv. 1-7 . 448 Rom. ii. 13-15, 405 Eph. ii. 11-17, 453 „ iii. 19, 20, 408 Col. ii. 11-17, . 462 „ iii. 31, . 412 1 Tim. i. 8-11, 474 THE REVELATION OF LAW IN SCRIPTURE. LECTURE I. INTRODUCTORY. PREVAILING VIEWS IN RESPECT TO THE ASCENDENCY OF LAW (1) IN THE NATURAL ; (2) IN THE MORAL AND RELIGIOUS SPHERE ; AND THE RELATION IN WHICH THEY STAND TO THE REVELA TIONS OF SCRIPTURE ON THE SUBJECT. A MONG the more marked tendencies of our age, especially as represented by its scientific and literary classes, may justly be reckoned a prevailing tone of sen timent regarding the place and authority of law in the Divine administration. The sentiment is a divided one ; for the tendency in question takes a twofold direction, according as it respects the natural, or the moral and rehgious sphere — in the one exalting, we may almost say deifying law ; in the other narrowing its domain, some times even ignoring its existence. An indissoluble chain of sequences, the fixed and immutable law of cause and effect, whether always discoverable or not, is contem plated as binding together the order of events in the natural world ; but as regards the spiritual, it is the inherent right or sovereignty of the individual mind that is chiefly made account of, subject only to the claims of social order, the temporal interests of humanity, and the general enlightenment of the times. And as there can be no doubt that these divergent lines of thought have found their occasion, and to some extent also their ground, A 2 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. the one in the marked advancement of natural science, the other in the progress of the Divine dispensations, it will form a fitting introduction to the inquiry that hes before us to take a brief review of both, in their general relation to the great truths and principles of Scripture. I. We naturally look first, .in such a survey, to the physical territory, to the vast and complicated field of nature. Here a twofold disturbance has arisen — the one from men of science pressing, not so much ascertained facts, as plausible inferences or speculations built on them, to unfavourable conclusions against Scripture ; the other from theologians themselves overstepping in their inter pretations of Scripture, and finding in it revelations of law, or supposed indications of order, in the natural sphere, which it was never intended to give. As so inter preted by Patristic, Mediaeval, and even some compara tively late writers, the Bible has unquestionably had its authority imperilled by being brought into collision with indisputable scientific results. But the better it is under stood the more will it be found to have practised in this respect a studious reserve, and to have as httle invaded the proper field of scientific inquiry and induction, as to have assumed, in regard to it, the false position of the nature -religions of heathenism. It is the moral and rehgious sphere with which the Bible takes strictly to do ; and only in respect to the more fundamental things belonging to the constitution of nature and its relation to the Creator, can it be said to have committed itself to any authoritative deliverance. Written, as every book must be that is adapted to popular use, in the language of common life, it describes the natural phenomena of which it speaks according to the appearances, rather than the realities, of things. This was inevitable, and requires to Lect. I.] THE ASCENDENCY OF LAW. 3 be made due account of by those who would deal justly with its contents. But while freely and familiarly dis coursing about much pertaining to the creation and pro vidence of the world, the Bible does not, in respect to the merely natural frame and order of things, pronounce upon their latent powers or modes of operation, nor does it isolate events from the proper instrumental agencies. It undoubtedly presents the works and movements of nature in close connection with the will and pervasive energy of God ; but then it speaks thus of them all alike — of the little as well as the great — of the ordinary not less than the extraordinary, or more striking and impressive. Accoi'ding to the Bible, God thunders, indeed, in the clouds ; but the winds also, even the gentlest zephyrs, blow at His command, and do His bidding. If it is He who makes the sun to know his going forth, and pour hght and gladness over the face of nature, it is He also who makes the rain to fall and the seeds of the earth to spring, and clothes the lilies of the field with beauty. Not even a sparrow falls to the ground without Him. And as in the nearer and more familiar of these opera tions everything is seen to be accomplished through means and ordinances bound up with nature's constitu tion ; so, it is reasonable to infer, must it be with the grander and more remote. In short, while it is the doctrine of the Bible' that God is in all, and in a sense does all, nothing is authoritatively defined as to the how or by ivhat they are done; and science is at perfect hberty to prosecute its researches with the view of dis covering the individual properties of things, and how, when brought into relation, they act and react on each other, so as to produce the results which appear in the daily march of providence. Now, let this relation of the Bible, with its true 4 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. religion, to the pursuits of science, be placed alongside that of the false religions of Greek and Roman poly theism which it supplanted, and let the effect be noted^- the legitimate and necessary effect — of the progress of science in its clearest and best estabhshed conclusions on the one as compared with the other. Resting on an essentially pantheistic basis, those ancient religions ever tended to associate the objects and operations of nature with the immediate presence and direct agency of some particular deity — to identify the one in a manner with the other ; and very specially to do this with the greater and more remarkable phenomena of nature. Thus Hehos, or the Sun, was deified in Apollo, and was not poetically represented merely, but rehgiously beheved, to mount his chariot, drawn by a team of fiery steeds, in the morn ing, to rise by a solid pathway to mid-heaven, and then descend toward the western horizon, that his wearied coursers might be refreshed before entering on the labours of another day. Selene", or the Moon, in like manner, though in humbler guise, was contemplated as pursuing her nocturnal course. Sun, moon, and stars, it was beheved, bathed themselves every night in the waves of ocean, and got then fires replenished by partaking of the Neptunian element. Echpses were prodigies — portentous signs of wrath in heaven — which struck fear into men's bosoms, as on the eve of direful calamities, and sometimes so paralysing them as to become itself the occasion of the sorest disasters. Hence, the philosophy which applied itself to explore the operation of physical properties and laws in connection with natural events, was accounted impious ; since, as Plutarch remarks,1 it seemed ' to ascribe things to insensate causes, unintelligent powers, and necessary changes, thereby jostling aside the divine.' 1 Life of Nicias. Lect. I.] THE ASCENDENCY OF LAW. 5 On this account Anaxagoras was thrown into prison by the Athenians, and narrowly escaped with his life. Socrates was less fortunate ; he suffered the condemna tion and penalty of death, although he had not carried his physical speculations nearly so far as Anaxagoras. At his trial, however, he was charged with impiety, on the ground of having said that the sun was a stone, and the moon earth ; he himself, however, protesting that such was not his, but the doctrine of Anaxagoras ; that he held both sun and moon to be divine persons, as was done by the rest of mankind. His real view seems to have been, that the common and ordinary events of Pro vidence flowed from the operation of second causes, but that those of greater magnitude and rarer occurrence came directly from the interposition of a divine power. Yet this modified philosophy was held to be utterly inconsistent with the popular religion, and condemned as an impiety. Of necessity, therefore, as science proceeded in its investigations and discoveries, religion fell into the background ; as the behef in second causes advanced, the gods, as no longer needed, vanished away. Physical science and the polytheism of Greece and Rome were in their very nature antagonistic, and every real advance of the one brought along with it a shock to the other. It is otherwise with the religion of the Bible, when this is rightly understood, and nothing from without, nothing foreign to its teaching, is imposed on it. For it neither merges God in the works and operations of nature, nor associates Him with one department more peculiarly than another ; while still it presents all — the works them selves, the changes they undergo, and every spring and agency employed in accomplishing them — in dependence on His arm and subordination to His will : He- is in all, through all, and over all. So that for those who have 6 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. imbibed the spirit of the Bible, there may appear the most perfect regularity and continued sequence of opera tions, while God is seen and adored in connection with every one of them. It is true, that the sensibilities of rehgious feeling, or, as we should rather say, the fresh ness and power of its occasional outbursts, are less hkely to be experienced, and in reality are more rarely mani fested, when, in accordance with the revelations of science, God's agency is contemplated as working through material forces under the direction of estabhshed law, than if, without such an intervening medium, in specific acts of providence, and by direct interference, He should make His presence felt. The more that anything ceases to appear strange to our view, abnormal — the more it comes to be associated in our minds with the orderly domain of law — the less startling and impressive does it naturally become as an evidence of the nearness and power of God head : it no longer stands alone to our view, it is part of a system, but still a system which, if viewed aright, has been all planned by the wisdom, and is constantly sus tained and directed by the providence of God. In this, as in so many other departments of human interest and experience, there is a compensation in things. What science may appear to take with one hand, it gives — gives, one might almost say, more liberally with another. If, for example, the revelation on scientific grounds of the amazing regularity and finely-balanced movements which prevail in the constitution and order of the material universe, as connected with our planetary system, — if this, in one aspect of it, should seem to have placed God at a certain distance from the visible world, in another it has but rendered His presiding agency and vigilant oversight more palpably indispensable. For such a vast, comphcated, and wondrous mechanism, how Lect. I.] THE ASCENDENCY OF LAW. 7 could it have originated ? or, having originated, how could it be sustained in action without the infinite skill and ceaseless activity of an all-perfect Mind ? There is here what is incalculably more and better than some occasional proofs of interference, or fitful displays of power, however grand and imposing. There is clear sighted, far-reaching thought, nicely planned design, mutual adaptations, infinitely varied, of part to part, the action and reaction of countless forces, working with an energy that baffles all conception, yet working with the most minute mathematical precision, and with the effect of producing both ,the most harmonious operation, and the most diversified, gigantic, and beneficent results. It is, too, the more marvellous, and the more certainly indicative of the originating and controlling agency of mind, that while all the planetary movements obey with perfect regularity one great principle of order, they do so by describing widely different orbits, and, in the case of some, pursuing courses that move in opposite directions to others. Whence should such things be ? Not, assuredly, from any property inherent in the material orbs them selves, which know nothing of the laws they exemplify, or the interests that depend on the order they keep : no, but solely from the will and power of the infinite and eternal Being, whose workmanship they are, and whose purposes they unconsciously fulfil. So wrote Newton devoutly, as well as nobly, ^at the close of his incompar able work : ' This beautiful system of sun, planets, and comets, could have its origin in no other way than by the counsel and sovereignty of an intelhgent and powerful Being. He governs all things — not as the soul of the world, but as the Lord of the universe. . . . We know Him only through His qualities and attributes, and through the most wise and excellent forms and final 8 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. 1. causes, which belong to created things ; and we admire Him on account of His perfections ; but for His sovereign lordship, we worship and adore Him ;' — thus in the true spirit of the Psalmist, and as with a solemn halle lujah, winding up the mighty demonstration.1 We are informed, in a recent publication by a noble author,2 that modern science is again returning to this view of things ; returning to it, I suppose, as becoming conscious of the inadequacy of the maxim of an earher time, in respect to creation, ' That the hypothesis of a Deity is not needed.' Speaking of the mystery which hangs around the idea of force, even of the particular force which has its seat in our own vitality, he says, ' If, then, we know nothing of that kind of force which is so near to us, and with which our own intelligence is in such close alliance, much less can we know the ultimate nature of force in its other forms. It is important to dwell on this, because both the aversion with which some men regard the idea of the reign of law, and the triumph 1 On this point, Dr Whewell has some remarks in his ' Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences,' which another great authority in natural science, Sir John Herschel, has characterized as admirable (' Essays and Addresses,' p. 239). ' The assertion appears to be quite unfounded, that as science advances from point to point, final causes recede before it, and disappear one after the other. The principle of design changes its mode of application indeed, but it loses none of its force. We no longer consider particular facts as produced by special inter positions, but we consider design as exhibited in the establishment and adjust ment of the laws by which particular facts are produced. We do not look upon each particular cloud as brought near us fehat it may drop fatness on our fields ; but the general adaptation of the laws of heat, and air, and moisture, to the promotion of vegetation, does not become doubtful. We are rather, by the discovery of the general laws of nature, led into a scene of wider design, of deeper contrivance, of more comprehensive adjustments. Final causes, if they appear driven farther from us by such an extension of our views, embrace us only with a vaster and more majestic circuit ; instead of a few threads connect ing some detached objects, they become a stupendous network which is wound round and round the universal frame of things.' — Vol. I. p. 635. 2 The Duke of Argyle, ' Reign of Law,' p. 122. Lect. I.] THE ASCENDENCY OF LAW. 9 with which some others hail it, are founded on a notion, that when we have traced any given phenomena to what are called natural forces, we have traced them farther than we really have. We know nothing of the ultimate nature, or of the ultimate seat of force [that is, know nothing scientifically]. Science, in the modern doctrine of the conservation of energy and the convertibility of forces, is already getting something hke a firm hold of the idea, that all kinds of force are but forms or manifestations of some central force issuing from some one Fountainhead 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 mdirect result of a consciousness or a will existing somewhere. And even if we cannot certainly identify force in all its forms with the direct energies of one omnipresent and all-pervading will, it is, at least, in the highest degree unphilosophical to assume the con trary ; to speak or to think as if the forces of nature were either independent of, or even separate from, the Creator's power.' In short, natural science, in its investigations into the forces and movements of the material universe, finds a limit which it cannot overpass, and in that limit a felt want of satisfaction, as conscious of the necessity of a spontaneity, a will, a power to give impulse and direc tion to the whole, of which nature itself can give no information, because lying outside of its province, and which, if discovered to us at all, must be certified through a supernatural revelation. But this is still not the whole of the argument for the pervading causal connection of God with the works of nature, and His claim in this respect to our devout recog nition of His will as the source of its laws, and His power as the originator and sustainer of its movements. For, besides the admirable method and order, the simplicity in 1 0 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. the midst of endless diversity, which are found to charac terize the system of material nature, there is also to be taken into account the irrepressible impulse in the human mind to search for these, and the capacity to discern and appreciate them as marks of the highest intelligence. A pre-established harmony here discovers itself between the world of thought within, and the world of material order and scientific adjustment without, bespeaking their mutual co-ordination by the wise foresight and plastic energy of one Supreme Mind. ' Copernicus1 (it has been remarked), in the dedication of his work to Pope Paul in., confesses that he was brought to the discovery of the sun's central position and of the diurnal motion of the earth, not by observation or analysis, but by what he calls the feeling of a want of symmetry in the Ptolemaic system. But who had told him that there must be symmetry in all the movements of the celestial bodies, or that complication was not more subhme than simphcity 1 Symmetry and simplicity, before they were discovered by the observer, were postulated by the philosopher ;' and by him, we may add, truly postulated, because first existing as ideas in the Eternal Mind, whose image and reflex man's is. So also with Newton : the principle of gravitation, as an all-embracing law of the planetary system, was postulated in his mind before he ascertained it to be the law actually in force throughout the whole, or even any considerable part of the system — mind in man thus responding to mind in God, and finding, in the things which appear, the evi dence at once of His eternal power and Godhead, and of the similitude of its own understanding to that of Him by whom the world has been contrived and ordained. There is a class of minds which such considerations cannot reach. They would take a position above them ; 1 Max Miiller, ' Lectures on Language,' p. 19. Lect. I.] THE ASCENDENCY OF LAW. 11 and adventuring upon what tends to perplex and con found, rather than satisfy, the reason, they raise such questions respecting the Absolute and Infinite, as in a manner exclude the just and natural conclusions deduced from the works of creation concerning the Being and Government of the Creator. But questions of that de scription, pressing as they do into a region which tran scends all human thought and known analogy, it is pre sumption in man to raise, folly to entertain ; for ' man is born,' as Goethe well remarked, ' not to solve the problems of the universe, but to find out where the problem for himself begins, and then restrain himself within the limits of the comprehensible.' Considered from this point of view, the reflections which have been submitted as to the prevalence of natural law in the general economy of the world of matter, in its relation to God and its bearing on the religion of the Bible, are perfectly legitimate ; and they might easily be extended by a diversified apphcation of the principles involved in them to the arrangements in the natural world, which stand more closely related to men's individual interests and responsibilities. But to sum up briefly what relates to this branch of our subject, there are three leading characteristics in the teaching of the Bible respecting the relation of God to the merely natural world, and which, though they can only in a qualified sense be termed a revelation of law, yet form, so to speak, the landmarks which the Bible itself sets up, and the measure of the liberty it accords to the cultivators of science. (1.) The first of these is the strict and proper person ality of God, as distinct from, and independent of, the whole or any part of the visible creation. This to its utmost limits is His workmanship — the theatre which His hands have reared, and which they still maintain, for 12 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. the outgoing of His perfections and the manifestation of His glory. As such, therefore, the things belonging to it are not, and cannot possibly be, a part of His proper self. However pervaded by His essential presence and divine energy, they are not 'the varied God,' in the natural sense of the expression. They came into being without any diminution of His infinite greatness, and so they may be freely handled, explored, modified, made to undergo ever so many changes and transformations, without in the slightest degree trenching on the nature of Him, who is ' without variableness or shadow of turn ing.' Such is the doctrine of the Bible — differing from mere nature-worship, and from polytheism in all its forms, which, if it does not openly avow, tacitly assumes the identification of Deity with the world. The Scripture doctrine of the Creator and creation, of God and the world, as diverse though closely related factors, leaves to science its proper field of inquiry and observation un trammelled by any hindrance arising from the view there exhibited of the Divine nature. (2.) A second distinguishing feature in the revelations of the Bible is, that they rather pre-suppose what belongs to the domain of natural science, than chrectly interfere with it. With the exception of the very earliest part of the sacred records, it is the supernatural — the supernatural with respect more immediately to ¦moral relations and results — which may be designated their proper field ; and while in this the supernatural throughout bases itself on the natural, the natural itself is httle more than inci dentally referred to, or very briefly indicated. Even in the account given of the formation of the world and the natural constitution of things therewith connected, it is obviously with the design of forming a suitable introduc tion to the place of man in the world, his moral relation Lect. I.] THE ASCENDENCY OF LAW. 13 to the Creator, and his special distinction as the respon sible head of creation upon earth, that the narrative was framed, rather than for the purpose of affording any insight into the merely natural relations and properties of things. The physical as such, with its manifold gradations of life and being, its history and developments, its laws of attraction and repulsion, modes of operation, existing forms and possible transformations, — all this is either unnoticed in Scripture, or indicated only in its rougher outlines. Even the vexed question respecting the origin and distinctions of species in the animal creation is but partially involved here ; for, while Scripture un doubtedly represents the existing families of mankind as originating in the formation of one pair by the immediate interposition of God, and also represents the production of plants, fishes, land animals, fowls, as coming at succes sive stages into being, and each constituted so as to bring forth after its kind ; yet nothing is said as to the number of kinds, or the centres, one or more, in which they respectively originated, how far the several kinds should remain stereotyped, or how far they might be capable, through human art or climatic influences, of departing from the original type, and in process of time developing into varieties and making indefinite approaches one to another. On such points Scripture is altogether silent, even in that introductory portion which most nearly resembles a piece of natural history. Nothing depends on them for the higher interests which it has mainly in view, the things which concern the moral character and purposes of God, as connected with His crowning work in creation — Man. And it may well surely be regarded as a wonderful thing in that simple primeval record, an evidence of something more in it than a merely human authorship, that it should, while touching but incidentally 14 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. on scientific ground, stand, as a whole, in such striking accord even now with the estabhshed results of science — exhibiting, by means of a few graphic lines, not merely the evolution from dark chaos of a world of hght, and order, and beauty, but the gradual ascent also of being upon earth, from the lowest forms of vegetable and animal life, up to him, who holds alike of earth and heaven — at once creation's head, and the rational image and vicegerent of the Creator. Here, substantially at least, we have the progression of modern science ; but this com bined, in a manner altogether peculiar, with the peerless dignity and worth of man, as of more account in God's sight than the entire world besides of animated being, yea, than sun, and moon, and stars of hght, because incomparably nearer than them all to the heart of God, and more closely associated with the moral aims, to which everything in nature was designed to be subordinate. Better than all science, it reveals alike man's general place in nature and his singular relation to God.1 (3.) A third characteristic of Bible teaching in this connection is the free play it allows to general laws and natural agencies, or to the operation of cause and effect ; and this, not merely as bearing on simply natural results, but also as connected with spiritual relations and duties. Those laws and agencies are of God ; as briefly expressed by Augustine, ' God's will constitutes the nature of things' {Dei voluntas rerum natura est); or more fully by Hooker,2 ' That law, the performance whereof we behold in things natural, is as it were an authentic or original draft written in the bosom of God himself, whose Spirit being to exe cute the same with every particular nature, every mere natural agent is only as an instrument created at the begmning, and ever since the beginning used, to work His 1 See Butler, ' Analogy,' P. I. c. 7. 2 ' Eccl. Polity,' B. I. c. 3, sec. 4. Lect. I.] THE ASCENDENCY OF LAW. 1 5 own will and pleasure withal. Nature, therefore, is nothing else but God's instrument.' Whence the various powers 'and faculties of nature, whether in things animate or inani mate, her regular course and modes of procedure, are not supplanted by grace, but are recognised and acted upon to the full extent that they can be made subservient to higher purposes. Thus, when in respect to things above nature, God reveals His mind to men, He does it through men, and through men not as mere machines unconsciously obeying a supernatural impulse, but acting in discharge of their personal obligations and the free exercise of their individual powers and susceptibilities. So also the common subject of grace, the ordinary behever, obtains no warrant as such to set at nought the settled laws and ordinances of nature, no right to expect aught but mis chief if he should contravene their action, or fail to adapt himself to their mode of operation ; and at every step in his course toward the final goal of his calling, reason, knowledge, cultivation, wise discretion, and persevering diligence have their parts to play in securing his safety and progress, as well as the divine help and internal agency of the Spirit. It is, therefore, within the boundary- lines fixed by nature, and in accordance with the prin ciples of her constitution, alike in the mental and the material world, that the work of grace proceeds, though bringing along with it powers, and influences, and results which are peculiarly its own. And even as regards the things done for the behever in the outer field of provi dence, and in answer to humble prayer, there may be no need (for aught we know to the contrary) for miraculous interference, in the ordinary sense of the term, but only for wise direction, for timely and fitting adjustment. It may even be, as Isaac Taylor has said, ' the great miracle of providence, that no miracles are needed to accomplish 1 6 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. its purposes;' that 'the materials of the machinery of providence are all of ordinary quality, while their com bination displays nothing less than infinite skill ;' and, at all events, within this field alone of divine foresight and gracious interventions through natural agencies, there is in the hand of God ' a hidden treasury of boons sufficient for the incitement of prayer and the reward of humble faith.'1 The three principles or positions now laid down in respect to God's operations in nature and providence, seem to comprise all that is needed for the maintenance of friendly relations between the religion of the Bible and the investigations of science ; on the one side, ample scope is left to these investigations, while, on the other, nothing has been actually established by them which conflicts with the statements of the Bible interpreted by the principles. we have stated. But undoubtedly there is in them what cannot be reconciled with that deification of material forces, which some would identify with strict science — as if every thing that took place were the result of the action only of unconscious law — law working with such rigid, un broken continuity of natural order, as to admit of no break or deviation whatever (such as is implied in miracles), and no special adaptation to individual cases (as a parti cular providence would involve). Both miracles and a particular providence, within certain limits, and as means to the attainment of important ends, are postulated and required in the revelations of the Bible. For if, as it teaches, there be a personal God, an infinite and eternal Spirit, distinct from the works of creation, and Himself the author of the laws by which they are governed — if also this God sustains the character of moral Governor in regard to the intelhgent part of His creation, and subordinates everything in His administration to the 1 ' Natural History of Enthusiasm,' sec. vi. Lect. I.] THE ASCENDENCY OF LAW. 1 7 principles and interests therewith connected — then the possibility, at least, of miracles and a particular providence (to say nothing at present of their evidence), can admit of no reasonable doubt. This does not imply, as the oppo nents of revelation not unfrequently assume, the produc tion in certain cases of an effect without a cause, or the emerging of dissimilar consequents from the same ante cedents. For, on the supposition in question, the ante cedents are no longer the same ; the cause which is of nature has superadded to it a cause which is above nature, in the material sense — the will and the power of a personal Deity. We reason here, as in other things, from the human to the divine. Mind in man is capable of originating a force, which within definite limits can suspend the laws of material nature, and control or modify them to its desired ends. And why, then, should it be thought incredible or strange, that the central Mind of the universe, by whom all subsists, should at certain special moments, when the purposes of His moral government require a new order of things to be originated, authoritative indications of His will to be given, or results accomplished unattainable in the ordinary course of nature, bring into play a force adequate to the end in view ? It is merely supposing the great primary cause interposing to do in a higher line of things what finite beings are ever doing in a lower ; and the right, and the power, and the purpose to do it, resolve themselves (as we have said) into the question, whether there really be a God, exercising a moral government over the world, capable for its higher ends of putting forth acts of supernatural agency — a question which natural science has no special mission to determine, or peculiar resources to explicate.1 1 See M'Cosh, ' Method of Divine Government,' B. II. cap. i. sec. 7. And for an admirable and conclusive exposure of the views of the chief opponents B 18 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. The subject of a particular providence so far differs from that of miraculous action, that, to a large extent, its requirements may be met through the operation of merely instrumental causes, fitly disposed and arranged ' by Divine wisdom to suit the ever- varying conditions of individual man. To have respect to the individual in His method of government cannot be regarded as less in the present day of all miraculous agency, even in creation and intelligent design as connected with the works of nature — namely, the advocates of natural selection and progressive development — see particularly 'The Darwinian Theory of Development examined by a Cambridge Graduate.' It is there stated, aa a remarkable thing, that this theory, which professes to be based on scientific grounds, yet expresses itself in the form of a creed: the words 'We must believe,' ' I have no difficulty in believing,' etc., are perpetually recurring, and, in fact, form the necessary links in the chain of so-called deductions. Hence, while setting out with the object of avoiding the miraculous, the end is not attained. ' In the old method, the great physiologists take it for granted that their researches can only reach a certain point, beyond which they cannot penetrate ; there they come to the inexplicable ; and they believe that barrier to be the Creator's power, which they leave at a respectful distance. This, according to the feelings of the ancients, was " the veil of nature which no mortal hand had ever withdrawn," and, as they approached it, they felt and spoke of it with reverence. Now, the new method is to discard the belief in a Creator, to reject the omniscience and omnipotence of a Maker of all things, to charge us who believe in it with endeavouring to conceal our ignorance by an imposing form of words ; and to undertake to explain the origin of all forms of life by another and a totally different hypothesis. What, then, is the result ? A long list of new and doubtful assertions, some of them of surpassing novelty and wildness, and all of them unaccompanied by proof, but proposed as points of belief. The marvellous in the old method is in one point only, and that, for the most part, more implied than expressed — the belief in a para mount Intellect ordaining life and providing for its success. The marvellous in the new way is a vast assemblage of prodigies, strange and unheard-of events and circumstances that cannot be confirmed by any authentic evidence, and which, indeed, are out of the reach of evidence — a throng of aery dreams and phantasies, evoked by the imagination, which we are called on to Mievees realities, as it is impossible to prove that they are so' (p. 355). A distinguished naturalist has said, ' No one who has advanced so far in philosophy as to have thought of one thing in relation to another, will ever be satisfied with laws which had no author, works which had no maker, and co-ordinations which had no designer' (Phillips, ' Life on Earth'). The development school vainly try to satisfy themselves by making enormous drafts on their imagination and faith. Lect. I.] THE ASCENDENCY OF LAW. 19 consistent with the nature of an all- wise and omnipotent Being, than to restrain His working within the bounds of general laws ; and nature itself is a witness to the infinite minuteness of the care and oversight of which even the smallest forms in the animated creation are the object. Besides, in a vast multitude of instances, probably in by far the greater number of what constitute special acts of providence for individuals, it is not the law of cause and effect in material nature that is interfered with, but the operations of mind that are controlled — the Eternal Spirit directly, or by some appropriate ministry, touching the springs of thought and feeling in different bosoms, so as to bring the resolves and procedure of one to bear upon the condition and circumstances, of another, and work out the results which need to be accomphshed. In the ordinary affairs of hfe, where secular ends alone are concerned, we see what a complicated network of mutual interconnection and specific influences is formed, by the movements of mind transmitted from one person to another, and the same we can readily conceive to exist in relation to spiritual ends ; in this case, indeed, even more varied and far-reaching, as the ends to be secured are of a higher kind, and there is the action of minds from the heavenly places coming in aid of the move ments which originate upon earth. But without dilating further, the principle of the whole matter in this, as well as the previous aspect of it, is embodied in another grand utterance of Newton's, in which, after describing God as a being or substance, ' one, simple, indivisible, living, and life-giving, everywhere and necessarily existing,' etc., it is added, in these remarkable words, ' perceiving and governing all things by His essential presence, and con stantly co-operating with all things, according to fixed laws as the foundation and cause of all nature, except 20 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. when it is good to act otherwise {nisi ubi aliter agere- bonum est):' the will of the great Sovereign of the universe being thus placed above every impressed law and instrumental cause of nature, and conceived free to adopt other and more peculiar lines of action as the higher ends of His government might require. II. We turn now from the physical to the moral and religious sphere, the one with which in the present dis cussion we have more especially to do ; and in doing so we pass into quite another region as regards the tendency of thought in the current literature and philosophy of the day. For here, undoubtedly, the disposition with many is to fall as much short of the teaching of Scripture in respect to the supremacy of law, as in the other depart ment to go beyond it. But opinions on the subject are really so diverse, they differ so much both in respect to the forms they assume and the grounds on which they are based, that it is not quite easy in a brief space, and impossible without some detail, to give a distinct repre sentation of them. (1.) At the farthest remove from the Scriptural view stand the advocates of materialism — those who would merge mind and matter ultimately into one mass, who would trace all mental phenomena to sensations, and account for everything that takes place by means of the affinities, combinations, and inherent properties of matter. In such a philosophy there is room for law only in the physical sense, and for such progress or civilization as may arise from a more perfect acquaintance therewith, and a more skilful use or adaptation of it to the employments and purposes of life. The personality of God, as a living, eternal Spirit, cannot be entertained ; and, of course, Lect. I.] CURRENT THEORIES ON LAW. 21 responsibility in the higher sense, as involving subjection to moral government, and the establishment of a Divine moral order, can have no place. For, mind is but a species of cerebral development ; thought or desire but an action of the brain ; man himself but the most perfectly developed form of organic being, the highest type in the scale of nature's ascending series of productions, whose part is fulfilled in doing what is fitted to secure a health ful organization, and provide for himself the best condi tions possible of social order and earthly wellbeing. But, to say nothing of the scheme in other respects, looking at it simply with reference to the religion and morahty of the Bible, it plainly ignores the foundation on which these may be said to rest ; namely, the moral elements in man's constitution, or the phenomena of conscience, which are just as real as those belonging to the physical world, and in their nature immensely more important. In so doing, it gives the he to our profoundest convictions, and loses sight of the higher, the more ennobling qualities of our nature, indeed would reduce man very much to the condition of a child and creature of fate — capable, indeed, of being influenced by sensual desires, prudential motives, and utilitarian considerations, but not called to aim at conformity to any absolute rule of right and wrong, or to recognise as binding a common standard of duty. Such an idea is strongly repudiated by writers of this school ; each man, it is contended, has a right or 'just claim to carry on his life in his own way,' ' his own mode of laying out his existence is the best, not because it is the best in itself, but because it is his own mode ;' hence, on the other side, Calvinism, which appears to be taken as another name for evangehcal Christianity, is decried as comprising all the good of which humanity is capable in 22 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. obedience, and prescribing a way of duty which shall be essentially the same for all.1 (2.) Formally antagonistic to this sensational or mate rialistic school — occupying, one might say, the opposite pole of thought in respect to moral law, yet not less opposed to any objective revelation of law — is the view of the idealists, or, as a portion of them at least are some times called, the ideal pantheists. With them, mind and God are the two great ideas that are to rule all ; God first, indeed, whether as the personal or ideal centre of the vital forces that work, and the fundamental principles that should prevail throughout the moral universe ; but also mind in man as the exemplar of God, the exponent of the Divine, and the medium through which it comes into realization. Man, accordingly, by the very constitu tion of his being, is as a God to himself ; or, in the lan guage of one who, more perhaps than any other, may be regarded as the founder of the school, ' Man, as surely as he is a rational being, is the end of his own existence ; he does not exist to the end that something else may be, but he exists absolutely for his own sake ; his being is its own ultimate object.' Consequently, ' all should proceed from his own simple personality,' and should be deter mined by what is within, not by a regard to what is external to himself, though this latter element will usually more or less prevail, and bring on a sort of con- 1 J. S. Mill ' On Liberty,' ch. iii. In referring to Mr Mill, we certainly take one of the less extreme, as well as most respectable and able of the advocates of a materialistic philosophy — one, too, who in his work on Utilitarianism has laboured hard to make up, in a moral respect, for the inherent defects of his system. But there still is, as Dr M'Cosh has shown (' Examination of Mill's Philosophy,' ch. xx.), the fundamental want of moral law, the impossibihty of giving any satisfactory account of the ideas of moral desert and personal obliga tion, and such loose, uncertain drawing of the boundary lines between moral good and evil, as leaves each man, to a large extent, the framer of his own moral standard. Lect. I.] CURRENT THEORIES ON LAW. 23 tradiction, empirically or as matter of fact, to his proper self. But he should be determined by nothing foreign, and 'the fundamental principle of morality may be ex pressed in such a formula as this, " So act, that thou mayest look upon the dictate of thy will as an eternal law to thyself.'"1 Thus the Divine becomes essentially one with the human ; the law for the universe is to be got at through the insight and monitions of the indivi dual, especiaUy of such individuals as have a higher range of thought than their fellow-men ; the heroes of humanity are, in a qualified sense, its legislators. ' What,' asks Carlyle,2 'is this law of the universe, or law made by God ? Men at one time read it in their Bible. In many bibles, books, and authentic symbols and monitions of nature, and the world (of fact), there are still some clear indications towards it. Most important it is, that men do, and in some way, get to see it a httle. And if no man could now see it by any bible, there is written in the heart of every man an authentic copy of it, direct from Heaven itself : there, if he have learnt to decipher Heaven's writing, and can read the sacred oracles, every born man may find some copy of it.' An element of truth, doubtless, is in such utterances — a most important element, which Scripture also recognises — but inter mingled with what is entirely alien to the spirit and teaching of Scripture. For, it proceeds on the supposition of man being still in his normal state, and as such per fectly capable, by the insight of his own rational and moral nature, to acquaint himself with all moral truth and duty. The inner consciousness of man is entitled to create for itself a morality, and a religion (if it should deem such a thing worthy of creation) ; it is, in effect, deified — though itself, as every one knows, to a large 1 Fichte, ' Vocation of Man.' 2 ' Latter Day Pamphlets,' No. II. 24 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. extent the creature of circumstances. And thus aU takes a pantheistic direction — the Divine is dragged down to a level with the human, made to coalesce with it, instead of the human (according to the Scriptural scheme) being informed by and elevated to the Divine.1 And the general result, in so far as such idealism prevails, is obviously to shut men up to ' measureless content' with themselves, and dispose them to resist the dictation of any external authority or revelation whatever. This result is beyond doubt already reached with considerable numbers among the educated classes, and is also pressing through manifold channels of influence into the church ! For it is of this that the historian of rationahsm speaks when he says,2 ' The tendency of religious thought in the present day is aU in one direction, towards the identification of the Bible and conscience. Generation after generation the power of the moral faculty becomes more absolute, the doctrines that oppose it wane and vanish, and the various elements of theology are absorbed and recast by its in fluence.' The representation is plausibly made, and only when taken in its connection is its full import seen ; for the meaning is, that the identification in question pro ceeds, not from the conscience finding its enlightenment in the Bible, but from the Bible being made to speak in accordance with the enlightenment of conscience. The intellectual and moral idealism of the age, if still holding by the Bible, reads this in its own hght, and throws into the background whatever it disrelishes or repudiates. (3.) This species of ideahsm — allying itself with the Bible, though sprung from philosophy, and in itself naturally tending to pantheism — has its representatives in the Christian church, especially among the class whose 1 See Morell, ' Hist, of Modern Philosophy,' Vol. II. p. 611. 2 Lecky's ' Hist, of Rationalism,' Vol. I. p. 384. Lect. I.] CURRENT THEORIES ON LAW. 25 tastes he more in literature than in theology. Of culti vated minds and refined moral sentiments, such persons readily acknowledge the ascendency of law in the govern ment of God, but, in accordance with their ideahsm, it is law in a somewhat ethereal sense, having httle to do with definite rules or external revelations, recognised merely in a kind of general obligation to exercise certain feelings, emotions, or principles of action. Hence in the same writers you will find law at once exalted and depreciated ; at one time it appears to be everything, at another nothing. ' This universe,' says a rehgious ideahst of the class now referred to,1 'is governed by laws. At the bottom of everything here there is law. Things are in this way and not that ; we call that a law or a condition. AU depart ments have their own laws. By submission to them you make them your own.' And still more strongly in another place, adopting the very style of the pantheistic idealists,2 ' I think a great deal of law. Law rules Deity, and its awful majesty is above individual happiness. This is what Kant calls the " categorical imperative ;" that is, a sense of duty which commands categoricaUy or absolutely —not saying, " It is better," but " Thou shalt." Why ? Because " Thou shalt" — that is all. It is not best to do right, thou must do right ; and the conscience that feels that, and in that way, is the nearest to divine humanity.' But in other passages language equally decided is used in disparagement of anything in the moral or spiritual sphere carrying the form of law. Nothing now must rest, we are told, on enactment; if necessary, it is not on that account, ' not because it is commanded ; but it is com manded because it is necessary'3 — hence binding on the 1 Robertson of Brighton, ' Sermons,' 2d Series, p. 114. 2 ' Life and Letters,' Vol. 1. p. 292. 3 ' Life,' in a Letter, October 24, 1849. 26 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. conscience only so far as it is perceived to be necessary. And again, professing to give the drift of St Paul's admonitions to the Galatians respecting observance, it is said,1 ' All forms and modes of particularizing the Chris tian life he reckoned as bondage under the elements or alphabet of the law ;' so that, though the Christian life might, if it saw fit, find a suitable expression for itself in any particular observance, this could be defended ' on the ground of wise and Christian expediency alone, and could not be placed on the ground of a Divine statute or command.' Professor Jowett seems to carry the idealizing a httle further ; he thinks that, under the Old Testament itself, the period emphatically of law, there is evidence of its adoption by the more thoughtful and intelhgent of the covenant people. The term ' law,' he says, is ambiguous in Scripture;2 'it is so in the Old Testament itself. In the prophecies and psalms, as well as in the writings of St Paul, the law is in a great measure ideal. When the Psalmist spoke of " meditating in the law of the Lord," he was not thinking of the five books of Moses. The law which he delighted to contemplate was not written down (as well might we imagine that the Platonic idea was a treatise on philosophy) ; it was the will of God, the truth of God, the justice and holiness of God. In later ages the same feelings began to gather around the volume of the law itself. The law was ideal still' — though he admits that ' with this ideahsm were combined the reference to its. words, and the literal enforcement of its precepts.' A strange sort of ideahsm, surely, which could not sepa rate itself from the concrete or actual, and continued looking to this for the material alike of its study and its observance ! But it is the view only we at pre sent notice, the form of thought itself respecting the law, 1 ' Sermons,' 2d Series, p. 184. 2 ' Epistles of St Paul,' II. p. 501. Lect. I.] CURRENT THEORIES ON LAW. 27 not its consistence either with itself or with the statements of Scripture. It clearly enough indicates how idealism has been influencing the minds of Christian writers in this direction, and how, along with much that is sound, pure, and sometimes elevating in the sentiments they utter, there is also a certain laxity as to particular things, an asserted superiority for the individual over law in respect to everything hke exphcit rules and enactments. (4.) There is, however, a class of Christian writers, more properly theological and also of a somewhat realistic character, who so far concur with the ideahsts, that they maintain the freedom of the Christian from obhgation to the law distinctively so called — the law in that sense is abolished by the Gospel of Christ, or, as sometimes put, dead and buried in His grave ; but only that a new and higher law might come in its place, the law of Gospel life and hberty. This view is what in theological language bears the name of Neonomianism — that is, the doctrine of a new law, in some respects differing from or opposed to the old — a law of principles rather than of precepts, especially the great principles of faith and love, which it conceives to be carried now higher than before. The view is by no means of recent origin ; it was formally propounded shortly after the Reformation, was adopted by the Socinians as a distmguishing part of their system, and with certain unimportant variations has often been set forth afresh in later times.1 Dr Whately puts it thus : The law as revealed in the Old Testament bears on the face of it that the whole of its precepts, moral as weU as 1 Zanchius, who belongs to the Reformation era, states expressly that we have nothing to do with the moral precepts of Moses, except in so far as they agree with the common law of nature, and are confirmed by Christ (Op. IV. 1. i. c. 11). To the same effect, Musculus, 'De Abrogatione Legis Mos. ;' and more recently, Knapp, 'Christian Theology,' sec. 119, ' Bialloblotzky, De Abrog. L. Mos.,' &c. 28 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. ceremonial, 'were intended for the Israelites exclusively;' therefore 'they could not by their own authority be binding on Christians,' and are by the apostle in explicit terms denied to be binding on them, hence as regards them abohshed.1 ' But, on the other hand, the natural principles of morality which (among other things) it inculcates, are from their own character of universal obligation ; so that Christians are bound to the observance of those commandments which are called moral — not, however, because they are commandments of the Mosaic law, but because they are moral.' The moral law, as written upon man's heart, remains still, as ever, authori tative and binding, and ' is by the Gospel placed on higher grounds. Instead of precise rules, it furnishes sublime principles of conduct, leaving the Christian to apply these, according to his own discretion, to each case that may arise.' In a somewhat modified form, the same view has been presented after this ' manner : ' Under the Christian dispensation, the law in its outward and limited form — in its form as given to Israel — has passed away ; but the substance, the principles, of the law remain. Would we be free from that substance, these principles must be written on our hearts. If they are not so written, we ourselves reduce them to an outward and commanding law, which, not being obeyed, brings bondage with it.' The law, therefore, in one sense has passed away, in another not ; it is improper to speak of it as dead and buried in the grave of Christ, for in its great principles it never dies ; but ' the outward, the hmited, the command ing form of it may be said to be dead ;' or, as otherwise expressed, 'that law in a particular and local form has been taken up and widened out into a higher law, in Him who not only exhibits it in its most perfect form, but gives 1 ' Essay on the Abolition of the Law,' sees. 1, 2. Lect. I.] CURRENT THEORIES ON LAW. 29 the strength in which alone we can obey.'1 The differ ence between this and the other mode of representation is evidently not material : in both alike the revelation of law in the Old Testament is held to be not directly, and in its letter, binding upon Christians ; but its essential prin ciples, which constitute the basis of all morahty, being recognised and embraced in the Gospel, developed also to nobler results and enforced by higher motives, these are binding, and if not strictly law, at least in the stead of law, and more effectively serving its interests. (5.) A still farther development in -the same direction is what is known under the name of Antinomianism — antithesis to the law, in the sense of formal opposition to it, as from its very nature destructive of what is good for us in our present state — an occasion only and instrmnent of death. It is the view of men, evangelical indeed, but partial and extreme in their evangehsm — who, in their zeal to magnify the grace of th'e Gospel, lay stress only upon a class of expressions which unfold its riches and its triumphs, as contrasted with the law's impotence in itself, yea, with the terror and condemnation produced by it, and silently overlook, or deprive of their proper force, another class, which exhibit law in living fellowship with grace — joint factors in the accomplishment of the same blessed results. But it is right to add, the spirit and design with which this is done differ widely in the hands of different persons. Some so magnify grace in order to get their consciences at ease respecting the claims of holiness, and vindicate for themselves a liberty to sin that grace may abound — or, which is even worse, deny that anything they do can have the character of sin, because they are through grace released from the demands of law, and so cannot sin. These are Antinomians of the 1 Milligan on ' The Decalogue and the Lord's Day,' pp. 96, 108, 111. 30 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. grosser kind, who have not particular texts merely of the Bible, but its whole tenor and spirit against them. Others, however, and these the only representatives of the idea who in present times can be regarded as having an outstanding existence, are advocates of holiness after the example and teaching of Christ. They are ready to say, ' Conformity to the Divine will, and that as obedi ence to commandments, is ahke the joy and the duty of the renewed mind. Some are afraid of the word obedi ence, as if it would weaken love and the idea of a new creation. Scripture is not. Obedience and keeping the commandments of one we love is the proof of that love, and the dehght of the new creature. Did I do all right, and not do it in obedience, I should do nothing right, because my true relationship and heart-reference to God would be left out. This is love, that we keep His com mandments.'1 So far exceUent; but then these com mandments are not fou"nd in the revelation of law, distinctively so called. The law, it is held, had a specific character and aim, from which it cannot be dissociated, and which makes it for all time the minister of evil. ' It is a principle of dealing with men which necessarily destroys and condemns them. This is the way (the writer continues) the Spirit of God uses law in contrast with Christ, and never in Christian teaching puts men under it. Nor does Scripture ever think of saying, You are not under the law in one way, but you are in another; you are not for justification, but you are for a rule of life. It declares, You are not under law, but under grace ; and if you are under law, you are condemned and under a curse. How is that obhgatory which a man is not under — from which he is delivered?'2 Antinomianism of this description — distinguishing between the teaching or com- 1 Darby ' On the Law,' pp. 3, 4. 2 Ibid. p. 4. Lect. I.] CURRENT THEORIES ON LAW. 31 mandments of Christ and the commandments of the law, holding the one to be binding on the conscience of Chris tians and the other not; — is plainly but partial Antino- mianism; it does not, indeed, essentially differ from Neonomianism, since law only as connected with the earlier dispensation is repudiated, while it is received as embodying the principles of Christian morality, and asso ciated with the life and power of the Spirit of Christ. (6.) Still it is clear, from this brief review, that there is a very considerable diversity of opinion on the subject of law, in a moral or spiritual respect, even among those who are agreed in asserting our freedom from its re straints and obhgations in the more imperative form ; and from not a httle of the philosophic, and much of the current secular hterature of the age, a tendency is continually flowing into the church, which is impatient of anything in the name of moral or religious obhgation, beyond the general claims of rectitude and benevolence. In respect to everything besides, the individual is held to have an absolute right to judge for himself. It can not, therefore, appear otherwise than an important line of inquiry, and one specially caUed for by the present aspect of things, what place does law hold in the revela tions of Scripture ? How far has it varied in amount of requirement or form of obhgation, at different periods of the Divine aolministration ? What was the nature of the change effected in regard to it, or to our relation to it, by the appearance and work of Christ ? It is of the more importance that such questions should receive a thoughtful and considerate examination, as the confes sional position of most churches, Eeformed as well as Cathohc, is against the tendency now described, and on the side of law, in the stricter sense of the term, having still a commanding power on the consciences of men. 32 INTRODUCTORY. [Lect. I. At the farthest extreme in this direction stands the Roman Cathohc church, which holds Christ to be a legislator in the same sense as Moses was, and deems itself entitled by Divine right to bind enactments of moral and rehgious duty upon the consciences of its members, similar in kind, and greatly more numerous and exacting in the things required by them, than those imposed by the legislation of Moses. There are sections also of the Protestant church, and parties of considerable extent and influence in particular churches, who have ever endeavoured to find, either by direct imposition, or by analogical reasonings and necessary implication, autho rity in Scripture for a large amount of positive law as weU as moral precept, to be received and acted on by the Christian church. And from the opposite quarter, we may say, of the theological heavens, there has recently been given a representation of Christ, in which the- strongest emphasis is laid on His legislative character. Speaking of the first formation of the Christian society, the author of ' Ecce Homo ' says, * ' Those who gathered round Christ did in the first place contract an obhga tion of personal loyalty to Him. On the ground of this loyalty He proceeded to form a society, and to promulgate an elaborate legislation, comprising and intimately con nected with certain declarations, authoritatively dehvered, concerning the nature of God, the relation of man to Him, and the invisible world. In doing so He assumed the part of a second Moses ;' and he goes on to indicate the specific character of the legislation, and the sanctions under which it was estabhshed, both materially differing from the Mosaic. Yet this seems again virtually recalled by other representations, in which the New Testament is declared to be ' not the Christian law ;'2 not ' the pre- 1 P. 80. 2 P. 202. Lect. L] CURRENT THEORIES ON LAW. 33 cepts of apostles,' not even ' the special commands of Christ.' ' The enthusiasm of humanity in Christianity is their only law ;' ' what it dictates, and that alone, is law for the Christian.' But apart from this, which can only be set down to prevailing arbitrariness and uncertainty on the subject, the Protestant churches generally stand committed to the belief of the moral law in the Old Testament as in substance the same with that in the New, and from its very nature limited to no age or country, but of perpetual and universal obligation. They have ever looked to the Decalogue as the grand summary of moral obhgation, under which all duty to God and man may be comprised. Is this the true Scriptural position ? or in what manner, and to what extent, should it be modified ? 34 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II. LECTURE II. THE RELATION OF MAN AT CREATION TO MORAL LAW— HOW FAE OR IN WHAT RESPECTS THE LAW IN ITS PRINCIPLES WAS MADE KNOWN TO HIM— THE GRAND TEST OF HIS RECTITUDE, AND HIS FAILURE UNDER IT. "OTHEN opening the sacred volume for the purpose of ' ' ascertaining its revelations of Divine law, it appears at first sight somewhat strange that so httle should be found of this in the earlier parts of Scripture, and that what is emphatically called the law did not come into formal existence till greatly more than half the world's history between Adam and Christ had run its course. ' The law came by Moses.'1 The generations of God's people that preceded this era are represented as living under promise rather than under law, and the covenant of promise — that, namely, made with Abraham — in the order of the Divine dispensations took precedence of the law by four hundred and thirty years.2 Yet it is clear from what is elsewhere said, that though not under law in one sense, those earher generations were under it in another ; for they were throughout generations of sinful men, subject to disease and death on account of sin, and sin is but the transgression of law ; ' where no law is, there is no transgression.'3 So that when the apostle again speaks of certain portions of mankind not having the law, of their sinning without law, and perishing without law,4 he can only mean that they were without 1 John i. 17. 2 Gal ih 17 3 Rom. v. 12, 13 ;_Lv. 15 ; vi. 2, 3. 4 Rom. ii 12, 14. Lect. IL] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 35 the formal revelation of law, which had been given through Moses to the covenant -people, while still, by the very constitution of then beings, they stood under the bonds of law, and by their relation -to these would be justified or condemned. But this plainly carries us up to the very beginnings of the human family ; for as our first parents, though created altogether good, sinned against God, and through sinning lost their proper heritage of life and blessing, then original standing must have been amid the obligations of law. And the question which presses on us at the outset — the first in order in the line of investigation that hes before us, and one on the right determination of which not a httle depends for the correct ness of future conclusions — is, what was the nature of the law associated with man's original state 1 and how far, or in what respects, did it possess the character of a revelation ? a I. The answer to such questions must be sought, primarily at least, in something else than what in the primeval records carries the formal aspect of law — the commands, namely, given to our first parents respecting their place and conduct toward the earth generally, or the select region they more peculiarly occupied ; for it is remarkable that these are in themselves of a merely outward and positive nature — positive, I mean, as contra distinguished from moral ; so that, in their bearing on man's original probation, they could only have been intended to form the occasions and tests of moral obedi- 1 In discussing this subject, it will be understood that I take for granted the truth of the history in Genesis i. -iii. , and the fact of man's creation in a state of manhood, ripeness, and perfection. The impossibility of accounting for the existence and propagation of the human race otherwise, has been often demon strated. See Dr Moore's ' First Man and his Place in Creation,' and the autho rities there referred to. 36 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II. ence, not its proper ground or principle. Underneath those commands, and pre-supposed by them, there must have been certain fundamental elements of moral obhga tion in the very make and constitution of man — in his moral nature, to which such commands addressed them selves, and which must remain, indeed, for all time the real basis of whatever can be justly exacted of man, or is actually due by him in moral and rehgious duty. In applying ourselves, therefore, to consider what in this respect is written of man's original state, we have to do with what, in its more essential features, relates not to the first merely, but to every stage of human history — with what must be recognised by every law that is really Divine, and to which it must stand in fitting adaptation. The notice mainly to be considered we find in that part of the history of creation, which tells us with marked precision and emphasis of the Divine mould after which his being was fashioned : ' Let us make man,' it was said by God, after the inferior creatures had been formed each after their kind, 'in our image, after our hkeness (or similitude),' And the purpose being accomphshed, it is added, ' So God created man in His own image, in the image of God created He him' — the rational offspring, therefore, as well as the workmanship of Deity, a repre sentation in finite form and under creaturely limitations of the invisible God. That the hkeness had respect to the soul, not to the body of man (except in so far as this is the organ ofthe soul and its proper instrument of working) cannot be doubted; for the God who is a Spirit could find only in the spiritual part of man's complex being a subject capable of having imparted to it the characteristics of His own image. Nor could the dominion with which man was invested over the fulness of the world and its living creaturehood, be regarded as more than the mere con- Lect. IL] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 37 sequence and sign of the Divine hkeness after which man was constituted, not the likeness itself; for this mani festly pointed to the distinction of his nature, not to some prerogative merely, or incidental accompaniment of his position. Holding, then, that the hkeness or image of God, in which man was made, is to be understood of his intellectual and moral nature, what light, we have now to ask, does it furnish in respect to the line of inquiry with which we are engaged ? What does it import of the requirements of law, or the bonds of .moral obhgation ? Undoubtedly, as the primary element in this idea must be placed the intellect, or rational nature of the soul in man ; the power or capacity of mind, which enabled him in discernment to rise above the impressions of sense, and in action to follow the guidance of an intelligent aim or pur pose, instead of obeying the blind promptings of appetite or instinct. Without such a faculty, there had been want ing the essential ground of moral obhgation ; man could not have been the subject either of praise or of blame ; for he should have been incapable, as the inferior animals universally are, of so distinguishing between the true and the false, the right and the wrong, and so appreciat ing the reasons which ought to make the one rather than the other the object of one's desire and choice, as to render him morally responsible for his conduct. In God, we need scarcely say, this property exists in absolute perfection ; He has command over all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge — ever seeing things as they really are, and with unerring precision selecting, out of number less conceivable plans, that which is the best adapted to accomplish His end. And made as man was, in this respect, after the image of God, we cannot conceive of him otherwise than as endowed with an understanding to 38 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II. know everything, either in the world around him or his own relation to it, which might be required to fit him for accomphshing, without failure or imperfection, the destination he had to fill, and secure the good which he was capable of attaining. How far, as subservient to this end, the discerning and reasoning faculty in un- faUen man might actuaUy reach, we want the materials for enabling us to ascertain ; but in the few notices given of him we see the free exercise of that faculty in ways perfectly natural to him, and indicative of its sufficiency for his place and calling in creation. The Lord brought, it is said, the inferior creatures around him — those, no doubt, belonging to the paradisiacal region — ' to see what he would call them ; and whatsoever Adam caUed every creature, that was the name of it.'1 The name, we are to understand, according to the usual phraseology of Scripture, was expressive of the nature or distinctive properties of the subject ; so that to represent Adam as giving names to the different creatures was all one with saying, that he had intelligently scanned their respective natures, and knew how to discriminate, not merely between them and himself, but also between one creature and another. So, again, when a fitting partner had been formed out of his person and placed before him, he was able, by the same discerning faculty, to perceive her like ness and adaptation to himself, to recognise also the kindredness of her nature to his own — as ' bone of his bones, and flesh of his flesh' — and to bestow on her a name that should fitly express this oneness of nature and closeness of relationship {isha, woman ; from ish, man). These, of course, are but specimens, yet enough to shew the existence of the faculty, and the manner of its exer cise, as quahfying him — not, indeed, to search into all 1 Gen. ii. 19. Lect. IL] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 39 mysteries, or bring him acquainted with the principles of universal truth (of which nothing is hinted) — but to know the relations and properties of things so far as he had personaUy to do with them, or as was required to guide him with wisdom and discretion amid the affairs of life. To this extent the natural intelligence of Adam bore the image of his Maker's.1 The rational or intellectual part of man's nature, how ever, though entitled to be placed first in the character istics that constitute the image of God (for without this there could be no free, intelligent, or responsible action) does not of itself bring us into the sphere of the moraUy good, or involve the obligation to act according to the principles of eternal rectitude. For this there must be a will to choose, as well as a reason to understand — a will 1 This view of man's original state in an intellectual respect, while it is utterly opposed to the so-called philosophic theory of the savage mode of life, with all its ignorance and barbarity, having been the original one for mankind, is at the same time free from the extravagance which has appeared in the de scription given by some divines of the intellectual attainments and scientific insight of Adam — as if all knowledge, even of a natural kind, had been neces sary to his perfection, as the image of God ! Thomas Aquinas argues,* that if he knew the natures of all animals, he must by parity of reason have had the knowledge of all other things ; and that, as the perfect precedes the imperfect, and the first man being perfect must have had the ability to instruct his pos terity in all that they should know, so he must have himself known ' whatever things men in a natural way can know.' Protestant writers have occasionally, though certainly not as a class, carried the matter as far. And, as if such innate apprehension of all natural knowledge, and proportionate skill in the application of it to the arts and usages of life, were necessarily involved in the Scriptural account of man's original state, geologists, in the interest of their own theories, have not failed to urge, that, with such ' inspired knowledge,' t the remains should be found of the finest works of art in the remotest ages, ' lines of buried railways, or electric telegraphs,' &c. It is enough to say, that no enlightened theologian would ever ascribe such a reach of knowledge to primeval man, and that what he did possess soon became clouded and disturbed by sin. * Summa, P. I. Quaest. 94, art. 3. t Sir G. Lyell, on ' The Antiquity of Man,' p. 378. 40 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II, perfectly free in its movements, having the hght of reason to direct it to the good, but under no constraining force to obey the direction ; in other words, with the power to choose aright conformably to the truth of things, the. power also of choosing amiss, in opposition to the truth. This hberty of choice, necessary from the very nature of things to constitute man a subject of moral government, was distinctly recognised by God in the scope given to Adam to exercise the gifts and use the privileges con ferred on him, limited only by what was due to his place and calling in creation. It was more especiaUy recognised in the permission accorded to him to partake freely of the productions of the garden, to partake even of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, though with a stern prohibition and threatening to deter him from such a misuse of his freedom. But the will in its choice is just the index of the nature ; it is the expression of the pre vailing bent of the soul ; and coupled as it was in Adam with a spiritual nature untainted with evil, the reflex of His who is the supremely wise and good, there could not but be associated with it an instinctive desire to exercise it aright, — a profound, innate conviction that what was perceived to be good should carry it, as by the force of an imperative law, over whatever else might sohcit his regard ; resembling herein the Divine Author of his existence, whose very being ' is a kind of law to His working, since the perfection which God is gives perfec tion to what He does.'1 Yet, while thus bearing a near resemblance to God, there still was an essential differ ence. For in man's case all was bounded by creaturely hmitations ; and while God never can, from the infinite perfection of His being, do otherwise than choose with absolute and unerring rectitude, man with his finite 1 Hooker, ' Eccl. Polity,' B. I. c. 2. Lect. II.] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 4 1 nature and his call to work amid circumstances and con ditions imposed on him from without, could have no natural security for such unfaihng rectitude of will ; a diversity might possibly arise between what should have been, and what actuaUy was, willed and done. These, then, are the essential characteristics of the image of God, in which man was made — first, the noble faculty of reason as the lamp of the soul to search into and know the truth of things ; then the will ready at the call of reason, with the hberty and the power to choose according to the hght thus furnished ; and, finally, the pure moral nature prompting and disposing the will so to choose. Blessedness and immortality have by some been also included in the idea. And undoubtedly they are inseparable accompaniments of the Divine nature, but rather as results flowing from the perpetual exercise of its inherent powers and glorious perfections, than qualities possessed apart — hence in man suspended on the rightful employment of the gifts and prerogatives committed to him. Blessed and immortal life was to be his portion if he continued to realize the true idea of his being, and proved himself to be the living image of his Maker ; not otherwise. But that the spiritual features we have ex hibited as the essential characteristics of this image are those also which Scripture acknowledges to be such, appears from this, that they are precisely the things specified in connection with the restoration to the image of God, in the case of those who partake in the new crea tion through the grace and Gospel of Christ. It is said of such1 that they are created anew after God, or that they put on the new man {new as contradistinguished from the oldness of nature's corruptions), which is renewed after the image of Him that created him. And the 1 Eph. iv. 24 ; Col. iii. 10. 42 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II, renewal is more especially described as consisting in knowledge, righteousness, and true holiness — knowledge, the product of the ihuminated reason made cognizant of the truth of God ; righteousness, the rectitude of the mind's will and purpose in the use of that knowledge; true holiness, the actual result of knowledge so applied in the habitual exercise of virtuous affections and just desires. These attributes, therefore, of moral perfection must have constituted the main features of the Divine image in . which Adam was created, since they are what the new creation in Christ purposely aims at restoring. And in nature as weU as in grace, they were of a deriva tive character ; as component elements in the human con stitution they took their being from God, and received their moral impress from the eternal type and pattern of all that is right and good in Him. Man himself no more made and constituted them after his own liking, or can do so, than he did his capacity of thought or his bodily organization ; and the power of will which it was given him to exercise in connection with the promptings of his moral nature, had to do merely with the practical effect of its decisions, not with the nature of the decisions themselves, which necessarily drew their character from the conscience that formed them. If, therefore, this conscience in man, this governing power in his moral constitution, had in one respect the rightful place of authority over the other powers and faculties of his being, in another it stood itself under authority, and in its clearest utterances con cerning right and wrong could only affirm that there was a Divine must in the matter — the law of its being ren dered it impossible for it to think or judge otherwise. In reasoning thus as to what man originally was, when coming fresh and pure from the hands of his Creator, we must, of course, proceed in a great degree on the ground Lect. IL] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 43 of what we still know him to be — sin, while it has sadly vitiated his moral constitution, not having subverted its nature or essentially changed its manner of working. The argument, indeed, is plainly from the less to the greater : if even in its ruin the actings of our moral nature thus lead up to God, and compel us to feel our selves under a rule or an authority estabhshed by Him, how much more man in the unsullied greatness and beauty of his creation-state, with everything in his condition fitted to draw his soul heavenwards, standing as it were face to face with God ! Even now, ' the felt presence of a judge within the breast powerfully and immediately suggests the notion of a supreme judge and sovereign, who placed it there. The mind does not stop at a mere abstraction ; but, passing at once from the abstract to the concrete, from the law of the heart it makes the rapid in ference of a lawgiver.'1 Or, as put more fully by a German Christian philosopher,2 ' There is something above the merely human and creaturely in what man is sensible of in the operation of conscience, whether he may himself recognise and acknowledge it as such or not. The workings of his conscience do not, indeed, give themselves to be known as properly divine, and in reahty are nothing more than the movements of the human soul ; but they involve something which I, as soon as I reflect upon it, cannot explain from the nature of spirit, if this is contemplated merely as the ground in nature of my individual personal hfe, which after a human manner has been born in me. I stand before myself as before a riddle, the key of which can be given, not by human self-con sciousness, but by the revelation of God in His word. By this word we are made acquainted with the origination of • the human soul, as having sprung from God, and by God 1 Chalmers, ' Nat. Theology,' B. III. c. 2. 2 Harless, ' Christ. Ethik.,' sec. 8. 44 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II. settled in its creation-state. This relationship as to origin is an abiding one, because constituted by God, and, how ever much it may be obscured, incapable of being dissolved. It is one also that precedes the development of men's self-consciousness ; their soul does not place itself in relation to God, but God stands in relation to their soul. It is a bond co-extensive with life and being, by which, through the fact of the creation of their spirit out of God, it is for the whole course of its creaturely existence indis- solubly joined to God ; and a bond not destroyed by the instrumentality of human propagation, but only trans mitted onwards. On this account, what is the spirit of life in man is at the same time caUed the hght (lamp) of God (Prov. xx. 27).'1 On these grounds, derived partly from the testimony of Scripture, partly from the reflection on the nature and constitution of the human soul, we are fully warranted to conclude, that in man's creation-state there were implanted the grounds of moral obhgation — the elements of a law 1 In substance, the same representations are given in all our sounder writers on Christian ethics — for example, Butler, M'Cosh, Mansel. ' Why (asks the last named writer) has one part of our constitution, merely as such, an impera tive authority over the remainder ? What right has one part of the human consciousness to represent itself as duty, and another merely as inclination? There is but one answer possible. The moral reason, or will, or conscience of man can have no authority, save as implanted in him by some higher spiritual Being, as a Law emanating from a Lawgiver. Man can be a law unto himself, only on the supposition that he reflects in himself the law of God. If he is absolutely a law unto himself, his duty and his pleasure are undistinguishahle from each other ; for he is subject to no one, and accountable to no one. Duty in his case becomes only a higher kind of pleasure — a balance between the present and the future, between the larger and the smaller gratification, We are thus compelled by the consciousness of moral obligation to assume the existence of a moral Deity, and to regard the absolute standard of right and wrong as constituted by the nature of that Deity' (' Bampton Lecture,' p. 81, Fifth Ed.). For some partial errors in respect to conscience in man before the fall, as compared with conscience subsequent to the fall, see Delitzsch, ' Bibl. Psych.,' iii. sec. 4, Lect. IL] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 45 inwrought into the very framework of his being, which called him perpetually to aim at conformity to the will and character of God. For what was the law, when it came, but the idea of the Divine image set forth after its different sides, and placed in formal contrast to sin and opposition to God?1 Strictly speaking, however, man at first stood in law, rather than under law — being formed to the spontaneous exercise of that pure and holy love, which is the expression of the Divine image, and hence also to the doing of what the law requires. Not uncommonly his relation to law has had a more objective representation given to it, as if the law itself in some sort of categorical form had been directly communicated to our first parents. Thus Tertullian, reasoning against the Jews, who sought to magnify their nation, by claiming as their exclusive property the revelation of law, says,2 that ' at the begin ning of the world God gave a law to Adam and Eve' — he refers specifically to the command not to eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil ; but he thus expounds concerning it, ' In this law given to Adam we recognise all the precepts as already estabhshed which afterwards budded forth as given by Moses For the primordial law was given to Adam and Eve in para dise as the kind of prolific source (quasi matrix) of aU the precepts of God.' In common with him Augustine often identifies the unwritten or natural law given originally to man, and in a measure retained generaUy, though imperfectly, in men's hearts, with the law after wards introduced by Moses and written on the tables of stone (On Ps. cxviii, Sermo 25, § 4, 5 ; Liber de Spiritu et Lit., § 29, 30 ; Opus Imp., Lib. vi. § 15). In later times, among the Protestant theologians, from the Loci Theol. of Melancthon downwards, the moral law was generaUy 1 See Sartorius, ' Heilige Liebe,' p. 168. 2 Adv. Judseos, c. 2. 46 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II. regarded as in substance one with the Decalogue, or the two great precepts of love to God and love to man, and this again identified with the law of nature, which was in its fulness and perfection impressed upon the hearts of our first parents, and stiU has a certain place in the hearts of their posterity ; hence such statements as these : ' The moral law was written in Adam's heart,' ' The law was Adam's lease when God made him tenant of Eden' (Light- foot, Works, iv. 7, viii. 379) ; ' The law of the ten com mandments, being the natural law, was written on Adam's heart on his creation' (Boston, ' Notes to the Marrow,' Introd.); or, as in the Westminster Confession, ' God gave to Adam a law, as a covenant of works, by which He bound him to personal, entire, exact, and perpetual obedience ;' which law, after the faU, ' continued to be a perfect rule of righteousness, and, as such, was dehvered by God upon Mount Sinai in ten commandments, and written in two tables' (ch. xix.). We should, however, mistake such language did we suppose it to mean, that there was either any formal promulgation of a moral law to Adam, or that the Decalogue, as embodying this law, was in precise form internaUy communicated by some special revelation to him. It was a brief and popular style of speech, inti mating that by the constitution of his spiritual nature, taken in connection with the circumstances in which he was placed, he was bound, and knew that he was bound, to act according to the spirit and tenor of what was after wards formally set forth in the ten commands. And so Lightfoot, for example, who is one of the most explicit in this mode of representation, brings out his meaning, 'The law writ in Adam's heart was not particularly every command of the two tables, written as they were in two tables, hne by line ; but this law in general, of piety and love towards God, and of justice and love Lect. IL] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 47 toward our neighbour. And in these lay couched a law to aU particulars that concerned either — to branch forth as occasion for the practice of them should arise : as in our natural corruption, brought in by sin, there is couched every sin whatsoever too ready to bud forth, when occasion is offered.'1 In hke manner, Delitzsch, who among Continental writers adheres to the same mode of expression, speaks of the conscience in man, pre eminently of course in unfaUen man, by what it indi cates of moral duty, as ' the knowing about a Divine law, which every man carries in his heart,' or ' an actual con sciousness of a Divine law engraven in the heart ;' but explains himself by saying, that 'the powers of the spirit and of the soul themselves are as the decalogue of the Thora (Law) that was in creation imprinted upon us ;'2 that is to say, those powers, when in their proper state, work under a sense of subjection to the wiU of God, and in conformity with the great lines of truth and duty un folded in the Decalogue.3 Understood after this manner, the language in question 1 Sermon on Exodus xx. 11, Works, IV. 379. 2 ' Biblische Psychologie,' pp. 138, 140. 3 Were it necessary, other explanations of a like kind might be given, espe cially from our older writers. Thus, in the 'Marrow of Modern Divinity,' where the language is frequently used of the law of the two tables being written on man's heart, and forming the matter of the covenant of works,* this is again explained by the fact of man having been made in God's image or likeness, and more fully thus, ' God had furnished his soul with an understand ing mind, whereby he might discern good from evil and right from wrong ; and not only so, but also in his will was most perfect uprightness (Eccl. vii. 29), and his instrumental parts (i.e., his executive faculties and powers) were in an orderly way framed to obedience.' Much to the same effect Turretine, ' Inst. Loc. Undecimus, Qusest. II.,' who represents the moral law as the same with that which in nature was impressed upon the heart, as to its substance, though not formally and expressly given as in the Decalogue, sec. III. 2. xvii. ; also Colquhoun, ' Treatise on the Law and the Gospel,' p. 7. 48 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II. is quite intelligible and proper, though certainly capable of being misapphed (if too hteraUy taken), and in form shghtly differing from the Scriptural representation;1 for in the passage which most nearly resembles it, and on which it evidently leans, the apostle does not say that the law itself, but that the work of the law, was written on men's hearts, in so far as they shewed a practical acquaintance with the things enjoined in it, and a disposition to do them. Such in the completest sense was Adam, as made in the Divine image, and replenished with hght and power from on high. It was his very nature to think and act in accordance with the principles of the Divine character and government, but, at the same time also, his imperative obligation ; for to know the good, and not to choose and perform it, could not appear otherwise than sin. Higher, therefore, than if surrounded on every side by the objective demands of law, which as yet were not needed — would, indeed, have been out of place — Adam had the spirit of the law impregnating his moral being ; he had the mind of the Lawgiver Himself given to bear rule within — hence, not so properly a revelation of law, in the ordinary sense of the term, as an inspiration from the Almighty, giving him understanding in regard to what, as an intelligent and responsible being, it became him to purpose and do in life. But this, however good as an internal constitution — chief, doubtless, among the things pronounced at first very good by the Creator — required, both for its development and its probation, certain ordi nances of an outward kind, specific hnes of action and observance marked out for it by the hand of God, for the purpose of providing a proper stimulus to the sense of right and wrong in the bosom, and bringing its relative strength or weakness into the hght of day. And we now 1 Rom. ii. 14, 15. Lect IL] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 49 therefore turn, with the knowledge we have gained of the fundamental elements of man's moral condition, to the formal calling and arrangements amid which he was placed, to note their fitness for evolving the powers of his moral nature and testing then- character. II. The first in order, and in its nature the most general, was the original charge, the word of direction and blessing, under which mankind, in the persons of the newly-created pair, were sent on their course of develop ment — that, namely, which bade them be fruitful, mul tiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it, and have donhnion over its living creatures and its powers of pro duction. This word was afterwards brought into closer adaptation to the circumstances of our first parents, in the appointment given them to dress and keep the blessed region, which was assigned them as their more immediate charge and proper domain. Taken by itself, it was a caU to merely bodily exercise and industrious employment. But considered as the expression of the mind of God to those who were made in the Divine image, and had received their place of dignity and lord ship upon earth, for the purpose of carrying out the Divine plan, everything assumes a higher character ; the natural becomes inseparably linked to the moral. Realiz ing his proper calling and destiny, man could not look upon the world and the interests belonging to it, as if he occupied an independent position ; he must bear himself as the representative and steward of God, to mark the operations of His hand, and fulfil His benevolent design. In such a case, how could he faU to see in the ordin ances of nature, God's appointments ? and in the laws of life and production, God's methods of working? Or if so regarding them, how could he do otherwise than place him- D 50 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II. self in loving accord with them, and phant ministration? Not, therefore, presuming to deem aught evU wlrich bore on it the Divine impress of good ; but, as a veritable child of nature, content to watch and observe that he might learn, to obey that he might govern ; and thus, with ever growing insight into nature's capacities and command over her resources, striving to multiply around him the materials of weU-being and enjoyment, and render the world a continuaUy expanding and brightening mirror, in which to see reflected the manifold fulness and glorious perfections of God. Such, according to this primary charge, was to be man's function in the world of nature — his function as made in God's image — and as so made capable of under standing, of appropriating to himself, and acting out the ideas which were embodied in the visible frame and order of things. He was to trace, in the operations proceeding around him, the workings of the Divine mind, and then make them bear the impress of his own. Here, there fore, stands rebuked for aU time the essential ungodli ness of an indolent and selfish repose, since only to man's habitual oversight and wakeful industry was the earth to become what its Maker designed it, and paradise itself to yield to him the attractive beauty and plenteousness of a proper home. Here, too, stands yet more palpably rebuked the monkish isolation and asceticism, which would treat the common gifts of nature with disdain, and turn with aversion from the ordinary employments and relations of life : as if the plan of the Divine Architect had in these missed the proper good for man, and a nobler ideal were required to correct its faultiness, or supple ment its deficiencies ! Here yet again was authority given, the commission, we may say, issued, not merely for the labour of the hand to help forward the processes of Lect. II. ] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 51 nature, and render them productive of ever varying and beneficent results, but for the labour also of the inteUect to explore the hidden springs and principles of things, to bring the scattered materials which the experience of every day was presenting to his eye and placing at his disposal under the dominion of order, that they might be made duly subservient to the interests of intellectual hfe and social progress ; for in proportion as such results might be won was man's destined ascendency over the world secured, and the mutual, far-reaching interconnections between the several provinces of nature brought to hght, which so marveUously display the creative foresight and infinite goodness of God. We may even carry the matter a step farther. For, con stituted as man was, the intelligent head and responsible possessor of the earth's fulness, the calhng also was his to develop the powers and capacities belonging to it for ornament and beauty, as weU as for usefulness. With elements of this description the Creator has richly im pregnated the works of His hand, there being not an object in nature that is incapable of conveying ideas of beauty ;x and this beyond doubt that each after its kind might by man be appreciated, refined, and elevated. ' Man possessed,' so we may justly say with a recent writer,2 ' a sense of beauty as an essential ground of his intelligence and fellowship with Heaven. He was there fore to cultivate the feeling of the beautiful by cultivating the appropriate beauty inherent in everything that hves. Nature ever holds out to the hand of man means by which his reason, when rightly employed, may be enriched with true gold from Heaven's treasury. And even now, in proportion to the restoration to heavenly enhghten- 1 Buskin's ' Modern Painters,' Vol. II. p. 27. 2 Moore's ' First Man and his Place in Creation,' p. 299. 52 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II. ment, we perceive that every kind of beauty and power is but an embodiment of truth, a form of love, revealing the relation of the Divine creative mind to lovehness, symmetry, and justness, as well as expressing tender thought towards the susceptibilities of aU His sentient creatines, but especiaUy for the instruction and happy occupation of man himself.' This too, then, is to be reckoned among the things included in man's destination to intelligent and fruitful labour — an end to be prosecuted in a measure for its own sake, though in great part realiz ing itself as the incidental result of what was otherwise required at his hand. But labour demands, as its proper complement, rest: rest in God alternating with labour for God. And here we come upon another part of man's original calling; since in this respect also it became him, as made in God's image, to faU in with the Divine order and make it his own. ' God rested,'1 we are told, after having prosecuted, through six successive days of work, the preparation of the world for a fit habitation and field of employment for man. ' He rested on the seventh day from aU His work which He had made ; and He blessed the seventh day and sanctified it, because that in it He had rested from all His work which he created and made ' — a procedure in God that would have been inexplicable except as furnish ing the ground for a hke procedure on the part of man, as, in that case, the hallowing and benediction spoken of must have wanted both a proper subject and a definite aim. True, indeed, as we are often told, there was no formal enactment binding the observance of the day on man; there is merely an announcement of what God did, not a setting forth to man of what man should do ; it is not said, that the Sabbath was expressly enjoined upon man. And Gen. ii. 2, 3. Lect. IL] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 53 neither, we reply, should it have been ; for, since man was made in the hnage of God, it was only, so long as this image remained pure, the general landmarks of moral and religious duty, which were required for his guidance, not specific and stringent regulations : he had the hght of Heaven within him, and of his own accord should have taken the course, which his own circumstances, viewed in connection with the Divine procedure, indicated as dutiful and becoming. The real question is, did not the things recorded contain the elements of law ? Was there not in them such a revelation of the mind of God, as bespoke an obhgation to observe the day of weekly rest, for those whose calling was to embrace the order and do the works of God ? Undoubtedly there was — if in the sacred record we have, what it purports to give, a plain historical narrative of things which actually occurred. In that case — the only supposition we are warranted to make — the primeval consecration of the seventh day has a moral, as weU as rehgious significance. It set up, at the threshold of the world's history, a memorial and a witness, that as the Creator, when putting forth His active energies on the visible theatre of the universe, did not aUow Himself to become absorbed in it, but withdrew again to the enjoyment of His own infinite fulness and sufficiency ; so it behoved His rational creature man to take heed, lest, when doing the work of God, he should lose himself amid outward objects, and faU to carry out the higher ends and purposes of his being with reference to God and eternity. Is it I alone who say this ? Hear a very able and acute German morahst : ' It is, indeed, a high thought (says Wuttke1) that in Sacred Scripture this creation-rest of God is taken as the original type and ground of the Sabbath solemnity. It is thereby indi- 1 ' Handbuch der Christlichen Sittenlehre,' I. p. 469. 54 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II. cated, that precisely the innermost part of what constitutes the hkeness of God is that which demands this solemnity — the truly reasonable rehgious-moral nature of man, and not the natural necessity of rest and enjoyment. What with God are but two sides of the eternal hfe itself, no temporal falling asunder into active working, and then re treating into one's self, that with respect to the finite spirit falls partiaUy, at least, into separate portions — namely, into work and Sabbath-rest. God blessed the seventh day : — there rests upon the sacred observance of this day a special and a higher blessing, an imparting of eternal, heavenly benefits, as the blessing associated with work is primarily but the imparting of temporal benefits. The Sabbath has not a merely negative significance ; it is not a simple cessation from work ; it has a most weighty, real import, being the free action of the reasonable God-like spirit rising above the merely individual and finite, the reaching forth of the soul, which through work has been drawn down to the transitory, toward the unchangeable and Divine.' Hence (as the same writer also remarks), the ordinance of the Sabbath belongs to the moral sphere considered by itself, not merely to the state of redemp tion struggling to escape from sin — though such a state obviously furnishes fresh reasons for the line of duty con templated in the ordinance. But at no period could it be meant to stand altogether alone. Neither before the faU nor after it, could such calm elevation of the soul to God and spiritual rest in Him be shut up to the day speciaUy devoted to it ; each day, if rightly spent, must also have its intervals of spiritual repose and blessing. So far, then, aU was good and blessed. Man, as thus constituted, thus caUed to work and rest in harmony and feUowship with God, was in a state of relative perfection — of perfection after its kind, though not such as pertains Lect. IL] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 55 to the regeneration in Christ. Scripture itself marks the difference, when it speaks of the natural or psychical {¦^tiX'xov) coming first, then that which is spiritual (tw ttarixo,, 1 Cor. xv. 46). The first man was of the earth, earthy — in the frame and mould of his being simply a part of this mundane existence, though incomparably its noblest part, and allied, through his spirit, with the Divine ; but the second man was the Lord from heaven. The creation of the one wras welcomed by the sUent homage and regard of the living creaturehood on earth ; the advent of the other was celebrated by angehc hosts in anthems of joy from the heavenly places. In Adam there was an intelli gence that could ohscriminate wisely between irrational natures and his own, as also between one kind of inferior natures and another ; in Christ there was a spirit that knew what was in man himself, capable of penetrating into his inmost secrets, yea, even of most perfectly know ing and revealing the Father. Finally, high as man's original calling was to preside over and subdue the earth, to improve and multiply its resources, to render it in aU respects subservient to the ends for which it was made ; how mightUy was this caUing surpassed by the mission of Him, who came to grapple with the great controversy between sin and righteousness, to restore the faUen, to sanctify the unclean, and bring in a world of incorruptible glory and blessed hfe, with which God should be most intimately associated, and over which He should per petually rejoice ! The superiority, however, of the things pertaining to the person and the work of Christ does not prevent those relating to man's original state from being fitly viewed as relatively perfect. But then there was no absolute guar antee for this being continued ; there was a possibility of all being lost, since it hung on the steadfastness of a 56 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II. merely created head; and hence, as regarded man himself, there was a need for something of a more special and definite kind to test his adherence to the perfect order and rectitude incumbent on him. There might, we can readily conceive, have been defections from the right and good in respect to his general calling and destination — failures distinct enough, perhaps, in themselves, but perceptible only to the eye of Him who can look on the desires and intents of the heart. Here, however, it was indispensable that the materials for judgment should be patent to all. For, in Adam humanity itself was on its trial — the whole race having been potentiaUy created in him, and destined to stand or faU, to be blessed or cursed, with him. The question, therefore, as to its properly decisive issue, must be made to turn on conformity to an ordinance, at once reasonable in its nature and specific in its requirements — an ordinance which the simplest could understand, and respecting which no uncertainty could exist, whether it had been kept or not. Such in the highest degree was the appointment respecting the tree of the knowledge of good and evU, forbidding it to be eaten on the pain of death— an appointment positive in its character, in a certain sense arbitrary, yet, withal, perfectly natural, as relating to a particular tree singled out for the purpose from many others around it, imposing no vexatious burden, requiring only the exercise of a measure of personal restraint in deference to the authority, and acknowledgment of the supreme right, of Him of whom all was held — in short, one of the easiest, most natural, most unexceptionable of probationary enactments. It was not exactly, as put by Tertullian, as if this command re specting the tree of knowledge formed the kind of quint essence or prolific source of aU other moral commands; for in itself, and apart from the Divine authority imposing Lect. IL] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 57 it, there was nothing about it strictly moral : not on this account therefore was it given, but as serving to erect a standard, every way proper and becoming, around which the elements of good and evil might meet, and the ascendency of the one or the other be made manifest.1 And so the Sovereign Disposer of events by the very appointment undertook to order it. If the Divine image should anyhow begin to lose the perfection of its parts, if a spirit of disaffection should enter the bosoms of our first parents, it could not be left to their own choice or to merely adventitious circumstances, in what form or direc tion this should appear. It must assume an attitude of contrariety to this Divine ordinance, and discover itself in a disposition to eat of that tree of which God had said, They should not eat of it, lest they died. There, pre cisely, and not elsewhere — thus and not otherwise was it to be seen, if they could maintain their part in this covenant of life ; or, if not, then the obvious mastery of the evU over the good in their natures. III. We are not caUed here to enter into any formal discussion of the temptation and the faU. Profound mysteries hang around the subject ; but the general result, and the overt steps that led to it, are known to all. Hearkening to the voice of the tempter, that they should be as God, knowing good and evil, our first parents did eat of the interdicted tree ; and, in doing so, broke through the law of their being, which bound them ever 1 So, indeed, Tertullian, when he explains himself, virtually regarded it : ' Denique si dominum deum smvm dilexissent' (viz., Adam and Eve), ' contra prseeeptum ejus non fecissent ; si proximum diligerent, id est semetipsos, per- suasioni serpentis non credidissent,' etc. And the general conclusion he draws is, ' Denique, ante legem Moysi scriptam in tabulis lapideis, legem fuisse eon- tendo non scriptam, qiiEe naturaliter intelligebatur et a patribus custodiebatur.' (Adv. Judteos, sec. 2). 58 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II. to hve and act in loving allegiance to the God who made them, and of whom they held whatever they possessed. Self now took the place of God ; they would be their own rule and their own end, and thereby gave way to the spirit of apostacy ; first entertaining doubts of God's goodness, as if the prohibition under which they had been placed laid an undue restraint on their freedom, limited too much then range of action and enjoyment ; then disbelieving God's testimony as to the inevitable result of disobedience ; finally, making the gratification of their own self-will and fleshly desire the paramount considera tion which was to determine their course. At every step a violation of the principle of love — of love in both its departments ; first, indeed, and most conspicuously, in reference to God, who was suspected, shghted, disobeyed; but also in reference to one another, and their prospective offspring, whose interests were sacrificed at the shrine of selfishness. The high probation, therefore, issued in a mournful failure ; humanity, in its most favoured condi tions, proved unequal to the task of itself holding the place and using the talents committed to it, in loving subjection to the will of Heaven ; and the penalty of sin, not the guerdon of righteousness, became its deserved portion. ShaU not the penalty take effect ? Can the Righteous One do otherwise than shew Himself the enemy and avenger of sin, by resigning to corruption and death the nature which had allied itself to the evU ? Where, if He did, would have been the glory of His name? Where the sanction and authority of His righteous government ? It was for the purpose, above aU, of insti tuting such a government in the world, and unfolding by means of it the essential attributes of His character, that man had been brought on the stage of being as the proper climax of creation ; and if, for this end, it was necessary Lect. IL] RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. 59 that righteousness should be rewarded, was it not equally necessary that sin should be punished ? So, death entered, where life only should have reigned ; it entered as the stern yet sublime proof, that in the Divine govern ment of the world the moral must carry it over the natural ; that conformity to the principles of righteous ness is the indispensable condition of blessing ; and that even if grace should interpose to rectify the evU that had emerged, and place the hopes of mankind on a better footing than that of nature, this grace must reign through righteousness, and overcome death by overcom ing the sin which caused it. To have these great principles written so indelibly and palpably on the foundations of the world's history was of incalculable moment for its future instruction and weU- being ; for the solemn lessons and affecting memories of the faU entered as essential elements of men's views of God, and formed the basis of all true religion for a sinful world. They do so stUl. And, certainly, if it could be proved by the cultivators of natural science, that man, simply as such — man by the very constitution of his being — is mortal, it would strike at the root of our reh gious behefs ; for it would imply, that death did not come as a judgment from God, and was the result of physical organization or inherent defectibihty, not the wages of sin. This, however, is a point that hes beyond the range of natural science. It may be able to shew, that death is not only now, but ever has been, the law of merely sentient existence, and that individual forms of sentient life, having no proper personahty — if perpetuated at aU, must be perpetuated in the species. But man is on one side only, and that the lower side, related to sentient forms of being. In what constitute the more essential characteristics of his nature — inteUigence, reason, wiU, 60 RELATION OF MAN TO MORAL LAW. [Lect. II. conscience — he stands in close affinity to God ; he is God's image and representative, and not a liability to death, but the possession of endless life, must be regarded as his normal state of being. And to secure this for the animal part of his frame, so long as spiritually he lived to God, was, at least, one part of the design of the tree of life (whatever higher purposes it might also have been intended to serve as the pledge or symbol of life to his soul) : it was the specific antidote of death. A most in adequate" provision, it may perhaps be alleged, for such a purpose, suited only for a single pair, or for a compara tive handful of people, but by no means for a numerous race. Let it be so : He who made the provision knew weU for how many, or how long, it might be required; and, in point of fact, from no misarrangement or defect in this respect, the evil it was ordained to guard against found an entrance into the world. By man's dis obedience, by that alone, came sin, and death by sin- such is the teaching of Scripture alike in its earher and later revelations ; and the theology which would elimi nate this doctrine from its fundamental behefs must be bruit on another foundation than the word of the living God. Lect. IIL] THE REVELATION OF LAW. 01 LECTURE III. THE EEVELATION OF LAW, STRICTLY SO CALLED, VIEWED IN RE SPECT TO THE TIME AND OCCASION OF ITS PROMULGATION. A PRINCIPLE of progression pervades the Divine plan as unfolded in Scripture, which must be borne in mind by those who would arrive at a correct under standing, either of the plan as a whole, or of the charac teristic features and specific arrangements which have distinguished it at one period, as compared with another. We can scarcely refer in proof of this to the original con stitution of things, since it so speedily broke up — though, there can be no doubt, it also had interwoven with it a principle of progression. The charge given to man at the moment of creation, if it had been in any measure exe cuted, would necessarily have involved a continuous rise in the outward theatre of his existence ; and it may justly be inferred, that as this proceeded, his mental and bodily condition world have partaken of influences fitted in definitely to ennoble and bless it. But the fatal blow given by the fall to that primeval state rendered the real starting-point of human history an essentiaUy different one. The progression had now to proceed, not from a less to a more complete form of excellence, but from a state of sin and ruin to one of restored peace, hfe, and purity, culminating in the possession of aU blessing and glory in the kingdom of the Father. And, in accordance with this plan of God for the recovery and perfecting of those who should be heirs of salvation, His revelation of 62 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. III. spiritual and divine things assumes the form of a gradual development and progressive history — beginning as a smaU stream amid the wreck and desolation of the fall, just enough to cheer the heart of the faUen and brace it for the conflict with evU, but receiving additions from age to age, as the necessities of men and the purpose of God required, until, in the incarnation and work of Christ for the salvation of the world, it reached that fulness of light and hope, which prompted an apostle to say, ' The darkness is past, and the true hght now shineth.' It may seem strange to our view — there is undoubtedly in it something of the dark and mysterious — that the plan of God for the enhghtenment and regeneration of the world should have been formed on such a principle of progression, and that, in consequence, so many ages should have elapsed before the realities on which hght and blessing mainly depended were brought distinctly into view. Standing, as we ourselves do, on a point of time, and even still knowing but in part the things of God's kingdom, we must be content, for the present, to remain ignorant of the higher reasons which led to the adoption of this principle as a pervading characteristic of the Divine administration. But where we can do Httle to explain, we are able to exemplify ; for the ordinary scheme of providence presents us here with a far-reaching and varied analogy. On the same principle of progres sion is the life-plan of each individual constructed ; so that, on an average, a half, and in the case of multitudes greatly more than a half, of their earthly life is spent before the capacity for its proper employments has been attained. In the history, also, of nations and com munities, of arts and sciences, we see the principle in constant operation, and have no difficulty in connecting with it much of the activity, enjoyment, and weU-being Lect. III.] TIMES OF PREPARATION. 63 of mankind. It is this very principle of progression which is the mainspring of life's buoyancy and hopeful ness, and which links together, with a profound and varied interest, one stage of life with another. Reasons equaUy valid would doubtless be found in the higher line of things which relates to the dispensations of God toward men, could we search the depths of the Divine counsels, and see the whole as it presents itself to the eye of Him who perceives the end from the beginning. It is the fact itself, however, which we here think it of importance to note ; for, assuming the principle in question to have had a directive sway in the Divine dispensations, it warrants us to expect measures of hght at one stage, and modes of administration, which shall bear the marks of relative imperfection as compared with others. This holds good of the revelation of law, which we now approach, when placed beside the manifestation of God in the Gospel ; and even in regard to the law itself the principle of progression was aUowed to work ; for it might as weU be said, that the law formed the proper complement and issue of what preceded it, as that it became the groundwork of future and grander revelations. To this, as a matter of some importance, our attention must first be given. Considering the length of the period that elapsed from the faU of man to the giving of the law, the httle that remains in the Divine records of exphcit revelation as to moral and rehgious duty, appears striking, and cannot be regarded as free from difficulty when contemplated from a modern point of view. It may be so, however, chiefly from the scantiness of our materials, and our consequent inability to realize the circumstances of the time, or to take in aU the elements of directive knowledge which were actuaUy at work in society. This deficiency is 64 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. III. certainly not to be supplied, after the fashion of Blunt, by combining together the scattered notices in the early histoiy of the Bible, and looking upon them as so many hints or fragmentary indications of a regularly constituted patriarchal church, with its weU furnished rubric as to functions, places, times, and forms of worship.1 These are not the points on which the comparatively isolated and artless families of those early times might be expected to have received special and unrecorded communications from Heaven. It had been as much out of place for them as for the early Christian communities, whUe worshipping in upper chambers, lured school-rooms, and sequestered retreats, to have had furnished to their hand a ritual of service fit only for spacious cathedrals and a fully deve loped hierarchy. We are rather to assume, that brief aa the outline which Scripture gives of the transactions of the period, it is still one that contains whatever is to be deemed essential to the matter as a history of Divine revelation ; and that only by making proper account of the things which are recorded, not by imagining such as are not, can we frame to ourselves an adequate or well- grounded idea of the state of those earher generations of mankind, as to the means of knowledge they possessed, or the claims of service that lay upon them, in respect to moral and rehgious duty. Let us endeavour to indi- 1 Some of these, as might be expected, are obtained in a very arbitrary manner, and look almost like a caricature of the text of Scripture : — as when in Esau's ' goodly raiment,' furtively used by Jacob, is found the sacerdotal robes of the first-born,* and something similar also in Joseph's coat of many colours— as if this mere boy were already invested with priestly attire, and not only so, but in that attire went about the country, since he certainly wore it when he visited his brethren at Dothan. Can any parallel to this be found even in the complicated legislation of the Mosaic ritual 1 The priests who were ministering at the tabernacle or temple had to wear robes of office, but not when eng in ordinary employments. * ' Scripture Coincidences,' p. 12. Lect. IIL] TIMES OF PREPARATION. 65 cate some of the leading points suggested by Scripture on the subject, without, however, dwelling upon them, and for the purpose more especiaUy of apprehending the rela tion in which they stood to the coming legislation of Sinai. 1. At the foundation of all we must place the fact of man's knowledge of God — of a hving, personal, righteous God — as the Creator of aU things, and of man himself as His intelligent, responsible creature, made after His image, and subject to His authority. Whatever effect the faU might ultimately have on this knowledge, and on the conscious relationship of man to his Maker, his moral and rehgious history started with it, — a knowledge still fresh and vivid when he was expeUed from Eden, in some aspects of it even widened and enlarged by the circumstances that led to that expulsion. ' Heaven lies about us in our infancy : ' — it did so pre-eminently, and in another sense than now, when the infancy was that of the human race itself ; and not as by ' trailing clouds of glory' merely, but by the deep instincts of their moral being, and the facts of an experience not soon to be for gotten, its original heads knew that ' they came from God as their home.' Here, in a moral respect, lay their special vantage-ground for the future ; for not the authority of conscience merely, but the relation of this to the higher authority of God, must have been among their clearest and most assured convictions. They knew that it had its eternal source and prototype in the Divine nature, and that in aU its actings it stood under law to God. Good ness after the pattern of His goodness must have been what they felt caUed by this internal monitor to aim at ; and in so far as they might faU beneath it, or deviate from it, they knew — they could not but know — that it was the voice of God they were virtuaUy disobeying, 2. Then, as regards the manner in which this call E 66 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. III. to imitate God's goodness and be conformed to His will was to be carried out, it would of course be understood that, whatever was fairly involved in the original destina tion of man to replenish and cultivate the earth, so as to make it productive of the good of which it was capable, and subservient to the ends of a wise and paternal government, this remained as much as ever his calling and duty. Man's proper vocation, as the rational head of this lower world, was not abolished by the faU ; it had stUl to be wrought out, only under altered circumstances, and amid discouragements which had been unknown, if sin had not been aUowed to enter into his condition. And with this destination to work and rule for God on earth, the correlative appointment embodied in God's procedure at creation, to be ever and anon entering into His rest, must also be understood to have remained in force. As the catastrophe of the fall had both enlarged the sphere and aggravated the toU of work, so the calm return of the soul to God, and the gathering up of its desires and affections into the fulness of His life and blessing, especially on the day peculiarly consecrated for the purpose, could not but increasingly appear to the thoughtful mind an act of homage to the Divine will, and an exercise of pious feehng eminently proper and reasonable. 3. Turning now, thirdly, to the sphere of family and domestic life, the foundation laid at the first, in the for mation of one man, and out of this man one woman to be his bosom companion and wife, this also stood as before— and carried the same deep import. The lesson originally drawn from the creative act, whether immediately drawn by Adam himself or not — ' therefore shaU a man leave his father and his mother, and shaU cleave unto his wife, and they shaU be one flesh ' 1 — was a lesson for aU time. Our 1 Gen. ii. 24. Lect. IIL] TIMES OF PREPARATION. (', 7 Lord (who as the creative Word was the immediate agent in the matter) when on earth set to His seal, at once to the historical fact, and to the important practical deduction flowing from it ; and He added, for the purpose of still further exhibiting its moral bearing, ' So then they are no more twain, but one flesh. What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder.'1 Thus was im pressed on the very beginnings of human history the stamp of God's appointed order for families — the close and endearing nature of the marriage-tie — the hfe-union it was intended to form — the mutual sympathy and affec tion by which it should be sustained — and the common interest it created, as weU as the loving regard it naturally tended to evoke, in behalf of the offspring that might issue from it. All this, though not formaUy imposed by definite rules and prescriptions, was yet by the moral significance of that primeval fact laid upon the consciences of men, and indicated the place which the fanhly constitu tion and its relative duties were to hold in the organization and progress of society.2 1 Mark x. 8, 9. 2 The objections that have been made to the sacred narrative respecting the fact of Eve's formation out of a rib of Adam, as that it was unworthy of God ; that his posterity are not deficient in that part of their bodily organization, which they would have been if Adam had been actually deprived of a rib ; that we have therefore in the story not a fact but a myth, teaching the com panionship of the woman to man — are entitled to no serious consideration. It is the very foundations of things we have here to do with, in a social and moral respect, and for this, not shadowy myths (the inventions, always, of a compara tively late age) but great outstanding facts were necessary to furnish the requisite instruction. Since important moral ends were in view for all coming time, why could not God have taken a portion of Adam's frame for the formation of his partner in life, and afterwards repaired the loss ? or, if the defect continued in him as an individual, prevented its transmission to posterity ? Somehow, the formation of the first woman, as well as the first man, had to be brought about by a direct operation of Deity ; and why not thus rather than otherwise, if thus only it could be made the symbol of a great truth, the embodiment of an imperishable moral lesson ? No reason can be shewn to the contrary. GS THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. III. 4. Of devotion as consisting in specific acts of rehgious worship, the record of man's creation, it must be admitted, is altogether sUent, nor does anything appear in the form of a command for ages to come. This cannot, however, be fairly regarded as a proof, either that nothing in the matter of worship was involved in the fundamental grounds of moral obligation, or that the sense of duty in that respect did not from the first find some fitting ex pression. The haUowing of a particular day of the week, and connecting with its observance a peculiar blessing, evidently implied the recognition of the rehgious senti ment in man's bosom, and formed an ever-recurring call to exercises of devotion. For what is devotion in its proper nature, and stript of its mere accessories ? It is just the Sabbath idea reahzed, or, in the simple but expressive language of Bishop Butler,1 ' Devotion is retire ment from the world God has made, to Him alone : it is to withdraw from the avocations of sense, to employ our attention whoUy upon Him as upon an object actually present, to yield ourselves up to the influence of the Divine presence, and to give full scope to the affections of gratitude, love, reverence, trust, and dependence, of which infinite power, wisdom, and goodness is the natural and only adequate object.' The constitution of man's nature, and the circumstances in which he was originaUy placed, could not but lead him to cherish and exercise the feelings of such a spirit of devotion — though with what accompani ments of outward form we have no indication, nor is it of any practical moment, since they can only be under stood to have been the natural and appropriate manifestar tions of what was felt within. With the faU, however, matters in this respect underwent a material change ; for the wrorship which became a sinner could not be the same 1 Sermons, Ser. XIV. Lect. III.] TIMES OF PREPARATION. G9 with that which flowed spontaneously from the heart of one who was conscious only of good, nor could it be left entirely to men's own unaided conceptions ; for if so left, how could they be assured that it was accepted of their Maker ? how know it to be such as He would bless '( Somehow, therefore — apparently, indeed, in connection with the clothing of the shame of our first parents by means of the skins of slain victims — they were guided to a worship by sacrifice as the one specially adapted to their state as sinners, and one which probably from the very first (by means of the supernatural agencies associated with the entrance to Eden and its tree of life, viz., the flaming sword and the cherubim), received upon it the marks of Divine approval. At all events, in the history of their earhest offspring, worship by the sacrifice of slain victims becomes manifest as the regular and approved mode of access to God in its more formal acts of homage. Here then, again without any positive command, far less any formaUy prescribed ritual, there still were in the Divine procedure, taken in connection with men's moral convic tions and feelings, the grounds of moral obhgation and specific duty — not law, indeed, in the formal sense of the term, but the elements of law, or such indications of the Divine wiU as were sufficient to guide truly humble and God-fearing men in the earher ages of the world to give expression to their faith and hope in God by a mode of worship suited to their condition and acceptable to Heaven. 5. Another thing also ought to be borne in mind in respect to those varied materials of moral and rehgious duty, which is this — that whUe they belonged to the origination of things on earth, to things of which the first heads of the human family were either the only witnesses, or the direct and immediate subjects, they had the advan tage of being associated with a living testimony, which 70 THE REVELATION OF LAWr. [Lect. III. was capable of preserving it fresh and unimpaired for many generations. The longevity of the first race of patriarchs had doubtless many important ends to serve ; but we cannot be wrong in mentioning this among the chief. He who had received his being direct and pure from the hand of God, to whom had been revealed the wonders of God's work in creation, who had himself walked with God in paradise, was present with his living voice to tell of all he had seen and heard, and by his example (as we can scarcely doubt) to confirm and com mend his testimony, down even to the times of Lamech, the father of Noah. So that, if the materials of knowledge respecting God's wiU to men were comparatively few, and were in many respects linked to the facts of a primeval past, this continuous personal testimony served to render that past a kind of perpetual present, and so to connect, as by a living bond, the successive generations of men with the original grounds of faith and hope for the world. There were, also, as is clear from the case of Enoch and other incidental notices, closer communings occasionaUy main tained by God with believing men, and for special seasons more definite communications made of His will. Sparse, therefore, as the memorials are, in a rehgious respect, which belong to this period, as compared with its great length, God stiU did not leave Himself without a wit ness ; and men who were alive to the responsibilities of their position, and disposed to foUow the impulses of their moral nature, could not complain of being without any sure direction as to the great landmarks of truth and duty. 6. Yet, it is impossible to carry the matter further ; and to speak of law in the moral and religious sphere- law in some definite and imperative form, standing out side the conscience, and claiming authority to regulate Lect. IIL] TIMES OF PREPARATION. 7l its decisions, as having a place in the earlier ages of man kind, is not warranted by any certain knowledge we possess of the remoter periods of God's dispensations. That ' aU human laws are sustained by one tha,t is divine' (a saying ascribed to Herachtus), seems, as several others of a hke kind that might be quoted, to point to a traditional belief in some primitive Divine legislation ; and in a weU-known noble passage of Cicero, which it is weU to bring into remembrance in discussions of this nature, there is placed above all merely local and con ventional enactments of men, a law essentiaUy Divine, of eternal existence and permanent universal obhgation,1 Est quidem vera lex, etc. ' There is indeed a true law, right reason, conformable to nature, diffused among aU, unchanging, eternal, which, by commanding, urges to duty ; by prohibiting, deters from fraud ; not in vain com manding or prohibiting the good, though by neither moving the wicked. This law cannot be abrogated, nor may anything be withdrawn from it ; it is in the power of no senate or people to set us free from it ; nor is there to be sought any extraneous teacher or interpreter of it. It shaU not be one law at Rome, another at Athens ; one now, another at some future time ; but one law, alike eternal and unchangeable, shaU bind aU nations and through all time ; and one shaU be the common teacher, as it were, and governor of aU — God, who is Himself the Author, the Administrator, and Enactor of this law.' Elsewhere, he expresses it as the opinion of the wisest men,2 that ' this fundamental law and ultimate judgment was the mind of Deity either ordering or forbidding all things according to reason ; whence that law which the gods have given to mankind is justly praised. For it fitly belongs to the reason and judgment of the wise to 1 De Republica, III. 22. 2 De Leg., II. 4. 72 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. Ill, enjoin one thing and prohibit another.' And in thus having its ground in right reason, which is the property of man as contradistinguished from beasts, and is the same in man as in God, he finds the reason of this law being so unchanging, universal, and perpetually binding. But the very description imphes that no external legisla tion was meant coming somewhere into formal existence among men ; it is but another name for the findings of that intelligent and moral nature, which is implanted in aU men, though in some is more finely balanced and more faithfully exercised than in others. Under the designation of the supremacy of conscience, it appears again in the discourses of Bishop Butler, and is analysed and described as ' our natural guide, the guide assigned us by the Author of our nature,' that by virtue of which ' man in his make, constitution, or nature, is, in the strictest and most proper sense, a law to himself,' whereby ' he hath the rule of right within ; what is wanting is only that it be honestly attended to.' But this has already been taken into account, and placed at the head of those moral elements in man's condition which belonged to him even as faUen, and which, though pos sessing httle of the character of objective or formal law, yet carried with them such directive light and just authority as should have had the force of law to his mind, and rendered inexcusable those who turned aside to transgression.1 7. The result, however, proved that aU was insufrl- cient ; a grievous defect lurked somewhere. The means of knowledge possessed, and the motives to obedience 1 It is only in this sense, and as connected with the means of instruction provided by the course of God's providential dealings, that we can speak ofthe light possessed by men as sufficient for moral and religious duty. The light of conscience in fallen man by itself can never reach to the proper knowledge of the things which concern his relation to God and immortality. Lect. IIL] TIMES OF PREPARATION. 73 with which they were accompanied, utterly failed with the great majority of men to keep them in the path of uprightness, or even to restrain the most shameful de generacy and corruption. The principle of evU which wrought so vehemently, and so early reached an over mastering height in Cain, grew and spread through a continuaUy widening circle, tiU the earth was filled with violence, and the danger became imminent, unless averted by some forcible interposition, of aU going to perdition. Where lay the radical defect ? It lay, beyond doubt, in the weakness of the moral nature, or in that fatal rent which had been made by the entrance of sin into man's spiritual being, dividing between his soul and God, divid ing even between the higher and the lower propensities of his soul, so that the lower, instead of being regulated and controUed by the higher, practicaUy acquired the ascendency. Conscience, indeed, stiU had, as by the constitution of nature it must ever have, the right to command the other faculties of the soul, and prescribe the rule to be obeyed ; but what was wanting was the power to enforce this obedience, or, as Butler puts it, to see that the rule be honestly attended to ; and the want is one which human nature is of itself incompetent to rectify. For the bent of nature being now on the side of evU, the wiU, which is but the expression of the nature, is ever ready to give effect to those aims and desires which have for their object some present gratification, and correspondingly tend to blunt the sensibilities and overbear the promptings of conscience in respect to things of higher moment. In the language of the apostle, the flesh lusts against the spirit, yea, and brings it into bon dage to the law of sin and death. And the evU, once begun, is from its very nature a growing one, alike in the individual and in the species. For when man, in either 74 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. Ill, respect, does violence to the better quahties of his nature, when he defaces the Divine image in which he was made, he instinctively turns away from any close examination of his proper likeness — withdraws himself also more and more from the thoughts and the companionships which tend to rebuke his ungodliness, and dehghts in those which foster his vanity and corruption. Hence, the melancholy picture drawn near the commencement of the epistle to the Romans, as an ever deepening and darken ing progression in evU, realizes itself wherever fallen nature is aUowed to operate unchecked. It did so in the primitive, as weU as the subsequent stages of human history : First, men refused to employ the means of knowledge they possessed respecting God's nature and will, WOuld not glorify Him as God {yvovreg rbv ®tbv oux ISogato); then, having thus separated themselves from the true hght, they feU into the mazes of spiritual error and will- worship, became frivolous, fuU of empty conceits, mis taking the false for the true, the shadowy for the real ; finally, not thinking it worth whUe to keep by the right knowledge OI God {bux ihoxipaaav rbv ©soy iysiv h swymen), treating it as comparatively a thing of nought, they were themselves made to appear worthless and vile- given up by God to a reprobate mind {a&oxipw wD»), whereby they lost sight of their true dignity, and became the slaves of all manner of impure, hurtful, and pernicious lusts, which drove them headlong into courses equally offensive to God, and subversive of their own highest good. 8. This process of degeneracy, though sure to have taken place anyhow, had opportunities of development and license during the earlier periods of the world's history, which materially helped to make it more rapid and general. If there were not then such temptations to Lect. III.] TIMES OF PREPARATION. 75 flagrant evU as exist in more advanced states of society, there wTere also greatly fewer and less powerful restraints. Each man was to a larger extent than now the master of his own movements : social and political organizations were extremely imperfect ; the censorship of the press, the voice of an enhghtened pubhc opinion in any syste matic form, was wanting, and there was also wanting the wholesome disciphne and good order of regularly con stituted churches ; so that ample scope was found for those who were so inclined, to shght the monitions of their moral sense, and renounce the habits and observ ances which are the proper auxiliaries of a weak virtue, and necessary in the long run to the preservation of a healthful and robust piety in communities. The fer mentation of evil, therefore, wrought on from one stage to another, tiU it reached a consummation of appalling breadth and magnitude. And yet not for many long ages — not tiU the centuries of antedUuvian times had passed away, and centuries more after a new state of things had commenced its course — did God see meet to manifest Himself to the world in the formal character of Lawgiver, and confront men's waywardness and impiety with a code of objective commands and prohibitions, in the peremptory tone, Thou shcdt do this, and Thou shalt not do that : — A proof, manifestly, of God's unwillingness to assume this more severe aspect in respect to beings He had made in His own image, and press upon them, in the form of specific enactments, His just claims on their homage and obedience ! He would rather — unspeakably rather — that they should know Him in the riches of His fatherly good ness, and should be moved, not so much by fear, as by forbearance and tenderness, to act toward Him a faithful and becoming part ! Hence He delayed as long as possible the stringent and imperative revelation of law, 76 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. III. which by the time alone of its appearance is virtually acknowledged to have been a kind of painful necessity, and in its very form is a ' reflection upon man's incon stancy of homage and love.'1 » God did not, however, during the long periods referred to, leave Himself without witness, either as to His dis pleasure on account of men's sin, or the holiness in heart and conduct which He required at their hands. If His course of administration displayed httle of the formal aspect of law, it still was throughout impregnated with the principles of law ; for it contained manifestations of the character and purposes of God which were both fitted and designed to draw the hearts of men toward Him in confiding love, and inspire them with His own supreme regard to the interests of righteousness. Of law, strictly so caUed, we find nothing applicable to the condition of mankind generally, from the period of the faU to the redemption from Egypt, except the law of blood for blood, introduced immediately after the Deluge, and the ordi nance of circumcision, to seal the covenant with Abraham, and symbolize the moral purity which became those who entered into it. But even these, though legal in their form, partook in their import and bearing of the character of grace ; they came in as appendages to the fresh and fuller revelations which had been given of God's mercy and loving-kindness — the one in connection with Noah's covenant of blessing, and as a safeguard thrown around the sacredness of human life ; the other in connec tion with the stUl richer and more specific covenant of blessing established with Abraham. Indeed, during the whole of what is usuahy caUed the patriarchal period, the most prominent feature in the Divine administration consisted in the unfoldings of promise, or in the materials 1 ' Ecce Deus,' p. 234. Lect. III.] TIMES OF PREPARATION. 77 it furnished to sinful men for the exercise of faith and hope. God again condescended to hold familiar inter course with them. He gave them, not only His word of promise, but His oath confirming the word, that He might win from them a more assured and implicit confidence ; and by very clear and impressive indications of His mind in providence, He made it to be understood how ready He was to welcome those who beheved, and to enlarge, as their faith and love increased, their interest in the heritage of blessing. It is the history of grace in its earlier movements — grace dehghting to pardon, and by much free and loving feUowship, by kind interpositions of providence and encouraging hopes, striving to bring the subjects of it into proper sympathy and accord with the purposes of Heaven. Yet here also grace reigned through righteousness ; and the righteousness at times ripened into judgment. There was the mighty catastrophe of the Deluge lying in the background — emphaticaUy God's judgment on the world of the ungodly, and the sure presage of what might still be expected to befaU the wicked. At a later period, and within the region of God's more peculiar operations in grace, there was the overthrow of the cities of the plain, which were made for their crying enor mities to suffer 'the vengeance of eternal fire.' So stUl onwards, and in the circle itself of the chosen seed, or the races most nearly related to them, there were ever and anon occurring marks of Divine displeasure, rebukes in providence, which were designed to temper the exhibitions of mercy, and keep up salutary impres sions of the righteous character of God. And it may justly be affirmed, that for those who were conversant with the events which make up the sacred history of the period, it was not left them to doubt that the face 7S THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. III. of God was towards the righteous, and is set against them that do wickedly. 9. Such, certainly, shoidd have been the result ; such also it would have been, if they had wisely considered the matter, and marked the character and tendency of the Divine dispensations. But this, unfortunately, was too httle done ; and so the desired result was most imper fectly reached. So much so, indeed, that at the close of the patriarchal period aU seemed verging again to utter ruin. The heathen world, not excepting those portions of it which came most in contact with the members of God's covenant, had with one consent surrendered them selves to the corruptions of idolatry ; and the covenant seed themselves, after aU the gracious treatment they had received, and the special moral training through which they had passed, were gradually sinking into the superstitious and degrading manners of Egypt — their knowledge of Jehovah as the God of their fathers became httle better than a vague tradition, their faith in the promise of His covenant ready to die, and aU ambition gone, except with the merest remnant, to care for more than a kind of tolerable existence in the land of Goshen.1 A change, therefore, in the mode of the Divine admini stration was inevitable, if living piety and goodness were reaUy to be preserved among men, and the cause of righteousness was not whoUy to go down. This cause had come to be quite peculiarly identified with the people of Israel. God's covenant of blessing was with them ; they were the custodiers of His word of salvation for the world ; and to fulfil their calling they must be rescued from degradation, and placed in a position of freedom and enlargement. But even this was not enough. The history of the past had made it manifest that other 1 Exodus, ii. 14 ; v. 21 ; xvi. 4. Ezekiel, xxiii. 25, 39. Lect. IIL] TIMES OF PREPARATION. 79 securities against defection, more effectual guarantees for righteousness than had yet been taken, would require to be introduced. Somehow the bonds of moral oblis:a- tion must be wound more closely around them, so as to awaken and keep alive upon their conscience a more pro found and steadfast regard to the interests of righteous ness. And when, looking forward to what actuaUy took place, we find the most characteristic feature in the new era that emerged to be the revelation of law, we are warranted to infer that such was its primary and leading object. It could not have been intended — the very time and occasion of its introduction prove that it could not have been intended — to occupy an independent place ; it was of necessity but the sequel or complement of the covenant of promise, with which were bound up the hopes of the world's salvation, to help out in a more regular and efficient manner the moral aims which were involved in the covenant itself, and which were directly contem plated in the more special acts and dealings of God toward His people. It formed a fresh stage, indeed, in the history of the Divine dispensations ; but one in which the same great objects were still aimed at, and both the ground of a sinner's confidence towards God, and the nature of the obhgations growing out of it, remained essentiaUy as they were. 10. This becomes yet more clear and conclusively cer tain, when we look from the general connection which the revelation of law had with preceding manifestations of God, to the things which formed its more immediate prelude and preparation. The great starting-point here was the redemption from Egypt ; and the direct object of this was to estabhsh the covenant which God had made with the heads of the Israelitish people. Hence, when appearing for the purpose of charging Moses to 80 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. Ill undertake the work of dehverance, the Lord revealed Himself as at once the Jehovah, the one unchangeable and eternal God, and the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob,1 who was going at last to do for their posterity what He had pledged His word to accomphsh for them. And as soon as the dehverance was achieved, and the tribes of Israel lay at the foot of Sinai, ready to hear what their redeeming God might have to say to them, the first message that came to them was one that most strikingly connected the past with the future, the redeeming grace of a covenant God with the duty of service justly ex pected of a redeemed people : ' Thus shalt thou say to the house of Jacob, and teU the children of Israel ;2 Ye have seen what I did unto the Egyptians, and how I bare you on eagles' wings, and brought you unto myself. Now therefore, if ye wiU obey my voice indeed, and keep my covenant, then ye shall be a peculiar treasure unto me above aU people : for aU the earth is mine. And ye shaU be unto me a kingdom of priests, and an holy nation. These are the words which thou shalt speak unto the children of Israel.' They were, indeed, words of profound significance and pregnant import, comprising in substance both the gospel and the law of the covenant. Primarily, indeed, the gospel ; for Jehovah announces Himself at the outset as, in a quite peculiar sense, the God of Israel, who had vindicated them to Himself by singular displays of His power and glory — had raised them to the position of a people, given them national existence, for the very purpose of endowing them with the richest tokens of His favour and loving-kindness. It drew a broad distinction between Israel as a nation, and aU merely worldly kingdoms, which spring into existence by dint of human powers and earthly advantages, and 1 Ex. iii. 6, 9, 13, 15-17. 2 Ex. xix. 3-7. Lect. IIL] TIMES OF PREPARATION. 81 can attain to nothing more than that kind of secondary glory and evanescent greatness, which such inferior means and resources may be able to secure. Israel, however, stands related from the first to a higher sphere ; it comes into being under special acts of Divine providence, and has both its place of peculiar honour assigned it, and the high prerogatives and powers needful for fulfilling aright its calling by reason of its living connection with Him who is the eternal source of aU that is great and good. Considered, therefore, in its now ransomed and indepen dent position among the nations, Israel is the creation of God's omnipotent goodness — the child, in a manner, which He has taken to His bosom, which He wfll endow with His proper inheritance,1 and whose future safety and weU-being must be secured by Divine faith fulness and power. But for this very reason that God identified Himself so closely with Israel, Israel in return must identify itself with God. Brought into near rela tionship and free intercommunion with the Source of holi ness and truth, the people must be known as the holy nation ; they must even be as a kingdom of priests, receiv ing from His presence communications of His mind and wiU, and again giving forth suitable impressions of what they have received to the world around them. This, henceforth, was to be their peculiar calling ; and to in struct them how to fulfil it — to shew them distinctly what it was (as matters then stood) to be a kingdom of priests and an holy nation — the law came with its clear announcements of duty and its stern prohibitions against the ways of transgression. What, then, are the main characteristics of this law ? and how, in one part of its enactments, does it stand related to another ? This naturaUy becomes our next branch of inquiry. 1 Lev. xxv. 23. F 82 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. LECTURE IV. THE LAW IN ITS FORM AND SUBSTANCE— ITS MORE ESSENTIAL CHARACTERISTICS— AND THE RELATION OF ONE PART OF ITS CONTENTS TO ANOTHER. TN this particular part of .our inquiry, there is much that might be taken for granted as familiarly known and generaUy admitted, were it not that much also is often ignored, or grievously misrepresented ; and that, for a correct view of the whole, not a httle depends on a proper understanding of the spirit as weU as formal con tents of the law, of its historical setting, and the right adjustment of its several parts. If, in these respects, we can here present httle more than an outline, it must stiU be such as shaU embrace the more distinctive features of the subject, and clear the ground for future statements and discussions. * I. We naturaUy look first to the Decalogue — the ten words, as they are usuaUy termed in the Pentateuch, which stand most prorninently out in the Mosaic legisla tion, as being not only the first in order, and in them selves a regularly constructed whole, but the part which is represented as having been spoken directly from Heaven in the audience of aU the people, amid the most striking indications of the Divine presence and glory— the part, moreover, which was engraven by God on the mount, on two tablets of stone — the only part so engraven — and, in this enduring form, the sole contents Lect. IV.] COMMANDS OF THE DECALOGUE. 83 of that sacred chest or ark which became the centre of the whole of the rehgious institutions of Judaism — the symbolical basis of God's throne in Israel. Such varied marks of distinction, there can be no reasonable doubt, were intended to secure for this portion of the Sinaitic revelation the place of pre-eminent importance, to render it emphaticaUy the law, to which subsequent enact ments stood in a dependent or auxiliary relation. 1. And in considering it, there is first to be noted the aspect in which the great Lawgiver here presents Him self to His people : ' I am Jehovah thy God, who have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.' The words are merely a resumption of what had been shortly before, and somewhat more fuUy, de clared in the first message dehvered from Sinai ; they give, in a compendious form, the Gospel of the covenant of promise. Jehovah, the unchangeable and eternal, the great I am ; this alone, had it been aU, was a lofty idea for men who had been so long enveloped in the murky atmosphere of idolatry ; and if deeply impressed upon their hearts, and made a pervading element in their reli gion and pohty, would have nobly elevated the seed of Israel above aU the nations then existing on the earth. But there is more a great deal than this in the personal announcement which introduces the ten fundamental pre cepts ; it is that same glorious and unchangeable Being coming near to Israel in the character of their redeeming God, and by the very title, with the incontestable fact on which it rested, pledging His faithful love and sufficiency for aU future time, to protect them from evU or bring them salvation.1 So that, in coming forth in such a character to declare the law that was henceforth to bind their consciences and regulate their procedure 1 Ex. xv. 26. 84 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. alike toward Himself and toward one another, there was embodied the aU-important and salutary principle, that redemption carries in its bosom a conformity to the Divine order, and that only when the soul responds to the righteousness of Heaven is the work of dehverance complete. The view now given received important confirmation in the course of the historical transactions which immediately ensued. The people who had heard with solemn awe the voice which spake to them from Sinai, and undertook to observe and do what was commanded, soon shewed how far they were from having imbibed the spirit of the revelation made to them, how far especiaUy from having attained to right thoughts of God, by turning back in their hearts to Egypt, and during the temporary absence of Moses on the mount, prevailing upon Aaron to make a golden calf as the object of their worship. The sensual orgies of this false worship were suddenly arrested by the re-appearance of Moses upon the scene ; whUe Moses himself, in the grief and indignation of the moment, cast from him the two tables of the law, and broke them at the foot of the mount1 — an expressive emblem of that moral breach which the sin of the people had made between them and God. The breach, however, was again healed, and the covenant re-estabhshed ; but before the fundamental words of the covenant were written afresh on tables of stone, the Lord gave to Moses, and through him to the people, a further revelation of His name, that the broken relationship might be renewed under clearer convictions of the gracious and loving nature of Him whose yoke of service it caUed them to bear. Even Moses betrayed his need of some additional insight in this respect, by requesting that God would 1 Ex. xxxii. 19. Lect. IV.] COMMANDS OF THE DECALOGUE. 85 shew him His glory ; though, as may seem from the response made to it, he appears to have had too much in his eye some external form of manifestation. Waiving, however, what may have been partial or defective in the request — at least, no farther meeting it than by present ing to the view of Moses what, perhaps, we may caU a ghmpse of the incarnation in a cleft of the rock — the Lord did reveal His more essential glory — revealed it by such a proclamation of His name as disclosed aU His goodness.1 ' The Lord,' it is said, ' passed by before Moses, and proclaimed, Jehovah, Jehovah God, merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth ; keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity, transgression, and sin, and that wiU by no means clear the gudty ; visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, and upon the chUdren's chU- dren, unto the third and to the fourth generation.' This emphatic proclamation of the Divine name, or description of the character in which God wished to be known by His people, is in principle the same with that which heads the ten words ; but it is of greater compass, and remarkable chiefly for the copious and prominent exhibi tion it gives of the gracious, tender, and benignant character of God, as the Redeemer of Israel, that they might know how thoroughly they could trust in His goodness, and what ample encouragement they had to serve Him. It intimates, indeed, that justice could not forego its claims, that obstinate transgressors should meet their desert, but gives this only the subordinate and secondary place, while grace occupies the foreground. Was this, we ask, to act hke One, who was more anxious to inspire terror, than win affection from men ? Did it seem as if He would have His revelation of law associated 1 Ex. xxxiii. 19 ; xxxiv. 6, 7. S6 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. in their minds with the demands of a rigid service, such as only an imperious sense of duty, or a dread of conse quences, might constrain them to render ? Assuredly not ; and we know that the words of the memorial-name, which He so closely hnked with the restored tables of the law, did take an abiding hold of the more earnest and thoughtful spirits of the nation, and ever and anon, amid- the seasons of greatest darkness and despondency, came up with a joyous and re-assuring effect into their hearts.1 So that, whatever of awful grandeur and majesty attended the revelation of the law from Sinai, as uttered amid thrilling sounds and sights that flashed amazement on the eyes of the beholders, it stiU had its foundation in love, and came from God expressly in the character of their most gracious and faithful Redeemer, as well as their righteous Lord. 2. Yet — and here is a second point to be noted — it did not the less on that account assume — being a revela tion of law in form as weU as substance, it could not but assume — a predominantly stringent and imperative character. The humane and loving spirit in which it opens, is not, indeed, absent from the body of its enact ments, though, for the most part, formaUy disguised; but even in form it reappears more than once — especially in the assurance of mercy to the thousands who should love God and keep His commandments, and the promise of long continuance on the land of rest and blessing, associated respectively with the second and the fifth precepts of the law. But these are only, as it were, the relieving clauses of the code — reminiscences of the grace and loving-kindness which had been pledged by the Lawgiver, and might be surely counted on by those who were willing to yield themselves to His service : the law 1 Ps. lxxxvi 5, 15 ; ciii. 8 ; cxlv. 8 ; Joel ii. 13 ; Jonah iv. 2 ; Nek. ix. 17- Lect. IV.] COMMANDS OF THE DECALOGUE. 87 itself, in every one of the obligations it imposes, takes (as we have said) the imperative form — ' Thou shalt do this,' ' Thou shalt not do that ;' and this just because it is law, and must leave no doubt that the course it pre scribes is the one that ought to be taken, and must be taken, by every one who is in a sound moral condition. This is the case equaUy whether the precepts run in the positive or the negative form. For, as justly stated by a morahst formerly quoted,1 ' Since morahty rests upon freedom of choice, and this again consists in the fact, that under several modes of action that are possible, a parti cular one is chosen through one's own independent exer cise of wiU, every moral act is at the same time also a refraining from a contrary mode of action that might have been taken. The moral law is hence always double- sided ; it is at once command and prohibition ; nor can it make any essential difference, whether the law comes forth in the one or the other form ; and as the moral life of man is a continuous one, he must every moment be fulfilling a Divine law ; a mere abstaining would be a disowning of the moral.' No peculiar learning or pro found reach of thought is required to understand this ; it must commend itself to every intelligent and serious mind ; for if, in respect to those precepts which take the negative form of prohibitions, the mere omitting to do the thing forbidden were aU that is enjoined, there would be nothing properly moral in the matter — the command might be fulfilled by the simple absence of moral action, by mere inactivity, which in the moral sphere is but another name for death. Hence it has ever been the maxim of all judicious and thoughtful commentators on the law of the two tables, that when evU is forbidden, the opposite good is to be understood as enjoined ; just 1 Wuttke, ' Handhuch der Christlichen Sittenlehre,' I. p. 385. THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. as, on the other side, when a duty is commanded, every thing contrary to it is virtuaUy forbidden. Thus Calvin, after substantiaUy affirming the principle now stated]. referring to the commandment, ' Thou shalt not kill/ repudiates the idea that it is to be regarded merely as an injunction to abstain from all injury, or wish to inflict it. ' I hold (he says) that it means besides, that we are to aid our neighbour's life by every means in our power.' And he proves it thus : ' God forbids us to injure or hurt a brother, because He would have his life to be dear and precious to us ; and therefore when He so forbids, He at the same time demands aU the offices of charity which can contribute to his preservation.' So also Luther, who, under the same precept, considers aU indeed forbidden that might lead to murder, but holds this also to he included, that ' we must help our neighbour and assist him in aU his bodny troubles.' Higher than both, our Lord Himself brings out the principle strongly in His exposition of that and of other precepts of the Decalogue in His sermon on the mount ; as again also in reference to the prohibition regarding work on the Sabbath, when taken as an excuse for refusing to administer help to a brother's necessities, by asking, ' Is it lawful on the sabbath-days to do good, or to do evil 1 to save life, or to destroy it?'2— which plainly involves the principle, that mere negatives in matters of moral obhgation haw the force of positives ; that to reject virtue is to choose vice ; that not to do the good we can is to consent to the evU we aUow; to let a life we might have saved perish, is to be guilty of another's death. ' On this ground, which has its justification in theverj nature of things, there can manifestly be no adequate knowledge of this revelation of law, or proper exhibition » < Institutes,' B. II. c. 8, see. 9. * Luke vi. 9. Lect. IV.] COMMANDS OF THE DECALOGUE. 89 of its real nature and place in the Divine economy, with out perceiving its relation, as well in those who received as in Him who gave it, to the great principle of love. Apart from this, it had been a body without a soul, a call to obedience without the slightest chance of a response ; for aiming, as the law did, at securing a conformity in moral purpose and character between a redeeming God and a redeemed people, not one of its precepts could reach the desired fulfilment, unless the love which had exhibited itself as the governing principle in the one should find in the other a corresponding love, which might be roused and guided into proper action. Hence, as if to make this unmistakeably plain, no sooner had Moses given a rehearsal of the Decalogue in the book of Deuteronomy, than he proclaimed aloud the memorable words : ' Hear, 0 Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord ; and thou shalt love the Lord thy God with aU thine heart, and with aU thy soul, and with all thy might :'1 — which our Lord declared to be the first and great com mandment,2 and He added another, which He pronounced the second and hke to it, ' Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself — the same also which centuries before had issued from the hps of Moses.3 ' On these two command ments,' He further declared, ' hang aU the law and the prophets.' The apostles also freely interchange the pre cept of love with the commands of the Decalogue, as mutually explanatory of each other.4 And thus, in part at least, may be explained the negative form of the ten sommandments. They assume throughout the known ¦sxistence of a positive ; and that, primarily, in the moral aature of man, as the image (though marred) of the -Divine — without which, latent but living in the bosom, 1 Dent. vi. 4, 5. 2 Matt. xxii. 40. 3 Lev. xix. 18. * Rom. xiii. 9, 10 ; Jas. ii. 8-11. 90 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. they had been incapable of awakening any response, or creating the shghtest sense of obhgation. Yet not in that alone does the law assume the existence of a posi tive, but also in the revealed character of God, as recog nised and exhibited in the law itself. There Israel, as the redeemed of Jehovah, had ever before them the per fection of exceUence, which they were bound to aim at, and for the sake of which — lest they should lose sight of it, or think httle of the obligation — they had their path fenced and guarded by those prohibitions of law, on the right hand and the left. StiU, the negative is doubtless in itself the lower form of command ; and when so largely employed as it is in the Decalogue, it must be regarded as contemplating and striving to meet the strong current of evU that runs in the human heart. This may not im properly be deemed the main reason — only not the exclusive one, since even in paradise a negative form was given to the command which served as the peculiar test of love. 3. Viewing the law thus, as essentially the law of love, which it seeks to guard and protect, as weU as to evoke and direct, let us glance briefly at the detaUs, that we may see how entirely these accord, alike in their nature and their orderly arrangement, with the general idea, and provide for its proper exemplification. As love has un speakably its grandest object in God, so precedence is justly given to what directly concerns Him — implying also that religion is the basis of morality, that the right adjustment of men's relation to God tends to ensure the proper maintenance of their relations one to another. God, therefore, must hold the supreme place in their regard, must receive the homage of their love and obedi ence : — and this in regard to His being, His worship, His name, and His day. He is the one hving God — therefore Lect. IV.] COMMANDS OF THE DECALOGUE. 91 no others must be set up in His presence ; He alone must have the place of Deity (the first). Spiritual in His own nature, His worship also must be spiritual — therefore no idol-forms are to appear in His service, for none such can adequately represent Him ; they would but degrade men's notions concerning Him, virtually change His truth into a he (second). His name is the expression of whatever is pure, holy, and good — therefore it must be lifted up to nothing that is vain, associated with nothing false, cor rupt, wicked, or profane, but only with words and deeds which breathe its ' spirit and reflect its glory (third). The day, too, which He has speciaUy consecrated for Him- seff, being the signature of His holiness on time and labour — the check He lays upon human activity as natu- raUy tending to work only for self, His ever-recurring caU in providence on men to work so as to be again perpetuaUy entering into His rest — this day, therefore, must be kept apart from servile labour, withdrawn from the interests of the flesh, and haUowed to God (fourth). The next command may also be taken in the same connection — a step further in the same line, since earthly parents are in a peculiar sense God's representatives among men, those whom He invests with a measure of His own authority, as standing for a time in His stead to those whom instrumentaUy they have brought into being, and whom they should train for His service and glory — these, therefore, must be honoured with aU dutiful and ready obedience, that the hearts of the fathers ¦ may in turn become the hearts of the chUdren. This, however, touches on the second division of moral duty, that which concerns men's relation to each other ; and according to the parti cular aspect in which it is contemplated, the fifth command may be assigned to the first or to the second table of the law. Scripture itself makes no formal division. Though 92 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. it speaks frequently enough of two tables, it nowhere indicates where the one terminates and the other begins — purposely, perhaps, to teach us that the distinction is not to be very sharply drawn, and that the contents of the one graduaUy approximate and at last pass over into the other. Already, in the fourth commandment, distinct reference is made to persons in the humbler ranks of life, and a kind consideration is required to be had of them— though still the primary aim and aspect of the command bore upon interests in which aU were ahke concerned. In like manner with the fifth : what it directly enjoins is certainly such love and regard as is due from one human being to another ; and yet the relation involved is not that exactly of neighbour to neighbour, but rather of wards under persons bearing Heaven's delegated trust and authority ; so that in the honouring of these God Himself receives somewhat of the homage due to Him, and they who render it, as the apostle says, ' shew piety at home. ' 1 With the sixth command, however — the first of the second five — we are brought to what most dis tinctly relates to the human sphere, and to the exercise of that love, which may in the strictest sense be called love to one's neighbours. These the law enjoins us not to injure, but to protect and cherish, in regard to their life ; then, to what next to life should be dearest to them, the chastity and honour of wife or daughter, to their pn^operty, to their character and position in life. In re spect to one and aU of these, the imperative obligation imposed is, that we do our neighbour no harm by the false testimony of our tongues, or the violence of our hands, or any course of procedure that is fitted to tell injuriously upon what he has and loves. And, finally, to shew that neither tongue, nor hands, nor any other 1 I. Tim. v. 4. Lect. IV.] COMMANDS OF THE DECALOGUE. 93 member of our body, or any means and opportunities at our command — that not these alone are laid under contri bution to this principle of love, but the seat also and fountain of aU desire, aU purpose and action — the Deca logue closes with the precept which forbids us to lust after or covet wife, house, possessions, anything whatever that is our neighbour's — a precept which reaches to the inmost thoughts and intents of the heart, and requires that all even there should be under the control of a love which thinketh no evU, wmich abhors the very thought of adding to one's own heritage of good by wrongfuUy infringing on what is another's. Viewed thus as enshrining the great principle of love, and in a series of commands chalking out the courses of righteous action it was to foUow, of unrighteous action it was to shun, the law of the two tables may justly be pronounced unique — so compact in form, so orderly in arrangement, so comprehensive in range, so free from everything narrow and punctilious — altogether the fitting reflex of the character of the Supremely Pure and Good in His relation to the members of His earthly kingdom. It is emphatically a revelation of God — of God generaUy, indeed, as the moral Governor of the world, but more peculiarly as the Redeemer of Israel ; and to lower it to the position of a kind of semi-political and rehgious code, were to deprive it of aU that is most distinctive in its spirit and bearing, and render utterly inexphcable the singular pronxinence assigned it, not alone in the legisla tion of the old covenant, but in the Scriptures generaUy alike of the Old and the New.1 1 Those who will calmly reflect on the statements advanced in the preceding pages will not, I think, be much moved hy the extraordinary assertions in the following passage : ' What is termed the moral law is certainly in no way to he peculiarly identified with the Decalogue, as some have strangely imagined 94 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. II. Subordinate to this grand revelation of moral law, yet closely related to it, is what has usuaUy been called the judicial law of the Theocracy — though this is too hmited a term for what must be comprised under it. A more fitting designation would be, Statutory directions and enactments for the practical ordering of affairs amid the complicated relations and often untoward events of life. [some indeed!] Though moral duties are specially enjoined in many places of the Law, yet the Decalogue most assuredly does not contain all moral duties, even by remote implication, and on the widest construction. It totally omits many such, as, e.g., beneficence, truth, justice, temperance, control of temper, and others ; and some moral precepts omitted here are introduced in other places. But many moral duties are hardly recognised, e. g., it is difficult to find any positive prohibition of drunkenness in the Law. In one passage only an indirect censure seems to be implied (Deut. xxix. 19).'* As if God's grand summary of moral law might be expected to run in the style of an act of Parlia ment, and go into endless specifications of the precise kinds and forms of wickedness which would constitute breaches of its enactments ! Such cumbrous details would have been unsuited to its design, and marred rather than aided its practical effect. What was needed was a brief but comprehensive series of precepts, which for thoughtful and considerate minds would be found to embrace the wide range of duty, and, if honestly complied with, would render acts of ungodliness and crime practically unknown. And this is what the Decalogue really contains. That any one who sincerely opens his heart to the reception of its great principles of truth and duty, and lives in the loving con nection it implies with God and his fellow-men, should deem himself otherwise than bound to practise justice, temperance, beneficence, and truth, it is impos sible to conceive. And the same substantially may be said of another alleged omission — the moral obligation of missions. For, how could any one entering into the spirit of the revelation of law, and believing the practical acknowledg ment of its great principles of truth and righteousness to be the essential condition of all true peace and well-being, fail to recognise it as his duty to do what he could to bring others acquainted with them ? The very position and calling of Israel partook of a missionary character : it had for its grand aim the communication of the peculiar blessing of the covenant to all nations; and the missionary spirit breathed in such passages as Ps. lxvii, lxxii., xcviii. ; Isa. ii., xlix., Ix., etc., is but an expression of the love, in its higher exercise, which, as members alike of the covenant of law and the covenant of promise, the people of God were bound, as they had opportunity, to manifest.— For some points of a formal kind connected with the Decalogue, see Supplementary Dissertation, No. I. * Baden Powell's * Christianity without Judaism,' p. 104. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 95 The law, strictly so called, being the absolute expression of the Divine wiU toward a people redeemed for the Divine service and glory, was necessarUy oblivious of difficulties and defects ; it peremptorily required confor mity with its own perfect ideal of rectitude, and made no account of any deviation from this, except to warn against and condemn it. But in the circumstances in which mankind generaUy, and the Israehtes in particular, actuaUy stood, such conformity could never be more than partiaUy realized ; transactions, interests, would be sure to come up, which might render it doubtful even to sincere men how to apply, or how far to carry out, the precepts of the Decalogue ; and, what was hkely to be of much more frequent occurrence, wayward and selfish men would take occasion to traverse the pure and comely order, which it was the design of those precepts to estab lish among the covenant people. In the event of such things arising, how was the external pohty to be re gulated and maintained ? What modes of procedure in definite circumstances should be held in accordance with its spirit ? What, as between one member of the com munity and another, might be tolerated, though falling somewhat below the Divine code of requirements ? What, again, caUing for excision, as too flagrantly opposed to it to consist with the very being of the commonwealth ? It was to provide some sort of answer to these ques tions that the statutory directions and enactments now under consideration were introduced. They are caUed, in the first mention that is made of them, the mishpatim,1 the statutes or judgments, because bearing that character in relation to the ten commandments going immediately before. A series of particular cases is supposed — by way of example and Ulustration, of course, not as if exhausting 1 Ex. xxi. 1. 96 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. the entire category of possible occurrences — and, in con nection with them, instructions are given as to what may or should be done, so as to preserve the spirit of the con stitution, and to restrain and regulate, without unduly cramping, the hberty of the people. Indeed, the range which is aUowed through the whole class of provisions now in question, for the exercise of individual hberty in official and even social arrangements, is one of the most noticeable points connected with them. In civil and economical respects, the people were left in great measure to shape their domestic institutions, and model their administrative pohty as they thought fit. There were to be judges to determine in matters of dispute between man and man, and to maintain the fundamental laws of the kingdom ; but how these judges were to be ap pointed, or what their relative places and spheres of juris diction, nothing is prescribed. A regular gradation of officers was introduced by Moses shortly before the giving of the law ;x but this was done at the suggestion of Jethro, as a merely prudential arrangement, and, for any thing that appears, was in that specific form confined to the wUderness-sojourn. Neither the time, nor the mode of its introduction, brings it properly within the circle of legal appointments. Even when, at a later period, the supposition is made of the general government assuming a kingly form, it is spoken of as a thing to be left to the people's own choice, restricted only by such rules and limitations regarding the mode of election, and the future conduct of the king, as would render the appointment compatible with the Theocratic constitution.2 And a simUar reserve was maintained in respect to whatever did not come distinctly within the province of religion and morals ; the people stood, in regard to it, much on 1 Ex. xviii. 2 Deut. xvii. 14-20. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 97 the same platform as the other nations of the earth. And these, we know, were stUl in a comparatively im perfect state of order and civUization : education and learning in the modern sense were unknown, the arts and conveniences of life in their infancy, the civU rights of the different classes of society httle understood, and usages of various kinds prevailing which partook of the rudeness of the times. It was in such a state of things that the kingdom of God, with its formal revelation of law, was set up in Israel ; and while that revelation, in so far as it met with due consideration and was honestly apphed, could not faU to operate with effect in elevating the tone and habits of society even in the strictly temporal and earthly sphere, yet, we must remember, it only indirectly bore upon this, and had to make its way amid much that was out of course, and that could only admit of a gradual amehoration. Here, too, unless violence were to be done to the natural course of development, and a mechanical order made to supersede the free action of mind, the principle of progression must have had scope given it to work, and consequently, in the actual administration of the affairs of the kingdom, not always what was abso lutely the best, but only the best practicable in the cir cumstances, was to be authoritatively enjoined. If only contemplated thus from a right point of view, the things sometimes excepted against in this part of the Mosaic legislation would be seen to admit of a just defence or reasonable explanation. 1. But to take the points connected with it in order. A considerable portion of the statutes and judgments are, as we have said, a simple apphcation of the great prin ciples of the Decalogue to particular cases, intended at once to explain and confirm them. That in its general spirit and tenor the Decalogue is an embodiment of love G 98 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. — in its second part of brotherly love, extending through the entire circle of one's thoughts, words, and deeds- might be conceded. But must it be exercised in every case ? even toward one from whom injury has been received ? If we think he has acted to us unjustly, may not we in turn take our revenge ? No;. the judicial reply is — a neighbour, though an enemy, in trouble, as when his ass or his ox strays, or his ass has faUen helplessly under a burden, ought to receive our help.1 So that the action of love enjoined in the command must not be thought to depend on the mere accidents of one's position; and in the most untoward circumstances, in respect even to an enemy, must shew itself in the positive as well as the negative form. Revenge is strictly excluded, and love to every brother or neighbour enforced ;2 nor in words merely, but also in giving to him in his time of need without usury, and imitating toward him the Divine beneficence.3 Other statutes in the same line cut off the excuse, which some might be ready to offer, that the injury sustained by their neighbour had been done by a mere act of inadvertence or rashness on their part (as by kindling a fire, which spread into another's vineyard, or by keeping open a pit into which his ox feU) ;4 done, per haps, in a sudden outburst of passion,5 or through the vicious propensities of their cattle ;6 for such things also men were held responsible, because failing to do within their proper domain the kind and considerate part of love to those around them. But then it was possible some might be disposed occasionaUy to press the matter too far, and hold a man equaUy responsible for any violence done by him to the life or property of another, whether done from sheer carelessness, from heedless impetuosity, 1 Ex. xxiii. 4, 5. 2 Lev. xix. 18. 3 Ex. xxii 25-27. 4 Ex. xxii 5, xxi. 33. 5 Ex. xxi. 22-27. 6 Ex. xxi. 28-36. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 99 or from deliberate malice. Here, again, the statutory enactments come in with their wise and discriminatinp- judgments — distinguishing, for example, between death inflicted unwittingly, or in self-defence, or in the attempt to arrest a burglary, and murder perpetrated in cool blood.1 Thus there is delivered to us, for a principle of interpretation and personal guidance, that the law under any particular head is violated or fulfilled, not by the bare act anyhow performed, but by the act taken in con nection with the circumstances, especiaUy the feeling and intent of the heart, under which it has been done. Once more, the question might be stirred by some in a per verse, by others in a partial or prejudiced spirit, whether the law should be understood as applying to aU with absolute equality? whether an exemption more or less might not be aUowed, at least to persons in what might be caUed the extremes of social position ? Here, also, the decision is given with sufficient plainness, when it is ordained that the poor man was neither to have his judgment wrested, nor be unduly countenanced in his cause, from respect to his poverty ; that even the friend less stranger was to be treated with kindness and equity; and that the rich and powerful were not to be aUowed to use their resources for the purpose of gaining an advan tage to which they were not entitled.2 2. It thus appears that the class of enactments referred to have an abiding value, as they serve materiaUy to throw light on the import and bearing of the Decalogue, confirming the views already given of its spiritual and comprehensive character. Another class, which, like the preceding, involve no difficulty of interpretation, also reflect, in a somewhat different way, a measure of hght on the Decalogue, viz., by the judicial treatment they 1 Ex. xxi. 12-14, xxii. 2. 2 Ex. xxiii. 2, 3, 6, 9 ; Deut. i. 17, xix. 7-19. 100 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. award to the more flagrant violation of its precepts. The deeds which were of this description had aU the penalty of death attached to them — shewing that the precepts they violated were of a fundamental character, and entered as essential principles into the constitution of the Theocracy. Such was the doom suspended over the introduction of false gods, in violation of the first command,1 to which also belong aU the statutes about witchcraft, divination, and necromancing, which involved the paying of homage to another object of worship than Jehovah ; over the wor shipping of God by idols, in violation of the second com mand;2 over the profanation of God's name, in violation of the third ;3 over the dehberate profanation of the Sabbath, in violation of the fourth ; i over shameful dis honour and violence done to parents, in violation of the fifth;5 over murder, adultery, bestiahty, men-stealing, and the more extreme cases of oppression, violence, and false witness-bearing, in violation of the successive com mands of the second table.6 Why the breaches of these great precepts of the Decalogue should have been met so uniformly with the severity of capital punishment, is to be accounted for by the nature of the kingdom set up in Israel, which was a theocracy, having God for its supreme Lawgiver and Head, and for its subjects a people bearing His name and occupying His land. How completely would the great end of such an institution have been frustrated, if the holiness to which the people were caUed had been outraged, and the sins which ran counter to it openly practised ? To act thus had been to traverse the fundamental laws of the kingdom, nay, to 1 Ex. xxii. 20 ; Deut. xiii. 9, 10. 2 Ex. xxxii. ; Deut. iv. 25-28. 3 Ex. xx. 7 ; Lev. xxiv. 16. * Ex. xxxi. 14, 15 ; Numb. xv. 35. 5 Ex. xxi. 15-17. 6 Ex. xxi. 12 ; Lev. xxiv. 17, xx. 10; Ex. xxii. 19, 22-24 ; Deut. xix. 21. Lect. IV] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 1 01 manifest an unmistakeable hatred to its Divine Head, and could no more be tolerated there than overt treason in an earthly government. The law, therefore, right eously laid the sin of dehberate transgression on the head of the sinner as gvhlt, which could only be taken away by the punishment of him who committed it.1 If this should be deemed excessive severity, it can only be because the right is virtually denied on the part of God to estabhsh a Theocracy among men in conformity with His own revealed character, and for the manifestation of His name. That right, however, is assumed as the ground on which the whole legislation of Sinai proceeds ; and if the penal enactments of the Theocracy are to be rightly interpreted, they must be placed in immediate connection with the authority and honour of God. In respect to aU judicial action, when properly administered, the judgment, though administered by man, was held to be the Lord's.2 To bring a matter up for judgment was represented as bringing it to God (so the rendering should be in Ex. xxii. 8, 9, not ' the judges,' as in the Enghsh version) ; and persons standing before the priests and the judges to have sentence pronounced upon them, were said to stand before the Lord.3 If the judges and the judged realized this to be their position, would there have been any just ground to complain of undue severity? Would there not rather have been diffused throughout the community a deep sense of the Divine righteous ness, and .an earnest striving to have its claims and penalties enforced, as the indispensable pre-requisite of peace and blessing ? * Besides, it was not they alone who 1 See Weber, ' Von Zorne Gottes,' p. 142. 2 Deut. i. 17. 3 Deut. xix. 17. 4 Human theories of jurisprudence often entirely repudiate the relation here implied of sin or crime to punishment. The maxim of Seneca (nemo prudens punit, quia peccatum est, sed ne peccetur ; revocari enim praeterrita non possunt, futura prohibentur), which abjures the thought of inflicting punishment, except 102 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. were to be considered ; for in planting them in Canaan, ' in the midst of the nations,' and furnishing them with such a pohty, God's design was to use them as a great teaching institute — a hght placed aloft on the moral heights of the world amid surrounding darkness. What incalculable blessings might have accrued to ancient heathendom had that high calling been fulfilled ! But to this end the stern proscription of open ungodliness and flagrant immoralities was indispensable.1 3. Another class of the statutes and judgments under consideration is one which more directly bore on the im perfect state of order and civilization then everywhere existing, and which has often been misunderstood and objected to. The law of compensation — frequently, though improperly, termed the law of retahation — does not strictly belong to the class, but may be included in it, on account of the assaults to which it has been subjected. It is, indeed, so far of the class in question, as it comes first directly into view in connection with a very rude and barbarous state of manners. The supposition is made .-is a check or means of prevention against its future commission, has found not a few defenders in recent times, though more in Germany than here. Yet there also some of the profoundest thinkers have given it their decided oppo sition. Hegel, for instance, taught that ' punishment is certainly to be regarded as the necessary abolition of crime which would otherwise predominate, and as the re-establishment of right.' More fully and distinctly Stahl, ' To man is given, along with the power, the authority also of performing a deed, but this he can only have with God, not against Him. If, therefore, he acts amiss, he comes to have a glory in the world antagonistic to God. Not, however, to undo the deed itself, and its consequence, can be demanded by the Divine righteousness, but only to destroy this glory of the deed ; and if this can he destroyed, the antagonism is brought to an end.' — (See in Baumgarten's Coram. on Pent., II. pp. 29, 30.) But the relation of capital punishment to moral trans gressions of the first table, and to some extent also of the second, which was proper to a Theocracy, cannot be justly transferred to an ordinary civil com mon wealth ; and, in this respect, Christian states have often grievously erred in assimilating their penal statutes too closely to those of the Mosaic legislation. 1 See the remarks in my ' Commentary on Ezekiel,' pp. 68-70. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 1 03 of two men striving together, and a woman with chUd (whether by chance or from weU-meant interference on her part) happening to receive some corporeal injury in the fray ; and it was ordained, that her husband was entitled to claim compensation from the offender, according to the extent of the injury ; proceeding further, the statute pro vides generaUy for all like cases, that there should be ' life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot, burning for burning, wound for wound, stripe for stripe.'1 Stript of its concrete form, this is simply a rule for the proper administration of justice between man and man, requiring that when a particular wrong was done to any one, and through him to society, an adequate compensation should be rendered. So far from being peculiar to the Mosaic code, no legislation that is not capricious and arbitrary can dispense with such a rule, nor could society exist in peace and comfort without its faithful apphcation. ' In fact,' to use the words of Kalisch in his commentary on the passage, ' our own Christian legislation could not dispense with simUar principles : life is punished with life, and intentional injuries are visited with more than equivalent penalties. Not even the most sentimental and romantic legislator has ever had the fancy to pardon aU criminals out of Christian love. For, in reahty, every simple law in our criminal code is based on the jus talionis (the law of com pensation), with the hmitation that bodUy mutUation is converted into an adequate pecuniary fine, or incarcera tion ; but the same modification (he adds) has been universaUy adopted by traditional Judaism.' Such a hmitation was in perfect accordance with the general spirit of the Mosaic code, and must have been from the first intended. The hteral application of the rule, as in 1 Ex. xxi. 22-25. 104 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. the case of burning for burning, or wound for wound, would often have been impracticable, for who could have undertaken to make a second that should always be pre cisely equivalent to the first ? or unjust, for the severity of a bochly infliction may, in particular circumstances, be a widely different thing to one person from what it is to another. To insist on the exact counterpart of such corporeal injuries, even when it could have been secured, in preference to a reasonable compensation, would plainly have been to gratify a spirit of revenge ; and this, as already stated, was expressly disaUowed. There was one thing, and only one, in regard to which compensation was formaUy interdicted : the hfe of a dehberate murderer must be given for the hfe of the murdered, without satisfaction, without pity j1 and the emphatic exclusion of compensation here, was justly regarded by the Jewish doctors as virtually sanctioning its admission in cases of a lighter kind, where no such exclusion was mentioned. The real bearing of this law, then, when rightly understood and apphed as it was meant, in judicial decisions, was in perfect accordance with the principles of equity ; it was merely a practical embodiment of these ; and the reference made to it by our Lord in His sermon on the mount, where it forms a kind of contrast to the injunction laid on His followers not to resist evU, but when smitten on the one cheek to turn the other also, and so on,2 can imply no disparagement of the old rule in its proper intention. In so far as it breathed a tone of censure, or assumed a position of antagonism, it was only in regard 'to those who, in their personal endeavours after the pure and good, had not known to rise above the level of a formal and rigid justice. Not questioning the claims of justice in the public administration of affairs, our Lord 1 Numb. xxxv. 31 ; Deut. xix. 13. 2 Mat. v. 38. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 105 still made it to be known that He sought a people who would be ready to forego these, whenever by doing so they could promote the good of their fellow-men. But the law of brotherly love, when requiring the suppression of revenge, and the exercise of forbearance and kindness even to an enemy, in reahty did the same, as was per fectly understood by the better spirits of the old cove nant.1 So that notliing properly different, but only a greater fulness and prominence in the exhibition or enforcement of such love, can be claimed for the Gospel dispensation.2 4. More distinctly than the statutes just noticed may some of those connected with the punishment of murder be ranked in the class now under consideration. In this branch of the Mosaic legislation there is generally apparent a spirit of humanity and moderation. First of aU, murder in the proper sense is carefully discriminated from death brought about in some casual manner. In every case of real murder it was necessary to prove preceding mahce or hatred, a lying in wait or taking deliberate measures to compass the death of its victim, and an assault with some violent weapon accomplishing the end in view.3 But if, on the other hand, while a man had proved the cause of a neighbour's death, the act inflicting it was merely the throwing of a stone or other weight, which incidentaUy hghted upon some one, and took away his 1 Ps. vii. 4 ; Prov. xxv. 21, 22 ; 1 Sam. xxiv., xxvi. 2 The same view is given of the Mosaic statute by the leading authorities ; for example, by Michaelis, Salvador ' His. des Institutions de Moise ' (who says, ' The^Ms talionis is a principle rather than a law ; as a law it cannot, nor does it actually come in general to be executed') ; Saalschiitz ' Des Mosaische Recht ;' Kalisch gives some specimens of the Rabbinical discussions on the sub ject, from Bab. Talmud ; and Maimonides. For the compensations by which the Arabs and Egyptians carry out the principle, see Kitto's ' Pictorial Bible,' on Ex. xxi., and Lane's ' Modern Egyptians,' ch. III. 3 Deut. xix. 2. 106 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. life — or if by some sort of sudden thrust, in a freak or fury, without aught of preconceived mahce or dehberate intent, a neighbour's life was sacrificed, the instrument of doing it could not be arraigned for murder; but neither could he be deemed altogether innocent. There must usuaUy have been, in such cases, at least a culpable degree of heedlessness, which would always caU for careful inves tigation, and might justly subject the individual to a limited amount of trouble, or even of punishment. It does so stUl in the civUized communities of modern times, with their regulated forms of judicial procedure and vigi lant pohce : the man-slayer, however unwittingly he may have been the occasion of taking another's life, must lay his account to the solemn inquest, often also the personal arrest, and it may be, ultimately, the severe reprimand, pecuniary fine, or temporary imprisonment, which may be thought due as a correction to his improper heedlessness or haste. But at the period of Israel's settlement in Canaan there were not the opportunities for calm inquiry, and patient, satisfactory adjustment of such cases as exist now ; and there were, besides, feehngs deeply rooted in Asiatic society, and usages growing out of them, which ' tended very considerably to embarrass the matter, and yet could not be arbitrarily set aside. These arose out of the relation of Goel, according to which the nearest of kin had the wrongs, in particidar circumstances, as weU as the rights of the deceased, devolved upon him ; especially the obligation to avenge his blood in the event of its having been unrighteously shed. On this account the term Goel is very commonly reckoned synonymous with 'avenger {Goel haddam, avenger of blood), and in the passages bear ing on this subject they are invariably so rendered in our English Bible.1 To the mere Enghsh reader, however, 1 Numb. xxxv. 12 ; Deut. xix. 6, 12 ; Jos. xx. 5, 9, etc. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 107 in modern times, this is apt to convey a somewhat wrong idea ; for in its proper import Goel means not avenger, but redeemer (as in Job xix. 25, 'I know that my Be- deemer liveth'), and Goel haddam is strictly ' redeemer of blood,' one to whom belonged the right and duty of recovering the blood of the murdered kinsman, of vindi cating in the only way practicable its wronged cause, and obtaining for it justice. In him the 'blood ofthe dead, as it were, rose to life again and claimed its due. In other cases, it feU to the Goel to redeem the property of his relative, which had become ahenated and lost by debt ; l to redeem his person from bondage, if through poverty he had been necessitated to go into servitude ;2 even to redeem his fanuly, when by dying chUdless it was like to become extinct in Israel, by marrying his widow and raising up a seed to him.3 It thus appears that a humane and brotherly feeling lay at the root of this Goel-relation- ship ; and in regard to the matter more immediately before us, it did not necessarily involve anything revenge ful or capricious in its mode of operation. In ordinary cases, aU its demands might have been satisfied by the Goel appearing before the judges as the prosecutor of the man-slayer, and caUing upon them to examine the case and give judgment in behalf of the deceased. But there can be no doubt that it might also quite readUy run to evil, that it might degenerate — if not very carefully guarded and checked — into what, from time immemorial, it has been among the Arab races — a kind of wUd and vengeful spirit of justice, which would take the law into its own hands, and, in defiance alike of personal danger and of the forms of legal procedure, would pursue the shedder of blood tUl his blood in turn had been shed. This was the vicious extreme of the system ; yet one, it 1 Lev. xxv. 25. 2 Lev. xxv. 48-50. 3 Deut. xxv. 5-10. 108 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. ought to be remembered, which operated as a powerful check — perhaps, in the circumstances of the place and times, the only vahd check that could be devised against another and stUl more pernicious extreme, for which peculiar facilities were afforded by the vast deserts of Arabia and the regions lying around Palestine. How easy might it have been for the daring and successful murderer, by making his escape into these, to get beyond the reach of the regular tribunals and officers of justice ! Only the dread of being tracked out and having his own measure summarily meted back to him, by one on whom the charge to avenge the wrong lay as a primary and hfe-long obhgation, might be sufficient to deter him from trusting in such a refuge from evil. We have it on the testimony of those who have been most thoroughly con versant with the regions in question, and the races inhabiting them, that nothing has contributed so much as this institution (even in its most objectionable Arab form) to prevent the warhke tribes of the East from exterminating one another.1 In these circumstances, Moses, legislating for a people already familiar with the Goel-relationship, and going to occupy a region which presented to the more lawless spirits of the community, tempting opportunities for escaping from judicial treatment of a more orderly kind, took the wise course of grounding his statutes in respect to manslaughter and murder on the hereditary rights and duties of the Goel. But he so restrained and regulated them, that, if faithfuUy carried out, the checks he intro duced could scarcely faU to arrest the worst tendencies of the system, and indeed reduce the position of the Goel to that of the recognised and rightful prosecutor of the 1 See in Layard's ' Nineveh and Babylon,' p. 305, for his own and Burck- hardt's testimony. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 109 shedder of blood. To prevent any sudden assault upon the letter, and afford time for the due investigation of his deed, a temporary asylum was provided for him in the cities of refuge, which were appointed for this purpose at convenient distances — three on the one side and three on the other of the Jordan.1 When actuaUy appointed, the cities were most wisely distributed, and belonged also to the class of Levitical cities (Golan in Bashan, Bamoth in GUead, and Bezer on the east side; Kadesh in GalUee, Shechem and Hebron on the west),2 and as such were sure to contain persons skilled in the knowledge of the law and capable of giving intelligent judgment. Arrived within the gates of one of these cities, the man-slayer was safe from the premature action of the Goel ; but only that the judges and elders of the place might take up the case and pronounce impartial judgment upon it. If they found reason to acquit him of actual murder, then he remained under their protection, but was obhged to submit to a kind o'f partial imprisonment, because not aUowed to go beyond the borders of the city tiU the death of the existing high- priest — after which, if he still lived, he was at hberty to return to his own possession. Were not these conditions, however, somewhat arbitrary ? If not reaUy guilty of blood in the proper sense, why should he not have been placed at once under the protection of the law, and restored to his property and home ? And why should the period of his release have been made to hang on the uncertain and variable moment ofthe high-priest's death? Perhaps there may have been grounds for these hmitations at the 'time they were imposed, which cannot now be ascertained ; but a little consideration is sufficient to shew that they could not be deemed unreasonable. In the great majority of cases, the death of the person slain must 1 Numb. xxxv. 2 Jos. xx. 7, 8. 110 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. have been owing to the want of due circumspection, fore thought, or restraint on the part of him who had occasioned it ; and it could not, to thoughtful minds, appear other wise than a salutary disciphne, that he should be adjudged to a temporary abridgment of his hberty. Arbitrarily to break through this restraint after it had been judicially imposed, would clearly have argued a self-willed, im petuous, and troublesome humour, which refused correc tion, and might readily enough repeat in the future the rashness or misdeed of the past ; so that it was but deal ing with him according to his foUy to leave him in such a case at the mercy ofthe Goel.1 Nor could the connection of the period of release with the death of the existing high-priest carry much of a strange or capricious aspect to the members of the Theocracy. For the high-priest was, in everything pertaining to sin and forgiveness, the most prominent person in the community ; in such things, he was the representative of the people, making perpetual intercession for them before God ; and though there was nothing expiatory in his death, yet being the death of one in whom the expiatory ritual of the old covenant had so long found its centre and culmination, it was natural- more than natural, it was every way proper and becom ing — that when he disappeared from among men, the cause of the blood that had been incidentaUy shed in his life-time, and from its nature could admit of no very definite reckoning, should be held to have passed with him into oblivion — its cry was to be no more heard.2 It was made very clear, however, by other statutes on 1 Lev. xxv. 26, 27. 2 This appears to me the natural explanation of the rule, and sufficient for the purpose intended. The older evangelical divines (some also still, as Keil) think that in the death of the high-priest there was a shadow of the death of Christ ; consequently something that might be regarded as having a sort of atoning value for the sins of the people. This I cannot but consider arbitrary Lect. -IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. HI this subject, that when actual murder had been com mitted, no advantage was to accrue to the perpetrator from the cities of refuge ; though he might have fled thither, he was, on the proof of his guUt, to be delivered up to the Goel for summary execution.1 Nor was the altar of God — a still more sacred place than the cities of refuge, and in ancient times almost universaUy regarded as an asylum for criminals — to be permitted in such cases to afford protection ; from this also the murderer was to be dragged to his deserved doom.2 In short, dehberate murder was to admit of no compromise and no palliation : the original law, ' whoso sheddest man's blood by man shaU his blood be shed,' 3 must be rigorously enforced ; and, doubtless, mainly also on the original ground, ' because in the image of God made He him.' To dis regard the sanctity of human life, and tread it vilely in the dust, was hke aiming a thrust at God Himself, dis paraging His noblest work in creation, and the one that stood in peculiar relationship to His own spiritual being. Therefore, the violation of the sixth command by deli berate murder involved also a kind of secondary violation of the first ; and to suffer the blood of the innocent to he unavenged, was, in the highest sense, to poUute the land ;4 it was to render it unworthy of the name of God's inheritance. So great was the horror entertained of this unnatural crime, and so anxious was the Lawgiver to impress men with the feeling of its contrariety to the whole spirit and object of the law, that, even in the case of an in interpretation, and involving a dangerous element in respect to the work of atonement. For if the death of a sinful man, because he was anointed with oil, the symbol of the Spirit's grace, had such a value then, why should not the death of martyrs and other saints, richly endowed with the Spirit, have some thing of the same now ? 1 Deut. xix. 11-16. 2 Ex. xxi. 14. 3 Gen. ix. 6. 4 Numb. xxxy. 34. 112 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. uncertain murder, there was a cry of blood which could not be disregarded ; and when every effort had failed to discover the author of the deed, the elders of the city which lay nearest to the corpse were to regard themselves as in a manner implicated ; they had to come publicly forward, and not only protest their innocence of the crime, and their ignorance of the manner in which it had been committed, but also to go through a process of purifica tion by blood and water, that the charge of blood-guilti ness might not rest upon them and their land.1 5. We pass on now to the statutes on slavery and the treatment of those subject to" it, which have in various re spects been deemed inconsistent with the spirit of the Decalogue, as embodying the law of brotherly love. Here, again, it is especiaUy necessary to bear in mind the state of the world at the time the law was given, and the relation in which it stood to manners and usages, which bespoke a very imperfect development both of economical science and of civil rights. It was necessary that the law should take things as it found them, and, while setting before the covenant people the correct ideal of all that was moraUy right and good, should stiU regulate what pertained to the enforcement of discipline with a due regard to circumstances more or less anomalous and perplexing. By constitutional right, all the members of the covenant were free ; they were the Lord's redeemed ones, whom He vindicated to Himself from the house of bondage, that they might be in a condition to serve and honour Him;2 they were not again to be sold as bond men ;3 and that they might remain in this freedom from human servitude, every one had an inheritance assigned sufficient for the maintenance of himself and his family. The precautions, too, which were taken to secure the 1 Deut. xxi. 1-9. 2 Ex. xx. 2 ; Deut. xv. 15. 3 Lev. xxv. 42. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 113 perpetuity of these family possessions, were admirably devised ; if properly guarded and carried out, nothing had been wanting to provide, so far as external arrange ments could effect it, the means of a comfortable liveli hood and independence for the families of Israel. But much must stiU depend on the individual character of the people, and the current of events in their history. If, through adverse circumstances, desolation fell on any por tion of the territory — or if, from slothful neglect, particular inheritances were not duly cultivated, or the resources they furnished were again improvidently squandered — above all, if the people in whole or in part should become involved in the reverses or triumphs of war — such in equalities might reachly spring up as, in the existing state of civic life and pohtical arrangements, would most naturally tead to the introduction of a certain kind of slavery. It is even possible that, as matters then stood, the humanest, if not the only practicable thing, that could be done by legislative enactment, was to bound and regulate, rather than absolutely interdict, some modi fied form of this in itself unhappy relationship. Such, at least, appears to have been the view countenanced by the Divine Head of the Theocracy ; for the statutes bear ing on the subject of slavery are entirely ofthe kind just indicated, and, when temperately considered, wiU be found to involve a wise adaptation to the circumstances of the time. Even a brief outline may be enough to establish this. (1.) The language alone is of importance here, as indi cative of the spirit of the Hebrew Theocracy : it had no term to designate one class as slaves (in the stricter sense) and another who did hired service. The term for both alike is Ebed (i3?>), properly, a labourer or worker, and hence very naturaUy one whose calhng in life is emphati- H 114 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. caUy of this description, a servant. And, as justly noted by Saalschiitz,1 ' among a people who were engaged in agricultural employments, whose lawgiver Moses, and whose kings Saul and David, were taken straight from the flock and the plough to their high calling, there could not seem to be anything degrading in a designation derived from work; and the name of honour apphed to Moses and other righteous men was that of " servant of God,'" The only ground for concern could be, lest occasion might be taken to render work galling and oppressive, or inci- dentaUy subversive of the great principles of the consti tution. (2.) As a check upon this, at the outset a brand was set upon man-stealing ; he who should be found to have kidnapped a soul (meaning thereby man or woman) of the chUdren of Israel, for the purpose of using or selling that soul as a slave, incurred the penalty of death, as a violator ofthe fundamental laws ofthe kingdom.2 (3.) But a man might, under the constraint of circum stances, to save himself and his family from the extre mities of want, become fain to part with his freedom, and bind himself in servitude to another. In such cases, which should never have been but of an exceptional kind, a whole series of prescriptions were given to set bounds to the evil, and secure, during its continuance, the essentials of a brotherly relationship. The service required was in no case to be that of an absolute bondman — or, as the expression hteraUy is, service of a servant (125; non rigorous service, such as might be expected of one into whose condition no higher element entered.3 His relation to Jehovah as the Redeemer of Israel must not be allowed to fall into abeyance. Hence, his general rights and 1 ' Mosaische Recht,' c. 101, sec. 1. 2 Lev. xxi. 17 ; Deut. xxiv. 7. 3 Lev. xxv. 39-43. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 115 privileges as a member of the covenant remained un touched : he could inherit property if it accrued to him, could be redeemed by a kinsman at a fair ransom, was entitled to the rest of the weekly Sabbaths, and to the joy and consolation of the stated festivals.1 Besides, the period of service was limited ; it could not extend beyond six years, after which, in the seventh, came the year of release ; and even then the master was not to let him go empty, but was to furnish him with supphes to help him toward an independent position (Ex. xxi. 2 ; Deut. xv. 12-14).2 So that the relation of a Hebrew bondman to his master did not materiaUy differ from that of one now, who seUs his labour to a particular person, or engages to work to him on definite terms, for a stated period. A certain exception, no doubt, has to be made in respect to the provision concerning his wife and children : if the wife belonged to him when he entered into the bond-service, then both wife and chUdren went out with him ; but if the wife had been given him by the master, wife and chUdren could be claimed by the master. In the latter case, of course, the servant 1 Lev. xxv. 42-52. 2 In respect to the period of release, there is an apparent discrepance in the passages relating to it ; in Ex. xxi. 2, also Deut. xv. 12, the seventh year is fixed definitely as the time of release; while in Lev. xxv. 40, the year of Jubilee is named as the terminating point. In the latter passage, and through out the chapter, the chief subject of discourse is the Jubilee, and it is only as connected with it that the other subject comes into consideration. The natural explanation, therefore, as given by many of our recent writers, is, that in ordi nary circumstances the servitude terminated with the commencement of the seventh year, but when a Jubilee intervened, the bond of servitude, like all other bonds, ceased as a matter of course. This simple explanation renders quite unnecessary Ewald's resort to his theory of earlier and later documents. The seventh year, however, was not the Sabbatical year, but the seventh from the entrance of the servitude — the principle of the arrangement being, that, as after seven days' work there came the day of rest, and after seven year-;' husbandry a year of repose, so after seven years' servitude a return to freedom. 116 • THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. would be at perfect liberty to refuse what was offered; and as it must have been a person of heathen birth that in the case supposed was offered him for wife (for Hebrew maid-servants were, equaUy with the men, entitled to release in the seventh year),1 the proper Israehte could not have comphed with it, unless the woman had ceased in spirit to be a heathen, and he had himself made up his mind to abide in perpetual servitude to his master. The laws respecting marriage involved these two conditions, as in a moral respect binding upon the individual in question ; for temporary marriages, and marriages with unconverted heathens, were ahke forbidden. A man might, however, choose to remain in the position of a bondman, rather than avaU himself of his right to become free ; the supposition of such a case is distinctly made, and it was ordered that he should go through what could not but be regarded as a degrading ceremony. On de claring that he loved his master, his wife and children, and that he would not go out free, his master was to place him before the judges, and in their presence bore his ear through with an awl into the door or door-post.2 The perforating of the ear and fixing it with the awl to the door (as appears from the passage in Deuteronomy to have been the full rite), was undoubtedly intended to signify the servant's personal surrender of the freedom proper to him as an Israehte, that he might attach him self to the authority and interest of the master. By the door, therefore, is most naturally understood the door of the master's house, in which the man and his family now became a kind of fixtures ; but whether the ' for ever ' connected with his obhgation of servitude indicated a strictly life-long continuance, or an unbroken service only till the year of Jubilee, is differently understood, and can- 1 Deut. xv. 12. 2 Ex. xxi. 6 ; Deut. xv. 17. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 1 1 7 not be quite definitely determined — though the natural impression is in favour of the former view. The whole object and bearing of the ceremony were obviously to fix a- sort of stigma on any one who voluntarUy assumed the condition of such prolonged servitude. His claim, how ever, to lenient treatment, and the usual Israelitish privUeges, remained as before. (4.) A still further supposition is made, that, namely, of the daughter of an Israehte — not going into ordinary servitude for the legal term of years, as in Deut. xv. 1 2, in which case the regulations laid down for male servants were in substance applicable here — but being sold (accord ing to a prevailing custom in the East) with the double view of service and betrothal.1 She was, in the circum stances, supposed to go as a maid-servant, namely, to engage actively in domestic work ; and, at the same time, she is represented as standing in a betrothed con dition to her master. If he was satisfied with her, and either himself took her to wife, or gave her to his son in that capacity, then she, of course, became a member of the family and had the rights of a spouse ; but if the con nexion, after being formed, was again broken off, then (besides aU the moral blame that might be incurred in the matter, of which this branch of the law does not treat) the master was obhged to forfeit the money he had paid — the maid could not be re- sold, but was instantly to regain her hberty ; though it may be doubtful if she had the right to sue for a regular divorce. This part of the question, however, belongs rather to the subject of mar riage than to that of servitude. (5.) Servitude, in a stricter sense than that which the preceding regulations contemplate, might be exacted of foreigners. Of the heathen that were round about them, 1 Ex. xxi. 7-11. 118 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. the Israelites might buy persons for bondmen and bond maids, also of the strangers who might be sojourning among them.1 Then, those who were taken captive in war, as a matter of course feU into the hands of the victors, and were reduced to the condition of bondmen.2 The chUdren also, if any should be born to either of the preceding classes, formed a third source of supply. But from the very constitution of the kingdom, which secured a general distribution of the land along with the rights of citizenship, and rendered next to impossible large accu mulations of property, or fields of enterprise that would caU for much servUe labour, there was comparatively little scope or occasion for the growth of this kind of population. The circumstances of the covenant-people presented no temptation to it ; beyond very moderate limits, the presence of such a population must have been a source of trouble and annoyance, rather than of comfort or strength ; and hence, in the historical records, no indication exists of any regular commerce being carried on in this hne, or even of any considerable numbers being held in the condition of bondmen. The Phoenician slave trade is noticed only in connection with what Israel suffered by it, not for anything they gained ;3 and so httle sympathy were they to have with the slave system practised among the nations around them, that a slave flying to them for refuge from his heathen master was not to be dehvered up, but to be aUowed, under Israelitish protection, to fix his abode in whatever city he himself might choose. 4 The strangers or foreigners sometimes men tioned, and especiaUy in the times of David and Solomon, as ready for the execution of servUe work,5 seem rather to have been a kind of serfs, than slaves in the ordinary 1 Lev. xxv. 44, 45. 2 Num. xxxi. 26-35 ; Deut. xx. 14, etc. 3 Mic. i. 9; Ok 20. * Deut. xxiii. 15-17. 5 1 Kings ix. 20; 2 Chron. ii. 16; viii. I Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 119 sense — chiefly the descendants, in aU probability, of the heathen families that remained in the land. Of that class certainly were the Gibeonites, only with a special destination as to the form of service they were taken bound to render.1 From the facts just stated, one is naturaUy led to infer, that bond-service in the strict sense must have been of very limited extent among the covenant people, and that, in so far as it did exist, it must have ever tended to work toward its own extinction. This also is the im pression which the particular statutes on the subject are fitted to convey. As a rule, the persons belonging to the house as bondmen or bondmaids were to be treated as members of the family ; they were to enjoy the Sabbath rest, and partake of the sacrificial meals ;2 even if the priest should have any servants in that position, they were to eat of the consecrated food which fell to the share of the master.3 When they submitted to the rite of cir cumcision — which, according to Babbinical tradition, and, indeed, to the obvious proprieties of things, required their own dehberate consent — as they thereby entered into the bond of the covenant, so they became entitled to eat of the Passover, and, of course, to participate fuUy in aU the privUeges of the covenant. i If the master should smite any of his bondmen with a murderous weapon, so as to cause his death, he was himself hable to the penalty of murder — for smiting to death with intent to kUl is, without exception, in the case ofthe stranger as well as the native Israelite, placed under one condemnation.5 Smit ing only to the effect of destroying a tooth or an eye, was to be foUowed with the freedom ofthe slave.6 But when 1 Jos. ix. 23 ; 2 Sam. xxi. 2 Deut. v. 14, xii. 12, xvi. 11. 3 Lev. xxii. 11. 4 Ex. xii. 44. 5 Ex. xxi. 12 ; Numb. xxxv. 16-18 ; Lev. xxiv. 17-22. 6 Ex. xxi. 26, 27. 120 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. smiting of that description — smiting, namely, with a rod in the way of chastisement, with no intent to kUl — went so far as to produce death, it was to be met by deserved punishment — the atrocity was to be avenged — though it is not said by what particular infliction (Ex. xxi. 20.) l The penalty was apparently left to the discretion of the judges, and would doubtless vary according to the circumstances. But if death did not immediately foUow, if the servant lingered a day or two, no additional penalty was to be imposed ; the delay was to be taken as proof that no fatal result was contemplated by the master, and, in a pecuniary respect, the death of the victim had itself in flicted a heavy mulct.2 Not that, in a moral point of view, this was an adequate compensation for the undue severity he had practised, but that the temporal loss having equaUed the recognised value of the subject, it was deemed inexpedient to go farther in that direction. For the higher bearing of his procedure, he had still to place himself in contact with the revelations respecting sin and atonement. Taken as a whole, the statutes upon the subject of slavery, it is impossible to deny, are largely pervaded by a spirit of nuldness and equity, tolerating rather than properly countenancing and approving of it, and giving to it a very different character, both as to extent and manner of working, from what belonged to it in the nations of heathen antiquity. If brought into comparison, indeed, with the arrangements of modern civilization, one 1 I take here the view which seems the most probable, which is that also of Saalschiitz, Kalisch, CEhler in ' Hertzog,' art. SMaverei, and many others. The smiting to death, in the verse referred to, was only with a rod— not with a heavy or deadly weapon ; and the death, though immediate, was not intentional. The phrase, he shall be avenged or punished, must therefore refer to something less than capital punishment. 2 Ex. xxi. 21. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 121 can reachly point to features in it which, considered by themselves, were not in accordance with the ideal of a weU-ordered commonwealth. But such a comparison would be essentiaUy unfair. For, however high the standard of moral rectitude set up in the Hebrew com monwealth, and in its entireness laid upon the consciences of the people, the commonwealth in its political adminis tration could not move in total isolation from the state of things around it. At various points it necessarily took a certain impress from the age and time ; and from the universal prevalence of slavery among their heathen neighbours, it must often have been impracticable for the people, when seeking the service they needed, to obtain it otherwise than in the form of bond service. But as the persons acquired for the purpose must usuaUy have been brought from heathen districts, they could not pos sibly be placed on a footing with the proper subjects of the Theocracy. Even, however, as strangers in a de pressed condition, they were to be- treated in a kind and considerate manner, as by those who, in their own persons or through their ancestors, had known the heart and experience of a stranger -,1 and aU proper facUities were besides afforded them, and reasonable encouragements held out, to their entering into the bond of the covenant, and merging their condition and prospects with those of the covenant people. If, after all, things were often not ordered as they should have been, who that calmly con siders the actual position of affairs, would venture to affirm that it could have been made better by any statu tory regulations given for authoritative enforcement ? These must hmit themselves to the practically attainable — if they were not to produce other, and perhaps greater, evils than those they were intended to prevent. 1 Ex. xxiii. 9. 122 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV 6. The only remaining class of statutes and judgments calling for consideration here are those relating to the subject of marriage. The fundamental law on the sub ject merely declared, ' Thou shalt not commit adultery;' but, as in all the other precepts of the Decalogue, so here, what should constitute a breach of the command was left to the moral instincts of mankind ; no specific description was given of adultery, nor was a right marriage relation ship more nearly defined. But that marriage, according to its proper ideal, consisted of the life-union of one man and one woman, and that the violation of this union by sexual commerce with another party constituted adultery, was weU enough understood in the earher ages of the world, and especially among the covenant-people. ' The notion of matrimony has in the Old Testament, from the very commencement, been conceived in admirable purity and perfection. Already the wife of Adam is caUed "a help at his side," that is, a companion through hfe, with whom he coalesces into one being' (Gen. ii. 18-24).1 And this being testified of man in his normal state, as he came pure and good from the hand of his Creator, clearly indicated for aU coming time what in a family respect should be his normal condition — as is, indeed, formally stated in the inference drawn from the original fact: ' Therefore shaU a man leave his father and his mother, and shaU cleave to his wife {his wife, the one individual standing to him in that relation), and they shaU be one flesh.' It was a great thing for the covenant-people to have had this view of the marriage relation placed so prominently forward in those sacred records which to gether formed then Thorah, or law. And we see it distinctly reflected, both in the dignity which is thrown around the wife in ancient Scripture, and in the prevalent 1 Kalisch on Exod. xx. 13. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 1 23 feeling in behalf of monogamy as the proper form of matrimonial life. The two, indeed, hang inseparably together ; for wherever polygamy exists, woman falls in the social scale. But in the glimpses afforded us of family life in Israel, the women have much freedom and con sideration accorded to them ;a and those of them especi- aUy who are presented as the more peculiar types of their class, appear in an honourable hght, as the fitting hand maids of their husbands, the rightful mistresses of the house. Such, certainly, was Sarah in relation to Abraham, and Bebekah to Isaac ; and similar examples, ever and anon throughout the history, rise into Anew of married women, who acted with becoming grace and dignity the part that properly belonged to them in the household — as the wife of Manoah, Hannah, Abigail the prudent and courteous spouse of Nabal, the Shunamite woman, who dealt so kindly with Elisha, and others of a hke description. It was from no fancy musings, but from living exemplars such as these, that Solomon drew his noble portraiture, unequaUed in any ancient writing, of the virtuous wife ;2 and pronounced such a wife to be a crown to her husband, and a gift bestowed on him from the Lord.3 So fully also did the lawgiver himself accord with these senti ments, that he aUowed the new married man to remain at home for a year, free from military service and other pubhc burdens, that he might gladden his wife ;4 and in the reverence and affection charged on chUdren towards their parents, the mother ever has her place of honour beside the father.5 In perfect accordance with this regard for woman as the proper handmaid and spouse of man, there is evidence of a prevaihng sense in men's minds in favour of mono- 1 Ex. xv. 20 ; 1 Sam. xviii. 6, 7 ; Ps. lxviii. 25, etc. 2 Prov. xxxi. 10-31. 3 Prov. xii. 4; xix. 14. 4 Deut. xxiv. 5. 6 Ex. xx. 12; xxi. 17, etc. 124 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. gamy as the normal state of things, whUe polygamy carried with it an aspect of disorder and trouble. It was not by accident, but as an indication and omen of its real character, that the latter first made its appearance in the Cainite section of the human famUy, and has its memorial in an address savouring of violence and blood.1 How strongly the mind of Abraham was set against any de parture from the original order, is evident from his reluct ance to think of any one but Sarah as the mother of the seed promised to him — only at last yielding to her advice respecting Hagar, when no other way seemed open to him for obtaining the seed he had been assured of — yet for this also receiving palpable rebukes in providence to mark the course that had been pursued as an improper violation of the Divine order. We see this order beautifully kept by Isaac, though his patience was long tried with the apparently fruitless expectation of a promised seed; no thought of another spouse than Bebekah seems ever to have been entertained by him ; nor did Jacob purpose differently, tiU by deceit in the first instance, then by artful cozening, he was drawn into connexions which brought their recompenses of trouble after them. The sons of Jacob, the patriarchal heads of the covenant- people, are at least not known (with the exception, per haps, of Simeon) to have possessed more at a time than one wife ; such, more certainly, was the case with Moses, as also with Aaron ; and in the rule laid down for the priests, who might be regarded as the pattern-men for Israel, it was ordained that each should take a virgin of his own people for wife2 — purposely contemplating but one such connexion. In the later descriptions also of rightly constituted and happy families, the wife is always spoken of as the one spouse and mother of offspring ; and 1 Gen. iv. 23, 24. 2 Lev. xxiii. 14. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 125 severe denunciations are occasionally uttered against un fair deahng toward her.1 So that, whUe there were unquestionably notorious exceptions, especially among per sons in high places, yet with the great mass of the cove nant-people monogamy must have been the general rule, and the one properly recognised order. Holding this view of the marriage union, the greater part of the statutes bearing on it in the books of Moses present no oufficulty ; their obvious design was to guard its sanctity, and punish with unsparing rigour its de liberate violation. Sexual commerce with another man's wife rendered both parties liable to the penalty of death;2 and if the woman, instead of being actually mar ried, was simply betrothed, the penalty remained the same.3 A man who seduced a girl, and robbed her of her chastity, was obhged to marry her, and pay fifty shekels to her father;4 on the other side, a married woman who was only suspected of having improper intercourse with another, was subjected to a severe and humiliating test of her innocence ;5 and whUe suppositions are made of men having sexual connexion with women, not betrothed or married, and of entering into relationships not consistent with strict monogamy, there is never any pronounced sanction of their conduct, nor is the word concubine {pile- gesh) once named in the Mosaic statutes as a kind of recognised relation, separate from and superadditional to that of wife. The nearest thing to it, perhaps, is in Ex. xxi. 8, where we have the case formerly referred to of a man purchasing a maid-servant, under a pledge or betrothal to take her to wife, or to give her in that capa city to his son. As a maid-servant she was so far in his power, that he could, if he so pleased, break his connexion 1 Ps. xiv., cxxviii. ; Prov. xxxi. ; Mai. ii. 14. 2 Lev. xx. 10 ; Deut. xxii. 22. 3 Deut. xxii. 23. 4 Deut. xxii. 28, 29. 5 Num. v. 126 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. with her, and cease to keep her as a wife. Yet this is spoken of as a moral wrong ; it was ' dealing deceitfully with her ;' and, as already noticed under the statutes about slavery, he lost his purchase-money — the maid regained her freedom — a penalty so far being thus imposed on such capricious behaviour. If, however, he should retain the person so acquired for his wife, and at the same time take another, the first was to be continued in her rights — ' her food, her raiment, and her duty of marriage'1 — as if stUl she alone properly stood in the relation of spouse, and the other was superadded merely for show or fleshly indulgence. But did not this also involve a wrong, as weU as the former mode of treatment ? And was it not an anomaly in legislation, that she should have a certain compensation in the one case and none in the other ? Nay, that whUe the man was bound by the nature of the marriage tie to be as one flesh with her, he should become the same with another person ? Undoubtedly, a certain ground existed for such ques tions ; and the spiritual guides of the community should have made it clear, that men had no constitutional right to act after such a fashion ; that in doing so they violated great moral principles ; and that the guilt and the respon sibility of such procedure were aU their own — the judicial statutes of the commonwealth only not interposing against it by specific enactments and penalties. In its moral bearings, the case was very nearly paraUel with another, which has been even more generaUy excepted against, and by our Lord Himself was aUowed to be justly liable to exception ; that, namely, of a divorce executed against a wife for some cause less than actual infidelity.2 This was the point brought into consideration by the Pharisees; but it is proper to notice — the rather so as the EngHsh 1 Ex. xxi. 10. 2 Deut. xxiv. 1-4. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 127 Bible fails to give a quite correct translation of the original — that it was not the one which formed the direct or formal subject of the statute. Exactly rendered, the passage stands thus : — •' When a man has taken a wife and married her, and it come to pass that she does not find favour in his sight, because he has found something of shame (or nakedness) in her, and he writes for her a biU of divorcement, and gives it into her hand, and sends her out of his house : and she has departed from his house, and gone and become another man's : and the latter husband hates her, and writes for her a biU of divorcement, and gives it into her hand, and sends her forth out of his house, or the latter husband has died that took her to wife : — The first husband that sent her away cannot return to take her for his wife after she has been defiled ; for that were abomination before Jehovah ; and thou shalt not poUute the land which Jehovah thy God gives thee as an inheritance.' Thus read, it wiU be seen that the thing directly forbidden in the passage is simply the return of the divorced woman to be again the wife of the man who had first divorced her ; this would indicate a total looseness in regard to the marriage relationship, and was to be interdicted as an abomination which would utterly poUute the land. There is marked, indeed, a double or pro gressive defilement : the woman was defiled by her com merce with another man after being divorced from her first husband ; and to re-marry her, when so denied, was to aggravate the poUution. AU, however, that goes before this prohibitory part is simple narration : when a man marries a woman, and is displeased with her, and gives her a biU of divorce, and sends her from him, and another man does after the same manner — not as our translators, after Luther and some others, ' then let him 128 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. write her a biU of divorce,' and so on. The words do not properly admit of this rendering ; and on that very point may be said to turn the diversity of view exhibited in the Gospel narrative,1 the one presented by the Phari sees, the other given by our Lord. They asked, ' Why did Moses command (hen-ix«.ro) to give a writing of divorcement, and to put away?' The Lord replied, ' Moses, from respect (iroig) to the hardness of your hearts, suffered you (hiriros-^M u/tft) to put away your wives : ' — not a privilege to be enjoyed, or a duty to be discharged, but a permission or tolerance merely suffered to continue, because of Israel's participation in the evU of the times— their moral unfitness for a more stringent apphcation of the proper rule. The permission in question, so far as the Mosaic legislation was concerned, went no further than not distinctly pronouncing upon the practice, or positively interdicting it. The practice, it is implied, was not unknown ; in aU probability it prevaUed exten sively among the corrupt nations among whom Israel was to dweU (since things greatly worse were of every day occurrence among them) ; and in so far as any might adopt it, the judicial authorities were not empowered to prevent it — that is aU ; but whatever rashness, or con travention of the proper spirit and design of the marriage relation might be involved in it, this lay still with the conscience of the individual ; he was answerable for it. Viewed in respect to the grounds of his supposed pro cedure, there is a certain vagueness in the form of ex pression, which gave rise even in ancient times to very different modes of interpretation. The two chief words in the original ("O^ nv$) certainly form a somewhat peculiar combination — strictly, nakedness of a matter, and as the term for nakedness is very commonly used for what is 1 Matt. xix. 7, 8. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 129 unbecoming or indecent, it may most naturaUy be re garded as indicating something distasteful or offensive in that direction. The two great Jewish schools, those of HUlel and Shammai, were divided in their opinions on the subject ; the school of HUM included in the expres sion everything that might cause dissatisfaction in the husband, even the bad cooking of his victuals,1 while the school of Shammai restricted it to uncleanness in the conjugal sense — defilement of the marriage bed. That something (different, however, something less than this, must have been intended, is evident alone from a com parison of other parts of the Mosaic legislation, which ordained that a woman guilty of adultery should be, not divorced, but put to death. It is also evident from the explanation of our Lord, which ascribed this liberty of divorce to the hardness of the people's hearts, and de clared its inconsistence with the fundamental principle of the marriage union, which admitted of a justifiable dis solution only by the death or the adulterous behaviour of one of the parties. The truth appears to have lain between the two extremes of the Jewish schools referred to ; and something short of actual impurity, yet tending in that direction — something unbecoming, and fitted to create dislike in the mind of the husband, or take off his affec tions from her- — was understood to form, in the case sup posed, an occasion for dismissing a wife. It is also supposed, that if such a step were taken, it would be done in an orderly manner — not by a mere oral renounce ment, as among some Eastern nations, but by a formal writing, which would usually require the employment of a neutral person, and perhaps also the signature of witnesses ; that this writing should be deliberately put into the woman's hand, and that she should thereafter 1 See quotations in Lightfoot and Wetstein, on the passage in Matthew. I -130 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. leave the house and go to another place of abode. These things, requiring some degree of dehberation and time and so far tending to serve as a check on the hasty im pulses of passion, are not directly enjoined (as already said), but presupposed as customary and indispensable parts of the process in question ; and the hberty thereby granted to the woman to aUy herself to another man, coupled with the strict prohibition against a return to her first husband, were evidently intended as additional checks — reasons calling for very serious consideration before the consummation of an act which carried such consequences along with it. StUl, the act could be done; no positive statute, capable of legal enforcement, was issued to prevent it ; and was not the hcence thus granted, however arising, a sign of imperfection ? Beyond doubt it was ; our Lord admits as much, when He accounts for it by the hardness of the people's hearts, But the person who should avaU himself of the licence was not thereby justified — no more than in Christian times a wife, or a husband, who, by wilful abandonment or crirninal behaviour, turns the marriage bond into a nullity. The apostle distinctly states, that a believing woman is not bound by the law of her husband, when he, remaining in unbehef and displeased with her procedure, has forced her into separation ; 1 he holds such a case not to be included in the general law of Christ respecting the 'perpetuity of marriage, except through death or fornica tion ; and, by parity of reason, the same must be held respecting parties, either of whom has become incapable of fulfilling matrimonial obligations, by being imprisoned or banished for life. There is here, at least, an approach to the Old Testament state of things, arising from the same cause, the hardness of the people's hearts ; and for 1 1 Cor. vii. 15. Lect. IV.] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 131 the greater measure of licence, and consequently of prac tical imperfection adhering to the old, the question, in its moral bearings, resolves itself into a wider one — it touches the principle of progression in the Divine government ; for if, in progress of time the light and privUeges granted to men became much increased, should not the practical administration or discipline in God's house receive a cor responding elevation ? It stands to reason that it should ; and hence certain things might be tolerated, in the sense of not being actively condemned, at an earher stage of the Divine dispensations, which should no longer be borne with now ; whUe still the standard of moral duty, abso lutely considered, does not change, but is the same for men of every age. There is the same relative difference, and the same essential agreement, between the church in its present and in its ultimate stage on earth — the period of nullennial glory : things tolerated now, wUl not be then. It is further to be borne in mind, that this, above all other points in the social system, was the one in respect to which Orientals stood at a relative disadvantage, and that feehngs and practices were widely prevalent, which would render stringent regulations of a disciplinary kind worse than inoperative with a certain class of persons. There was comparatively httle freedom of intercourse, prior to marriage, between the sexes, especially among those who were of age. In many cases espousals were made for the young, rather than by them ; multitudes found themselves joined in wedlock who had scarcely ever seen each other — never, at least, mingled in familiar converse ; and often, too, they came from such different classes of society and spheres of hfe, especiaUy when the wife was purchased as a bond-maid, or taken as a captive in war, that it would have been a marvel if estrange ments, jealousies, tempers that repeUed each other rather 132 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. than coalesced into a proper unity of heart and life, did not at times appear as the result. StiU, doubtless, the moral obligation remained, growing out of the essential nature of the marriage relation, and no way invalidated but enforced by the tenor of the Mosaic revelation, that the parties should cleave one to another, and abstain from aU that might tarnish the sanctity of their union, or mar the ends for which it was formed. But in such a state of things to exclude by positive and rigid enactment any possibility of rehef, even for such as did not in their hearts realize that obhgation, could only have tended to produce a recoU in the opposite direction ; it would have led them probably to resort to violent measures to rid themselves of the hated object, or to employ such treat ment as would have made death rather to be desired than life. The general regulations of the judicial code in respect to marriage, as weU as to other points of moment, thus appear to admit of justification, when they are considered with reference to the actual condition of the world. But when particular cases are looked at, as they arose in the subsequent history of the people, things are certainly sometimes met with of which it is difficult to find any adequate explanation : — the case, for example, of Elime- lech, a Levite, and apparently a man of probity, not only married to two wives without any specific reason assigned, but one of these (Hannah) a person of distinguished piety, and the subject of special direction and blessing from Heaven ; much more the case of David, and that of his highly gifted and honoured son Solomon, adding wife to wife, and concubines to wives, without any apparent con sciousness of wrong in the matter — yet aU the while pos sessing the more peculiar endowments of God's Spirit; and though receiving counsels, revelations, sometimes also re- Lect. IV] JUDICIAL STATUTES AND DIRECTIONS. 133 bukes from above, still never directly reproved for depart ing on this point from the right ways of the Lord. It is true, on the other hand, they had no proper warrant fur what they did; they sinned against law — judicial as weU as moral law ; and it is also true, that painful results attended their course, such as might well be deemed practical reproofs. Such considerations do help us a certain way to the solution — we can say no more ; perplexing diffi culties stUl hang around the subject, which cannot mean- whUe be cleared satisfactorily away, only they are difficulties which relate to the practical administration of affairs, rather than to the Divine constitution of the king dom. There are certain things in other departments of which the same might be affirmed. But for aU in the Old Economy that bears on it the explicit sanction of Heaven, though formaUy differing from what is now estabhshed, the principle so finely exhibited by Augustine in his con- tendings with the Manichees is perfectly applicable. Having compared the kingdom of God to a weU-regulated house, in which for wise reasons certain things are per mitted or enjoined at one time, which are prohibited at another, he adds : ' So is it with these persons who are indignant when they hear that something was aUowed to good men in a former age, which is not allowed in this ; and because God commanded one thing to the former, another thing to the latter, for reasons pertaining to the particular time, while each were alike obedient to the same righteousness : — And yet in a single man, and in a single day, and in a single dwelhng, they may see one thing suiting one member, another a different one ; one thing permitted just now, and again after a time pro hibited ; something aUowed or ordered in a certain corner, which elsewhere is fitly forbidden or punished. Bight- eousness is not therefore various and mutable, is it ? But 134 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. the times over which it presides do not proceed in a uniform manner, just because they are times. But men, whose life on earth is short, because they are not able intelligently to harmonize the causes of earher times and of other nations, of which they have not had cognizance, with those wherewith they are familiar — though in one body, or day, or house, they can easUy see what would suit a particular member, particular times, particular offices or persons — take offence at the one, but fall in with the other.'1 III. There yet remains to be noticed the third great division of the Law — namely, the rites and ceremonies which more directly pertained to religion ; or, as it is very commonly designated, the Levitical code of worship and observance. In what are caUed the statutes and judgments, which immediately succeeded the delivery of the ten commandments, there is scarcely any reference made to ordinances of this description. A few words were spoken to the people respecting the kind of altar they should erect,2 implying that sacrifices were to form an essential part of worship ; also respecting the con secration of the first-born for special service to God, the offering of the first-fruits, and the appearance of the males annuaUy at three stated feasts before the Lord; but that was aU. And it was only after the covenant had been formaUy ratified and sealed with blood over 1 Confes. L . III. c. 7. Sic sunt isti qui indignantur, cum audierint illo saeculo licuisse justis aliquid, quod isto non licet justis ; et quia illis aliud praecipit Deus, istis aliud pro temporalibus causis, cum eidem justitia? utriqae serviunt ; cum in uno homine, et in uno die, et in unis sedibus videant aliud alii membro congruere, et aliud jamdudum licuisse, post horam non b'cere; quiddam in illo ungulo permitti aut juberi, quod in isto juste vetetur et vinde- citur, etc. 2 Ex. xx. 24-26. Lect. IV.] THE CEREMONIAL LAW. 135 'the ten words' from Sinai, with those supplementary statutes, that the ritual of the Levitical system, in its more distinctive form, came into existence. From its very place in the history, therefore, it is to be regarded, not as of primary, but only of secondary moment in the constitution of the Divine kingdom in Israel ; not itself the foundation, but a buUding raised on the foundation, and designed, by a wise accommodation to the state of things then present, and by the skilful use of material elements and earthly relations, to secure the proper work ing of what really was fundamental, and render it more certainly productive of the wished for results. The general connexion is this : God had already redeemed Israel for His peculiar people, caUed them to occupy a near relation to Himself, and proclaimed to them tbe great principles of truth and duty which were to regulate their procedure, so that they might be the true witnesses of His glory, and the inheritors of His blessing. And for the purpose of enabling them more readUy to apprehend the nature of this relation, and more distinctly realize the things belonging to it, the Lord instituted a visible bond of fellowship, by planting in the midst of their dweUings a dwelling for Himself, and ordering everything in the structure of the dwelhng, the services to be performed at it, and the access of the people to its courts, after such a manner as to keep up right impressions in their mind of the character of their Divine Head, and of what became them as sojourners with Him in the land that was to be emphatically His own. In such a case, it was indis pensable that aU should be done under the express direc tion of God's hand ; for it was as truly a revelation of His wiU to the members of the covenant as the direct utterances of His mouth ; it must be made and ordered throughout according to the pattern of things presented 136 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. to the view of Moses ; while the people, on their part, were to shew their disposition to faU in with the design, by contributing the materials requisite for the purpose, and fulfilling the offices assigned them.1 The connexion now indicated between the revelation of law in the stricter sense, and the structure and use of the sacred dweUing, comes out very strikingly in the descrip tion given of the tabernacle, which, after mentioning the different kinds of material to be provided, begins first with the ark of the covenant — the repository, as it might equally be caUed, of the Decalogue, since it was merely a chest for containing the tables of the law, and as such was taken for the very seat or throne from which Jehovah manifested His presence and glory.2 It was, therefore, the most sacred piece of furniture belonging to the Tabernacle — the centre from which all relating to men's fellowship with God was to proceed, and to derive its essential character. To break this link of connexion between the ceremonial and the moral, or to invert their relative order as thus impressed from the first on the very framework of the Tabernacle, had been virtually to reject the plan of God, and frustrate the design contem plated in this part of His covenant arrangements. For those who practically ignored the revelation of truth and duty in the Decalogue, there was properly no house of God hi Israel, no local throne, in connexion with which they could hold communion with the hving Head of the Theocracy, and present acceptable worship before Him. And for such as did acknowledge and own that revela tion, there could be only this one. The fundamental truth, that Jehovah the God of Israel is one Lord, before whom no other God can stand, nor even any form of worship be aUowed which might countenance the idea 1 Ex. xxv. 2, 9, 40, etc. 2 Ex. xxv. 21, 22. Lect. IV.] THE CEREMONIAL LAW. 137 of a diversity of nature or will in the supreme object of worship — this must have its expression in the absolute oneness of the place where Jehovah should put His name, and where, in the more peculiar acts of worship, He should be approached by the members of the covenant. The place itself might be different at one time from what it was at another ; it was left, indeed, altogether unde termined at what particular point in the chosen territory, or even within what tribe, the sacred dweUing should have its location. This might change from one period to another ; the dwelhng itself also might, as the event proved, change its exterior form — pass from the humble tent to a gorgeous temple ; but its unity must ever remain intact, so as to exclude the 'entrance of different theo- cratical centres, and thereby prevent what would, in those times, have been its inevitable sequence, the idea of a plurality of gods to be acknowledged and served. When we proceed from the sacred dwelling itself to the institutions and services associated with it, we find only further proofs of the close connexion between the Levitical code and the Decalogue, and of the dependence of the one upon the other. ' The Levitical prescriptions,' says Weber excellently,'1 follow the estabhshment of the covenant and its realization in the indweUing of Jehovah in Israel. They are not conditions, but consequences of the Sinaitic covenant. Aftery Jehovah, in consequence of His covenant, had taken up , His abode in Israel, and Israel must now dweU before Him, it was necessary to appoint the ordinances by which this intercourse should be carried on. Since Israel in itself is impure, and is constantly defiling itself, because its natural hfe stands under the power of sin, it cannot quite directly enter into fellowship with Jehovah ; but what took place at Sinai 1 < Von Zorne Gottes,' p. 143. 138 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. must be ever repeating itself — it must first, in order to meet with Jehovah, undergo a purification. Hence, one department of the ordinances of purification in the Levi tical part of the Law. But even when it has become pure, it still cannot approach Jehovah in any manner it may please, but only as He orders and appoints. It will not, in spite of aU purifications, be so pure, as that it could venture to approach immediately to the Lord. The glory of the Lord enthroned above the cherubim would consume the impure. Therefore must Israel come near to the Lord through priests whom He has Himself chosen ; and stiU not personaUy, but by means of the gifts which ascend in the fire and rise into Jehovah's presence, nor even so without the offerer having been first covered from the fiery glance of the Holy One through the blood of His victim. This is the second part ofthe Levitical law.'1 It would be impossible here, and, besides, is not required for the purpose we have more immediately in view, to go into aU the detaUs which belong to a complete and 1 In nothing is the imperfect and temporary nature of the Levitical economy more distinctly marked than in the appointment of a separate priest hood, which was rather necessitated by circumstances, and superinduced upon the original constitution of the Theocracy, than properly germane to its spirit. The priestly institution sprang out of the weaknesses and defections of the time (Ex. xix. 21-24, xxxii. ; Lev. xvi. ; Num. xvi., etc.), hence was destined to pass away when a higher spiritual elevation was reached by the people of God. And this (as justly remarked by Ewald, Vol. II. p. 185) ' is the finest characteristic of the Old Testament, that even when its original elevated truths suffer through the violence of the times, it still always gives us to recognise the original necessary thought, just because in this community itself the consciousness of it could never be wholly lost. At the last, there still stands prominently out, here and alone, the great gospel of Ex. xix. 5, which was there before any kind of hereditary priesthood, and continues after it, however firmly such a pnest- hood had for long ages rooted itself ; and even while it stood, the circumstance that this priesthood had always to tolerate by its side the freest prophetic function, prevented it from becoming altogether like an Egyptian or a Biahminical one.' Lect. IV.] THE CEREMONIAL LAW. 139 exhaustive treatment of the subject. It will be enough to indicate the leading points relating to it. There is, then, first of aU, in the Levitical code, a teaching element, which leans upon and confirms that of the Decalogue. The grand lesson which it proclaimed through a multitude of rites and ordinances was, the pure, the good have access to God's fellowship and blessing ; the unholy, the wicked are excluded. But who constitute the one class, and who the other ? Here the Levitical code may be said to be sUent — excepting in so far as certain natural and outward things were ingrafted into it as symbols of what, in the ¦ spiritual sphere, is good or evU. But for the things themselves which properly are such, it was necessary to look to the character of God, the Head of the Theocracy, and as such the type of aU who belonged to it — to His character especiaUy as revealed in that law of moral duty, which He took for the foundation of His throne and the centre of His government in Israel. There the great land marks of right and wrong, of holy and unholy in God's sight, were set up ; and in the Levitical code they are presupposed, and men's attention caUed to them, by its manifold prescriptions concerning clean and unclean, defilement and purification. Thus, its divers washings and ever-recurring atonements by blood bespoke existing impurities, which were such because they were at vari ance with the law of righteousness imposed in the Deca logue. The Decalogue had pointed, by the predominantly negative form of its precepts, to the prevaUing tendency in human nature to sin ; and in like manner the Levitical code, by making everything that directly bore on genera tion and birth a source of uncleanness, perpetuaUy re iterated in men's ears the lesson, that corruption cleaved to them, that they were conceived in sin and brought forth in iniquity. The very institution of a separate 140 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. order for immediate approach to God, and performing, in behalf of the community, the more sacred offices of religion, was, as already noticed, a visible sign of actual short comings and transgressions among the people : it was a standing testimony, that they were not holy after the lofty pattern of hohness exhibited in the law of Jehovah's throne. The distinction, also, between clean and unclean in food, while it deprived them of nothing that was required either to gratify the taste or minister nourish ment to the bodily life — granted them, indeed, what was best adapted for both — yet served as a daily monitor in respect to the spiritual dangers that encompassed them, and of the necessity of exercising themselves to a careful choosing between one class of things and another, re minded them of a good that was to be followed, and of an evU to be shunned. And then there is a whole series of defilements springing from contact with what is emphatically the wages of sin — death, or death's livid image, the leprosy, which, wherever it alighted, struck a fatal blight into the organism of nature, and rendered it a certain prey to corruption : — things, the very sight and touch of which formed a call to hunuliation, because carrying with them the mournful evidence, that, while sojourners with God, men still found themselves in the region of corruption and death, not in that brighter and purer region, where life, the hfe that is incorruptible and full of glory, for ever dwells.1 1 The passages bearing on the particular subjects adverted to in the text are contained chiefly in Lev. x.-xv., Numb. xix. For detailed explanations respect ing them, and the specific import of each as briefly indicated in the preceding remarks, see my ' Typology,' B. III. c. 8. Though some of the ordinances may now seem, in their didactic aspect, to be somewhat arbitrary, it would be quite otherwise for those who were accustomed to symbolical institutions ; if sincere and earnest, they would readily pass from the natural to the spiritual, and would find in them all the lesson expressed in regard to the class first mentioned (Lev. xi. 44), that they should be holy as God Himself was holy. Lect. IV] THE CEREMONIAL LAW. 141 Viewed in this light, the law of fleshly ordinances was a great teaching institute — not by itself, but when taken (according to its true intent) as an auxUiary to the law of the two tables. Isolated from these, and placed in an independent position, as having an end of its own to reach, its teaching would have been at variance with the truth of things ; for it would have led men to make account of mere outward distinctions, and rest in corporeal observances. In such a case it would have been the antithesis rather than the complement of the law from Sinai, which gave to the moral element the supreme place, alike in God's character, and in the homage and obedience He requires of His people. But, kept in its proper relation to that law, the Levitical code was for the members of the old covenant an important means of instruction ; it phed them with warnings and admonitions respecting sin, as bringing defilement in the sight of God, and thereby excluding from His fellowship. That such, however, was the real design of this class of Levitical ordinances — that they had merely a subsidiary aim, and derived all their importance and value from the connexion in which they stood with the moral precepts of the Deca logue — is evident from other considerations than those furnished by their own nature and their place in the Mosaic legislation. It is evident, first, from this, that whenever the special judgments of Heaven were denounced against the covenant people, it never was for neglect of those ceremonial observances, but always for palpable breaches of the precepts of the Decalogue ;J evident, again, from this, that whenever the indispensable condi tions of access to God's house and abiding fellowship with His love are set forth, they are made to turn on 1 Jer. vii. 22-31 ; Ezek. viii., xviii. 1-13 ; Hosea iv. 1-3 ; Amos ii. 4-9 ; Micah v., vi. 142 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. conformity to the moral precepts, not to the ceremonial observances ;x evident, yet again and finally, from this, that whenever the ceremonial observances were put in the foreground by the people, as things distinct from, and in lieu of, obedience to the moral precepts, the procedure was denounced as arbitrary, and the service rejected as a mockery.2 Beside the teaching element, however, which belonged to the Levitical institutions, there was another and still more important one, which we may caU their mediating design. Here also they stood in a kind of supplementary relation to the law of the ten commandments, but a rela tion which implied something more than a simple re echoing of their testimony respecting holiness and sin- something, indeed, essentiaUy different. For that law, in revealing the righteous demands of God, from its very nature could make no allowance or provision for the sins and shortcomings by which those demands were dis honoured ; it could but threaten condemnation, and, with its cry of guUt under the throne of God, terrify from. His presence those who might venture to approach. But the Levitical code, with its mediating priesthood, its rites of expiation, and ordinances of cleansing, had for its very object the effecting of a restored communion with God for those who through sin had forfeited their right to it, WhUe it by no means ignored the reahty or the guilt of sin — nay, assumed this as the very ground on which it rested, and so far coincided with the Decalogue — it, at the same time, secured for those who acknowledged their sin and humbled themselves on account of it, a way of recon ciliation and peace with God. The more special means for effecting this was through sacrifice — the blood of slain 1 Ps. xv., xxiv., 1., etc. 2 1 Sam. xv. 22 ; Ps. xl. 7, li. ; Isa. i. 2 ; Micah vi. 8. Lect. IV.] THE CEREMONIAL LAW. 143 victims — the hfe-blood of an irrational creature, itself un conscious of sin, being accepted by God in His character of Redeemer for the life of the sinner. A mode of satis faction no doubt in itself unsatisfactory, since there was no just correspondence between the merely sensuous life of an unthinking animal and the higher life of a rational and responsible being ; in the strict reckoning of justice the one could form no adequate compensation for the other. But in this respect it was not singular ; it was part of a scheme of things which bore throughout the marks of relative imperfection. The sanctuary itself, which was of narrow dimensions and composed of earthly and perishable materials, how poor a representation was it of the dweUing-place of Him who fills heaven and earth with His presence ! And the occasional access of a few ministering priests into the courts of that worldly sanc tuary — an access into its inmost receptacle by one person only, and by him only once a year — how imperfect an image of the behever 's freedom of intercourse with God, and habitual consciousness of His favour and blessing ! Such things might be said to he upon the surface, and could not faU, as we shaU see, to give a specific direction to the minds of the more thoughtful and spiritual wor shippers. But there still was, in the structure of the tabernacle, and the regulated services of its worship, a provisional arrangement of Divine ordination by which transgressors, otherwise excluded, might obtain the forgive ness of their sins, and enjoy the blessings of communion with Heaven. Through this appointed channel God did in very deed dweU with men on earth ; and men, who would have been repeUed with terror by His fiery law, could come nigh to His seat, and in spirit dwell as in the secret of His presence.1 1 For the specific ordinances, I must again refer to my ' Typology,' Vol. II . 144 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. One can easUy see, however, that the very imperfec tions attendant on this state of things required that its working be very carefully guarded. Definite checks and limits must be set to the possibUity of obtaining the blessings of forgiveness. For, had an indefinite hberty been given to make propitiation for sin, and to wash away the stains of its defilement, how certainly would it have degenerated into a corrupt and dangerous license ! The Levitical code would have become the foster-mother of iniquity. The ready access it gave to the means of purification would have encouraged men to proceed on their evU courses, assured that if they should add sin to sin they might also bring victim after victim to expiate their guilt. Therefore, the right and privUege of expia tion were limited to sins of infirmity, or such as spring from the weakness and imperfection of nature in a world abounding with temptation ; whUe sins committed with a high hand, that is, in open and deliberate violation of the great precepts of the Decalogue, were appointed only to judgment, as subversive of the very ends of the Theo cracy.1 So that here, again, the Levitical code of ordi nances leant on the fundamental law of the Decalogue, and did obeisance to its supreme authority. Only they who devoutly recognised this law, and in their conscience strove to walk according to its precepts, had any title to an interest in the provisions sanctioned for the blotting out of transgression. Then, as now, ' to walk in dark ness,' or persistently adhere to the practice of iniquity, was utterly incompatible with having feUowship with God.2 One thing further requires to be noted respecting the Levitical institutions, which is, that while under one aspect they constituted the rights and privUeges of the 1 Lev. iv. 2 ; Num. xv. 22-30. 2 1 John i. 6. Lect. IV.] THE CEREMONIAL LAW. 145 Israelite, under another they added to his obligations of duty. They took the form of law, as well as the Deca logue, and, wilful violators of its prescriptions, were not less amenable to justice than those who were .guilty of gross immorality.1 And the reason is obvious : for these Levitical ordinances of purification bore on them the autho rity of God as weU as those which related to the strictly moral sphere, and to set them at nought was to dishonour God ; it was also to make light of the means He had appointed — the only avaUable means — of having the guilt of transgression covered, which therefore remained unfor- given, yea aggravated, by the despite that was done to the riches of God's mercy. Yet, practically, the difficulty and the danger did not lie much in this particular direction. Though guUt was no doubt frequently incurred by neglect ing the provision's and requirements of the Levitical code, yet this was sure to be preceded and accompanied by the far greater guUt of violating the fundamental precepts of the Decalogue. And, hence, it was always guUt of this latter description which drew down the heaviest judgments. If anything, indeed, has more clearly discovered itself than another, from the whole of this investigation, it is the fundamental character of the Decalogue — its pre eminent and singular place in the Bevelation of Law. This was itself emphaticaUy the law ; and all, besides, which bore that name was but of secondary rank, and derived its proper value and significance from the relation in which it stood to the other. Hence, the prominent regard, as in due time will appear, which, in the use of the term Lata by our Lord and His apostles, was had to the moral precepts of the Decalogue. Hence, also, the groundlessness of the statement, which has been often made by modern writers, that the distinction, with which 1 Lev. vii. 20, xvii. 4, 14 ; Num. ix. 13, K 146 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IV. we are so familiar, between moral and ceremonial, was not so sharply drawn in the Books of Moses, and that pre cepts of both kinds are there often thrown together, as if, in Jewish apprehension, no very material difference existed between them. It is easy to pick out a few quotations which give a plausible support to such a view, But a careful examination of the subject as a whole, and of the relation in which one part stands to another, yields a quite different result. And Mr Maurice does not put it too strongly when he says, ' The distinction between these commandments and the mere statutes of the Jewish people has strongly commended itself to the conscience of modern nations, not because they have denied the latter to have a divine origin, but because they have felt that the same wisdom which adapted a certain class of com mands to the peculiarities of one locahty and age, must intend a different one for another. The ten command ments have no such hmitation. . . . AU the sub sequent legislation, though referred to the same authority, is separated from these. AU the subsequent history was a witness to the Jew, that in the setting up of any god besides the Unseen Dehverer ; in the fancy that there could be any likeness of Him in heaven above, or in the earth beneath, or in the waters under the earth ; in the loss of awe for His name ; in the loss of the distinction between work and rest as the ground of man's life, and as having its archetype in the Divine Being, and as worked by Him into the tissue of the existence of His own people ; in the loss of reverence for parents, for life, for marriage, for property, for character ; and in the covetous feeling which is at the root of these evils, lay the sources of pohtical disunion, and the loss of all per sonal dignity and manliness."1 1 ' Moral and Metaphysical Philosophy,' p. 13. Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 14', LECTUBE V. THE POSITION AND CALLING OF ISRAEL AS PLACED UNDER THE COVENANT OF LAW, WHAT PRECISELY INVOLVED IN IT— FALSE VIEWS ON THE SUBJECT EXPOSED— THE MORAL RESULTS OF THE ECONOMY, ACCORDING AS THE LAW WAS LEGITIMATELY USED OR THE REVERSE. TTAVING now considered the nature of the Law as revealed from Sinai, and the relation in which both the judicial statutes and the Levitical ordinances stood to it, our next line of investigation naturaUy turns on Israel's position under it ; in which respect such ques tions as these press themselves on our regard : How did the being placed under the covenant of law of itself tend to affect the real weU-being of Israel as a people ? or their representative character as the seed of blessing, the types of a redeemed church ? How far did the proper effects of the covenant realize themselves in their history, or others not proper — the result of their own neglect and waywardness — come in their stead ? And did the cove nant, in consequence of the things, whether of the one sort or the other, which transpired during its continuance, undergo any material alterations, or remain essentially the same till the bringing in of the new covenant by the mission and work of Christ ? 1. In entering upon the line of thought to which such questions point, we are struck at the outset with a some what remarkable diversity in the representations of Scrip- 148 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V. ture itself respecting the natural tendency and bearing of the law on those who were subject to it. Coining expressly from Jehovah in the character of Israel's Bedeemer, it cannot be contemplated otherwise than as carrying a benign aspect, and aiming at happy results. Moses extoUed the condition of Israel as on this very account surpassing that of aU other people :- ' What nation is there so great, who hath God so nigh unto them, as the Lord our God is in aU things that we call upon him for ? And what nation is there so great, that hath statutes and judgments so righteous as aU this law, which I set before you this day.'1 The very last recorded utterance of the legislator was a rapturous exclamation over Israel's now enviable condition and joyful prospects : ' Happy art thou, 0 Israel ; who is hke unto thee, 0 people saved by the Lord!'2 And the sentiment is re-echoed under various forms in other parts of ancient Scripture, especiaUy in the Bsalms. Among the great acts of mercy and loving-kindness for which the Lord is praised in Ps. ciii., is the fact that ' He made known His ways unto Moses, His acts unto the children of Israel ;' or, as it is put in another Psalm, ' He shewed His sta tutes and His judgments to Israel ; He hath not dealt so with any nation.'3 And then the law itself, and the blessedness arising from a just acquaintance with its precepts, are celebrated in the very strongest terms : ' The law of the Lord is perfect, converting (quickening) the soul : the testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the simple : the statutes of the Lord are right, rejoicing the heart : the commandment of the Lord is pure, enlighten ing the eyes.'4 '0 how I love thy law ! it is my medita tion all the day. ' ' I wiU never forget thy precepts, for 1 Deut. iv. 7, 8. 2 Deut. xxxiii. 29. 3 Ps. cxlvii. 19, 20. * Ps. xix. 7, 8. Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 149 with them thou hast quickened me ;' and, generally, ' Great peace have they who love thy law, and nothing shaU offend them.'1 But another set of passages appear to point in the very opposite direction ; they represent the law as a source of terror or trouble — a bondage from which it is true liberty to escape : ' The law worketh wrath ; ' 'by the law is the knowledge of sin ; ' ' the strength of sin is the law ;' and referring distinctly to the law in the stricter sense — as indeed these other passages also do — the law engraven in stones — the apostle desig nates it 'the ministration of condemnation and of death.'2 It is clear, on a moment's reflection, that such diverse, antagonistic representations could not have been given of the law in the same respects, or with the same regard to its direct and primary aim. If both ahke were true — as we cannot doubt they were, being ahke found in the volume of inspiration — it must be from the law having been contemplated in one of them from a different point of view, or with regard to different uses and applications of it from what it was in the other. At present, as we have to do with the place of the law in the Old Testa ment economy, it is more especiaUy the happier class of representations which come into consideration ; they may fitly, at least, be viewed as occupying the foreground, whUe the others may come into particular notice after wards. 2. Now, the view which we have seen reason to take of the nature of the law as revealed through Moses, will render it unnecessary to do more than make a passing refer ence to such modes of explanation as would resolve every thing in the covenant with Israel into merely outward and carnal elements — would make the law, as dehvered 1 Ps. cxix. 93, 97, 165. 2 Ro. iii. 20, iv. 15 ; 1 Cor. xv. 56 ; 2 Cor. iii. 7, 9 ; GaL iv. 1-3, v. 1-3. 150 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V. to them at Sinai, a comparatively easy and hghtsome thing — satisfied if it could but secure outward wor shippers of Jehovah, and respectable citizens of the commonwealth. The law, we are told by writers of this class, was one that dealt only 'in negative measures:' ' the precepts were negative that the obedience might be the more possible ;' and he was ' the good man who could not be excused to have done what the law forbade, he who had done the fewest evils.' So Jeremy Taylor,1 and at more length Spencer, in his learned, work on the Laws of the Hebrews, who endeavoured to shew that the one great end of the Decalogue, as weU as of the cere monial law, was to extirpate idolatry, and the fruits that more immediately spring from it.2 Warburton improved on it a httle, by turning the negative respecting idolatry into a positive respecting God ; but that was aU. The primary end of the law (moral and ceremonial ahke) accord ing to him was, ' not to keep the Israelites from idolatry,' but ' to preserve the memory of the one God in an idola trous world tiU the coming of Christ,'3 — a distinction, one might almost say, without a difference, and of use only as a polemical weapon in the hands of its author. Michaehs followed in the same track, and could find nothing in the first part of the Decalogue but a provision for the acknowledgment and worship of one God, in opposition to the idolatries of heathenism, nor in the second — not even as condensed into the positive form of love to one's neighbour as one's-self — but a dry injunction to have respect to one another's civU rights.4 And" to mention no more (though many more might be noticed), we meet, in a comparatively late work, with such asser tions as the foUowing respecting the Old Covenant, which 1 ' On Conscience,' B. II. c. 2, sec. 4; c. 3, sec. 2. 2 L. I. c. 2. 3 ' Leg. of Moses,' B. V. sec. 2. * ' Laws of Moses,' sees. 34, 72. Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 151 had the law of the two tables for its basis, that ' it had nothing whatever to do with any, except with the nation of Israel, and nothing whatever with any mere individual in that nation ; that it was made with the nation coUec- tively, and was entirely temporal ;' that its whole sub stance lay in this, God promised to give the land of Canaan to the nation of Israel, so long, but ' only so long, as the nation collectively acknowledged Jehovah as the one God.' Hence the holiness required was 'quite irre spective of individual righteousness ; ' Israel was stiU the holy nation, whatever sins might be harboured in its bosom, so long as it did not cease from the formal recog nition and worship of Jehovah.1 We appeal from aU such representations to the plain reading of the law itself (as we have endeavoured to give it), looked at, as it should be, in its historical connection and its general bearings. The blinding influence of theory wUl obscure even the clearest hght ; but it is scarcely possible that any unbiassed mind should apply itself earnestly to the subject, and take up with so partial and meagre a view of what, not in one place merely, but in aU Scripture, is made known to us as distinctively God's revelation of law to men. The immediate circumstances that led to it — the special acts and announcements which might be said to form its historical introduction, are alone sufficient to compel a higher estimate of the revelation. The people had just been rescued, it was declared, from Egypt, had been borne by God on eagles' wings, and brought to Himself — for what ? Not simply that they might acknowledge His existence, or preserve His me mory, in the face of surrounding idolatry, but that they might 'obey His voice and keep His covenant,' and so be to Him ' a kingdom of priests and an holy nation.'2 1 Johnstone's ' Israel after the Flesh,' pp. 7, 87. 2 Ex. xix. 4-6. 152 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V, Peculiar nearness to God in position, and, as the proper consequence and result of that, knowing and reflecting His character, . entering into His mind and wUl, striving to be holy as He is holy — this was the end to which all was directed — the purpose, also, for which they stood before God as a separate people, and were gathered around Sinai to hear the law from His mouth : — And if that law had been aught else than a real disclosure of the mind of God as to what he demands of His people toward Him self and toward each other in the vital interests of truth and righteousness, it had been (we need not hesitate to say it) beneath the occasion ; faUing, as it should have done, to present the proper ideal, which it was Israel's calling to endeavour constantly to have realized. The formal acknowledgment, forsooth, of Jehovah as the one true God, and paying due respect to one another's civU rights ! And that, too, chiefly in the general, without any distinct bond of obligation on the individual conscience, quite irrespective of personal righteousness! Was this a thing so important in itself, so well-pleasing in the eyes of the pure and heart-searching Jehovah, that the law requiring it should have been laid as the very foundation of His throne in Israel, and that the period of its promulgation should have formed a marked era in the history of His dispensations among men ? The thought is not for a moment to be entertained. The eternal God could not so abnegate or demean Himself — no more for any temporal purpose than for one directly bearing on the interests of eternity ; for in such a matter nothing is determined by the mere element of duration. He could not, in consistence with His own unchangeable character, either ask or accept what should be other than a fit expression of the homage that is supremely due to Him, and the love that wUhngly yields itself to His require- Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLINC UNDER IT. 15:5 ments.1 This, also, is what a fair examination of the law itself has impressed upon our minds. Were it necessary to say more, we might add, that there is a conclusive historical reason against the view of the law, and the pohty founded on it, to which we have been adverting. According to it, the religion of the Old Covenant had been nothing more than a kind of bald theism, adapted to the circumstances of the time — a sort of natural rehgion, enshrined amid a cumbrous framework of ordinances and political regulations, which partly humoured the semi-heathenish state of the people, and partly kept them off from the more flagrant pagan cor ruptions. Had that, however, been all, the Jews of our Lord's time should have been presented to our view as the best exemplars and most satisfactory results of the Sinaitic covenant. For in what age of its continuance was the doctrine of the unity more strictly adhered to ? or when were the institutions connected with it more generaUy and punctuaUy observed 1 It wiU not do to say, by way of explanation, that in rejecting Jesus they set themselves against the very Head of the Theocracy, and so ran counter to its primary design ; for it was not in that character that He formally appeared and claimed the homage of men, but rather as Himself the living embodiment of its great principles, the culmination of its spiritual aims. It was the practiced oversight of these which constituted the fatal error of those later Jews ; and 1 ' To know and to serve God, that is religion, whether it be with a view to the present life or to the next, and whatever inducements or encouragements He may choose to supply. The greatest rewards of endless felicity sought, or expected, in any other service than His, cannot consecrate that service, nor make it a part of essential religion. In every original right of moral authority, the essence of the obligation, and the virtue of compliance with it, are independent of the kind, or the degree, of the retribution annexed.'— Davison ' On Prophecy,' Dis. IV. 1 54 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V, the theoretical oversight of the same, in any view that may be taken of the covenant of law under which they were placed, must be equally fatal to its acceptance. 2. Belonging almost to the opposite pole of theological sentiment, writers of the Cocceian school have sometimes gone to a different extreme, and have given, if not a false, yet an artificial and perplexing, rather than a plain and Scriptural view of Israel's position under the law. They were themselves embarrassed by the habit of ranging everything pertaining to covenant engagements under one of two heads — the covenant of works, and the cove nant of grace. They differ, however, to some extent in their mode of representation — all, indeed, holding that the ten commandments, in which the covenant of law more peculiarly stood, was for substance the same with the covenant of works; in other words, embodied that perfect rule of rectitude, on conformity to which hung man's original possession of hfe and blessing ; but differ ing as to the precise form or aspect under which they supposed this rule of rectitude to have been presented to Israel in the Sinaitic covenant. Cocceius himself, in his mode of representation, did not differ materially from the view of Calvin, and that generaUy of the Beformed theologians. He held that the Decalogue was not for mally proposed to the Israelites as the covenant of works; that it proceeded from Jehovah as the God and Bedeemer of Israel, implying that He had entered with them into a covenant of grace ; that the covenant of law was given to subserve that covenant of grace, pointing out and enjoining what was necessary to be done, in order that the children of the covenant might see how they should hve, if they were to enjoy its blessings — precisely as the evangelical precepts and exhortations in the New Testament do in subservience to the Gospel. Its language, he thinks, Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLINO UNDER IT. 155 was not, I demand that you do these precepts, and so live (this had been to mock men with impossibUities) ; but, I have caUed you to hfe, and now, laying aside fear, come and hear my voice.1 Indeed, one might say Cocceius leant rather too much to the assinhlation of the law to the form of things in the New Testament Scriptures. Witsius, the more systematic expounder of the Cocceian theology, discriminates more exactly ; he finds in the precepts of the Decalogue the moral elements of the covenant of works, and in the terror and majesty with which they were dehvered, a sort of reduphcation (ingemi- nationem) of the covenant of works; but still they were not proposed in the character of that covenant, as if through obedience to its precepts the people were to attain to life ; they only assumed somewhat of the appear ance of the covenant of works to convince the people of their sinfulness, and drive them out of themselves to look for the hope of salvation in Christ. But with all this it in reahty assumed and was founded upon the covenant of grace already made with Israel — Israel, as partakers in such a covenant of grace, promising to God a sincere observance of the precepts imposed, and God in turn promising to accept and bless such observance, though in itself imperfect.2 A different view, however, came to 1 Animad. de Vet. Test. Quaest. 33; also De Foed., chap. xi. 49-58. 2 De CEcon. Foederum, Lib. IV. chap. iv. sees. 47-54. It is astonishing how Mr Johnstone, if he really had the entire work of Witsius in his hands, could have so grossly misrepresented his views on this subject. He says, p. 3, ' It is the usual, but an utterly unfounded conception of the old covenant, that " it points out the way in which, by means of works, salvation is obtained ;" that " the form of this covenant is, The man which doeth these things shall live by them, and that in it there is a promise of eternal life, consisting in the imme diate fruition of God. " I do not hesitate to say, that there is not the shadow of an authority for this all but universal view of the old covenant.' The authority referred to, and briefly quoted, for this sweeping declaration, is Witsius, De CEcon. Foederum, Lib. I. chap. i. sec. 15. But there Witsius is treating, not of the old covenant properly so called, but of the covenants 156 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V. prevaU pretty generaUy among the English Puritans, who generaUy belonged to the Cocceian school, and found its expression in a book which attained to great popularity, and became the occasion of a prolonged controversy — Fisher's 'Marrow of Modern Divinity' Here it is broadly asserted, and at some length maintained, that the ten commandments were formally dehvered on Mount Sinai as the covenant of works, or as a renewal of the Adamic covenant — not, however, as if the Israelites were expected to fulfil it, and justify themselves by deeds of law — but for this, and no other end, ' that man being thereby con vinced of his weakness, might flee to Christ. So that it was renewed only to help forward and introduce another and a better covenant.'1 And various authors are referred to as having previously adopted the same style of repre sentation (in particular Preston, Pemble, Walker). Boston, who was a more correct theologian, and a more discrimi nating writer, than the author of the ' Marrow,' in his notes to that work admits that the view in question was held by ' some late learned writers,' but gave it only a qualified approval. He conceives that both covenants were delivered on Mount Sinai to the Israelites : ' First, the covenant of grace made with Abraham, contained in the preface, repeated and promulgated there to Israel, to be believed and embraced by faith, that they might be saved; to which were annexed the ten commandments, given by the Mediator Christ, the head of the covenant, as a rule of life to His covenant people. Secondly, the abstractly — namely, of works and grace. It is at a much later part of his treatise that he conies to discuss the old covenant, or covenant of law, and which, as we have said, he holds to have been neither formally a covenant of works nor a covenant of grace. As for the assertion that the view ascribed to Witsius is nearly universal, we can only designate it as for present times a great exaggeration. 1 Part I. chap. ii. Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 157 covenant of works made with Adam, contained in the same ten commands, delivered with thunderings and lightnings, the meaning of which was afterwards cleared by Moses describing the righteousness of the law and the sanction thereof, as the original perfect rule of righteous ness to be obeyed ; and yet they were no more bound thereby to seek righteousness by the law than the young man was by our Saviour's saying to him, If thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments.' Thus, he adds, ' there is no confounding of the two covenants of grace and works. ' x I fear, in saying this, the good man forgot at what period it was in the Divine dispensations that the law was given from Sinai. It was stUl the comparatively dim twihght of revelation, when the plan of God could be seen only in a few broken hnes and provisional arrange ments, which tended to veU, even whUe they disclosed the truth. The men of that age could not so easUy dis tinguish between the two aspects of law here presented, even if they had got some hint of the diversity ; but, as matters actuaUy stood, it could scarcely be said, that the two were ever distinctly before 'them. No one can read 1 Substantially the same representation is given by Colquhoun, ' Law and Grace,' chap. I. sec. 2 ; Beart's 'Eternal Law and Everlasting Gospel;' and, to name no more, in the work of the late Dr R. Gordon, ' Christ in the Old Testament,' Vol. I. p. 385, seq. It is there said, ' The giving of the law was thus a new exhibition of the covenant of works — a declaration of what was necessarily incumbent on men, if they expected to secure for themselves the favour and fellowship of God ;' while, shortly after, it is denied that ' the law was pre scribed to Israel as the covenant of works, so as that their acceptance with God absolutely depended on their fulfilling the condition of that covenant.' This ground of acceptance is referred to the previous exhibition of grace and mercy. What we except to in such a statement is, that it is fitted to create confusion, to embarrass and perplex people's minds. It was adopted by the writers in ques tion very much from the view they took of the passages, Rom. x. 5, Gal. iii. 12, where the righteousness of works is described in language derived from the writings of Moses. But see the exposition on Rom. x. 5, in Supplement. 158 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V. the history of the transaction without being convinced, that in whatever character the law was declared to the Israelites and estabhshed with them as a covenant, it carried with it the bond of a sacred obligation which they were to strive to make good ; and of any other meaning or design, either on God's part in imposing, or on their part in accepting the obhgation, the narrative is entirely sUent. 3. But a class — one can scarcely say of theologians (for the name would be misapplied to persons who in most things make so complete a travesty of Scripture) — a class, however, of very dogmatic writers (the Plymouthists) have recently pushed to its fuU extreme the view of the law just stated as the covenant of works — not, like the later Cocceians, as a kind of side view or secondary aspect which might also be taken of it, but as its direct, formal, and only proper character. ' Law,' we are told by one of them, ' was a distinct and definite dispensation of God, according to which life was promised consequent on obedi ence, and had its whole nature from this, a righteousness characterized by this principle : obedience first, then life therein, righteousness.'1 This is given as the import of ' the reasoning of the apostles ' on the subject ; and another of the party, in his ' Notes on Exodus,' interprets the narrative respecting the giving of the law so as to make it tell in support of the same view. When God, in the nineteenth chapter of Exodus, dehvered to Moses on the mount the tender and touching address, in which He related what He had done for the people, what He now caUed them to be in honour and blessing, and how, in order to maintain and enjoy this, they must be ready to obey His voice and keep His covenant ; and when Moses, after hearing the words, went at God's bidding and 1 Darby ' On the Law,' p. 22. Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 159 reported them to the people, and received for answer, ' AU that the Lord hath spoken we wiU do ' — this, we are told, was a virtual renunciation, on the part of Israel, of their blessed position : ' instead of rejoicing in God's holy promise, they undertook the most presumptuous vow that mortal lips could utter. Nor was this the language of a few vain, self-confident spirits, who presumed to single themselves out from the whole congregation. No, "All the people answered together, and said, All that the Lord hath spoken we wiU do.'"1 And then we are informed, that because of this proud and presumptuous spirit, the Lord immediately gave ' a total alteration to the aspect of things : ' He wrapt Himself up in the cloud of thick darkness, assumed an appearance of terrible majesty, and issued that fiery law, the object of which was to shew them how incompetent they were to fulfil what they had undertaken, to reveal what on their own assumption they ought to be, and place them under the curse for not being it. If this were the correct reading of the matter, why, we naturaUy ask, should God Himself have taken the initia tive in this so-caUed abandonment of the covenant of pro mise ? for it was He who sent Moses to the people with the words, which manifestly sought to evoke an affirma tive reply. Why, after such a reply was returned, did it call forth no formal rebuke, if so be it displayed an in tolerable arrogancy and presumption ? and the reason, the only reason, assigned for the Lord's declared intention to appear presently in a thick cloud, why should this have been simply that the people might hear His voice, and beheve Moses for ever ?2 Why, also, at the rehearsal of the transactions in the book of Deuteronomy, did God say, ' The people had weU said all they had spoken,' and 1 ' Notes on Exodus,' by A. M., p. 232. 2 Ex. xix. 9. 160 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V. only further breathed the wish, ' 0 that there were such an heart in them, that they would fear me, and keep all my commandments always, that it might be weU with them and with their chUdren for ever ? ' 1 Why, above all, if the case were as now represented, should the formalities of a covenant transaction have been gone through in the name of God over the words uttered by Him and responded to by the people — based, as it must in that case have been, on what were known on the one side to be impos sible conditions, and on the other palpable delusions and lies ? And why, after aU, should Israel not the less, but the more rather, have been pronounced most exalted hi' privilege, peculiarly destined to honour and blessing ?.2 Nothing, surely, can be more fitted to shake our confi dence in the transparent simplicity and faithfulness of God's recorded dealings with men, than to be taught, as by a look from behind the scenes, that what wears the aspect of a solemn transaction, was in reahty but a formal display or an empty mockery. And such, beyond all reasonable doubt, would be the effect with the great majority of minds, if the mode of representation before us should come to be accepted as valid. 4. But it rests upon no solid ground, and has more the character of an interpolation thrust into the sacred record than a fair and natural interpretation of its contents. The revelation of law from Sinai did not come forth in independence, as if it were to lay the foundation of some- ' thing altogether new in men's experience ; nor did it proceed from God in His character as the God of nature, exercising His right to impose commands of service on the consciences of His creatures, which with no other helps and endowments than those of nature, they were required with urifailing rectitude to fulfil ; — not, therefore, when 1 Deut. v. 28, 29. 2 Ex. xxiii. 27-29 ; Deut. vi. xxxiii. Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 161 when made to take the form of a covenant, was it with the view of exacting what must be given as the prior and indispensable conditions of life and joy ? No, the history of Israel knows nothing of law except in connection with promise and blessing.1 It was as the Bedeemer of Israel that God spake the words — as in a special sense Israel's God (' I am Jehovah thy God') — a relation which, we have our Lord's exphcit testimony for asserting, carries in its bosom the dowry of life eternal ;2 so that grace here also took precedence of law, life of righteousness ; and the covenant of law, assuming and rooting itself in the prior covenant of grace, only came to shut the heirs of promise up to that course of dutiful obedience toward God, and brotherly kindness toward each other, by which alone they could accomplish the higher ends of their call ing. Inform merely was there anything new in this, not in principle. For what else was involved in the command given to Abraham, at the estabhshment of the covenant of promise, to have it sealed with the ordinance of circum cision — the symbol of a sanctified nature and a holy life ? Nay, even before that, the same thing in effect was done, when the Lord appeared to Abraham and said, ' I am the Almighty God, walk before me and be thou perfect,'3 — a word which (as Cocceius justly observes) 4 was comprehen sive of aU true service and righteous behaviour. But an advance was made by the entrance of the law over such preceding caUs and appointments, and it was this— the obhgation to rectitude of life resting upon the heirs of promise was now thrown into a categorical and imperative form,. embracing the entire round of moral and rehgious duty ; yet, not that they might by the observance of this work themselves into a blissful relation to God, but that, 1 Harless, ' Ethik.,' sec. 13. 2 Luke xx. 37, 38. 3 Q.eili xvjj_ i. 4 De Foed,, c. xi. sec. 338. 162 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V as already standing in such a relation, they might walk worthy of it, and become filled with the fruits of righteous ness, which alone could either prove the reahty of their interest in God, or fulfil the calling they had received from Him. 5. It is true, the people who entered into the bond of the covenant, as thus proposed, could not of themselves keep the precepts of the law ; and the shameful back sliding which took place so shortly after they had for- maUy undertaken to do aU that was commanded, but too plainly shewed how little they yet understood either the height of their obhgations, or the degree of moral strength that would be required to meet them. It was but gra dually, and through a succession of painful and trying experiences, that the truth in this respect could work itself into their minds. The law undoubtedly was ex ceeding broad. In its matter, that is, in the reach and compass of its requirements, it did (as the writers formerly referred to maintained) comprise the sum of moral excel lence — the full measure of goodness that man as man is bound to yield to God and his fellow-men. It was impossible that God, in His formal revelation of law to His people, could propound less as the aim of their spirit ual endeavours ; for conformity to His mind and will, to be made holy or good after the type of that which He Himself is, was the ultimate design contemplated in His covenant arrangements. But in these arrangements He stood also pledged to His people as the author of life and blessing ; and that mercy and loving-kindness which prompted Him so to interpose in their behalf, and which (as if to prevent misapprehension) He embodied even in His revelation of law, could not possibly be wanting, if earnestly sought for the ministration of such help as might be needed to enable them to give, though not a Lect. V] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 163 faultless, yet a hearty and steadfast obedience. Was not the whole tabernacle service, springing from the covenant of Sinai as its centre, and ever circling around it, a stand ing and palpable proof of this ? Through the rites and ordinances of that service, access continually lay open for them to God, as their ever-present guardian and strength ; there the incense of prayer was perpetually ascending to draw down supphes of help on the needy : and when consciousness of sin clouded their interest in God, and troubled them with apprehensions of deserved wrath, there was the blood of atonement ready to blot out their guilt, and quicken them, under a fresh sense of forgiveness, to run the way of God's commandments. Thus viewed, every thing is in its proper place ; and the covenant of law, instead of coming to supersede the earlier covenant of promise, was introduced merely as an handmaid to minister to its design, and help forward the moral aims it sought to promote. 6. If now we turn to the writings of the Old Covenant, we shah find the evidence they furnish in perfect accord ance with the view just given ; only, we must take it under two divisions — the one as connected with the sincere members of the covenant, who made an honest, a legitimate use of the things belonging to it ; the other with such as made an illegitimate use of them, whose hearts were not right with God, and who only incidentaUy, and as it were by contraries, became witnesses to the truth. We shaU look successively at both, considering each under a threefold aspect — with reference to God, to sin and holiness, and to salvation. 7. We look, then, in the first instance, to those who may be regarded as the more proper representatives of the Old Covenant ; and to these, primarily, in respect to what concerns their relation to God — His being and 164 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V. character. It was certainly not, as we have had occasion already to state, the sole design of the moral law, or even of the first table of the law, to preserve the belief in one personal God, as opposed to the polytheism of the ancient world ; but this was, unquestionably, a very pro minent and fundamental part of the design. The tendency in those remote times was aU in the opposite direction. Polytheism, the offspring of guUt and terror, leading to the deification and worship of the powers of nature under the different aspects in which they present themselves to the natural mind, set in hke a mighty flood, and swept over the earth with an aU-subduing force. The very name of religion came to be identified, in the different countries of the world, with the adoration of these false gods ; and as civilization and refinement advanced, it became associated with all that was imposing in architec ture, beautiful in art, joyous and attractive in pubhc life. There was just one region of the earth, one httle terri tory, within which for many an age this wide-wasting moral pestilence was withstood — not even there without sharp contendings and struggles, maintained sometimes against fearful odds ; yet the truth held its place, the moral barrier raised in defence of it by the Decalogue preserved the better portion of the covenant-people from the dangers which in this respect beset them — preserved them in the knowledge and belief of one God, as the sovereign Lord and moral Governor of the world. So deeply did this great truth, from the prominence given to it in the Old Covenant, and the awful sanctions there thrown around it, strike its roots into the hearts and consciences of the people, that it was not only handed down through successive ages in the face of every adverse influence, but made itself practically known as a principle of commanding power and ennobling influence. Of this Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 165 the writings of the Old Testament are a varied and pro longed witness. These writings were indited by men of very different grades of intellect and feeling, composed in circumstances, too, and at periods, widely remote from each other ; yet they are all pervaded by one spirit ; they exhibit a profound behef in the existence of one God, as the moral Governor of the world, and in His right— His sole and indefeasible right — to the homage and obedience of men. It is the rehgious view of the world, of the events of life and the interests of mankind, — the relation in which these severaUy stand to the one hving God — which is con- tinuaUy presented in them, and stamps them with a quite peculiar character and a permanent value. What has antiquity transmitted to us that in this respect may be compared to them ? We have, doubtless, much to learn from the hterature of Greece and Borne, as regards the history of kingdoms, the development and portraiture of character, the arts and refinements of the natural life ; but it is to the writings which enshrined the principles and breathed the spirit of the Divine law, that the nations of the world are indebted for that knowledge of God, which is the foundation at once of true religion and of sound morality.1 Look at the matter for a moment in its concrete form. See the mighty difference which appears between Hebrew monotheism and the polytheism of heathendom, even in its better phases, on. that memorable occasion, in the closing period of the old economy, when the extremes of both might be said to meet — the one as represented by the polished senators of Athens, the other by Paul of Tarsus. There cannot weU be conceived a bolder, and, moraUy, a more sublime attitude, than was presented by this man of God when, addressing the supreme councU 1 See Luthardt's ' Fundamental Truths of Christianity,' Lecture VIII. 166 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V. of the. city on Mars' hill, he assailed the idolatry of Greece in the very metropolis of its dominion, and in the presence of its most wonderful creations. On that elevated plat form of religion and art, he had immediately in front of him the Acropolis, adorned with an entire series of statues and temples : — among others, the Propylaea, one of the most expensive and beautiful works of Athenian archi tecture, with its temple and bronze statue of Minerva, under the name of Nike" Apteros (wingless victory) ; the Erectheium, the most revered of aU the sanctuaries of Athens, containing, as it did, the most ancient statue of their patron goddess, which was supposed to have fallen down from heaven, and the sacred ohve tree which she was beheved to have caUed forth from the earth in her contest with Neptune for the guardianship of the city ; and, towering above aU, the Parthenon, the most perfect structure of ancient heathendom, with its gold and ivory statue of Minerva, the masterpiece of Phidias ; and sculp tures besides of such exquisite workmanship, that the mutilated remains of them have been the admiration of the world, and, when made accessible in recent times to the studious of other lands, served to give a fresh impulse and higher style to the cultivation of modern art :— Think of aU this, and then think of Paul of Tarsus, an unknown and sohtary stranger, a barbarian, a Jew, standing there, and telling his Athenian audience, in the midst of these consecrated glories, that the Godhead could not be hkened to objects graven by art or man's device, nor dweU in temples made with hands ; and that out of the whole amphitheatre of their shrines and temples he had been able to discover only one thing which pro claimed a truth, and that remarkable for the ignorance it confessed, rather than the knowledge it revealed — an altar to the Unknown God ; adding, as from his own Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 167 higher vantage-ground, ' Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, Him declare I unto you.' 8. Here, then, was a great result accomplished in the case of those who in a becoming spirit submitted them selves to the bond of the Sinaitic covenant ; in the most fundamental point of religion they became the hghts of the world, the chosen witnesses of Heaven. And such also they were in a closely related point : their convictions in regard to holiness and sin. The polytheism of the heathen world wrought with disastrous effect here ; for losing sight of the one great source and pattern of moral exceUence, and making to themselves gods after then- own hkeness, men's notions of hohness became sadly deranged, and their convictions of sin were consequently irregular and superficial. Even the more thoughtful class of minds — those who sought to work themselves free from popular delusions, and to be guided only by the dictates of wisdom — never attained, even in concep tion, to the proper measure : the want of right views of sin cleaves as a fundamental defect to aU ancient philo sophy. But Israel's knowledge of the character and law of God, as it placed them in a different position spirituaUy, so it produced different results in experience. How was God Himself commonly present to their apprehensions ? Pre-eminently as the Holy One of Israel, loving righte ousness, and hating iniquity.1 Or, how did their writers of devotion portray the true worshipper of Jehovah, the man who had a right to draw near and abide with Him, as a dweUer in His house ? It was the man who had entered into the spirit of the Decalogue — the man of clean hands and a pure heart, who had not lifted up his soul to vanity, nor sworn deceitfully — the man who had been wont to walk uprightly, work righteousness, speak 1 Deut. xxxiii. 8; Ps. v. 4, xiv. 7; Isa. i. 4; Heb. i. 12, 13, etc. 168 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect, V, the truth in his heart, exercise himself, in short, to all suitable manifestations of love to God and man — he alone was the person to ascend the hUl of God, and worship and serve before Him.1 But, then, who had actuaUy done so ? In whom was the ideal properly realized ? Such ques tions could not but arise in thoughtful bosoms, and lead to both profound convictions of sin and a trembhng awe on the spirit when venturing into the presence of God. Hence the language of penitence, the cry of guilt with which we are so familiar in Old Testament Scripture : iniquity is felt cleaving to men as a girdle, yea, entering as a virulent poison into their natures, breaking out con tinually into unhaUowed tempers, marring the perfection of things that were outwardly correct, and taking away all hope of justification or acceptance with God, on the ground of personal conformity to His requirements.2 Ahve to the fact of an infinitely perfect God, Israel was also, and on that very account, alive to painful misgiv ings and fears of guilt ; the humiliating truth comes forcibly out in its history, that by the law is the know ledge of sin ; and, unlike aU other nations of- antiquity, its one most solemn service throughout the year was that of the day of atonement — the day for bringing to remem brance aU its transgressions and aU its sins, that they might be blotted out. 9. Had there been nothing more than law in the Old Covenant, there had also been nothing further in Israel's 1 Ps. iv. 3, xv., xxiv. 3-6, xxvi., etc. It cannot be said of these, and many similar passages in the Psalms, that they indicate an advanced state of things, higher views of goodness and acceptable worship, than those sanctioned at the institution of the tabernacle service. For it belonged to Moses, as the mediator of the Old Covenant, to settle all that pertained to its worship ; no one, during its continuance, had any warrant to prescribe new conditions to the worshipper; nor indeed was this done in the passages quoted, for they evidently lean on the terms of the Decalogue. 2 Ps. xix. 12, 13, xxxii. 5, li. 5, cxliii. 2 ; Isa. lxiv. 6 ; Job xv. 16, etc. Lect. V] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 169 experience, except the penalties that were the just desert of sin. But with the true members of the covenant another thing invariably appears — a fleeing to God aw the Bedeemer from sin, the Healer of Israel — or a fall ing back from the covenant of law on the covenant of grace and promise out of which it sprung. Take as an example the rich and varied record of a behever's ex perience contained in the 119th Psalm. The theme of discourse there, from begirining to end, is the law of God — its exceUence, its breadth and fulness, its suitableness to men's condition, the blessedness of being conformed to its requirements, and the earnest longings of the pious heart after aU that properly belongs to it : — but things of this sort perpetuaUy alternate with confessions of backshdings and sins, fervent cries for pardoning mercy and restoring grace, and fresh resolutions formed in dependence on Divine aid to resist the evil, and strive after higher attainments in the righteousness it enjoins. And so elsewhere ; the consciousness of sin and moral weakness ever drove the soul to God for dehverance and help ; and especiaUy to the use of that gracious provi sion made through the rite of sacrifice for expiating the guUt of sin and restoring peace to the troubled con science. But then this present dehverance bore on it such marks of imperfection as might weU seem to call for another and more perfect arrangement ; since both the means of reconciliation were inferior (the blood of bulls and goats), and the measure of it also, even as things then stood, was incomplete ; for the reconcUed were still not permitted to have direct and personal access into the presence-chamber of Jehovah — they were permitted only to frequent the courts of His house. The law, therefore, awakeriing a sense of guilt and alienation which could not then be perfectly removed, creating 1 70 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V. wants and desires it but partiaUy satisfied, whUe it could not faU to be productive of fear, was also weU fitted to raise expectations in the bosom of the worshipper of some better things to come, and dispose him to listen to the intimations concerning them which it was the part of prophecy to utter. And in proportion as men of humble and earnest faith acted on the hints thus given, they would, in answer to believing prayer and pious medita tion, understand that, however the existing provisions of mercy were to be appreciated, there was a sense also in which they might be disparaged ; x that they were indeed ' God's treasure-house of mysteries,' wonderful in themselves, but wonderful and precious most of aU for the hidden reference they bore to realities which were not yet disclosed, and into which the eye of faith naturaUy desired to look.2 1 As in the following passages : Ps. xl. 6, 1. 7-14, li. 16 ; Hos. vi. 6. 2 See Davison 'On Prophecy,' p. 143, who, after referring to the obvious imperfections in the religion of the Old Covenant, says, ' The action of the moral and ceremonial law combined, I conclude to have been such as would produce, in reasonable and serious minds, that temper which is itself eminently Christian in its principle, viz., a sense of demerit in transgression ; a willing ness to accept a better atonement adequate to the needs of the conscience, if God should provide it, and a desire after inward purity which bodily lustration might represent but could not supply ; in short, that temper which David has confessed and described when he rejects his reliance upon the legal rites : For thou desirest not sacrifice, else would I give it thee, etc. (Ps. li.).' At the same time, considering the provision actually made under the law for sin, and the expectations raised concerning something better to come, it is clear that the fear spoken of in connection with it could not be, with the true members of the covenant, properly slavish fear ; for in their case the native effect of the law was always checked by the prayer and hope which grew out of the cove nant of promise. It was only that in a more intense degree, which in a certain degree is still experienced in serious and thoughtful minds under the GospeL And in so far as the law then, or at any time, might be found to work wrath and despair, this, as justly remarked by Harless ('Ethik,' p. 161), 'is the guilt of men who do not rightly understand, or who misuse the law. For, if the law were understood, or rather the God who gave the law, then it would be known that the same God, who in the law threatens death, does not wish the death of the sinner.' Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 171 Such, briefly, is the evidence furnished by one portion of the covenant-people, those who constituted the true Israel, and who used the covenant of law, as it was in tended, in due subservience to the prior covenant of grace. Even with the imperfections cleaving to the Divine plan, as one of a merely provisional nature, and corresponding imperfections in the spiritual results pro duced by it, we may yet ask if there was not, as regards that portion of the people, fruit that might well be deemed worthy of God ? Where, in those ancient times, did hfe exhibit so many of the purer graces and more solid virtues ? Or where, on the side of truth and right eousness, were such perUs braved, and such heroic deeds performed 1 There alone were the claims of truth and righteousness even known in such a manner as to reach the depths of conscience, and bring into proper play the nobler feelings, desires, and aspirations of the heart. It is to Israel alone, of aU the nations of antiquity, that we must turn alike for the more meek and lovely, and for the more stirring examples of moral excellence. Sancti fied homes, which possessed the hght, and were shone upon by the favour of Heaven ; lives of patient endurance and suffering, or of strong wresthng for the rights of con science, and the privUege of yielding to the behests of duty ; manifestations of zeal and love in behalf of the higher interests of mankind, such as could scorn aU inferior considerations of flesh and blood, and even rise at times in ' the elected saints' to such a noble elevation, that they ' have wished themselves razed out of the book of hfe, in an ecstasy of charity, and feeling of infinite comrrfunion' (Bacon) : for refreshing sights and inspiring exhibitions hke these, we must repair to the annals of that chosen seed, who were trained to the knowledge of God, and moulded by the laws and institutions of His 172 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V. kingdom. Must we not, in consideration of them, re echo the saying of Moses, ' 0 Israel, what people was like unto thee ! — a people saved by the Lord I'1 10. But, unfortunately, there is a darker side to the pic ture. There was another, and, for the most part, a larger and more influential portion of the covenant-people, who acted very differently, who either openly resUed from the yoke of the law, or perverted it to a wrong purpose, and in whom also, though after another fashion, the truth found a -remarkable verification. In this class, the most prominent thing — that which was always the first to discover itself, was a restive and reluctant spirit, fretting against the demands of the law, often even against that fundamental part of them, which might be said to involve all the rest — the devout acknowledgment and pure worship of Jehovah. With this class, the prevailing tendency to idolatry in the ancient world had attrac tions which they were unable to resist. Tike so many around them, in part also among them, they wished a less exacting, a more sensuous and more easUy accessible mode of worship, than that which was enjoined in the law and connected with the tabernacle ; and so idola trous sanctuaries in various locahties, with their ac companying rites of wiU- worship, were formed : these generaUy first, and then, as a natural consequence, alto gether false deities, local or foreign, came to take the place of Jehovah. There was a strong tide from without bearing in this direction ; it was the spirit of the age, which human nature is ever ready to faU in with ; but the real ground of the defection, and that which rendered the apostatizing disposition a kind of chronic disease in Israel, lay in the affinity between those corrupt idolatries and the natural inclinations of the heart. Living in 1 See ' Typology,' Vol. II. p. 491. Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 1 73 Gospel times, we are wont to speak ofthe carnal and ritual istic nature ofthe Old Testament worship ; but underneath it all there was a spiritual element, which was distasteful to the merely natural mind, and the reverse of which was found in the showy and corrupt rites of heathenism. These fostered and gratified the sinful desires of the heart, whUe the worship of Jehovah repressed and con demned them : this was the real secret of that inveterate drawing in the one direction, and strong antipathy in the other, which were perpetuaUy breaking forth in the his tory of Israel, and turned it, we may say, into a great battle-ground for the very existence of true rehgion. In its essence, it was the conflict of human corruption with the wiU, the authority, and the actual being of God ; and, therefore, it never faded to draw down those rebukes in providence, by which God vindicated the honour of His name, and made the backshdings of His people to reprove them. Viewed in this hght, the history of Israel, how ever melancholy in one respect, is instructive and even consolatory in another : it shewed how every thing for Israel, in evil or in good, turned on the relation in which they stood to the living God, as the object of faith and worship — how inexcusable, as weU as foohsh, they were in hardening their hearts against His ways, and preferring the transitory pleasures of sin to the abiding recompenses of His service — and how, in spite of all manifestations of foUy, and combinations of human power and wisdom against the truth of God, that truth stUl prevaUed, and they who stood by it, the godly seed, though comparatively few, proved the real strength or substance ofthe nation.1 11. There was, however, another form of evU which manifested itself in this portion of the covenant-people, which latterly became a very prevalent form, and which so 1 Isa. vi." 13. 1 74 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V. far differed from the other, that it could consist with an outward adherence to the worship of Jehovah, nay, with apparent zeal for that worship, whUe the great ends of the covenant were trampled under foot. The failure here lay in false views respecting holiness and sin, neces sarily leading also to an utterly false position in regard to salvation. Instead of viewing the institutions and ser vices connected with the tabernacle — the ceremonial part of the law — as the complement merely of the Sinaitic tables, intended to help out their design and provide the means of escape from their just condemnation of sin, the persons in question exalted it to the first place, and, how ever they might stand related to ' the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy and faith,' thought all in a manner accomplished, if they kept the ordinances and presented the appointed offerings. Many sharp reproofs and severe denunciations are pronounced against this mode of procedure, and those who pursued it, in the writings of the Old Testament, especiaUy the prophets. Asaph asks such persons in his day, asks them indignantly in the name of God, what they had to do with declaring God's statutes, or going about the things of His covenant, since they were full of backbiting and deceit, taking part with thieves and adulterers ?1 Isaiah is still more severe in his language ; he finds such characters, after a period of much backshding and rebuke, professing great concern for the interests of religion, dUigently frequenting the courts of God's house, heaping sacrifices upon the altar, and stretching out their hands in prayer, whUe oppression and iniquity were in their dwelhngs, and their hands were even stained with blood. In such a case — so fla grantly at variance with the fundamental precepts and obligations of the covenant — what right, the prophet 1 Psalm l. Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 175 demands, had they to tread the courts of God's house or take part in its services ? Who required it ? There was no sincerity, he teUs them, in what they did ; then altar- gifts were but lying offerings j1 and their whole service an abomination in the sight of the Holy One.2 Jeremiah, in like manner, points out the inexpressible hardihood and foUy of men trusting to the temple and its services for a blessing, who by their ungodly and wicked hves had turned it into a resort of evU-doers, a den even of robbers (vii.) ; so also Ezekiel (xviii., xxxiii.), and some of the other prophets. By and by, however, a phase of things entered, although not tiU after the return from Babylon, and of which we have no very exact portraiture in Old Testament times ; we see the beginnings of it merely in the writings of Malachi. The fires of Divine judgment had now at last purged out from among the people the more heinous and abominable forms of transgression ; monotheism had come to be rigidly maintained ; and from being neglecters of the law, they passed, many of them, in a formal respect into the opposite extreme — the extreme, namely, of making the law, in a manner, every thing for life and blessing — more than it was ever intended to be, or in reality could be, consistently with the moral character of God and the actual condition of men. So the feeling continued and grew, and meets us in full efflorescence among the more prominent religionists of the Gospel era. And there is not, perhaps, a more remarkable example to be found in history than then case affords of that form of deceitfulness of the human heart, by which it can pass from the extreme of dislike to the law and service of God, to the extreme of outward regard and 1 So the expression should be rendered in Isa. i. 13, not merely ' vain oblations.' 2 See also ch. xxix. 13, lviii., lix. 1 76 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V. honour ; and yet retain, in the one extreme as well as the other, the ungodly frame of mind, which is opposed to their essential character and aim. It is this latter form of the evU that has most of interest for us, as it comes prominently into view in New Testa ment Scripture. Its fundamental error, as I have said, lay in isolating the covenant of law, taking it apart from the prior covenant of promise, as if it was alone sufficient for men — and not only so, but fading to distinguish between what was of prime, and what of only secondary moment in the law, throwing the ceremonial into precisely the same category with the moral. From this grievous mistake (which some would still most unaccountably con found with proper Judaism) three fatal results of a practical kind inevitably foUowed. First, they shut their, eyes upon the depth and spirituahty of the law's require ments. They were obliged to do so ; for had they per ceived these, the idea must of necessity have vanished from their minds, that they could attain to righteousness on a merely legal footing ; they could never have imagined that ' touching the righteousness which is in the law they were blameless.' l Thoughts of this description could only enter when the law was stript of its proper import as the revelation and sum of moral duty, and reduced to an outward discipline of specific rules of conduct. When so reduced, it was quite possible for any one to feel that the law's requirements lay within the compass of the practi- 1 Phil, iii 6. That Paul speaks thus of his earlier life from a Pharisaic point of view, is evident from the connection ; as he is avowedly recounting the things which had reference to the flesh (v. 4), and which gave him a merely external ground of glorying. It is further evident, from what he says of his relation to the law elsewhere, when he came to a proper understanding of its real import (Rom. vii.) ; and also from the utter want of satisfaction, which even here he expresses, of his former life after the light of truth dawned upon his mind (v. 7, 8). Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDER IT. 177 cable ; the task-work of services might with laudable regularity be gone through ; and the feeling of self-right eousness, so far from being repressed, would only be the more fostered and sustained by the number and variety of the materials it had to work upon. A second result was the servUe spirit in which aU in such a case came to be done. The covenant of Sinai — taken by itself, simply as the revelation of law — ' genders unto bondage ; ' x if it begets chUdren, they wiU inevitably be chUdren of a carnal and slavish, not of a free, loving, and devoted spirit. It cannot be otherwise. When any one submits to a yoke of service for which he has no natural inclination, for the sake merely of certain benefits he expects to reap from it, the heart can not but be conscious of a burden ; it does what is exacted, not from any high motives or generous impulses, but simply because necessary to the end in view — it must earn its wages. I need hardly say, that it was much in this spirit the Scribes and Pharisees of our Lord's time acted — they were hirehngs,' and not sons. And the explanation of their case was what we have just indicated — they put the law out of its proper place, and apphed themselves to get through a formal obedience to its requirements, what it was altogether incapable of giving — what, if got at all by sinful men, must come through the channel of Divine grace and loving-kindness. It is the covenant of promise alone, not the covenant of law, that is the true mother of chUdren in the kingdom of God. Finally, as a stiU further result, the persons who thus erred concerning the law's place and spirit, could neither rightly look for the Messiah, nor, when He came, be at all prepared to receive Him. They fancied they had already of themselves attained to righteousness, and were httle disposed to think they must be indebted for it to Christ. 1 Gal. iv. 24. M 178 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. V. They naturaUy regarded it as foul scorn to be put virtually on a level with those who had been without law, and clung to the law as the ground of all their distinctions, the very charter of their privileges and hopes. So com pletely, by misapprehending the proper nature and relations of things, did the major part of the later Jews frustrate the object of the law, and turn it from being a schoolmaster to lead them to Christ, into the jealous and lordly rival that would keep them at the remotest dis tance from Him. And the mournful result for themselves was, that the rock in which they trusted, itself rose against them ; the law which could condemn but not expiate their sin, cried for vengeance with a voice that must be heard, and wrath from heaven feU upon them to the uttermost. A marvellous history, on whichever side contemplated ! — whether in the evU or the good connected with it — and fraught with important lessons, not for those alone who were its immediate subjects, but for aU nations and for aU time. God constituted the seed of Israel the direct bearers of a Divine revelation, made them subjects alike of law and promise, and shaped their history so that in it men might see reflected as in a mirror the essential character of His kingdom, the blessings that flow from a hearty submission to His wiH, and the judgments that not less certainly come, sooner or later, in the train of wilful perversion and incorrigible disobedience. In a sense altogether peculiar, they were called to be God's witnesses to the world j1 and by the word of God, which has embodied itself in their experience and history, they still remain such — a hght in its better aspect to guide and comfort, in its worse a beacon to admonish and warn. Like every revelation of God, this word also hveth and 1 Isa. xliii. 10. Lect. V.] ISRAEL'S POSITION AND CALLING UNDE!! IT. 179 abideth for ever ; and among other lessons to 1 >e learned from it, this, which is common to all dispensations, em bodied hi a pregnant utterance of Augustine, should never be forgotten, Lex data est ut gratia quaereretur ; gratia data est ut lex impleretur1 — the law was given that grace might be sought; grace was given that the law might be fulfilled. 1 De Sp. and Lit., sec. xix. 180 THE EEVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. LECTUBE VI THE ECONOMICAL ASPECT OF THE LAW— THE DEFECTS ADHERING TO IT AS SUCH— THE RELATION OF THE PSALMS AND PROPHETS TO IT— MISTAKEN VIEWS OF THIS RELATION— THE GREAT PRO BLEM WITH WHICH THE OLD TESTAMENT CLOSED, AND THE VIEWS OF DIFFERENT PARTIES RESPECTING ITS SOLUTION. TN the preceding lecture we have seen what advantages -*- accrued to Israel, and through them to the world, from the revelation of law at Sinai, in so far as that revelation was rightly understood, and was kept in its proper place. But as yet we have only looked at a part of the considerations which require to be taken into ac count, in order to get a comprehensive view of the work which the law had to do in Israel, and of much that is written concerning it in Scripture. There can be no doubt that the law, taken in its entireness, and as forming the most prominent feature in the economy brought in by Moses, however wisely adapted to the time then present, was still inlaid with certain inherent defects, which dis covered themselves in the working of the system, and paved the way for its ultimate removal. As an economy, it belonged to an immature stage of the Divine dispensa tions, and as such was constituted after a relatively imperfect form. The institutions and ordinances, also, which were associated with it, and became an integral part of its machinery, were in many respects suited to a comparatively limited territory, and even within the bounds of that involved not a httle that must often have proved irksome and inconvenient — what an apostle said Lect. VL] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. IS] to his brethren, neither they nor their fathers were able to bear.1 It is plain, therefore, that matters existed then only in a provisional state, and that a change must some how be introduced into the Divine economy, to adapt it to the general wants and circumstances of mankind. It becomes, therefore, an interesting and important question, wherein precisely lay the inherent defects of an economy modeUed so much after the legal form. Also, how these defects practicaUy discovered themselves ; and what other elements or agencies came into play, to compensate for the defects in question, and to prepare the way for the entrance of another and higher state of things. To such points we shall now endeavour to address ourselves. I. Whatever may be the contents of law — even if comprising what is of universal import and obligation — simply as law, written on perishable materials, and imposed in so many formal enactments, it has a merely outward and objective character. And this is what first faUs to be noted here ; for the main element of weakness in the Sinaitic law, viewed in its economical bearings, stood in its having so much of the outward and objective. It was engraved on tables of stone, and stood there before men as a preceptor to instruct them, or a master to demand then imphcit submission, but without any direct influence or control over the secret springs and motives of obedience. And the same, of course, holds with respect to the ordinances of service, which were appended to it as supplementary means to subserve its design — more so, indeed ; for they not only possessed the same formaUy written character, though not on tables of stone, but bore throughout on men's relation to a material fabric, and their submission to bodUy restraints or exercises. The 1 Acts xv. 10. 182 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. whole, therefore, taken by itself, formed a kind of legal institute, and in its working naturally tended to the mechanical and formal. It is of the nature of law, whether Divine or human, when imposed as a bond of order and discipline, to work from without inwards — acting as an external pressure or constraint on the vital energies, and seeking to bind them into an orderly and becoming course. ' Laws politic,' says Hooker,1 ' ordained for external order and regiment amongst men, are never framed as they should be, unless presuming the will of man to be inwardly obstinate, rebeUious, and averse from all obedience unto the sacred laws of his nature; in a word, unless presuming man to be, in regard to his depraved nature, little better than a wild beast, they do accordingly provide, notwithstanding, so to frame his outward actions, that they be no hindrance to the common good, for which societies are instituted.' It is the same thing substantiaUy which was uttered long before by the apostle, when, with reference more immediately to the Divine law, he said, ' The law is not made for a righteous man, but for the lawless and dis obedient, for the ungodly, and for sinners :'2 it is such alone who need the stringent rules and prohibitions of an outward code of enactments ; those who are firmly rooted in the principles of rectitude, and animated by a genuine spirit of love, wiU be a law to themselves. Essentially the sum, as well as spirit, of the law is love. But then the law does not of itself ehcit love ; its object rather is to supplement the deficiency of love, and by means of an external discipline form the inner nature to the habit and direction which would have been in stinctively taken by the spirit of love. StiU, this spirit could not be altogether wanting in those for whom the 1 ' Eccl. Polity,' I. sec. 10. 2 1 Tim. i. 9. Lect. VL] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 183 discipline availed anything, otherwise the result would have been at most but a weU-drilled and heartless for malism. It was with them, as in the case of chUdren who, through the yoke of parental discipline, are trained to goodness and virtue : the elements of the good are all there though existing in comparative feebleness, and by means of the discipline are stimulated to a readiness and constancy of exercise, which they would otherwise have failed to put forth. And as a natural consequence, both of the feebleness of love and of the magisterial presence and power of law, the principle of fear must have had relatively greater sway than would belong to it in a more perfect state of things. The dread of incurring the wrath of an offended God, and suffering the penalties which guarded on every side the majesty of His law, would often deter from sin when no other consideration might prevaU, and quicken the soul to exertions in duty which it would not have otherwise put forth. These were, undoubtedly, marks of imperfection im pressed on the very nature of the old economy ; it wrought, as the apostle teUs us, to a large extent by weak and beggarly elements ; and it did so because it was the comparative nonage of the church, and the materials of a more spiritual economy did not yet exist. ' The atonement was yet but prospective ; the Holy Spirit did not operate as He does under the Gospel ; and God's gracious designs, as regards the redemption of our race, lay embedded and concealed in the obscure intimation, that the seed of the woman should bruise the serpent's head, and in the promises to Abraham. Nor were these defects perfectly remedied throughout the whole course of the dispensation. To the last the Jew walked in com parative darkness ; to the last the powerful motives which affect the Christian, derived from the infinite love 184 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. of God as exhibited in the completed work of redemp tion, and from the authoritative announcement of a future resurrection to life or death eternal, could not be brought to bear on the ancient behever ; to the last, therefore, he needed stimulants to his piety drawn from inferior sources.'1 The practical result in some measure corresponded. It might, indeed, have been greatly better than it actuaUy was, and would have been, if the proper use had been generaUy made of the grace offered in the covenant of promise ; the people would then have had the law of God in their hearts.2 But this proved to be the case only with a portion. In many the pulse of life beat too feebly and irregularly for the requirements of the law being felt otherwise than a difficult, if not oppressive yoke. Too often, also, those who should have been the most exemplary in performing what was en joined, and from their position in the commonwealth should have checked the practice of evU in others, were themselves the most forward in promoting it. Hence, the theory of the constitution as to the strict connection between transgression and punishment gave way : souls that shoidd have been cut off from the number of their people, as dehberate covenant-breakers, and in God's judgment were cut off, continued to retain their place in the community, and to exercise its rights.3 By de grees, also, the faulty administration of the covenant by 1 Litton's ' Bampton Lecture,' p. 50. 2 Ps. xxxvii. 31. 3 The expression, ' that soul shall he cut off,' refers primarily to God's act, and is sometimes used where, from the nature of things, human authority could not interfere — viz., where the violation of law was quite secret, as in Levj xvii. 10, xviii. 29, xxii. 3. Hence the words sometimes run, ' I will cut off that soul,' or ' I will cut him off from my presence.' But when the act was open, and the guilt manifest, God's decision should have been carried out hy the community, as at Num. xv. 30 ; Josh. vii. 24-26. Lect. VL] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 185 human authority re-acted on the state of heart out of which it sprung, and strengthened yet more the ten dency to fall away. And there being but a partial and defective exhibition of holiness on the part of the people, there necessarUy ensued on God's part a proportionate withdrawal of the promised blessing. So that the aspect of things in Canaan never presented more than a broken and irregular impression of that righteousness and pro sperity which, like twin sisters, should have accompanied the people through the whole course of their history. But did not the Mediator of the covenant Himself appre hend this, and at the outset proclaim it, when on the plains of Moab He so distinctly portrayed the future backshdings of the people, and foretold the desolations which should in consequence overtake them ?x Coin cident with the birth of the covenant there were thus given intimations of its imperfect character and temporary purpose ; and it was made clear that, not through the provisions and agencies therewith connected could the ultimate good for mankind, or even for Israel itself, be secured.2 II. The comparative faUure in this respect, while in itself an evil, was overruled to bring out very distinctly, among the covenant-people, the spiritual element which was in the law ; and this we note as the sepond point which here calls for consideration. By spiritual element I mean the great moral truths embodied in the law in their relation to the individual heart and conscience. This could not, of course, be said in any proper sense to be dependent on the defective observance and faulty administration of the covenant, but it would, we can easily understand, be aided by them. The law bore so 1 Deut. xxviii., xxxii. 2 See Davison ' On Prophecy,' p. 165. 186 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. much of an external character, that it was quite possible for persons to maintain a conduct free from aU just excep tions of a pubhc kind, whUe still it wanted much to bring it into accordance with the real spirit and design of the law ; for the outward was of value only as expressive of the desires and principles of the heart. Even in any cir cumstances, the thoughtful meditation of the law must have had the effect of leading the soul apart, instead of losing itself amid the decent formahties of a generally approved behaviour, of bringing it into close personal dealing with God regarding sin and righteousness. It could scarcely faU to force itself on the convictions of those who were thus spirituaUy exercised, that then- relation to the law, and to Him whose glory was identified with its proper observance, must materiaUy differ, accord ing as it might be the outward man merely that was drUled into the keeping of the law's requirements, or along with this, and under this, the outgoing also of reverent feelings, holy desires, and pure affections. The members of the covenant, it would thus come to be felt, were not alike chUdren of the covenant, even though they might present much the same appearance of outward conformity to its handwriting of ordinances. An Israel would be known as developing itself within Israel— a more special and select class, who individuaUy came nearer to God than others, and who might reasonably expect to find God coming nearer to them, and bestowing on them the more peculiar tokens of His goodness. But, plainly, a conviction of this sort, which was almost unavoidable anyhow, would gather strength in proportion as differences appeared among the members of the covenant ; and some were seen making conscience 01 keeping the statutes of the Lord, whUe others resigned themselves to selfish indifference or courses of sin. Be- Lect. VL] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 1,87 fleeting and serious minds would feel assured, that the one class held a relation to the God of truth and recti tude, which could not belong to the other ; and though all might still be called the seed of Israel, and might alike enjoy the common privileges of the covenant, yet those who alone properly answered to the description, and had any just right to look for the favour and protec tion of God, must have appeared to be such as, like Abraham, were observed to keep the commandments of the Lord and obey His voice.1 We judge this to have been the case from the very nature of things. The law recognised important relations, general and particular, human and Divine, and, in connection with them, estab hshed great moral obhgations, which not only called for a certain appropriate demeanour, but demanded also a suitable state of feeling and affection. These, of neces sity, formed elements of spiritual thought and compara tive judgment with the better class of Israelites, and must have done so the more, the more they found them selves surrounded by persons of another spirit than themselves — mere formal observers of the law, or open transgressors of its precepts. And that such actuaUy was the case, we have conclusive evidence in those writ ings of the Old Covenant, which give expression to the personal feelings and reflective judgments of godly men on the state of things around them. Take, for example, the Book of Proverbs, immensely the richest storehouse of thoughtful utterance and prac tical wisdom that any nation, not to say single indivi dual, has given to the world, does not its leading charac teristic, as a writing, stand in the skiU and discrimination with which it draws moral distinctions — distinctions between one principle of action and one hne of conduct 1 Gen. xviii. 19. 188 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. and another ? It proceeds throughout on the profound conviction that there are such distinctions — a right and a wrong unalterably fixed by the law of God and the essential nature of things ; and, corresponding to this, a good and an evU in experience, a blessing and a curse. The Book is the record of a most careful and extensive observation, gathered, no doubt, in part from the general field of the world's history, but chiefly and most espe cially from the land of the covenant — the territory which lay in the light of God's truth and in the bond of His law. The comparison is never formally made between Israel as a nation and the idolatrous nations around it ; no, but rather between class and class, individual and individual in Israel. There are the fearers of Jehovah on the one side — those who sincerely hsten to the voice of Divine wisdom, and apply themselves in earnest to all the works of a pious, upright, and beneficent life ; and, on the other, the vain and foohsh, the corrupt and profli gate, the envious, the niggardly, the unjust, the scornful, and the wicked. With both classes, and with manifold shades and diversities in each, the writer's experience had manifestly made him familiar ; and, according to their respective moral condition — in other words, their relation to the law and service of God — such also is the portion of good or evU he associates with their history. In various portions of the Book of Psalms, the spiritual element comes out, if possible, still more strongly, and the moral distinctions are drawn with a yet keener edge ; because for the most part drawn from a personal point of view, and with reference to a contrast or an antagonism which was pressing on the faith and interests of the writer. In such a psalm as the 37th, the contrast assumes its mUder form, and approaches to the style of the Proverbs ; yet stUl there is perceptible the feeling of Lect. VL] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 189 one who knew himself to be in a struggling minority, and who needed to encourage his own heart, and the hearts of those he represented, with considerations drawn from the eternal principles of God's law, and the recom penses of good and evU therewith connected. But more commonly the theme of the Psalms in question turns on the trials of the Lord's servant in his contendings for truth and righteousness against those who, though formaUy members of the covenant, ranged themselves in opposition to its real interests. It was the representa tive of Heaven's cause, the true wrestler for righteous ness, on the one side, and those, on the other, who had not the fear of God before their eyes, and sought to strengthen themselves by their wickedness. It was the former alone, the Psalmist with manifold frequency pro claims, the godly ones, whom the Lord had chosen ; the others were objects of His displeasure, ahens, heathen at heart, who should be made to perish from the land, or become entangled in their own arts of destruction. Thus it appears that the principle, ' not aU Israel who are of Israel' — in other words, an election within the election, a spiritual seed from among the visible community of the covenant-people — though not recognised in the Theocratic constitution, yet came practically into distinct and pal pable operation. It was present as a fact to the minds of the faithful in almost every age of its history ; and so gave promise of a time when the really distinctive and fundamental things in men's relation to God should rise to then proper place. It foUows, therefore, that the law, considered as a national covenant, did not, in its actual working, tend to perpetuate, but rather to antiquate itself; it led to a state of things, which was the prelude and virtual commencement of an era in which primary regard should be had, not to men's natural descent or 190 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. hereditary position, but to their personal relation to the redeeming grace of God, and their heartfelt sympathy with the interests of His kingdom.1 III. The sacred writings just referred to, more especially the Psalms, besides incidentally testifying to the exist ence of a spiritual along with a carnal seed in Israel, had another and more direct end to serve in respect to the question now under consideration : by their didactic and devotional character they made a fresh advance in the Divine administration toward men, and so far tended to modify the operation of law. They formed the introduc tion of an agency, perfectly harmonious, indeed, with the outward prescriptions and observances of the law, but in its own nature higher, and as such tending to pre- 1 There was unavoidably connected with the state of things now described certain anomalies of a moral kind, which exercised the patience, sometimes even for a time staggered the faith, of God's people — cases in which, contrary to the general tenor of the covenant, wrong appeared to triumph, and the righteous cause or person was put to the worse. We have specimens of the painful reflections they gave rise to in such Psalms as xlix., lxxiii.; also in the Book of Ecclesiastes, and various passages in the prophets. They are to be explained, so far as an explanation was possible, from the broken and disordered state of things brought in by the wide-spread unfaithfulness of the people to the covenant, which necessarily rendered the admiiiistration of temporal rewards and punishments also broken and irregular — although still of such a kind, that thoughtful observers had enough to satisfy them that there was a righteous God who judged in the earth. This is surely a better and more Scriptural mode of viewing such cases, than the rough and sceptical sort of treatment they receive in ' Ecce Homo' — where, in reference to acts of moral delinquency not punished by the judge, it is said, ' What did Jehovah do 1 Did He suffer the guilty man to escape, or had He other ministers of justice beside the judge and the king ? It was supposed that in such cases He called in the powers of nature against the transgressor, destroyed his vines with hailstones, etc. But this theory was found to be unsatisfactory. Life is a short term, and prosperous villany was seen going to an honoured grave. Another conjecture was hazarded: it was said the bad man prospers sometimes, but he has no children, or at least his house soon dies out,' etc. (p. 38). All mere human thought and vain speculation about the matter ! Lect. VL] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 191 pare the way for yet further advances in the same direction. The service rendered by this kind of agency was various ; but, in whichever way considered, the effect must have been in the hne now indicated. It un doubtedly bore respect, and may be said, perhaps, to have more immediately owed its origin, to the form of worship associated with the covenant of law. Partaking as this did so much of the outward and ceremonial, it was, as a matter of course, largely identified with parti cular times and places, which for the great body of the people necessarily circumscribed very much the oppor tunities of public worship. Long intervals elapsed be tween the solemnities which drew them around the one altar of burnt-offering, and the place where Jehovah, in a more peculiar sense, put His name. Not only so, but when the people held their holy convocations in their several locahties (such as the law itseU contemplated,1 and which ought to have been of frequent occurrence) no special legislation was made in respect to the mode of conducting them ; the worshippers were left to their own discretion and resources, doubtless on the supposition that the lack would be supphed by the more gifted members of the community. And in the circumstances of the time, when written helps were as yet so scanty, one of the readiest, and one also of the most effectual modes of supplying it, was by means of the lofty and stirring notes of sacred song, accompanied by simple but appro priate melodies. How near this lay to the thoughts of the better class of the people, is evident from the fre quency which, even in the earher periods of their national existence, remarkable incidents and memorable occasions gave rise to such spirited effusions, as appears from the 1 Lev. xxiii. 3, 24, 27 ; Num. xxix. 1, 7. 192 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. songs intermingled with the records of their history.1 These songs were manifestly composed for use in religious meetings, and were sure to be increasingly employed, and also to grow in number, in proportion as a spirit of earnest piety diffused itself among the people. Accordingly, in the period of revival which was originated by Samuel, this appears as one of the more distinguishing features of the time. The schools of the prophets, as they were called — that is, companies of the more select and godly members of the community, gathered together into a kind of spiritual brotherhood, under the presidency of a prophet, made such abundant use of sacred lyrics that they had for their distinctive badges musical instruments — the psaltery, the tabret, the pipe, and the harp.2 David himself, in his earlier years, was no stranger to these institutions, and not improbably, by what he witnessed and felt in them, had his heart first moved to stir up the gift that was in him to add to their materials of devotion, But what he received he repaid with increase. The fine poetical genius with which he was endowed, ennobled as it was and haUowed by the special gifts of God's Spirit, singularly fitted him for giving expression to the spiritual thoughts and feelings of the people, and even for impart ing to these an elevation and a fervour beyond what should otherwise have belonged to them. And to him, in his vocation as the sweet Psalmist of Israel, it was not a httle owing that such associations became, not only means of spiritual culture, but centres of rehgious awakening. Nearly akin to this was another service, which the Psalmodic literature, and the writings that were some- 1 Ex. xv. ; Num. xxi. 17-27 ; Deut. xxxii. ; Judges v.; also Balaam's pro phecies, and the Psalm of Moses. 2 1 Sam. x. 5. Lect. VL] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 193 what allied to it, rendered to the religion of the Old Covenant — one more immediately connected with their didactic character. That religion was predominantly of a symbolical nature. The very writing of the Decalogue on tables of stone possessed this character ; and every act of lustration, every ordinance of service at the temple or away from it, had couched under it a spiritual meaning. It had this, however, practically not for aU, but only for those who possessed discernment to look through the sheU into the kernel. The native tendency of the soul was to rest in the outward ; and, instead of searching into the hidden treasures which lay enclosed in the external forms of worship, to turn the mere ritualism of these into a kind of sacred pantomime, which, for all higher purposes, left the worshipper much where it found him. The proneness of ancient Israel to give way to this unthinking, fleshly disposition, comes out with mournful frequency through the whole of their history. And for the purpose of correcting it — for the purpose, we may also say, of providing in this behalf a needed complement to the institutions and services of the Old Covenant, it became the calhng of the more gifted members of the community to extract from them their spiritual essence — to detach the great truths and principles they enshrined, and, by linking them to the varied experiences and pros pects as well of individual as of national life, to invest them with a significance and a power that might be level to every understanding, and touch a chord of sympathy in every reflecting bosom. This was pre-eminently the calhng of David, and of those who succeeded him in the line of reforming agency he initiated. It was to pour new life and vigour into the old religion, not merely by rectifying the partial disorders that had crept into its administration, and promoting the due observance of its N 194 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. solemnities with the hvely accompaniment of song and music — not merely this, but also, and much more, by popularizing its lessons in compositions adapted to general use, and providing appropriate forms of utterance for the devout feehngs and desires which the ordinances of God and the events of life were fitted to caU forth. The thought of God as the Creator and moral Governor of the world — the Bedeemer, the Shepherd, the King of Israel — of His glorious perfections and wonderful works — the deliverances He had wrought for His people, the careful guardianship He exercises over them, the spiritu ality of His holy law, as requiring truth in the inward parts not less than integrity and kindness in the outward life, His mercy to. the penitent, His special nearness to the humble, to the needy, to the souls struggling with con victions of sin or sharp conflicts in the cause of righteous ness, yea, His readiness to keep them as in the secret of His tabernacle, and compass them about with His presence as with a shield : — -these and such-like thoughts, which were aU interwoven with the facts of sacred history ahd with the structure and services of the Tabernacle, were in these inspired productions plainly set forth, clothed in the forms of an attractive and striking imagery, and enkindled with the glow of human sympathies and dtevout emotions. It is impossible not to see what an approach was here made to the directness and simphcity both of instruction and worship, which are the characteristics of a spiritual dispensation. In proportion as the members of the covenant became conversant with and used these helps to faith and devotion, they must have felt at once more capable of profiting by the worship of the sanctuary, and less tied to its formal routine ; in spirit they could now realize what was transacted there, and bring it home to the sanctuary of their bosoms. Jehovah Himself, Lect. VI.] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 195 though His dweUing-place was in Zion, was through these utterances of His Spirit brought near to every one of them ; and alike in their private communings and in then holy convocations, they possessed the choicest materials for holding sweet and hallowed converse with Heaven. And therefore must these Psalms have been pre-eminently to the Jewish believer what they have been said to be also in a measure to the Christian — even well- nigh ' what the love of parents and the sweet affections of home, and the clinging memory of infant scenes, and the generous love of country, are to men of every rank and order and employment, of every kindred, and tongue, and nation.'1 IV. The tendency in this direction, however, was greatly increased by the operation of another element — the prophetical agency and writings, which attained only to their greatest fulness and power when the affairs of the Old Covenant approached their lowest depression. The raising up of persons from time to time, who should come with special messages from God to the people, suited to the ever varying states and exigences of hfe, was from the first contemplated in the Theocratic government;2 and certain directions were given both for trying the pretensions of those who claimed to have such messages from God, and for treating with becoming reverence and regard such as had them. This was, certainly, a very singular arrangement — as justly noticed by G. Baur : — 1 Irving. An incidental proof of this is found in the touching notices in Ps. cxxxvii., where the Jewish captives are represented as hanging their harps on the willows, and incapable, when requested by their conquerors, of singing one of the songs of Zion. It shews how deep a hold the psalmody had taken of the better minds of the community, and what a powerful influence it exer cised over them. 2 Num. xii. 6; Deut. xviii. 17-22. 196 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. ' That the holy wiU of the one true God should have been set up before the Israelites in the definite prescriptions of a law, and that, in order to carry this Divine law into effect, and prepare for its proper fulfilment, prophets must appear on the scene, — this is what distinguishes the religion of Israel, not only from aU other pre- Christian religions, but also from Christianity itself. For, the legal and prophetical elements of the Old Testament religion are precisely those through which it stood in marked contrast to the other rehgions, and made an approach to Christianity, whUe at the same time it thereby bore the character of a rehgion which could not of itself present the most perfect rehgious state of things, but could only prepare for it, and hand over the completion to another.'1 The close relation of prophecy to the law is not too strongly stated here, and must be kept steadily in view. In its earlier stages the aim of the prophetic agency was almost exclusively directed to the one object of diffusing a better knowledge of the law, and promoting a more duti ful observance of its institutions and precepts. It was essentially a spirit of revival, called forth by the grievous disorders and wide-spread degeneracy that prevailed. Such, as has been already stated, was the leading char acter and aim of the rehgious associations which have received the name of the ' schools of the prophets.' They were composed of earnest and devoted men, who, under the direction of one or more persons of ready supernatural gifts (such as Samuel at first, afterwards of Ehjah and Elisha), set their faces boldly against the corruptions which prevailed, and endeavoured, by religious meetings in various places, with the powerful excitation of sacred 1 'Geschichte der Alttestamentlichen Weissagung,' by Dr Gustav Baur, p. 9. Lect. VL] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 197 song, to stir up the languid zeal of the people, and engage them to a hearty surrender to the Divine service. It was a kind of action which, though apparently somewhat irregular and spasmodic in its movements, was in nature not unlike to the evangelistic operations often carried on in modern times, and reached its end in proportion as people were brought to consider aright and discharge their duty as placed under the economy set up by the hand of Moses. The labours of David, and those gifted men, chiefly of Levitical families, who succeeded him in the work of sacred song, so far coincided with the class of agencies instituted by Samuel, that they also had in view the proper understanding and due appreciation of what pertained to the old economy, but employed more of literary effort, especiaUy of lyrical compositions, for the purpose, and in these sometimes gave delineations of the kingdom of God as it should exist in the future, and of the King who should preside over its affairs and destinies, which could scarcely be conceived capable of realization, except by some mighty change in the form of the constitu tion and the powers brought to bear on its administration. But by and by a state of things entered, which proved the comparative failure of those reforming agencies, and caUed for prophetic work of a different kind. Back sliding and corruption perpetually returned, after seasons of revival, and with ever -deepening inveteracy. The royal house itself, which should have ruled only for Jehovah, became infected with worldly pride, luxury, idolatry with its host of attendant vices. Judgment after judgment had been sent to correct the evU, but all without permanent effect ; and not the reahzation of splendid hopes, but the sinking of all into prostration and ruin, was the fate that seemed more immediately impending. It was when matters were verging toward 198 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. this deplorable condition, that the prophets, distinctively so caUed, came upon the field, and fulfilled, one after another, their appointed mission. The circumstances were very materially changed in which they had to act, from those which belonged to the times of Samuel and David; but they stUl stood in substantiaUy the same relation to the law, differing only in the apphcation which was made of it to the state and prospects of the people. The prophets without exception took up then position on the basis of law : they appeared as the vindicators of its authority, the expounders of its meaning, and in a sense also the avengers of its injured rights ; for they never faU to charge upon the people's culpable neglect of its obligations, and persistent adherence to the practices it condemns, aU the visitations of evU which in the course of God's providence had befaUen them, or the yet greater calamities that were in prospect. Nor in pointing to the possibihty of escaping the worst, when there was the utmost reason to apprehend its approach, do they ever indicate another course than that of a return to the bond of the covenant, by ceasing from aU the acts and indul gences against which it was directed : this one path pre sented to the people a door of hope. But in this particular line the prophets abstain from going farther ; they never attempt to improve upon the principles of the Theocracy, or inculcate a morality that transcends the ideal of the Decalogue. A claim has sometimes been made in honour of the prophets, as if their teaching did transcend, and, in a manner, remodel what had been previously given — though the quarter from which it comes may justly beget doubts of its vahdity. ' The remark,' says Mr Stuart MiU,1 ' of a distinguished 1 ' On Representative Government,' p. 42. Lect. VL] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 199 Hebrew, that the prophets were, in Church and State, the equivalent of the modern hberty of the press, gives a just but not an adequate conception of the part fulfilled in national and universal history by this great element of Jewish life ; by means of which, the canon of inspira tion never being complete, the persons most eminent in genius and moral feeling could not only denounce and reprobate, with the direct authority of the Almighty, whatever appeared to them deserving of such treatment, but could give forth better and higher interpretations of the national religion, which thenceforth became part of the rehgion. Accordingly, whoever can divest himself of the habit of reading the Bible as if it was one book, sees with admiration the vast interval between the moral ity and rehgion of the Pentateuch, or even of the historical books, and the morality and rehgion of the prophecies — a distance as wide as between these last and the Gospels. Conditions more favourable to progress could not easily exist ; accordingly, the Jews, instead of being stationary, like other Asiatics, were, next to the Greeks, the most progressive people of antiquity, and, jointly with them, have been the starting-point and main propelling agency of modern cultivation.' There is just enough in the actual history of the case to give a plausible colour to this representation, and a measure of truth which may save it from utter repudia tion. The recognised place given to the function of pro phecy in the Theocratic constitution, was unquestionably a valuable- safeguard against arbitrary power ; it secured a right and warrant for freedom of speech on all that most essentially concerned the interests of the kingdom ; and as the function was actually exercised, it did unques tionably serve, in a very high degree, the purpose of re proving abuses, and of unfolding principles of truth and 200 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. duty, which needed only to be behevingly apprehended to fiU the mind with a generous aspiration after everything pure and good. But the language quoted goes a great deal beyond this. It imphes, that we have in the Bible a specimen, not simply of growing hght and progressive development, but of diverse exhibitions of truth and duty ; that the beginnings of the Hebrew commonwealth were in this respect extremely crude and defective, but that in process of time, as men of higher inteUect and finer moral sensibUities (the prophets, to wit) applied themselves to the task of instruction, everything took a nobler elevation, and a rehgion and morality were brought forth which stood at a wide remove from those of the Pentateuch. This we altogether deny, and regret the countenance it has met with from Dean Stanley (as indeed from many other writers of the day). He quotes the passage from MiU without the shghtest qualification, and proceeds to support it by specifying the more leading features in which the prophetic teaching constituted an advance on what preceded. The particular points are, first, the unity of God ; then the spirituality of God (meaning thereby His moral character, His justice, love, and goodness) ; and lastly, as the necessary result of this, the exaltation of the moral above the ceremonial in religion (' not sacrifice, not fasting, not ablutions,' etc., but 'judgment, mercy, and truth').1 Beyond aU doubt, these were among the leading characteristics of the pro phetical teaching ; and in that teaching they are set forth with a clearness, a prominence, and a fervour, which may justly be termed peculiar, and for which the church of aU ages has reason to be thankful. The circumstances of the times were such as to caU, in a very special manner, for the bold and exphcit announcement of the vital 1 ' Lectures on Jewish Church,' end of Lee. XIX. and beginning of Lee. XX. Lect. VL] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 201 truths and principles in question ; only, it must be re membered, they were not given for the purpose of initiat ing a higher form of morality and religion, but rather of staying a perUous degeneracy, and recovering a position that had been lost. For the truths and principles were in no respect new ; they were interwoven with the writ ings and legislation of Moses ; and only in the mode and fulness of the revelation, but not in the things revealed, does the teaching of the prophets differ from the hand writing of Moses. So far from aiming at the introduc tion of anything properly new, either in the rehgion or the morahty of the Old Covenant, it was the object of then most earnest strivings to turn back the hearts of the chUdren to the fathers, the disobedient to the wisdom of the just -,1 and the very last in the long line of pro phetic agency, whUe pointing to nobler messengers and grander revelations in the coming future, charges his countrymen, as with his parting breath, to ' remember the law of Moses which God commanded him in Horeb for aU Israel, with the statutes and judgments.'2 It was virtually to say, This was meanwhUe the best thing for them ; the word of prophecy did not seek to carry them above the dispensation under which they lived ; and not a higher position, in respect either to God or to one another, was to be gained by disregarding it, but a fall into vanity, corruption, and ruin. But as regards the particular points mentioned by Stanley, which of them, we should like to know, is want ing in the books of Moses, or is denied its just place in the rehgious pohty he brought in ? The grand truth of the Divine unity is assuredly not wanting ; it stands in the very front of the Decalogue, and from the first chap ter in Genesis to the last in Deuteronomy, it is the truth 1 1 Kings xviii. 37 ; Luke i. 17. 2 Mai. iv. 4. 202 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. which above aU others is prominent — so prominent, that (as we have seen) to guard and preserve this doctrine some would even take as the almost exclusive end of the Mosaic legislation. Nor is it much otherwise with the spirituality of God — understanding thereby not only His incorporeal nature, but also and more peculiarly His moral character ; for this, too, is a pervading element both in the history and the legislation. It is the key which opens out to us, so far as it can be opened, the mystery of paradise and the fall, and the principle which runs through the entire series of providential dealings, of blessings bestowed upon some, and judgments inflicted upon others, which make up so large a portion of patri archal history. But the grand testimony for it is in the law of the ten commandments, given as the revelation of God's character, yea, laid as the very foundation of His throne in Israel — the most sublime exaltation of the moral above aU merely physical notions of Deity, and of the spiritual over the outward and material in the forms of worship, to be found in the records of ancient times. The prophets could but unfold and vindicate the truth so presented ; they could add nothing to its relative signifi cance. And if, in the law itself, there were many enact ments of a ceremonial kind — and if the Jewish people, especially in later times, shewed an inclination to give these the foremost place, to make more account of sacri fice, fasting, ablutions, than of judgment, mercy, and truth — it was in palpable violation (as we have already shewn) of the evident tendency and bearing of the law itself. It was only as testifying against an abuse, a culpable misreading of their religious institutions, that the prophets sometimes drew so sharply the distinction between the ceremonial and the moral in religion. At other times, they again shewed how they could appreciate Leot. VL] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 203 the symbolical institutions of the law, and enforce their observance.1 There was, then, no proper diversity, much less any antagonism, between the teaching of the prophets and the instruction embodied in the commands and ordi nances of the law. And we must hold, with Harless, that there is no ground for regarding ' the law of God in Israel as the product of a development-process among the people of Israel, who gradually arrived at the conscious ness of what is good and right in the relation of man to man, and in the relation of man to God. On the con trary, God appears, in opposition to the prevading spirit of the people, giving testimony to His wUl in a progres sive revelation. The law did not sink down into the people of God as a spiritual principle, the development of which was by God surrendered to the people ; but the entire compass of life's environments was among this people placed, through the variety of the law's enact ments, under the prescription of the Divine commanding wUl. Instead of being abandoned to the vacillations and gropings of human knowledge, it stands there (what can be said neither of conscience nor of any human law) as beyond doubt the ' holy law,' and its command as the ' holy and righteous and good command !'2 But with this fixed character as to the substance of the 1 Ps. li. 19, cxviii. 27; Isa. xliii. 23, 24, lx. 6, 13; Mai. i. 11, iii. 9, 10. 2 ' Christliche Ethik,' sec. 16. If due consideration is given to what has been stated, one will know what to think of the loose and offensive statements often made by persons, however able, who give forth their ' short studies on grave subjects' — such as the following in Froude, ' The religion of the prophets was not the religion which was adapted to the hardness of heart of the Israel ites of the Exodus. The Gospel set aside the law,' etc. A certain glimmering of truth, to give colour to an essentially wrong meaning ! It is also somewhat striking, in this connection, that the exercise of feelings of revenge, so often charged against the morality of the law, has more appearance of justification in the Psalms and Prophets than in the prescriptions of the law. But even in these the countenance given to it is more apparent than real. See Supple mentary Dissertation on the subject. 204 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. law, there is undoubtedly in the prophetical writings an advance made in the mode, and along therewith in the perspicuity, the fulness, and motive power of the instruc tion. What in the one lay written in naked prescrip tions, or wrapt in the drapery of symbol, is in the other copiously unfolded, explained, and reasoned upon, accom panied also with many touching appeals and forcible illustrations. Specific points, too, as occasion required, are brought out with a breadth and prominence which it was impossible for them to possess in the original revela tion. And then in those prophetical writings of later times, as the falling down of the tabernacle of David was clearly announced, and the dissolution of the Theo cracy in its original form distinctly contemplated, it was through those writings that the minds of believing men got such insight as they could obtain into the nature of that new and better form of things, through which the blessing (so long deferred) of the covenant of promise was to be realized, and practical results achieved far sur passing what had been found in the past. It is impos sible to go here into any detaU on this part of the prophetical writings ; but one thing ought to be noted concerning them, which may also be said to be common to: them aU, that while they speak plainly enough of the old being destined somehow to pass away, they not less plainly declare that aU its moral elements should remain and come into more effective and general operation. When Isaiah, for example, makes promise of a king who should spring as a tender scion from the root of David, and not only retrieve the fortunes of His kingdom, but carry everything belonging to it to a state of highest per fection and glory, he represents him as bringing the very mind and will of God to bear on it, taking righteousness for the girdle of his loins, and establishing aU with judg- Lect. VI.] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 205 ment and justice.1 To magnify the law and make it honourable, is, in a later part of his prophecies, presented as the aim with which the Lord was going to manifest His name in the future, otherwise than He had done in the past ; and, as the final result of the manifestation, there was to arise a kingdom of perfect order, a people all righteous, and because righteous full of peace, and bless ing, and joyfulness.2 Jeremiah is even more explicit ; he says expressly, that the Lord was going to make a new covenant with His people, different from that which He had made after the deliverance from Egypt ; yet different rather in respect to form and efficient adminis tration, than in what might be caUed the essential matter of the covenant ; for this is the explanation given, ' After those days, saith the Lord, I wiU put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts ; and wiU be then God, and they shaU be my people'3 — the same law in substance still, only transferred from the outward to the inward sphere — from the tables of stone to the fleshy tables of the heart ; and this so as to secure, what had in a great measure faded under the old form of the cove nant, a people with whom God could hold the most intimate and endearing fellowship. -Then, foUowing in the same line, there are such prophecies as those of Ezekiel, in which, with a glorious rise in the Divine kingdom from seeming ruin to the possession of universal dominion, there is announced a hitherto unknown work of the Spirit of God, changing hearts of stone into hearts of flesh, and imparting the disposition and the power to keep God's statutes and judgments ;4 the similar pro phecy of Joel, according to which the Spirit was to be poured out in such measure, that spiritual gifts hitherto 1 Isa. ix. 7, xi. 2 Isa. xlii. 21, lx., lxv. 17, 18. 3 Jer. xxxi. 33. 4 Ezek. xvii. 23, 24, xxxvi. 25-27. 206 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. confined to a few should become, in a manner, the com mon property of believers j1 the prophecy of Micah, that the mountain of the Lord's house, the seat of the Divine kingdom, should be moraUy exalted by such a manifesta tion of the Divine presence, and such a going forth of the law of the Lord, as would reach all hearts and carry it with decisive sway over the most distant lands ;2 and, to mention no more, the brief but clear and striking an nouncements of Malachi, teUing of a sudden coming of the Lord to His temple, with such demonstrations of righteousness and means of effective working, as would burn like a refiner's fire, and bring forth a hving com munity of pure and earnest worshippers.3 From the general strain of these and many simUar revelations in the prophetic Scriptures, it was evidently in the mind and purpose of God to give a manifestation of Himself among men for the higher ends and interests of His covenant, far surpassing anything that had been known in the history of the past ; and that, whUe the demands of law should thus be for ever estabhshed, the law itself should be made to take another place than it had been wont to do in economical arrangements, and should be so associated with the peculiar gifts and graces of the Spirit, as to bring out into quite singular prominence the spirit ual elements of the covenant, and secure for these far and wide a commanding influence in the world. So that the volume of Old Testament prophecy might be said to close with the presentation of this great problem to the consideration of thoughtful and believing men — how the promised blessing for Israel and the world could be wrought out, so as to maintain in all its integrity the law of the Divine righteousness, and, at the same time, provide for powers and agencies coming into play, which 1 Joel ii. 28-32. 2 Micah iv. 1-5. 3 Mai. iii. 1-6. Lect. VI.] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 207 should necessarily change the law's place from a higher to a lower, from a greater to a less prominent position in the administration of the Divine kingdom ! V. There can be no doubt that, for generations before the Christian era, the minds of the better part of the Jewish people were more or less occupied with thoughts concerning this problem ; and though from its very nature it was one of Divine, not of human solution, yet as the period approached for its passing into the sphere of history, expectation took very determinate forms of be lief as to the manner in which it behoved to be done. These differed widely from each other, but were aU so wide of the true mark, that the very conception of the plan by which the Divine purpose was to receive its accom phshment, proved the Divine insight of Him through whom it was at last carried into effect. With two of those forms of thought and belief we are perfectly fami liar, they come out so prominently in the Gospel history — represented, respectively, by the two great divisions of later Judaism in Palestine — those of the Pharisees and the Sadducees. Neither party, perhaps, embraced more than a section of the Jewish people resident in Palestine, but together they undoubtedly included its more influential portions — the men who guided the sentiments and ruled the destinies of their country. The Pharisees, as is well known, were by much the more numerous and influential party ; and taking their name from a Hebrew word (parash), which means to separate or place apart, it denoted them as the men by way of eminence, the more select and elevated portion of the community, those who stood 'at the summit of legal Judaism' (Neander). In them the state of feeling described toward the close of last lecture found its more pecuhar development. The 208 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. law was in a manner everything with them ; and to pre serve it on all sides from dishonour and infringement, they graduaUy accumulated an infinite number of rules and precepts, which tended greatly more to mar than to further its design. For it led them to fix their regards almost exclusively on the outward relations of things, to turn both religion and morahty into a rigid formalism ; and, as a matter of course, the form was substituted for the power of godliness — weightier matters gave way in practice to comparative trifles — and the law was in great part made void by what was done to protect and magnify it. Thus the Pharisees, as a class of rehgionists, proved them selves to be blind in regard to the great problem which was then waiting its solution ; and the more they multiplied their legal enactments, they but wove a thicker veil for their own understandings, and became the more incapable of looking to the end of those things which the law aimed at establishing. A perpetuation and extension of their system would have been a bondage and not a dehverance, a misfortune and not a blessing ; since it would have served to case the world up in a hard, inflexible religious coat of mad, fitted to repel rather than attract — the very antithesis of a free, loving, devoted piety. It had been no better, but in various respects worse, on the principle of Sadduceeism ; for here the deeper elements of the Old Covenant were not merely overshadowed, or relatively depreciated, as in Pharisaism, but absolutely ignored. The spiritual world was to it httle more than a blank ; it had an eye only for the visible and earthly sphere of things ; therefore knew nothing of the spiritual significance of the law, and the depth of meaning which lay underneath its symbols of worship. For men of this stamp, the rehgion of the Old Covenant was the ground merely of their national polity and of their hopes as a Lect. VI. ] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 209 people — which consequently had a claim on their respect ful observance, but not such as was connected with pain ful convictions of sin, or earnest longings after a holier and better state of things. AU that apparently entered into their dream of prospective glory would have been realized, if, without any material change in the rehgious aspect of things, they should be able, under the leader ship of some second David, to rectify the political dis orders of the time, relieve themselves of the shame and oppression of a foreign yoke, and rise to the ascendency of power and influence in the world, which the antecedents of their history gave them reason to expect. The more fundamental elements of the great problem could scarcely be said to come witliin their range of vision. There was much more of an earnest and thoughtful spirit in a class of rehgionists who belonged to Judea, and had their chief settlements about the shores of the Dead Sea, but who, from their reserved and secluded habits, are never mentioned in the Gospel history. I refer to the Essenes, whose religion appears to have been a strange and somewhat arbitrary compound of rituahstic and theosophic elements — of Judaism (in the Pharisaic sense) and asceticism. They are reported to have sent offerings to the temple, but they did not themselves per- sonaUy frequent its courts, deeming it a kind of poUution to mingle in the throng of such a misceUaneous com pany of worshippers ; so that many of the most distinctly commanded observances in the religion of the Old Cove nant must have been unscrupulously set aside by them. But whUe thus in one direction scorning the restraints of ceremoniahsm, and in their general abstinence from mar riage, and their communism of goods, chalking freely out a path for themselves, in other respects the Essenes were '* ceremoniahsts of the straitest sect : they would not 210 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. kindle a fire or remove a vessel on the Sabbath, refused to use victuals that had been prepared by persons out of their own haUowed circle, resorted ever and anon to corporeal ablutions, in particular after having been touched by an uncircumcised person, or even one of an inferior grade among themselves.1 Their system was evidently a sincere but Ul-adjusted and abortive attempt at reform ; on the one side, a reaction from the mechanical, selfish, and worldly spirit of Pharisaism ; on the other, an adhesion to specific forms and ascetic practices, as the choicest means for reaching the higher degrees of perfection. At how great a remove did the foUowers of such a system stand from the spiritual elevation of the prophets ! And in themselves how obviously incapable of bursting the sheU of Judaism, and understanding how a rehgion might be evolved from it of blessed peace, expansive benevo lence, and son-like freedom ! It was clear that no more with them than with the others, was found the secret of the problem which now lay before the people of God : they could contribute nothing to its solution. And the same, yet again, has to be said of another class of reforming Jews, who brought higher powers to the task than the narrow-minded Essenes, and who gave to Judaism whatever light could be . derived from the most spiritual philosophy of Greece. I speak now not of the Jews in Palestine, but of the Alexandrian Jews, more especiaUy as represented by the thoughtful and contem plative PhUo. He shrunk from the extremes that some of his countrymen, in their passion for phUosophy, appear to have run into — ' trampling (as he says of them) upon the laws in which they were born and bred, upturning those customs of their country which are liable to no just censure.' He, along with the great body even of the 1 Josephus, ' Ant.' xviii. 1, sec. 4 ; ' Wars,' ii. 8, sees. 3-13. Lect. VI.] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 211 phdosophizing Jews, still held by the traditions and re ligious customs of his fathers, but threw over these a kind of foreign costume, read them in a Hellenic light, and thereby sought to obtain from them a more profound and varied instruction than they were otherwise capable of yielding. PhUo and his coadjutors were so far right, that they conceived a letter and ' a spirit to belong to the Old Testament ; but they entirely erred in trying to find a key to the spirit in the sublimated physics of a GentUe philosophy — in seeing, for example, in the starry hosts choirs of the highest and purest angels, in the tabernacle a pattern of the universe, in the twelve loaves of shew- bread the twelve months of the year, in the two rows of them the vernal and autumnal equinox, in the seven- branched candlestick the seven planets, and so on. This was truly to seek the living among the dead. It is the moral, as we have had occasion frequently to repeat, which is the essential element in the rehgion of the Old Testament, underlying all its symbols, interwoven with all its histories ; the spirit which pervades them through out is the spirit of the ten commandments. And in trying to find in them the cover of phdosophic ideas, or the reflex of material nature, everything was turned into a wrong direction ; it became merely the handmaid of an inteUectual refinement or a mystic lore, but in the same proportion ceased to be of real value in the kingdom of God. On every side we see only misapprehension and faUure. Not one of the various sections, into which the covenant- people latterly feU, sufficiently grasped the completed revelation of the Old Testament, so as even to perceive how its destined end was to be reached — how its great problem was' to be solved. From the simply ritualistic and patriotic spirit, as represented by the divergent 212 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VI. schools of the Pharisees and the Sadducees, it lay hid ; it lay hid also from the theosophic and ascetic spirit, as represented by the earnest, but exclusive and somewhat forbidding sect of the Essenes. And when phUosophy, with its inteUectual culture and lofty aspirations, came to the task, it fared no better; the real spirit of the old economy was not evoked, nor any discovery made of the way by which its apparent contradictories might be re- concded, and an influence of charmed power brought to bear on the hearts and consciences of men. For anything that such schools and parties could effect, or even knew distinctly to propose, the world had slumbered on in its ancient darkness and corruption — its moral degeneracy unchecked, its disquieting terrors unaUayed, its debasing superstitions and foul idolatries continuing to hold captive the souls of men. And if the real reform— the salvation- work, and the better spirit growing out of it, which hke a vivifying pulse of life was to make itself felt through society, to cause humanity itself to spring aloft into a higher sphere, and commence a new career of fruitfulness in intellectual and moral action — if this should have found its realization in One who, humanly speaking, was the least likely to be furnished for the undertaking — One who not only belonged to the same people, but was reared in one of their obscurest vdlages, and under the roof of one of its humblest cottages — whence, we naturally ask, could it have been found in Him, but from His altogether peculiar connection with the Highest ? A failure in every quarter but the one which was most palpably deficient in human equipment and worldly re sources, manifestly bespeaks for that One the preter natural insight and all-sufficient help of God. Jesus of Nazareth did what all others were unable not only to accomplish, but even adequately to conceive, because He Lect. VI.] ECONOMICAL ASPECTS AND BEARINGS. 21:} was Immanuel, God with us ; and so, in spite of the lack of human advantages, and the fierce opposition of power ful foes, He fulfilled the task with which expectation had been so long travaihng in birth, and left the mysterious problem concerning the future of the Divine kingdom among men written out in the facts of His marvellous history, and the rich dowry of grace and blessing He brought in for His redeemed. 214 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIL LECTUBE VII. THE RELATION OF THE LAW TO THE MISSION AND WORK OF CHRIST— THE SYMBOLICAL AND RITUAL FINDING IN HIM ITS TERMINATION, AND THE MORAL ITS FORMAL APPROPRIATION AND PERFECT FULFILMENT. A S the appearance of the Lord Jesus Christ for the work of our redemption was unspeakably the great est era in the history of God's dispensations toward men, we cannot doubt that every thing respecting it was arranged with infinite wisdom. It took place, as the apostle teUs us, ' in the fulness of the time' (Gal. iv. 4). Many circumstances, both in the church and in the world, conspired to render it such ; and among these may undoubtedly be placed the fact, that there was not only a general expectation throughout the world of some one going to arise in Judea, who should greatly change and renovate the state of things, but in Judea itself the more certain hope and longing desire of a select few, who, taught by the word of prophecy, were anxiously waiting ' for the consolation of Israel.' Yet even with them, as may be reasonably inferred from what afterwards trans pired in Gospel history, the expectation, however sincere and earnest, was greatly wanting in discernment : it might justly be said 'to see through a glass, darkly' The great problem which, according to Old Testament Scripture, had to find its solution in the brighter future of God's kingdom, was not distinctly apprehended by any Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 215 known section of the covenant-people ; and in aU the more prominent and active members of the community there were strong currents of opinion and deeply cherished convictions, which were utterly incompatible with the proper realization of the Divine plan. This condition of affairs immensely aggravated the difficulty of the under taking for Him, who came in this peculiar work to do the Father's wiU; but it served, at the same time, more clearly to shew how entirely aU was of God — both the insight to understand what was needed to be done, and the wisdom, the resolution, the power to carry it into execution. If, however, from the position of matters now noticed, it was necessary that our Lord should move in perfect independence as regards the religious parties of the time, it was not less necessary that He should exercise a close dependence on the rehgion which they professed in common to maintain. Coming as the Messiah promised to the Fathers, He entered, as a matter of course, into the heritage of aU preceding revelations, and therefore could introduce nothing absolutely new — could only exhibit the proper growth and development of the old. And so, while isolating Himself from the Judaism of the Scribes and Pharisees, Jesus lovingly embraced the Judaism of the law and the prophets ; and, founding upon what had been already established, took it for His especial calling to unfold the germs of holy principle which were con tained in the past revelations of God, and by word and deed ripen them into a system of truth and duty adapted to the mature stage which had now been reached of the Divine dispensations. It was only in part, indeed, that this could be done during the personal ministry of our Lord ;• for, as the hght He was to introduce depended to a large extent on the work He had to accomplish for 216 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. men, there were many things respecting it which could not be fully disclosed tUl the events of His marvellous history had run their course. It was the redeeming work of Christ which more than aU besides was to give its tone and impress to the new dispensation ; and much of the teaching on men's relations to God, on their pre sent calhng and their future prospects as believers in Christ, had in consequence to be deferred till the work itself was finished. This our Lord Himself plainly inti mated to His disciples near the close of His career, when pointing to certain things of which they could not even then bear the disclosure, but which the Spirit of truth would reveal to them after His departure, *and qualify them for communicating to others.1 Yet not only were the materials for all provided by Christ in His earthly ministry, but the way also was begun to be opened for their proper application and use ; and what was after wards done in this respect by the hands of the apostles was merely the continuation and further unfolding of the line of instruction already commenced by their Divine Master. ¦ I. Now, of one thing our Lord's ministry left no room to doubt — and it is the more noticeable, as in this He differed from all around Him — He made a marked dis tinction between the symbolical or ritual things of the Old Covenant, and its strictly moral precepts. He re garded the former, as the legal economy itself did, in the light merely of appendages to the moral — temporary expedients, or provisional substitutes for better things to come, which had no inherent value in themselves, and were to give way before the great realities they fore- 1 John xvi. 12-15. See the point admirably exhibited in Bernard's Bamp ton Lecture, on ' The Progress of Doctrine in the New Testament.' Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 217 shadowed. Hence the reserve He manifested in regard to external rites and ceremonies. We read of no act of bodily lustration in His public history. He expressly repudiated the idea of washing having hi itself any power to cleanse from spiritual defilement, or of true purifica tion at aU depending on the kind of food that might be partaken of.1 He was the true, the ideal Nazarite, yet undertook no Nazarene vow. Though combining in Himself all the functions of prophet, priest, and king, yet He entered on them by no outward anointing : He had the real consecrating of the Holy Spirit, visibly de scending and abiding with Him.2 And though He did not abstain from the stated feasts of the Temple, when it was safe and practicable for Him to be present, yet we hear of no special offerings for Himself or His disciples on such occasions. Even as regards the ordinary services and offerings of the Temple, He claimed a rightful exemption, on the ground of His essentially Divine standing, from the tribute-money, the half-shekel contri bution, by which they were maintained.3 He was Him self, as the Son of the Highest, the Lord of that Temple ; it was the material symbol of what He is in His relation to His people ; and on the occasion of His first public visit to its courts, He vindicated His right to order its affairs, by casting out the buyers and sellers ; yea, and, identifying Himself with it, He declared that when Tie fed, as the Redeemer of the world, it too should virtually fall— the Great Inhabitant should be gone — and hence forth, no more in one place than another, but in every place where the children of faith might meet together, there should true worship and acceptable service be pre sented to God.4 Utterances like these plainly rung the 1 Matt. xv. 1-20. 2 John i. 32-34; Luke iii. 22, iv. 18. 3 Matt. xvii. 24-27. " John ii. 13-22, iv. 21-24. 218 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. kneU of the old ceremonialism. They bespoke a speedy removing of the external fabric of Judaism, yet such a removing as would leave greatly more than it took — instead of the imperfect and temporary shadow, the eternal substance. And if one might stUl speak, in the haUowed language of the sanctuary, of a temple, and a sacrifice, and a dady ministration, of a sanctity to be preserved and a poUution to be shunned, it must be as bound to no specific locahties, or stereotyped forms, but as connected with the proper freedom and enlargement of God's true chUdren.1 1 The nature of this part of our Lord's work, and the substance of His teach ing respecting it, was strikingly embodied in the first formal manifestation of His supernatural agency — the n/^lcv, which He performed as an appropriate and fitting commencement to the whole cycle of His- miraculous working — namely, the turning of water into wine at the marriage feast in Cana (John ii. 1-10). Considered as such a beginning, it certainly has, at first sight, a somewhat strange appearance ; but, on closer examination, this aspect of strangeness gives way, and the Divine wisdom of the procedure discovers itself. The transaction, like the period to which it belonged, found a point of contact between the new and the old in God's kingdom — it was indicative of the transition which was on the eve of taking place from the law to the Gospel. The water-vessels used for the occasion were those ordinarily employed for purposes of purification according to the law ; they stood there as the representatives of the old economy — the remembrancers of sin and pollution even in the midst of festive mirth ; and had they been associated merely with water, they could not have been made the bearer of any higher instruction. But when, after being filled with this, the water was turned into wine — wine of the finest quality — such as drew forth the spontaneous testimony, not that the old, but that the new was the better, they became the emblem of the now opening dispensation of grace, which, with its vivifying and refresh ing influences, was soon to take the place of the legal purifications. Yet, in that supplanting of the one by the other, there was not the production of something absolutely new, but rather the old transformed, elevated, as in the transmutation of the simple and comparatively feeble element of water into the naturally powerful and active principle of wine. In the very act of chang ing the old into the new, our Lord, so far from ignoring or disparaging the old, served Himself of it ; and it was, we may say, within the shell and framework of what had been, that the new and better power was made to come forth and develop itself in the world. Such, in its main features and leading import, was the sign here wrought by Jesus at the commencement of His public career. Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 219 II. Turning now to the moral part of the Old Testa ment legislation — to the law strictly so called — we find our Lord acting in a quite different manner — shewing the utmost sohcitude to preserve intact the revelation at Sinai, and to have it made, through His teaching, both better understood, and with fresh sanctions enforced as the essential rule of righteousness in God's kingdom — nay, Himself submitting to bow down to it as the yoke which, in His great work of obedience, He was to bear, and, by bearing, to glorify God and redeem man. Let us look at it first in more immediate connection with the teaching of Christ. There was undoubtedly a difference — a difference of a quite perceptible kind, and one that wUl not be over looked by those who would deal wisely with the records of God's dispensations, in respect to the place occupied by law in the economies headed respectively by Moses and Christ. It was in His memorable Sermon on the Mount that our Lord made the chief formal promulgation ofthe fundamental principles of His Kingdom, which, there fore, stood to the coming dispensation in somewhat of the The occasion, too, on which it was done, fitly accorded with its character ; for, just as in the Old Testament arrangements the feasts were linked to appropriate seasons in nature, so was it here with the initiatory work of Christ : like the economical change which the miracle symbolized, the time was one of hope and gladness. It was the commencing era of a new life to the persons more immediately concerned, and one that, not only in its natural aspect, had the sanction and countenance of Christ, but also, from the higher turn given to it by His miraculous working, made promise of the joy and blessing which was to result from His great undertaking. Nay, by entering into the bridegroom's part, and ministering to the guests the materials of gladness, He foreshadowed how, as the Regenerator of the world, He should make Himself known as the kind and gracious Bridegroom of His church. And it seems as if the Baptist had hut caught up the meaning couched under this significant action of our Lord, when, not long afterwards, he spoke of Jesus as the Bridegroom, whose voice he, as the Bridegroom's friend, delighted to hear, and whose appearance should have been welcomed by all as the harbinger of life and blessing. 220 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. same relation that the imposing promulgation of law from Sinai did to the ancient Theocracy ; and, as if on purpose to link the two more distinctly and closely together, He makes to that earlier revelation very fre quent and pointed reference in His discourse. But how strikingly different in mode and circumstance the one revelation from the other ! The two dispensations have their distinctive characteristics imaged in the two histo rical occasions, exhibiting even to the outward eye the contrast expressed by the Evangelist John, when he said, ' The law was given by Moses, grace and truth came by Jesus Christ.' What a difference in the external scenery alone, hi the two mounts ! Sinai is less properly a mountain, in the ordinary sense of the term, than a lofty and precipitous rock, in the midst of a wilderness of rocks of similar aspect and formation — combining, in a degree rarely equaUed, the two features of grandeur and desolation; ' The Alps unclothed,' as they have been significantly called — the Alps stript of aU verdure and vegetation, and cleft on every side into such deep hollows, or rising into such rugged eminences, as render them alike of sullen mien and of difficult access. There, amid the sterner scenery of nature, intensified by the supernatural elements brought into play for the occasion, the Lord de scended as in a chariot of fire, and proclaimed with a voice of thunder those ten words which were to form the basis of Israel's religion and pohty. It was amid quite other scenes and aspects of nature, that the incar nate Redeemer met the assembled multitudes of Gahlee, when He proceeded to disclose in their hearing the fundamental principles of the new and higher constitu tion He came to introduce. The exact locality in this case cannot, indeed, be determined with infaUible cer- Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 221 tainty — though there is no reason to doubt its- connection with the elevated table-land, rising prominently into view a few miles to the south of Capernaum, and jutting up into two httle points called the ' Horns of Hattin,' to which tradition has assigned the name of ' The mount of the Beatitudes.' This elevated plain, we are informed, ' is easdy accessible from the Gahlean lake, and from that plain to the summit [or points just mentioned] is but a few minutes' walk. Its situation also is central both to the peasants of the GalUean hUls, and the fisher men of the lake, between which it stands ; and would, therefore, be a natural resort to Jesus and His disciples, when they retired for sohtude from the shores of the sea.'1 The prospect from the summit is described even now as pleasing, though rank weeds are growing around, and only occasional patches of corn meet the eye ;2 but how much more must it have been so then, when Gahlee was a weU-cultivated and fertile region, and the rich fields which slope downwards to the lake were seen waving with their summer produce !¦ It was on such an eminence, embosomed in so fair and pleasing an amphi theatre, and, as the multitudes assembled on the occasion seemed to betoken, under a bright sky and a serene atmosphere, that the blessed Redeemer chose to give forth this fresh utterance of Heaven's mind and wiU ; and Himself the whUe, not wrapt in thick darkness, not even assuming an attitude of imposing grandeur, but fresh from the benign work of heahng, and seated in humble guise, as a man among his feUow-men, at the most as a teacher in the midst of His listening disciples. So did the Son of Man open His mouth and make known the things which concern His kingdom. What striking 1 Stanley's ' Sinai and Palestine,' p. 368. 2 Robertson's ' Researches,' III. p. 239. 222 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. and appropriate indications of Divine grace and conde scension ! How weU fitted to inspire confidence and hope ! As compared with the scenes and transactions associated with the giving of the law from Sinai, it bespoke such an advance in the march of God's dispensa tions, as is seen in the field of nature when it can be said, ' The winter is past, the rain is over and gone, the flowers appear on the earth, the time of the singing of birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land.' The discourse which our Lord dehvered on the occa sion entirely corresponds with the new era which it marked in the history of God's dispensations. The revelation from Sinai, though grafted on a covenant of grace, and uttered by God as the Redeemer of Israel, was emphaticaUy a promulgation of law. Its direct and formal object was to raise aloft the claims of the Divine righteousness, and meet, with repressive and determined energy, the corrupt tendencies of human nature. The Sermon on the Mount, on the other hand, begins with blessing. It opens with a whole series of beatitudes, blessing after blessing pouring itself forth as from a full spring of beneficence, and seeking, with its varied and copious manifestations of goodness, to leave nothing un provided for in the deep wants and longing desires of men. Yet here also, as in other things, the difference between the New and the Old is relative only, not absolute. There are the same fundamental elements in both, but these differently adjusted, so as fitly to adapt them to the ends they had to serve, and the times to which they respectively belonged. In the revelation of law there was a substratum of grace, recognised in the words which prefaced the ten commandments, and pro mises of grace and blessing also intermingling with the Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 223 stern prohibitions and injunctions of which they consist. And so, inversely, in the Sermon on the Mount, whUe it gives grace the priority and the prominence, it is far from excluding the severer aspect of God's character and government. No sooner, indeed, has grace poured itself forth in a succession of beatitudes, than there appear the stern demands of righteousness and law — the very law proclaimed from Sinai — and that law so explained and enforced as to bring fuUy under its sway the intents of the heart, as weU as the actions of the life, and by men's relation to it determining their place and destinies in the Messiah's kingdom. Here, then, we have our Lord's own testimony regard ing His relation to the law of God. His first and most comprehensive declaration upon the subject — the one which may be said to rule all the others — is the utterance on the mount, ' Think not that I came to destroy the law or the prophets, I came not to destroy (xaraXueai, to dissolve, abrogate, make void), but to fulfil (vXrigZaai).'1 This latter expression must be taken in its plain and natural sense ; therefore, not as some would understand it, to confirm or ratify — which is not the import of the word, and also what the law and the prophets did not require. God's word needs no ratification. Nor, as others, to fiU up and complete their teaching— for this were no proper contrast to the destroying or making void. No ; it means simply to substantiate, by doing what they required, or making good what they announced. To fulfil a law (irXyeow v6/j,ov), was a quite common expression, in profane as wed as sacred writings, and only in the sense now given.2 So we find Augustine confidently urging 1 Mat. v. 17. 2 Luke xxiv. 44 ; Acts iii. 18 ; Rom. xiii. 8 ; Gal. v. 14. See, for example, Meyer and Fritzsche on the words. Alford points to what he 224 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. it against the Manichsean perverters of the truth in his day : ' The law (says he) is fulfilled when the things are done which are commanded. . . . Christ came not to destroy the law but to fulfil it : not that things might be added to the law which were wanting, but that the things written in it might be done — which His own words confirm ; for He does not say, " One jot or one tittle shaU not pass from the law" tiU the things wanting . are added to it, but " tiU aU be done." n And uttered as the declaration was when men's minds were fermenting with aU manner of ophiions respecting the intentions of Jesus, it was plainly meant to assure them that He stood in a friendly relation to the law and the prophets, and could no more, in His teaching than in His work ing, do what would be subversive of their design. They must find in Him only their fulfilment. To render His meaning stiU more explicit, our Lord gives it the advantage of two specific Ulustrations, one hypo thetical, the other actual. ' Should any one, therefore (He says, in ver. 19), annul (not break, as in the Enghsh version, but put away, abrogate, annul, xbe-^) one of these commandments — the least of them — and teach men so, he shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven ;' such is the exact rendering, and it very expressly asserts the validity of what was found in preceding revelations, down even to then least commands, in the kingdom pre sently to be set up. There was to be no antagonism calls parallel instances for another meaning ; but they are not parallel ; for the question is not what i\yi^oiii by itself, but what ¦a-x^ovv iip.01 signifies. The expression has but one ascertained meaning. 1 Contra Faustum. L. xvii. sec. 6. I have given only what he says on the expression of our Lord ; his mode of explaining the fulfilment, though not in correct, is somewhat partial and incomplete : — Ipsa lex cum impleta est, gratia et Veritas facta est. Gratia pertinet ad charitatis plenitudinem, Veritas ad pro- phetiarum impletionem. Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 225 between the new and the old ; so far from it, that any one who had faded to discern and appreciate the righteous ness embodied in the smaller things of the law, and on that account would have them set aside — for so plainly must the words be understood — he should exhibit such a want of accordance with the spirit of the new economy, he shoidd so imperfectly understand and sympathize with its claims of righteousness, that he might lay his account to be aU but excluded from a place in the kingdom. But it was quite conceivable, that one might in a certain sense not except even to the least, and yet be so defective in the qualities of true righteousness, as to stand in an altogether false position toward the greater and more important. There were well-known parties in such a position at that particular time ; and by a reference to what actuaUy existed among them, our Lord furnishes another, and to His audience, doubtless, a more startling, illustration. ' For I say unto you,' He adds, ' that except your righteousness should exceed (wegieeitigp, go beyond, overpass) that of the Scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no wise enter into the kingdom of heaven.' The question is now one of total unfitness and consequent exclusion. In the preceding and hypothetical statement, our Lord had declared how even a comparatively smaU antagonism to the righteousness of the law should inevitably lower one's position in respect to the kingdom ; and now, vindicating this stringency, as well as exemplifying and confirming it, He points to the mistaken and defective standard preva lent among the more conspicuous religionists of the time as utterly incompatible with any place whatever in the .kingdom. The Scribes are joined with the Pharisees in upholding the righteousness in question — the one as representatives of its defective teaching, the other as examples of its inadequate doing. The Scribes under- p 226 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII, stood and taught superficiaUy, adhering to the mere letter of requirement, and hence unduly magnifying the little, relatively undervaluing or neglecting the great. The Pharisees, in like manner, practised superficiaUy, intent mainly on the proprieties of outward observance, doing the works of law only in so far as they seemed to be expressly enjoined, and doing them without love, without life — hence leaving its greater things in reahty undone. A righteousness of this description feU altogether below what Jesus, as the Head of the new dispensation, would require of His foUowers, below also, it is implied, what was taught in the law and the prophets ; for while He could place Himself in perfect accord with the one, He entirely repudiated any connection with the other : the kingdom, as to the righteousness recognised and expected in it, was to rise on the foundation of the law and the prophets ; but for any one to stand on the plat form of the Scribes and Pharisees, was to belong to an essentiaUy different sphere. Now two conclusions seem plainly to flow from this part of our Lord's teaching. One is, that He must have had chiefly in view the moral elements of the old economy, or the righteousness expressed in its enactments : — I do not say simply the ten commandments ; for though these always occupied the foremost place in discourses on the law, did so also here (as appears from the examples pre sently referred to by our Lord), yet one can scarcely think of them when a ' least' is spoken of, as they one and aU belonged to the fundamental statutes of the .kingdom. Yet, as it is of the law, in connection with and subservient to righteousness, that our Lord speaks, primary respect must be had to the Decalogue, and, in so far as matters of a ceremonial and judicial nature were included, to these only as designed to inculcate and Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 227 enforce the principles of holy living ; that is, not as mere outward forms or civd regulations, but as the means and the measure of practical goodness. For, otherwise, our Lord's teaching here would be at variance with what He taught elsewhere, and with the truth of things. What He said, for example, on the subject of defilement, that this does not depend upon corporeal conditions and questions of food, but simply on the state of the heart and the issues which proceed from it, formaUy considered, was undoubtedly an infringing upon the lesser things of the law ; but not so ready, for it was merely a penetrat ing through the sheU into the kernel, and in direct terms pressing upon the conscience the lessons intended to be conveyed by the law's carnal ordinances. If the letter feU away, it was only that the spirit might become more clear and prominent. And so in regard to aU the ritual observances and factitious distinctions associated with the rehgion of the Old Covenant — whUe an entire change was hinted at by our Lord, and in His name was after wards introduced — the commands imposing them were by no means dishonoured, since the righteousness, for the sake of which these commands were given, was still cared' for, and even more thoroughly secured than it could be by them. Rightly viewed, the change was more properly a fulfilling than an abrogating ; an abro gating, indeed, formaUy, yet a fulfilling or estabhshing in reahty. Another conclusion which evidently flows from the statements made by our Lord respecting His own relation and that of His kingdom to the law and the prophets, is that the distinctions which He proceeds to draw, in the Sermon on the Mount, between what had been said in earlier times on several points of moral and rehgious duty, and what He now said, must have respect, not to 228 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII, the teaching, strictly speaking, of the law and the pro phets, but to the views currently entertained of that teaching, or the false maxims founded on it. After so solemnly asserting His entire harmony with the law and the prophets, and His dependence on them, it would manifestly have been to lay Himself open to the charge of inconsistence, and actuady to shift the ground which He professedly occupied in regard to them, if now He should go on to declare, that, in respect to the great landmarks of moral and religious duty, they said one thing, and He said another. This is utterly incredible ; and we must assume, that in every instance where a precept of the law is quoted among the things said in former times, even though no improper addition is coupled with it (as at vers. 27 and 33), there stiU was an unwarrantable or quite inadequate view commonly taken of them, against which our Lord directs His authoritative dehverance, that He might point the way to the proper height of spiritual attainment. This view, which the very nature of the case may be said to demand, is also confirmed by the formula with which the sayings in question are introduced : ' Ye have heard that it was said to them of old time ' (roTg a^«;o/'s, to the ancients).1 1 Commentators are still divided on the construction here, whether the expression should be taken in the dative or the ablative sense — to the ancients, or by them. The general tendency of opinion, however, is decidedly in favour of the former ; and though the sense does not materially differ whichever con struction is adopted, yet various philological considerations determine for the dative. (1.) The verb (obsol. /•*>) is used with great frequency in Matthew's Gospel in the passive, but always (unless the cases in chap. v. be exceptions) with a preposition, un or §/<*, when the parties by whom the things spoken are mentioned — they were spoken by or through such an one. (2.) In the other passages of Scripture, ,in which precisely VyfiB* is used, followed as here by words in the dative without a preposition (Rom. ix. 12, 26 ; Gal. iii. 16 ; Rev. vi. 11 ; ix. 4), it is beyond doubt the dative import that must be re tained. (3.) If it were to be read by the ancients, then a special emphasis must rest upon the ancients; this will stand in formal contrast to the 'I' of our Lord. Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 229 It is a very general mode of expression, not such as we should have expected, if only the deliverances of Scrip ture were referred to, or the persons who at first hand received them from the messengers of Heaven. These were the honoured fathers of the covenant-people, not the ancients merely, who at some indefinite period in the past had heard and thought after some particular manner. Hence, while they aU turn on certain precepts of the law, these, in two or three of the cases, are expressly coupled with later additions, indicative of the superficial view that was taken of them ;x and, throughout all the cases adduced, it is evident ' from our Lord's mode of handling them, that it is not. the law per se that is under consideration, but the law as understood and expounded according so the frigid style of Rabbinical interpretation — by persons who looked no fiirther than its form of sound words, who thought that to kiU had to do with nothing but actual murder, and that a neighbour could be only one dwelhng in good fellowship beside us ; who, in short, turned the law of God's righteousness, which, Hke its Divine Author, must be pervasively spiritual, The collocation of the words, however, would in that case have been different ; it would have been om rols o.q%o.ioU Ippsfa, not oti sppsfa ro7s cip%utof$. Not only so, hut in most of the repetitions of the formula, in v. 27, according to what seems the best reading, and in v. 31, 38, 43, according to the received text, the mis ie%aio!s is wholly omitted — shewing that it was on the saying of the things, not on the persons who said them, that the contrast mainly turns. (4.) It may certainly be regarded as a confirmation of this being, at least, the most natural 'and obvious construction (which itself is, in such a matter, of some moment), that it is the one adopted by all the leading Greek commentators — Chrysostom, Theophylact, Euthymius. It is that also of the Syriac and Vulgate. Beza was the first, I believe, who formally proposed the rendering by them of old time, taking the simple ™t &^""'s as equivalent to ii-rl mis &(%. ] These are, v. 21, after ' Thou shalt not kill,' ' And whosoever shall kill shall be liable to the judgment ;' and v. 33-36, in regard to several kinds of oaths ; and v. 43, after ' Thou shalt love thy neighbour,' ' Thou shalt hate thine enemy.' 230 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. into a mere pohtical code or ecclesiastical rubric. It is of the law, as thus unduly curtailed, evacuated of its proper meaning, treated by the Scribes or letter-men (yiafhtharui) as itself but a letter (yga^/^a), that Christ speaks, and, setting His profound and far-reaching view in opposition to theirs, proclaims, ' But I say unto you.' Never on any occasion did Jesus place Himself in such antagonism to Moses ; and least of aU could He do so here, immediately after having so emphaticaUy repudiated the notion, that He had come to nullify the law and tbe prophets, or to cancel men's obhgation to any part of the righteousness they inculcated. It is to free this righteousness from the restrictive bonds that had been laid upon it, and bring it out in its proper breadth and fulness, that our Lord's expositions are directed. And as if to guard against any wrong impressions being pro duced by what He now said — to shew that His views of righteousness were in strict agreement with what is written in the law and the prophets, and that the germ of aU was already there, He distinctly connected with them, at a subsequent part of His discourse, His own enunciation of the law of brotherly love, in what has been called its finest form, ' Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them ; for this is the law and the prophets' (Matt. vh. 12).1 1 I am convinced the connection of our Lord's discourse — the relation of the specific illustrations, given in v. 21-48, to the frmdamental positions which they were brought to illustrate, v. 17-20 — will admit of no other construction than the one now given. From early times, others have been adopted — by the Manichseans, who sought to found on the illustrative expositions an absolute contrariety between Christ and Moses ; and by the great body of the Greek and Romish theologians, foUowed in later times by the Socinian, Arminian, and rationalistic expositors, who understand them of a relative antagonism— namely, that the law as given by Moses was good as far as it went, but was carnal and imperfect, and so needed -supplementing and enlarging by Christ. Christ, consequently, according to this view, placed His sayings in contrast with Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 231 At the same time, there is nothing in all this to pre vent us from believing, as, indeed, it is next to impossible for any one to avoid feeling, that an advance was made by our Lord in His own wonderful exposition of the law — if only that advance is confined to the clearer light which is thrown on the meaning of its precepts, and the higher form which is given to their expression. The Decalogue itself, and the legislation growing out of it, were in their form adapted • to a provisional state of the law itself, as well as with the external legalisms of the Scribes and Phari sees ; these, in fact, are regarded as in the main the true exponents of the Sinaitic law — contrary to the whole tenor of our Lord's representations of themt and the position He took up with reference to them. The other, and what I take to be the correct view, began to be distinctly unfolded and firmly maintained by Augustine, in his contendings with the Manichseans. This is the sense expressed in the passage already quoted from his writings, at p. 224 ; and in the treatise there referred to, L. xix. 27, he brings out the same meaning at still greater length, illustrating as weU as stating this to have been Christ's object, either to give the explanation of the law that was needed, or to secure its better observance — omnia ex Hebraeorum lege commemoravit, ut quiquid ex persona sua insuper loqueretur vel ad expositionem requirendam valeret, si quid ilia obscure posuisset, vel ad tutius conservandum quod ilia voluisset, The Protestant church, generally, in its sounder representatives, took the same yiew, — Luther, Calvin, Chemnitz (who speaks of the whole passage being cor rupted by those who think, Christum hanc suam explicationem opponere ipsi legi divinae), latterly, Stier, Meyer, Fritzsche, Olshausen, even De Wette, Bleek, Ewald, and others of a like stamp ; so also Tholuck, who gives a lengthened review of opinions on the subject, and expresses his own view, and that of many other of the best expositors thus : — ' The object of the Saviour is twofold ; on the one hand, He seeks to exhibit the Mosaic law in its deeper import as the moral norm of the righteousness of His kingdom ; on the other hand, He aims at an exposure of the laxer Pharisaic righteousness of His con temporaries, shewing how inadequate it was to attain the high end in view.' Neander, Hofmann, and several others of note, have espoused the other view. In our own country, Mr Liddon (Bampton Lecture for 1866, p. 252) presents it with rhetorical confidence ; while Mr Plumptre (' Christ and Christendom,' 1866, p. 235), substantially concurs with the old Protestant interpretation, looking on our Lord's discourse ' as a protest against the popular ethics of the Scribes and Pharisees, professing to be based upon the law, but representing it most imperfectly.' Alford would take a middle course, but fails to make his meaning quite intelligible. The contrast, he thinks, is ' not between the law misunderstood, and the law rightly understood, but between the law and its 232 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. things ; they had to serve the end of a disciplinary insti tution, and as such had to assume more both of an external and a negative character, than could be regarded as ideally or absolutely the best. And it was only what might have been expected in the progress of things — when that which is perfect was come — that whUe the law in its great principles of moral obhgation and its binding power upon the conscience remained, these should have had an exhibition given to them somewhat corresponding to the noon-day period of the church's ancient exposition, which in their letter, and as given, were vain, and the same as spiritualized by Christ ; ' but the Divine law, when taken in its letter (that is, we presume, as a mere outward regimen), is misunderstood, for it never was meant to be so taken ; psalmists and prophets, as well as Christ, protested against that view of it ; and then the more spiritual a law is, if left simply as law, the more certain is it to be vain as to any saving results. The parts in our Lord's sermon which have most the appearance of contra riety to the old law, are what is said about swearing (v. 33-36), about the law of recompense (v. 38-42) ; also, in a future discourse, what is said on the law of divorce (Matt. xix. 1-9). In regard to the first, however, the specific oaths of the Jews referred to by Christ, taken in connection with His later reference to them in Matt, xxiii. 16-22, shew clearly enough that it is a prevailing abuse and corruption of the law that was in view. And, as Harless remarks, 'What the Lord, the Giver of the law, had commanded in the Old Covenant, namely, that one should swear in His name (Deut. vi. 13, 18, 20 ; Ex. xxii. 11), that could not be forbidden in the new by the Lord, the Fulfiller of the law, without destroying instead of fulfilling it. Rather in this precisely consists the fulfil ment, that what the law commanded without being able properly to secure the fulfilment, that has now come in the Gospel, and, in consequecce, the precept respecting swearing has also reached its fulfilment, It is just what Jeremiah intimated, when he predicted that Israel, after being converted, would swear in a true and holy manner (iv. 1, 2). What is prohibited in the Gospel of Matthew are light and frivolous forms of swearing, without any religious feel ing' (Ethik, sec. 39). As to the law of recompense (not revenge), as meant by Moses, it is substantially in force still, and must be so in all well-regulated communities. (See in Lect. IV.) What our Lord taught in connection with it was, that men in their private relations, and as exponents of love, should not regard that judicial law as exhausting their duty : to do so was to misapply it. They should consider how, by forbearance and well-doing, they might benefit a brother, instead of always exacting of him their due. The case of divorce has certain difficulties connected with it, yet rather from what in the Old Testament was not enacted, permitted merely, than what was. But see in Lect. IV. Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 233 history, and the son-like freedom of her spiritual stand ing. Accordingly, our Lord does, in the Sermon on the Mount, and in other parts of His teaching, bring out in a manner never heretofore done, the sphituality of the law of God — shews how, just from being the revelation of His will who is Himself a Spirit, and, as such, necessarily has a predominant respect to spiritual states and acts, it reaches in all its precepts to the thoughts and intents of the heart, and only meets with the obedience it de mands, when a pure, generous, self-sacrificing love regulates men's desires and feelings, as well as their words and actions. Hence, things pertaining to the inner man have here relatively a larger place than of old ; and, as a natural sequel, there is more of the positive, less of the negative in form ; the mind is turned con siderably more upon the good that should be done, and less upon the evU to be shunned. It is stiU but a differ ence in degree, and is often grossly exaggerated by those who have a particular theory of the hfe of Christ to make out — as by the author of ' Ecce Homo,' who represents the morahty enjoined in the Pentateuch as adapted only to half-savage tribes of the desert, the morahty even of Isaiah and the prophets as 'narrow, antiquated, and insufficient for the needs' of men in the Gospel age, whUe, in the teaching of Christ, all becomes changed 'from a restraint to a motive. Those who listened to it passed from a region of passive into a region of active morahty. The old legal formula began, " Thou shalt not ;" the new begins with " Thou shalt," : etc.1 That this style of representation, in its comparative estimate of the new and the old, goes to excess, it would not be difficult to shew ; but the mere circumstance that Mr J. S. MU1 charges the expounders of Christian morahty 1 ' Ecce Homo,' ch. xvi. 234 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. with presenting an ideal essentially defective, because ' negative rather than positive, passive rather than active, innocence rather than nobleness, abstinence from evil rather than energetic pursuit of good,' is itself a proof that elements of this description cannot be wanting in the Christian system.1 In truth, in the New Testament as weU as in the Old, the prohibitory is perpetuaUy alternating with the hortatory, the shall not with the shall; even in the Sermon on the Mount the one is nearly of as frequent occurrence as the other, and must be so in every revelation of spiritual obhgation and moral duty that is suited to men with corrupt natures, and com passed about with manifold temptations. It must lay a restraint upon their inchnations to evil, as weU as direct and stimulate their efforts to what is good. And the difference between the discourses of Christ and the earher Scriptures on this and the other point now under consideration, cannot be justly exhibited as more than a relative one — adapted to a more advanced period of the Divine dispensations. It is such, however, that no discerning mind can fad to perceive it ; and when taken in connection with the altogether peculiar illus trations given of it in the facts of Gospel history, places the Christian on a much higher elevation than that possessed by ancient Israel as to a clear and 1 ' Essay on Liberty,' p. 89 . It is due, however, to Mr Mill to state that, while his language in the passage referred to is not free from objection, he yet distinguishes between the teaching of Christ in this respect, and what he de signates 'the so-called Christian morality' of later times. The writer of ' Ecce Deus,' in his attack on Mill (p. 261), has not sufficiently attended to this distinction. In another treatise, Mr Mill appears to find, in the fundamental principles of the Gospel, all that he himself teaches in morals. ' In the golden rule of Jesus of Nazareth we read the complete spirit of the ethics of utility. To do as one would be done by, and to love one's neighbour as one's-self, constitute the ideal perfection of utilitarian morality.' — 'On Utilitarianism,' p. 24. Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 23.5 comprehensive acquaintance with the obligations of moral duty.1 In perfect accordance with the views respecting the moral law exhibited in the Sermon on the Mount, and widely different from what He said of the ceremonial institutions, was the action of our Lord in regard to the Sabbatism enjoined in the fourth command of the Deca logue. He gives no hint whatever of its coming aboli tion, but, on the contrary, recognised its Divine ordination, and merely sought to estabhsh a more wholesome and rational observance of it than was dreamt of or admitted by the slaves of the letter. On a variety of occasions He wrought cures on the Sabbath-day — so often, indeed, that the action must have been taken on purpose to con vey what He deemed salutary and needful instruction for the time ; and on one occasion He aUowed His dis ciples to satisfy their hunger by plucking the ears of corn as they passed through a field.2 His watchful 1 The view now given is not, I think, materially different from that of Wuttke, who conceives something more to have been intended by Christ in His exposition of the law, than a mere repudiation of the false interpretations of the Pharisees, namely, such an elucidation and deepening of the import, as to constitute a further development, or spiritual enlargement (' Christliche Sittenlehre,' sec. 208). He still does not mean that anything absolutely new was introduced, or a sense put upon the law which was not contained in the Decalogue ; for he had just declared the ' law of the Old Covenant to be simply the moral law, valid for all men and times,' comprehensive of all righteousness, so that he who should keep it in spirit and in truth would be altogether righteous before God (sec. 204). But in Christ's discourse it got a clearer, profounder exposition, and was thrown also into a higher form. It is much the same also, apparently, that is meant by M tiller when he speaks of the Decalogue expressing the eternal principles of true morality, and, there fore, always fitted to bring about the knowledge of sin and repentance ; while still a far more developed and deeper knowledge of the moral law is given to the Christian Church through the efficacy of the holy prototype of Christ and the Holy Spirit, than could have been communicated by Moses to the children of Israel (On ' Sin,' B. I. P. I. c. 1). For this includes, besides law strictly so called, all supplementary means and privileges. 2 Matt. xii. 1-14 ; Mark i. 23, 24, iii. 1-5 ; Luke vi. 1-10, xiii. 10-16 ; John v., ix. 236 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. adversaries were not slow in marking this procedure, and charged our Lord with profaning the sacred rest of the Sabbath. How does He meet their reproaches? Not by quarreUing with the Divine command, or seeking to relax its obligation ; but by explaining its true purport and design, as never meant to interfere with such actions as He performed or sanctioned. In proof of this He chiefly appeals to precedents and practices which His adversaries themselves could not but aUow, if their minds had been open to conviction — such as David being per mitted in a time of extremity to eat the shew-bread, or themselves rescuing a sheep when it had fallen into a pit on the Sabbath — things necessary to the preservation and support of hfe ; or things, again, of a sacred nature, such as circumcising children on the legal day, though it might happen to be a Sabbath, doing the work at the Temple connected with the appointed service, which in some respects was greater on the seventh than the other days of the week, yea, at times involved aU the labour connected with the slaying and roasting of the Paschal lamb for tens of thousands of people. With such things r the parties in question were quite familiar ; and they should have understood from them, that the prescribed rest of the Sabbath was to be taken, not in an absolute, but in a relative sense — not as simply and in every case cessation from work, irrespective of the ends for which it might be done, but cessation from ordinary or servile work, in order that things of higher moment, things touching on the most important interests of men, might be cared for. Its sacred repose, therefore, must give way to the necessary demands of hfe, even of irra tional hfe, and to whatever is required to bring rehef from actual distress and trouble. It must give way also to that kind of work which is more peculiarly con- Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 237 nected with the service of God and with men's restored feUowship with the life and blessedness of Heaven ; for to promote this was the more special design of the Sab batical appointment. So, plainly, existing facts shewed even in Old Testament times, though the Pharisees, in their zeal for an abstract and imperious legahsm missed the proper reading of them. Jesus grasped, as usual, the real spirit of the institution ; for, we are to remember, He is explaining the law of the Sabbath as it then stood, not superseding it by another. He would have them to understand that, as it is not the simple abstraction of a man's property (which may in certain circumstances be done lawfuUy, and for his own temporal good), that constitutes a violation of the eighth commandment, but a selfish and covetous appropriation of it by fraud or violence ; so, in regard to the fourth, the prohibition of work had respect only to what was at variance with its holy and beneficent designs. ' The Sabbath was made for man ' — with a wise and gracious adaptation to the requirements of his complex nature, as apt to be wearied with the tods, and in his spirit dragged downward by the cares of life ; ' not man for the Sabbath,' as if it were an absolute and independent authority, that must hold its own, however hardly in doing so it might bear on the wants and interests of those placed under its control. It has an aim, a high moral aim, for the real wellbeing of mankind ; and by a conscientious regard to this must everything, in regard to its outward observance, be ruled. Such is the view given by our Lord on the law of the Sabbath, speaking as from the ground of law, and doing the part merely of a correct expounder of its meaning ; but a thought is introduced and variously expressed, as from His own higher elevation, in harmony with the 238 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. spiritual aspect of the subject He had presented, and pointing to still further developments of it. The Temple, He had said, has claims of service, which it was no proper desecration of the Sabbath, but the reverse, to satisfy; and ' a greater than the Temple was there.' ' The Temple yields to Christ, the Sabbath yields to the Temple, there fore the Sabbath yields to Christ ' — so the sentiment is syUogisticaUy expressed by Bengel ; but yields, it must be observed, in both cases alike, only for the performance of works not antagonistic, but homogeneous, to its nature. Or, as it is again put, ' The Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath.' Made, as the Sabbath was, for man, there necessardy belongs to man, within certain limits, a re gulating power in respect to its observance, so as to render it more effectuaUy subservient to its proper ends. But this power is supremely resident in Him, who is the Son of Man, in whom Humanity attains to its true ideal of goodness, whose wiU is in aU things coincident with the wUl of God, and who, like the Father, works even while He rests.1 He is Lord of the Sabbath, and, as such, has a right to order everything concerning it, so as to make it, in the fullest sense, a day of blessing for man — a right, therefore, if He should see fit, to , transfer its observance from the last day of the week to the first, that it might be associated with the consummation of His redemptive work, and to make it, in accordance with the impulsive life and energy thereby brought in, more than in the past, a day of active and haUowed employ ment for the good of men. So much was certainly imphed in the claim of our Lord in reference to the Sabbath ; but as regards the existence of such a day, its stated place in the ever-recurring weekly cycle, which in its origin was coeval with the beginning of the world, 1 John v. 17. Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 239 which as a law was inscribed among the fundamental ¦precepts of the Decalogue, which renders it on the one side a memorial of the paradise that has been lost, and on the other a pledge of the paradise to be restored — in this respect nothing of a reactionary nature feU from our Lord, nor was any principle advanced which can justly be said to point in such a direction.1 The same spirit substantially discovers itself in the other occasional references made by our Lord to the moral law of the Old Covenant, as in those already noticed ; that is, there appears in them the same pro found regard to the authoritative teaching of the law, coupled with an insight into its depth and spirituahty of meaning, which was httle apprehended by the superficial teachers and formalists of the time. Such, for example, was the character of our Lord's reference to the fifth com mand of the Decalogue, when, replying to the charge of the Pharisees against His disciples for disregarding the tradition of the elders about washing before meat, He retorted on them the greatly more serious charge of ' making void the law of God by their traditions — teach ing that it was a higher duty for a son to devote his substance as an offering to God, than to apply it to the support of his parents— thereby virtually dishonouring those whom God had commanded him, as a primary duty, 1 It needs scarcely to be said what an interval separates the sayings of our Lord in the Gospels respecting the Sabbath, from the story reported by Clement of Alexandria about Christ having seen a man working on the Sabbath, and saying to him, < If thou knowest what thou dost, then art thou blessed; but if thou knowest not, then art thou accursed.' It was a story quite in accordance with the spirit of the school to which Clement belonged ; hut to caU it, as Mr Plumptre does ('Christ and Christendom,' p. 237), a credible tradition of Christ's ministry, would certainly require some other test of credibility than accordance with what is written in the Gospels ; for nothing recorded there gives such a licence to the individual will for dis regarding the Sabbath. 240 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIL to honour.1 The love and reverence due to parents was thus declared to be more than burnt-offering, and to have been so determined in the teaching of the law itself. The right principle of obedience was also brought out, but with a more general apphcation, and the absolute perfection of the law announced, as given in one of its summaries in the Old Testament, when, near the close of His ministry, and in answer to a question by one of the better Scribes, Jesus said, ' The first of aU the com mandments is, Hear, 0 Israel, The Lord our God is one Lord ; and thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with aU thy mind, and with all thy strength : this is the first commandment. And the second is like, namely this, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.' Not only did our Lord affirm, that ' on these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets,' but that ' there is none other command ment greater than these'2 — evidently meaning that in them was comprised all moral obligation. And when the Scribe assented to what was said, and added, that to exercise such love was more than all whole burnt-offer ings and sacrifices, Christ expressed His concurrence, and even pronounced the person who had attained to such knowledge not far from the kingdom of God. So, too, on another and earlier occasion, when the rich young ruler came running to Him with the question, ' What good thing he should do, that he might inherit eternal life Vs And on still another, when a certain lawyer stood up and asked, 'What shaU I do to inherit eternal life?'4 On both occasions alike, as the question was respecting things to be done, or righteousness to be attained, with the view of grounding a title thereon to eternal life, 1 Matt. xv. 3-6. 2 Matt. xxii. 40 ; Mark xii. 31. 3 Matt. xix. 16. * Luke x. 25. Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 241 Christ pointed. the inquirers to the written law of God in the one case more particularly to the precepts of the Decalogue, in the other to the two great comprehensive precepts of supreme love to God and brotherly love to man ; and, in connection with each, affirmed that, if the commands were frufiUed, life in the highest sense, eternal life, would certainly be inherited. In other words, by falfilling those commands, there would be that conformity to the pattern of Divine goodness, on which from the first aU right to the possession of hfe in God's kingdom has been suspended. At the same time, our Lord took occasion to shew, in both the cases, how far His inquirers were themselves from having reached this ideal exceUence, or even from distinctly apprehending what was actually included in the attainment. This surely is enough ; for, touching as these declara tions do on the great essentials of rehgion and morality, they must be understood in their plainest import ; and anything like subtle ingenuity in dealing with them, or specious theorizings, would be entirely out of place. Manifestly, the revelation of law in the Old Testament was, in our Lord's view, comprehensive of aU righteous ness — whUe still, in respect to form, it partook of the imperfection of the times, and of the provisional economy, with which it was more immediately connected ; and for bringing clearly out the measure and extent of the obliga tions involved in it, we owe much — who can say how much? — to the Divine insight of Christ, and the truly celestial hght reflected on it by His matchless teaching and spotless example. In that respect our Lord might with fullest propriety say, ' A new commandment I give unto you, that ye may love one another ; as I have loved you, that ye may so also love one another :n — new, how- 1 John xiii. 34. Q 242 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. ever, not in regard to the command of love taken by itseff, nor in regard to the degree of love, as if one were required now to love others, not merely as one's-self, but above one's-self — no, but new simply with reference to the peerless manifestation of love given in His own person, and the motive thence arising — altogether peculiar in its force and efficacy — for His people to strive after conformity to His example. This, indeed, is the highest glory that can here be claimed for Jesus ; and to contend with some, under the plea of glorifying His Messiahship, that He must have signalized His appearance on earth by the introduction of an essentially new and higher morahty, were in effect to dishonour Him ; for it would break at a vital point the continuity of the Divine dis pensations, and stamp the revelation of law which, at an earher period of His own mediatorial agency, had in reahty come forth from Himself, as in its very nature faulty — wanting something which it should have had as a reflection of the character of God, and a rule of life for those who, as members of His kingdom, were called. to love and honour Him. II. We turn now from what Christ taught to what He did. And here, stiU more than in regard to His propheti cal agency, He had a mission peculiarly His own to fulfil for the good of men, yet not the less one which was defined beforehand, and in a manner ruled, by the pre scriptions of law. For the work of Christ as the Redeemer neither was, nor could be, anything else than the triumph of righteousness for man over man's sin. And, accordingly, in the intimations that had gone before concerning Him, this characteristic (as formerly noticed) was made pecuharly prominent : He was to be girt about with righteousness, was to be known as the Lord's right- Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 243' eous servant, His elect one, in whom His soul should delight ; so that He might be caUed ' The Lord our Eighteousness,' as weU as ' The Lord our Salvation,' since in Him aU that believed should be justified, or made righteous, and should glory.1 There have been those who questioned whether the reality corresponded with these predictions, or with the claims actually put forth in behalf of Jesus of Nazareth ; but nothing has ever been alleged in support of such insinuations, except what has been found in mistaken ideas of His mission, or wrong interpretations put on certain actions of His hfe. Certainly, His enemies in the days of His flesh, who sought most diligently for grounds of moral accusation against Him, faded to discover them : He Himself boldly threw out before them the chaUenge, ' Which of you con- vinceth me of sin ?'2 ' The prince of this world,' He again said — the great patron and representative of sin — ' cometh, and hath nothing in me.'3 Higher stiU, He said to the Father, ' I have glorified thee on earth ; I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do'4 — no indication whatever of the shghtest faUure or shortcoming ; — and this assertion of faultless exceUence was re-echoed on the Father's side, in the word once and again heard from Heaven, ' This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.'5 It was an altogether strange phenomenon in the world's history. ' What an impression,' Dorner justly asks,6 ' must have been made upon the disciples by Jesus, whose spirit was full of peace and of an undisturbed serenity, who never shewed the shghtest trace of having worked Himself into this peaceful state through hard 1 Isa. xi. 5, xlii. 1, liii. 11 ; Jer. xxiii. 6. 2 John viii. 46. 3 John xiv. 30. 4 John xvii. 4. 6 Matt. iii. 17, xvii. 5. 6 ' Ueber Jesu Sundlose Vollkommenheit,' p. 34. 244 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. effort and conflict with sin. There was a man in whom appeared no sign of repentance or of disquietude in regard to Himself ; a man without sohcitude for His soul's salva tion, for He is already possessed of eternal life ; He hves as in heaven. No prayer is heard from Him for sin of His own, nor is any aversion shewn to enter into the company of publicans and sinners ; in the most trying moments of His hfe, it becomes manifest that He is with out consciousness of sin. This is an unquestionable fact of history, whatever explanation may be given of it. For that He set before Him as His life-purpose the dehver ance and reconcdiation of the world, that for the execution of this purpose He knew HimseH to be committed to suffer, even to the cross, and that He actuaUy expired in the consciousness of having at once executed the purpose and maintained undisturbed His fellowship with God — this no more admits of denial than that it would have been an utterly foohsh and absurd idea to have thought of bringing in redemption for others, if He had been Himself conscious of needing redemption Jesus was conscious of no sin, just because He was no sinner. He was, though complete man, like God in sinless per fection ; and though not, hke God, incapable of being tempted, nor perfected from His birth, and so not in that sense holy, yet holy in the sense of preserving an innate purity and incorruptness, and through a quite normal development, in which the idea of a pure humanity comes at length to reahzation, and prevents the design of the world from remaining unaccomphshed. The impression made by Him is that of the free, the true Son of Man — needing no new birth, but by nature the new-born man, and no remedial apphcations, but Himself consciously possessing the power fitted to render Him the physician of diseased humanity.' Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 245 Could such an One reaUy be subject to the law ? Was He not rather above it ? So some have been disposed to maintain, with the avowed design of magnifying the name of Jesus : it has seemed to them as if they were claiming for Him a higher honour, when they represented Him as living above law, precisely as others have sought to do with respect to His teaching above law. But it is a kind of honour incompatible with the actual position and calhng of Jesus. To have so hved would have been to place Himself beyond the sphere which properly belongs to .humanity. He could no longer have been the representa tive of the morahty which we are bound to cultivate ; His standing in relation to spiritual exceUence had been something exceptional, arbitrary ; and wherever this enters, it is not a higher elevation that is reached, but rather a descent that is made — the sentimental or expe dient then takes the place of the absolutely righteous and good. To be the Lord of the law, and yet in aU things subject to the law's demands — moving within the bounds of law, yet finding them to be no restraint ; consenting to everything the law required as in itself altogether right, and of a free and ready mind doing it as a Son in the Father's house, so that it might as weU be said the law hved in Him, as that He lived in the law : — this is the highest glory which could be won in righteousness by the man Christ Jesus, and it is the glory which is ascribed to Him in Scripture. Never do we find Him there asserting for Himself as a right, or claiming as a privdege, a release from ordinary obhgations ; never was that which is dutiful and good for others viewed as otherwise for Him, or as hearing less directly on His responsibdities ; and in so . far as the work He had to do was peculiar, so much the more remarkable was the spirit of surrender with which He yielded Himself to the authority that lay upon Him. 246 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. Of Himself He declared that He was loved of the Father, because He kept the Father's commandments j1 and it is said of Him, in a word which covers the whole of His earthly career, ' He was made of a woman, made under the law,'2 therefore bound to a life-long subjection to its requirements ; bearing throughout the form of a servant, but bearing it with the heart of a Son. It was, conse quently, not His burden, but ' His meat to do the wiU of His Father, and to finish His work ;'3 and the spirit in which He entered on and ever prosecuted His vicarious service was that expressed in the language long before prepared for Him, ' Lo I come : in the volume of the book it is written of me ; I dehght to do thy wUl, 0 my God; yea, thy law is within my heart ;'4 and if at other times, so especially when His work of obedience was reaching its cul mination, and He was ready to perfect Himself through the sacrifice. of the cross. The necessity of this great act, and the place it was to hold in His mediatorial agency, had been from the first foreseen by Him : He knew (so He declared near the commencement of His ministry) that He must be lifted up for the salvation of the world.5 When the awful crisis approached, though He had power either to retain or to lay down His life, the things which had been written concerning it (He said) must be accom plished, that He should be numbered with the trans gressors ; 6 and the humble, earnest entreaty, ' Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me ; nevertheless, not my wdl but thine be done,' only shewed how nature recoiled from the terribleness, yet meekly bowed to the necessity, of the doom. For here especiaUy lay the ground of aU that He was to secure of good for His people. Here the work of reconcdiation between sinful 1 John x. 17, 18, xv. 11. 2 Gal. iv. 4. 3 John iv. 34. 4 Ps. xl. 7, 8; Heb. x. 7. 5 John iii. 14. 6 Luke xxii. 37. Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 247 men and their offended God must be once for all accom plished ; — and it was accomplished, by His ' being made sin for them who knew no sin, that they might be made the righteousness of God in Him' — or, as it is again put, by ' redeeming them from the curse of the law, by being Himself made a curse for them.'1 It is impossible here to do more than very briefly glance at this aU-important subject ; and the less needful, as it was so fuUy treated by the esteemed friend who immediately preceded me in this Lectureship.2 But, surely, if there be any thing in the record of our Lord's work upon earth, in which more than another the lan guage employed concerning it should be taken in its simplest meaning, it must be in what is said of the very heart of His undertaking — that on which every thing might be said to turn for the fulfilment of promise, and the exhibition of Divine faithfulness and truth. And there can be no doubt, that the representations just noticed, and others of a hke description, concerning the death of Christ, do in their natural sense carry a legal aspect ; they bear respect to the demands of law, or the justice of which law is the expression. They declare that, to meet those demands in behalf of sinners, Christ bore a judicial death — a death which, whfle aU-undeserved on the part of Him who suffered, must be regarded as the merited judgment of Heaven on human guUt. To be made a curse, that He might redeem men from the curse of the law, can have no other meaning than to endure the penalty, which as transgressors of law they had incurred, in order that they might escape ; nor can the exchange indicated in the words, ' He was made sin for us, that we might be made the righteousness of God 1 2 Cor. v. 21 ; Gal. iii. 13; Rom. v. 8-10. 2 Rev. Dr J. Buchanan. See his Lecture on ' Justification.' 248 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. in Him,' be justly understood to import less than that He, the righteous One, took the place of sinners in suf fering, that they might take His place in favour and blessing. And the stern necessity for the transaction — a necessity which even the resources of infinite wisdom, at the earnest cry of Jesus, found it impossible to evade1 — on what could it rest but the bosom of law, whose is violated claims caUed for satisfaction ? Not that God dehghts in blood, but that the paramount interests of truth and righteousness must be upheld, even though blood unspeakably precious may have to be shed in their vindication. There are many who cannot brook the idea of these legal claims and awful securities for the estabhshment of law and right in the government of God ; the sacrifice on the cross has no attraction for them when viewed in such an aspect ; and the utmost ingenuity has been pliedj in recent times more particularly, to accept the language of Scripture regarding it, and yet ehminate the element which alone gives it value or consistence. Thus, with one class, the idea of sacrifice in this connection is identi fied with seff-denial, with ' the entire surrender of the whole spirit and body to God,' bearing with meek and uncomplaining patience the impious rage of men, because it was the wiU of the Father He should do so ; when other wise He might have met it with counter- violence, or used His supernatural power to save Himself from the humili ating ordeal.2 What, however, is gained by such a mode of representation ? It gets rid, indeed, of what is called a religion of blood, but only to substitute for it a morality of blood — and a morality of blood grounded 1 Matt. xxvi. 39. 2 So, for example, Maurice in ' Theological Essays ;' and ' Ecce Homo' (p. 48), with some artistic delineations. Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 249 (for aught that we can see) upon no imperative necessity, nor in its own nature differing from what has been ex hibited by some of ^Christ's more illustrious disciples. Such a view has not even a formal resemblance to the truth as presented in Scripture ; it does not come within sight of the idea of vicarious sin-bearing or atonement, in any intelligible sense of the terms. Nor is the matter much improved by laying stress, with some, on the great ness of the opposition which the existing state of the world rendered it needful for Him to encounter — as when it is said, ' He came into coUision with the world's evU, and bore the penalty of that daring. . . . He bore suffer ing to free us from what is worse than suffering, sin : temporal death to save us from death everlasting' (Robertson). Nor again, with others, by viewing it in a merely subjective light, and finding the work to consist in a kind of sympathetic assumption of our gudt, entering in spirit into the Father's judgment upon it, and feeling and confessing for it the sorrow and repentance it is fitted 'to awaken in a perfectly holy soul (Campbell) ; or as others prefer putting it, by the manifestation of a bur dened love, of the moral suffering of God for men's sins and miseries, a Divine self-sacrificing love, to overmaster sin and conquer the human heart (BushneU, Young, etc.). In aU such representations, which are substantiaUy one, though somewhat different in form, there is merely an accommodation of Scripture language to a type of doctrine that is essentiaUy at variance with it. For when expressed in unambiguous terms, what does it amount to but this : That Christ in His views of sin and righteous ness, in the virtue of His hfe, and the sacrifice of His death, is the beau-ideal of humanity — our great pattern and example, the purest reflection of the Father's love and goodness? But that is aU. If we catch the spirit of 250 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. His antipathy to sin and devotion to righteousness, we share with Him in His glory ; we link ourselves to the Divine humanity which has manifested itself in Him ; ' God views us favourably as partaking of that holy, per fect, and Divine thing, which was once exhibited on earth ; but there is no judicial procedure, no legal penalty borne by the Saviour, and for His sake remitted to the gudty ; no direct acceptance for them through the blood of the atonement. And what comfort were such a Gospel to the conscience-stricken sinner ? It is but a disguised legalism ; for such a perfect exhibition of good ness in Christ, feeling, doing, suffering, with perfect con formity to the mind of God — what is it, considered by itself, but the law in a concrete and embodied form ? therefore the sinner's virtual condemnation ; the clear mirror in which the more steadfastly he looks, the more he must see how far he has gone from the righteousness and life of God ; and if not imputed to him, tiU he is conscious of having imbibed its spirit, where shall be his security against the agitations of fear, or even the agonies of despair ? In the great conflict of life, in the grand struggle which is proceeding, in our own bosoms and the world around us, between sin and righteousness, the conscious ness of gudt and the desire of salvation, it is not in such a mystified, impalpable Gospel, as those fine-spun theories present to us, that any effective aid is to be found. We must have a sohd foundation for our feet to stand on, a sure and living ground for our confidence before God. And this we can find only in the old church view of the sufferings and death of Christ as a satisfaction to God's justice for the offence done by our sin to His violated law. Satisfaction, I say emphaticaUy, to Gods justice — which some, even evangehcal writers, seem dis- Lect. VIL] HOW RELATED TO CHRIST'S WORK ON EARTH. 251 posed to stumble at ; they would say, satisfaction to God's honour, indeed, but by no means to God's justice.1 What, then, I would ask, is God's honour apart from God's justice ? His honour can be nothing but the reflex action or display of His moral attributes ; and in the exercise of these attributes, the fundamental and con trolling element is justice. Every one of them is con ditioned ; love itself is conditioned by the demands of justice ; and to provide scope for the operation of love in justifying the ungodly consistently with those demands, is the very ground and reason of the atonement — its ground and reason primardy in the mind of God, and because there, then also in its living image, the human conscience, which instinctively regards punishment as ' the recod of the eternal law of right against the trans gressor,' and cannot attain to sohd peace but through a medium of vahd expiation. So much so, indeed, that wher ever the true expiation is unknown, or but partiady under stood, it ever goes about to provide expiations of its own. 1 The language referred to occurs in Swainson's ' Hulsean Lecture,' p. 234. But by implication it is also adopted by those who sharply distinguish between vicarious suffering and vicarious punishment, accepting the former, but reject ing the latter, and treating the transference of guilt on which it rests as an enormity against which common sense revolts. So, no doubt, it is, as repre sented, for example, by Mr Jelletlet, in his ' Moral Difficulties of the Old Testament,' pp. 50-99, who holds the idea of guilt and punishment as insepar able from the moral qualities of the individual sinner, consequently inalienable. But Scrip;ture does not so contemplate them, in the passages referred to in the text, or in Isa. liii. 56 ; 1 Pet. ii. 24, etc. And the church doctrine of the atonement undoubtedly is, and has always been, as stated by the younger Hodge, 'that the legal responsibilities of His people were by covenant trans ferred to Christ, and that He, as Mediator, was regarded and treated accord ingly. The sinful act and the sinful nature are inalienable. The guilt, or just liability to punishment, is alienable, otherwise no sinner can be saved.'— ' The Atonement,' chap. xx. Hence the sufferings are penal in their character, in moral value equivalent and greatly more to the guilt of the redeemed, though not in all respects identically the same, which they could not pos sibly be. 252 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VII. Thus has the law been estabhshed1 — most signally estabhshed by that very feature of the Gospel, which specially distinguished it from the law — its display of the redeeming love of God in Christ. ' Just law indeed,' to use the words of MUton — ' Just law indeed, but more exceeding love ! For we by rightful doom remediless, Were lost in death, till He that dwelt alone, High throned in secret bliss, for us frail dust Emptied His glory, even to nakedness ; And that great covenant, which we still transgress, Entirely satisfied ; And the full wrath beside Of vengeful justice bore for our excess.'2 Yes ; hold fast by this broadly marked distinction, yet mutual interconnection, between the law and the Gospel; contemplate the law, or the justice which it reveals and demands, as finding satisfaction in the atoning work of Christ ; and this work again, by reason of that very satis faction, securing an eternal reign of peace and blessing in the kingdom of God ; and then, perhaps, you wiU not be indisposed to say of law, as thus magnified and in turn magnifying and blessing, with one of the profoundest of our old divines, that ' her seat is the bosom of God, her voice the harmony of the world : aU things in heaven and earth do her homage — the very least as feeling her care, and the greatest as not exempted from her power ; both angels and men and creatures, of what condition soever, though each in different sort and manner, yet aU with uniform consent, adniiring her as the mother of peace and joy.'3 1 Rom. iii. 31 . 2 Milton, Poem on the ' Crucifixion.' 3 Hooker, 'Eccl. Polity.' Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 253 LECTURE VIII. THE RELATION OF THE LAW TO THE CONSTITUTION, THE PRIVI LEGES, AND THE CALLING OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. TTOW Christ, in His mediatorial work, stood related to the law, and how He bore Himself in respect to it, we have already seen ; and we have now a similar inquiry to prosecute in connection with the Christian church. This line of inquiry, in its more essential features, can be nothing more than the continuation of the one already pursued. For whatever distinctively belongs to the Christian church — whether as regards her hght, her privUeges, her obligations, or her prospects— It springs from Christ as its hving ground ; it is entirely the result of what He Himself is and accomplished on earth ; and whatever room there might be, when He left the earth, for more explicit statements or fuller Ulustrations of the truth regarding it, in principle aU was already there, and only required, through apostolic agency, to be fitly ex pounded and applied, in relation to the souls of men and the circumstances of the newly constituted society. But situated as matters then were, with prejudices and opinions of an adverse nature so deeply rooted in the niinds of men, and long haUowed associations and practices that had to be broken up, it was no easy task to get the truth in its completeness wrought into men's convictions ; and only graduaUy, and through repeated struggles with error and opposition did the apostles of our Lord succeed 254 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. in gaining for the principles of the Gospel a just apprecia tion and a firm establishment. Keeping to the general outline observed in the preced ing discussion, we shaU, in this fresh line of inquiry, consider, first, how the Christian scheme of doctrine and duty was adjusted, under the hand of the apostles, with reference to things of a ceremonial nature — to a law of ordinances ? and, secondly, what relation it bore to the great revelation of moral law f I. As regards the former of these relations, the way had been made, so far at least, comparatively plain by Christ Himself : the law of ordinances, as connected with the old covenant, now ceased to have any binding autho rity. The hour had come when the Temple- worship, with every ceremonial institution depending on it, should pass away, having reached their destined end in the death and resurrection of Christ. Not immediately, however, did this truth find its way into the minds even of the apostles, nor could it obtain a footing in the church without ex press and stringent legislation. From the first, the dis ciples of our Lord preached in His name the free and full remission of sins to the penitent and beheving, but still only to such as stood vrithin the bond of the Sinaitic covenant — the Gospel being viewed, not as properly super seding the ancient law of ordinances, but rather as giving due effect to it — supplying what it was incompetent to provide. Of what use, then, any more such a law? Why stiU continue to observe it ? This question, evi dently, did not for a time present itself for consideration to the apostles — their immediate work lying among their own countrymen in Judea. But it could not be long kept in abeyance ; and such a direction was soon given to affairs by their Divine head as left them no alternative Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 255 in the matter. The new wine of the kingdom began here to burst the old bottles first in Stephen and those who suffered in his persecution — although as to the mode, perhaps, somewhat prematurely, and with too much vehemence to reach a settled result. But shortly after wards there came the remarkable success of the Gospel in Samaria, with gifts from the Holy Ghost attesting and sealing the work ; and foUowing upon that, the super natural vision granted to Peter of the sheet ' let down from heaven with aU manner of beasts, unclean and clean alike, immediately explained and exemplified, under the special guidance of the Spirit, by the reception into the Christian church of the heathen famdy of Cornehus. These things forced on a crisis in spite of earher predic tions ; and by conclusive facts of Divine ordination shewed, that now Jew and Gentde were on a footing as regards the blessings of Christ's salvation ; that, as a matter of course, the observances of the ancient ritual had ceased in God's sight to be of any practical avad. The dis covery fed as a shock on the minds of Jewish behevers. They did not hesitate to charge Peter with irregularity or unfaithfulness for the part he had acted in it ; and though the objectors were for the time sdenced by the decisive proofs he was able to adduce of Divine warrant and approval, yet the legal spirit stiU lived and again broke forth, especiaUy when it was seen how the GentUe converts increased in number, and the church at Antioch, chiefly composed of such converts, was becoming a kind of second centre of Christian influence, and of itself send ing forth mission-agencies to plant and organize churches in other regions of heathendom.1 It hence became necessary to give forth a formal decision on the matter ; and a councU of the apostles and elders was held for the 1 Acts xiii., xiv. 256 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. explicit purpose of determining whether, along with faith in Christ, it was necessary in order to salvation that men should be circumcised and keep the law of Moses.1 It is not needful here to go into the detads of this council ; but the judgment of the assembly as to the main point at issue was clear and peremptory — namely, that the legal observances were no longer bmding, and that Gentile be lievers should only be enjoined so far to respect the feel ings and usages of their Jewish brethren, as to abstain, not merely from the open hcentiousness which custom had made aUowable in heathendom, but also from liberties in food which those trained under the law could not re gard otherwise than as dangerous or improper. Notwith standing this decision, however, so tenaciously did the old leaven cleave to the Jewish mind, that the ancient observances retained their place in Jerusalem tUl the city and temple were laid in ruins ; and the Judaizing spirit even insinuated itself into some of the GentUe churches, those especiaUy of Galatia. But it only led to a more vigorous exposure and firm denunciation of the error through the apostle to the Gentiles — who affirmed, that now neither circumcision nor uncircumcision availed any thing for salvation, but faith, or the regeneration which comes through faith ; that if men betook to circumcision and the Jewish yoke to secure their spiritual good, Christ should profit them nothing ; that the teaching which led to the imposition of such a yoke was ready another gospel, not to be encouraged, but anathematized by all who knew the mind of Christ.2 And the cycle of Christian instruction on the subject was completed by the explana tion given in the epistle to the Hebrews of the general nature and design of the Old Testament ritual, as at once fulfUJed and abolished in Christ. So that there was here 1 Acts xv. 2 Gal. i. 6, 9, ii. 14, etc. Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 257 on the negative side, a very full revelation and authorita tive dehverance of the wiU of God.1 This result, however, not unnaturally gives rise to another question. If the new state and spiritual hfe of Christians was thus expressly dissociated from the old law of ordinances, was it not directly linked to another taking its place ? The answer to this may be variously given, according to the sense in which it is understood. We have no law of ordinances in the New Testament writings at all corresponding to that which is contained in the Old. There was a fulness and precision formerly in the ceremonials of worship, because these belonged to a provisional and typical economy, and required to be adjusted with Divine skUl to the coming realities for which they were intended to prepare. But the realities themselves having come, there is no longer any need for 1 The considerations adduced in the text plainly shew that the apostles, in the later period of their agency, were of one mind as to the cessation of the ceremonial law in its binding form even upon Jewish Christians ; while still they continued, especially when resident in Jerusalem, to observe its provisions and take part in its more peculiar services. They did so, of course, from no feeling of necessity, but partly from custom, and partly also, apparently indeed still more, from regard to the strong prejudices of their less enlightened brethren. Of these there were multitudes, as James intimated to Paul (Acts xxi. 20), who were zealous of the law, and actuated by strong jealousy toward Paul himself because of the freedom maintained alike in his teaching and his ex ample from the legal observances. They were in the position of those described by\)ur Lord in Luke v. 39 — like persons who, having been accustomed to old wine, did not straightway desire new, although in this case the new was really better. But the apostles felt that it was necessary to deal tenderly with them, lest, by a too sudden wrench from their old associations, their faith in the Gospel might sustain too great a shock. They therefore pursued a conciliatory policy, doubtless waiting and looking for the time when the Lord Himself would interpose, and, by the prostration of the Temple and the scattering of the Jewish nation, would formaUy take the Old Covenant institutions out of the way, and render their observance in great meastvre impossible. The history of the early church but too clearly proves how necessary this solemn dispensation was for the Christian church itself, and how dangerous an element even the partial observance of the old law to some sections of the Jewish believers after the destruction of the Temple, became to the purity of their faith in Christ. R 258 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect, VIII. such carefully adjusted observances. Hence, neither by our Lord Himself, nor by His apostles, have any definite appointments been made to things which were of great importance under the law — to the kind of place, for example, in which the members ofthe Christian community were to meet for worship — or the form of service they were to observe when they met — or the officials who were to conduct it, and whether any particular mode of conse cration were required to fit them for doing so. Even in those ordinances of the new dispensation, which in char acter approached most nearly to the old — the Sacraments of Baptism and the Lord's Supper — while no doubt is left as to the permanent place they were to occupy in the Christian church, how widely different is the manner of their appointment from that of the somewhat correspond ing ordinances of Circumcision and the Passover? In Circumcision, the precise thing to be done is prescribed, and the precise day also on which it must be done ; and in the Passover, the kind of sacrifice to be provided, the time when, and the place where it was to be killed, the modes of using the blood and of preparing the food, the manner also in which the feast was to be partaken, and even the disposal that was to be made of the fragments. In the Christian sacraments, on the other hand, the sub stance alone is brought into view — the kind of elements to be employed, and the general purport and design with which they are to be given and received ; all, besides, as to the time, the place, the subordinate acts, the ministerial agency, is left entirely unnoticed, as but of secondary moment, or capable of being readdy inferred from the nature of the ordinances. The converts on the day of Pentecost were baptized — so the inspired record distinctly testifies ; but where, how, or by whom, is not indicated. The Ethiopian eunuch was both converted and baptized Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 259 by Phdip, one of the seven, who, so far as ordination was concerned, were ordained merely to ' serve tables ; ' and the person who baptized Paul is simply designated ' a certain disciple at Damascus.' When the Spirit had manifestly descended on Cornelius and his household, Peter ' com manded them to be baptized in the name of the Lord ;' but the statement implies that the brethren accompanying Peter, rather than Peter himself, administered the rite. Paul, even when claiming to have founded the church at Corinth, expressly (7/sclaims the administration of baptism to more than a very few — this being not what he had specially received his apostolic mission to perform : ' Christ sent him not to baptize, but to preach the Gospel.'1 He even thanks God he had baptized but a few ; could he possibly have done so, if, in his view, baptizing had been aU one with regenerating ? When he speaks of those whom he was the means of regenerating, he says they were ' begotten through the Gospel.' 2 And in the pastoral instructions given by him through Timothy and Titus to the bishops or presbyters of the apostolic church, we read only of what they should be as men of Christian piety and worth, and how they should minister and apply the word ; but not so much as a hint is dropt as to their exclusive right to dispense and give validity to the Christian sacraments. AU shewing, as clearly as could weU be done by the facts of history, that nothing absolutely essential in this respect depends upon circumstances of person, and mode, and time ; and that whatever restrictions might then be observed, or after wards introduced, it could only be for the sake of order and general edification, not to give validity or impart saving efficacy to what were otherwise but empty symbols or unauthorised ceremonies. 1 1 Cor. i. 17. 2 1 Cor. iv. 15. 260 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. Nor does it appear to have been materially otherwise with the ordinance of the Supper. The original institu tion merely represents our Lord, at the close of the paschal feast, as taking bread and wine, and, after giving thanks, presenting them to the disciples, the one to be eaten the other to be drunk in the character of His body and blood, and in remembrance of Him. This is aU ; and when the church fairly entered on its new career, the record of its proceedings merely states, with reference to this part of its observances, that the disciples ' continued steadfastly in the apostles' doctrine and fellowship, and in breaking of bread ;' that ' they continued in breaking bread from house to house,' and were wont to ' come together on the first day of the week to break bread.' 1 St Paul, too, while rebuking certain flagrant abuses which had crept into the church at Corinth in the celebration of the ordinance, and rehearsing what he says he had received from the Lord concerning it, maintains a profound silence as to every thing of a rituahstic description : he mentions only a Lord's table with its bread and cup, and the action of giving and receiving, after the offering of thanks, in com memoration of Christ ; but says nothing of the particular kinds of bread and wine, of the status, dress, or actions of the administrator, or the proper terms of celebration, or the attitude of the people when partaking, whether sit ting, reclining, or kneehng. These, plainly, in the apostle's account, were the non-essentials, the mere circumstantial adjuncts, which it was left to the church to regulate— not arbitrarily indeed, and assuredly not so as to change a simply commemorative and sealing ordinance into a propi tiatory sacrifice and a stupendous mystery, but with a suitable adaptation to the nature of the feast and the cir cumstances of place and time. This reserve, too, was the 1 Acts ii. 42, 46, xx. 7, 11. Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 261 more remarkable, since the apostle did occasionally speak of Christian gifts and services in sacrificial language ; only never in connection with the ordinance of the Supper. He spake of the sacrifice of praise, but explains Himself by calhng it the fruit of the lips,1 and a sacrifice to be offered, not by a priest on earth, but by the one High Priest, Christ. Charitable contributions to the poor, or to the ser vice of the Gospel, are in like manner designated sacrifices weU-pleasingtoGod; also the presentations of the persons of behevers to God's service, and His own presentation of converted heathen before the heavenly throne ; 2 but not in one passage is the commemoration of our Lord's death in the Supper so represented, or any expression employed which might seem to point in that direction.3 1 Heb. xiii. 15. 2 Heb. xiii. 16 ; Phil. iv. 18 ; Rom. xii. 1, xv. 16. 3 Desperate efforts have been made by Roman Catholic writers to give another version to the whole matter, and even to find in the words of institu tion direct sacrificial language. Professedly Protestant writers are now treading to the full in their footsteps, and applying (we may say, perverting) the simple words of the original to a sense altogether foreign to them. They call the address of Christ, ' Do this in remembrance of me,' a sacrificial word ; and one paraphrases the words after the sense which he says the words (toD™ touIti) 'bear in the Septuagint, Offer this as my memorial' ('The Church and the World,' pp. 499, 564). It is enough to give the substance of the comment made on these extraordinary statements by the learned editor of the Contem porary Review, No. 21, who says, ' The words which our Lord employed nowhere bear a sacrificial sense in the Septuagint. In not one place does such an expression as srasiv rovm occur in a sacrificial sense ; it would have been absurd, and even impossible, that it should, unless ™5r» referred to some con crete thing then and there represented and designated — as, for example, Lev. ix. 10 — •jrpoanvlyx.i ro oXoxavruftcc, Kcti liroivitrzv u.vm ais x&Hxtt. To this, perhaps, the superficial ritualist will reply, that such a concrete object is present in the bread, of which it had just been said by our Lord, This is my body. If he committed himself so far, we should have to take him back to his school-days, and to remind him that the demonstrative pronoun, when applied to a concrete object, designates that and that alone, as distinguished from all others : so that if r„vro «¦««« signified, " Offer this," then, in order to obey it, that very bread must have been reserved to have been offered continually. We are driven, then, to the abstract reference, " this which I am doing ;" and this will rule the meaning ofthe verb to be "do," and not "offer." Such, indeed, is the only 262 THE REVELATION OF LAW. - [Lect. VIII. This, however, is a conclusion which many refuse to acquiesce in. They think that the mdeterminateness spoken of must somehow have been supphed ; and that if the needed materials are not furnished by Scripture, they must be sought in some coUateral source adequate to meet the deficiency. Hence the Romish theory of un written traditions, eking out and often superseding the teaching of Scripture ; the theory of development, claim ing for the church the inherent right and power to supple ment and authoritatively impose what was originally defective in her ordinances ; and the theory of the apostolic succession and the impressed character. It were out of place here, where we have to do merely with the revelation of law in God's kingdom, to go into an examina tion of such theories, as none of them, except by an abuse of terms, can be brought within that description. The things for which those theories are intended to account, have no distinct place in the expressed mind of our Lord and His apostles ; and so, even if aUowable, cannot be sense of the phrase mZm »«» wherever it occurs (see Gen. iii. 13, 14, xii. 18, xx. 5, etc. ; Luke vii. 8, x. 28, xii. 18 ; Acts xvi. 18, etc. ; Rom. vii. 15, 16, 20, xii. 20 ; 1 Cor . ix. 23). Is it conceivable that two authors (Luke and Paul), accus tomed to the use of the phrase in its simple everyday meaning, should use it once only, and that once, on its most solemn occurrence, in a sense altogether un precedented, and therefore certain not to be apprehended by their readers?' The reviewer goes on further to state that the historical evidence is also wholly against it : the church has, as a rule, understood the ' Do this' to mean doing, as he did, namely, taking the bread, breaking, and distributing it ; and adds, ' Can anything be plainer than that, but for the requirements of the sacrificial theory of the Eucharist, such an interpretation would never have been heard of ? And even with all the warping which men's philology gets from their peculiar opinions, can, even now, a single Greek or Hellenistic scholar be found who would, as a scholar, venture to uphold it?' It is not too much to say, that the whole that is written respecting the original observance of the sacraments, the whole also that St Paul says respecting his own peculiar calling as an ambassador of Christ, and what he wrote for the instruction of others on the pastoral office, is a virtual protest against the priestly character of the ministry of the New Testament ; and the one must be ignored before the other can be accepted by sound believers. Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 263 deemed of essential moment. If it is asked — as Dodwell, for example, asked (Paraenesis, 34), — ' Cannot God justly oblige men, in order to obtain the benefits which it is His good pleasure to bestow, to employ the means which His good pleasure has instituted ? ' We reply, if He had seen reason to institute them in such a sense as to render them in any way essential to salvation, the same reason which led Him to provide salvation would doubtless also have led Him to make His pleasure in this respect known — nay, to have inscribed it, in the most conspicuous manner on the foundations of the Christian faith ; which assuredly has not been done. Undoubtedly, the form and mode (as has been further aUeged) may be, and sometimes have been, of indispensable moment : ' God was not pleased to cleanse Naaman the Syrian from his leprosy by the water of any other river than the Jordan ; so that, had Naaman used the rivers of Syria for this purpose, he would have had no title to expect a cure.' Certainly ; but on this very account God made His meaning perfectly exphcit : He hung the cure of the Syrian leper on the condition, not of a sevenfold dipping in water merely, but of such a dipping in the waters of the Jordan ; these particular waters entered as an essential element into the method of recovery. And so, doubtless, would have been the points referred to in connection with the Christian sacra ments, if the same relative place had belonged to them ; they would have been noted and prescribed, in a manner not to be mistaken, in the fundamental records of the Christian faith ; and since they are awanting there, to introduce and press them in the character of essentials to salvation, is virtuaUy to disparage those records, and to do so in a way that runs counter to the whole genius of Christianity, which exalts the spiritual in comparison with the outward and formal — retains, we may say, the mini- 264 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. mum of symbolism because it exhibits the maximum of reahty. But whUe we thus contend against any law of ordi nances in the Christian church of the circumstantial and specific kind which existed under the old economy, the two sacraments undoubtedly have the place of ordi nances ; their observance has been prescribed with legis lative sanction and authority ; and there can be no question as to the duty of observing them among the genuine disciples of Christ ; the only, or at least, the main question is, in what relation do they stand to their possession of the Spirit and of the life that is in Christ Jesus ? Do they aim at originating, or rather at estab lishing and nourishing, the Divine life in the soul ? That it is this latter in the case of the Lord's Supper admits of no doubt ; the very name imphes that the participants are contemplated as having Spirit and life, since no one thinks of presenting a feast to the dead. The same also is implied in the formal design of its appointment, to keep ahve the remembrance of Jesus and of His great redemptive act in the minds of those who own Him as their Lord and Saviour — presupposing, therefore, the existence of a living bond between their souls and Him. Hence, the one essential pre-requisite to • a right and profitable participation in the ordinance indicated by the apostle is the possession and exercise of the life of faith : ' Let a man examine himself (viz. , as to his state and interest in Christ), and so let him eat of that bread and drink of that cup.'1 Not, then, to convert or quicken, but to nourish and strengthen the hfe already implanted in the soul, by bringing it into fresh contact and com munion with the one source of all hfe and blessing to sinful men, is the direct good to be sought in the ordi- 1 1 Cor. xi. 28. Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 265 nance of the Supper. And though the other sacrament, Baptism, has to do with the commencement of a Chris tian state, not its progressive advancement, and is hence termed initiatory, it is so, according to the representa tions of Scripture, only in a qualified sense ; that is, not as being absolutely originative, or of itself condition ing and producing the first rise of life in the soul, but associated with this early stage, and bringing it forth into distinct and formal connection with the service and kingdom of Christ. Such, certainly, is the relation in which the two stand to each other in the command of Christ, and the ministry of His immediate representa tives — ' Go and teach all nations, baptizing them,' etc. ; ' He that beheveth and is baptized shaU be saved.' Not, therefore, baptized in order to believing, but believing in order to be baptized ; so that, ideally or doctrinally con sidered, baptism presupposes faith, and sets the Divine seal on its blessings and prospects. And so we never find the evangehsts and apostles thrusting baptismal services into the foreground, as if through such ministra tions they expected the vital change to be produced, but first preaching the Gospel, and then, when this had come with power into the heart, recognising and confirming the result by the administration of the ordinance. So did Peter, for example, on the day of Pentecost ; he made proclamation of the truth concerning Christ and His salvation ; and only when this appeared to have wrought with convincing power and energy on the people, he pressed the matter home by urging them to ' repent and be baptized every one in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and they should receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.' It was a caU to see that they had every thing involved in a sound conversion ; for the kind of repentance spoken of is the metanoia, the change 266 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. of mind which has its root in faith, and implies a spiritual acquaintance with Christ and the things of His salvation, At a later period, Peter justifies himself for receiving, through baptism, the household of Cornehus, on the ground that they had ' heard of the Gospel and beheved,' or, as he again puts it, that ' God purified then hearts by faith.'1 Such was the process also with the Ethiopian eunuch, with Lydia, with the jailer at Phdippi ; so that baptism was administered by the apostles, not for the purpose of creating a relation between the individual and Christ, but of accrediting and completing a rela tion already formed. And if baptism also is said to save, and is specially associated with the work of regene ration — as it undoubtedly is2 — it can only be because baptism is viewed, in the case of the adult behever, as the proper consummation and embodiment of faith's act ings in the reception of Christ. For, constituting in such a case the solemn response of a believing soul and a purged conscience to the Gospel caU, it fitly represents the whole process, marks by a significant action the pass ing of the boundary-line between nature and grace, and a formal entrance on the state and privUeges of the redeemed. But apart from this spiritual change pre supposed and implied, nothing is effected by the outward administration ; and to be regenerated in the language of Scripture and the estimation of the apostles, is not to find admission merely into the Christian church ; it is to become a new creature, and enjoy that witness of the Spirit which is the pledge and foretaste of eternal life. What is said of regeneration, is equaUy said of faith in Christ (John in. 18-36 ; 2 Cor. v. 17, etc.).3 1 Acts xv. 7-9. 2 Rom. vi. 4, 5 ; Titus iii. 5 ; 1 Peter iii. 21. 3 See Litton on 'The Church of Christ,' p. 291, seq., where this subject is fully handled. Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 267 A certain accommodation, it will be understood, requires to be made in applying this Scriptural view to the baptism of infants — much as in the Old Testament rite of cir cumcision, which took its beginning with Abraham in advanced life, and, as so begun, had its proper significance and bearing determined for all time,1 though appointed also to embrace the chddren of the patriarch. Our object is merely to indicate the general purport and place of baptism, as also of the Lord's Supper, in relation to the spiritual life of the believer in Christ ; and to shew that, in this respect, their place is not primary, but secondary, seeing that they presuppose a relation of the individual to Christ, a spiritual life already begun through faith in the word of Christ, which it is their design to confirm and bufld up. They themselves rest upon that word, and derive from it then meaning and use. Apart from the Gospel of Christ and an intelligent behef in its contents, they become, no matter by whom administered or with what punctuality received, but formal observances, with out life and power. So that the grand ordinance, if we may so use the term, which has to do with the formation of Christ in the soul, or the actual participation of the hfe that is in Him, is this word of the kingdom — the Gospel, as the apostle caUs it, of Christ's glory2 — by the faith of which, through the Spirit, we are begotten as of incor ruptible seed, are justified from sin, and have Christ Himself dwelling in us.3 To abide in the doctrine of Christ and keep His word, is to have Him revealed in our experience for fellowship with that undying life which is hid with Him in God ; it is to have both the Father and the Son ; as, on the other hand, to be without His word abiding in the soul, is to be in a state of estrange- 1 Rom. iv. 10-12. 2 2 Cor. iv. 4. 3 James i. 18; 1 Peter i. 23; Rom. v. 1 ; Eph. iii. 17. 268 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII, ment from Him, spiritually dead.1 The position, there fore, which we are caUed to maintain toward Christ, rests more immediately upon the presentation of His person and work through the word ; it has its most decisive touch stone in the relation in which, as to spirit and behaviour, we stand to this word. And as the word comes into the heart, and abides in the heart through faith, so, of necessity, faith is the peculiar organ of spiritual life, since it is that whereby we humbly receive and appropriate what is freely given us in Christ — ' whereby we trust in Him, instead of trusting in ourselves — whereby, when sinking under the consciousness of our bhndness and helplessness, the effect of our habitual sins, we take God's word for our nde, God's strength for our trust, God's mercy and grace for the sole ground of peace and comfort and hope.'2 It is of incalculable moment for the interests of vital Christianity, that these things should be well understood and borne in mind ; for with the position now assigned to the word, as connected with the life of Christ, and the apprehension of that word by a reliant faith, is bound up the doctrine of a salvation by grace, as contradistinguished from that of salvation by works ; or, as we may otherwise put it, the attainment of a state of peace and blessing by fallen man, in a way that is practicable, as contrasted with a striving after one which is utterly impracticable. For whatever does not spring freshly and livingly from faith, can neither be well-pleasing in the eyes of God, nor can it secure that imperishable boon of eternal life in God's kingdom, which comes to sinners only as His free and sovereign gift. And precisely as this is lost sight of, whether in the case of individuals, or in the church at 1 John viii. 31, 37, 51, xv. 7 ; Col. iii. 3 ; 2 John 9. 2 Hare's 'Victory of Faith,' p. 78. Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 269 large, is there sure to discover itself, if not a total care lessness and insensibihty about spiritual things, then the resuscitation of a law of ordinances, an excessive regard to outward forms and ceremonial observances, as if these were the things of paramount importance, and there could be no salvation without them ; for these are things which the natural man can do, and, by taking pains to do them, may readdy fancy himself to be something before God. It is true that, in a certain aspect, this relation of the behever to the word, the salvation, and the life of Christ, may be regarded as coming within the domain of law ; for in every thing that concerns it — both the provision of grace and blessing in Christ, and the way in which this comes to be realized in the experience of men — there is a revelation of the will of God, which necessardy carries with it an obhgation to obedience — has the essence and the force of law. Men ought to receive the Gospel of Christ, and enter into the feUowship of His death and resurrection : they are commanded to do so, and in doing it they are said to be obedient to the Gospel, or to the truth therein exhibited.1 It is even set forth as pre eminently the work which God caUs or enjoins us in our faUen condition to do, to beheve on Him whom He hath sent, and the refusing to do this work, and thereby reject ing the grace of God provided and offered in Christ, is the crowning sin of those to whom the Gospel comes in vain.2 The more special and distinctive acts, also, of the new life which is given to those who yield themselves to the calls of the Gospel, are occasionaUy pressed on them as duties to be discharged — such as seeking from the Lord the gifts of grace, being converted to His love and service, or transformed into the image of Christ, by 1 John iii. 23 ; Acts xvi. 31 ; Rom. x. 16 ; 1 Pet. i. 14. 2 John vi. 29, xv. 22, xvi. 9 ; Luke xix. 27. 270 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. putting off the old man and putting on the new.1 And so, speaking from this point of view, the Apostle Paul does not hesitate, even whde striving to exclude the idea of merit, or of salvation as attainable by obedience to any law of works, to represent the whole as proceeding in conformity to law — ' the law of faith ;' and the individuals themselves are described as, in consequence of their believing reception of the Gospel, ' chddren of obedience,' or such as have become obedient to the faith.2 Undoubt edly the matter admits of being so represented. It is a mode of representation grounded in the essential nature of things, since by the very constitution of their being, men are bound to render account of the light they enjoy and the advantages placed within their reach ; are responsible to God for what with His help they can attain of good, as well as for what they are expressly commanded to do. It is, too, a mode of representation which may justly be pressed when the object is to arouse men's dormant energies, and bring them to consider what solemn issues depend on the treatment they personaUy give to the claims and Gospel of Christ. But it still were a grievous mistake to suppose, that this is either the only or the prin cipal light, in which our relation to the grace and truth of the Gospel ought to be contemplated. It is. not that in which the Gospel formaUy presents itself, or is fitted to produce its happiest results ; and on the ground of such a mode of representation, only incidentaUy, and for pur poses of moral suasion introduced, to do what Luther had too much reason for saying many great and exceUent men had done — that they not only ' knew not how to preach Moses rightly, but sought to make a Moses out of Christ, out of the Gospel a law-book, out of the word works,' — is 1 Mat. vii. 7 ; Acts iii. 19 ; Rom. xii. 2 ; Eph. iv. 22-24. 2 Rom. i. 5, iii. 27 ; 1 Pet. i. 14 ; Acts vi. 17. Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 271 the most effectual method to render Gospel and law alike of no avail for salvation. The direct and immediate aspect under which Christ is made known to us in the Gospel is unquestionably that of a bestower of blessing, not a master of laws and services ; a gracious and merci ful Redeemer, who has at infinite cost wrought out the plan of our salvation, and laid freely open to our accept ance the whole treasury of its unsearchable riches. It is, therefore, with invitation and promise, rather than with any thing bearing the aspect of law, that the genuine disciple of Jesus wiU ever find that he has immediately to do : his part is to receive, in the use of Gospel privi leges and the exercise of a living faith, the gifts so freely tendered to him ; and endeavour increasingly to apprehend that for which he is apprehended of Christ, so as to grow up unto a close and living feUowship with his Divine Head in aU that is His. II. But leaving now this branch of the subject, we turn to the other — to consider the relation in which, as exhibited in the apostohc writings, the church of the New Testament stands to the moral law — the law as summardy comprised in the precepts of the Decalogue, or in the two great commandments of love to God and man. Here, we must not forget, the prime requisite for a right perception of the truth is a proper personal relation to the truth. We must start from the position just de scribed — that, namely, of a believing appropriation of the word of Christ, and the consequent possession of the Spirit of life which flows from Christ to the members of His spiritual body. It is from this elevated point of view that the matter is contemplated in the doctrinal portions of New Testament Scripture ; and hence statements are sometimes made concerning it, which, whUe entirely con- 272 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII, sonant with the experience of those who have received with some degree of fulness the powers of that higher life, cannot be more than imperfectly understood, and may even be regarded as inconsistent, by such as either stand altogether without the spiritual sphere, or have but parti ally imbibed its spirit. It was so in a measure under the law, the statements regarding which, in the recorded ex perience of Old Testament believers — as to its exceUence, its depth and spirituality of meaning, their delight in its precepts yet tremblings of soul under its searching and condemning power, their desire to be conformed to its teaching yet perpetual dechning from the way of its commandments — could not appear otherwise than strange and enigmatical to persons who, not having come practi- caUy under the dominion of the law, necessardy possessed but a superficial knowledge of it. And the same may justly be expected in a stiU higher degree now, amid the comphcated and dehcate relations as between Moses and Christ, law and grace, through which the experience of behevers may be said to he. There is here very pecu liarly needed the spiritual discernment which belongs only to those who are living in the Spirit ; and if it may be affirmed of such that, having a mind to do the wiU of God, they shaU know of the doctrine that it is of God,1 with equal confidence may it be affirmed of others not thus spirituaUy minded, that they cannot adequately know it, because wanting the proper frame and temper of soul for justly appreciating it. The most distinguishing characteristic of the Gospel dispensation undoubtedly is its prominent exhibition of grace, as connected with the mediatorial work of Christ. The great salvation has come ; and, in consequence, sins are not merely pretermitted to behevers, as in former times, 1 John vii. 17. Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 273 through the forbearance of God, but Mly pardoned through the blood of the Lamb,1 freedom of access is gained for them into the presence of God, and the gift of the Spirit to abide with them, and work in them much more copiously than had been done before. But there is a gradation only, not a contrast ; and as under the Old Covenant the law-giving, was also the loving God, so under the New, the loving God is also the law-giving.2 We have seen how much it was so, as represented in the personal ministry and work of Christ — how completely He appropriated for Himself and His followers the perfect law of God, and how also He continually issued precepts for their observance, in conformity with its tenor, though in form bearing the impress of His own mind and mission. The apostles, after the descent of the Holy Spirit, and the formal entrance of the new economy, pursued sub- stantiaUy the same course. Thus James, whose style of thought and expression approaches nearest to those of Old Testament Scripture, designates the law of brotherly love the royal law — as that which, in a manner, governs and controls every other in the sphere of common life — and tells the Christians that they would do weU if they fulfilled it.3 St Peter, though he specifies no particular precept ofthe law, yet points to an injunction in the book of the law, which is comprehensive of all its right eousness, ' Be ye holy in aU manner of conversation ; for it is written, Be ye holy, for I am holy.'4 St John also speaks freely in his epistles of the Lord's commandments, and of the necessity of keeping them, especiaUy of the great commandment of love ; he speaks of the law as of the weU-known definite rule of righteousness, and of sin as the transgression of the law, to live in which is to 1 Eom. iii. 25, where the v^ins of the past stands in a kind cf contrast to the tym of the present. 2 See Wuttke, ' Handbuch der Sitt.,' chap. ii. sec. 208. 3 James ii. 8. 4 1 Peter i. 16. S 274 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. abide in death.1 And St Paul, who in a very peculiar manner was the representative and herald of the grace that is in Christ, is, if possible, still more express : ' Ye have been called to hberty,' says he to the Galatians, ' only use not liberty for an occasion to the flesh, but by love serve one another ; for aU the law is fuddled in one word — in this, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself,'2 — plainly identifying the love binding upon Christians with the love enjoined in the law. The same use is made by him of the fifth commandment of the Decalogue, in the Epistle to the Ephesians,3 when urging the duty of obedience to parents. And in the Epistle to the Romans, when the course of thought has brought him to the en forcement of vital godliness and the duties of a Christian life, the reference made to the perfection and abiding authority of the written law is even more full and explicit ; for he gives it as the characteristic of the spiritual mind, that it assents to the law as ' holy and just and good,' and ' serves it;'4" whde of the carnal mind he says, ' it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be.'5 And when speaking of Christian obligation in its varied manifestations of kindness between man and man, he sums up the whole, first in the specific precepts of the Decalogue, and then in the all-embracing precept of loving one's neighbour as one's-seff.6 I should reckon it next to impossible for any one of unbiassed mind — with no peculiar theory to support — with no desire of any kind, but that of giving a fair and natural interpretation to the teaching of Scripture — to weigh calmly the series of statements now adduced, and to derive from them any other impression than this — that 1 1 John ii. 7, 8, iii. 7, 8, 23, 24, v. 2, 3 ; 2 John 5, 6. 2 Gal. v. 13, 14. 3 Eph. vi. 1-3. 4 Rom. vii. 12, 25. 5 Rom. viii. 7. ° Rom. xiii. 8-10. Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 275 the moral law, as revealed in the Old Testament, had with the apostles of our Lord a recognised place in the Christian church, and was plainly set forth by them as the grand test of exceUence, and the authoritative rule of life. They recognised and appealed to it thus simply as it stood in the written revelation of God, and because so written ; — knowing nothing, apparently, of the refined explanations of modern thought, which would hold the morahty of the law, indeed, to be binding on Christians, but not as commanded in the law — that while the sub stance or principles of the law may be said to be stUl living, in its outward and commanding form it is dead — or that, as formaUy expressed law, it is no longer obhgatory, whether with reference to justification, or as a rule of life.1 And yet, unquestionably, there is something in the apos tolic mode of contemplating the law which gives a certain colour to these representations. A marked distinction is made in various places between the position which Israel occupied toward the law, and that now occupied by behevers in Christ ; such, that there is a sense in which Israel was placed under it, and in which Christians are not ; that it had a purpose to serve tiU the fulfilment of the covenant of promise in Christ, for which it is no longer specificaUy required ; 2 that somehow it is done away or abohshed,3 or, as it is again put, that we are done away from it, that is, set free, in regard to its right to lord it over us ; i that we are even dead to it, or are no longer under it ; 5 and that the scope or end for which the law was given is accomphshed, and alone can be accomplished, in Christ for those who are sphltuaUy united to Him. 6 1 See the references in Lee. I. 2 Gal. iii. 19-25, iv. 1-6. 3 2 Cor. iii. 11 ; Eph. ii. 15 ; Col. ii. 14. 4 Rom. vii. 6. 5 Rom. vi. 14, vii. 4. 6 Rom. viii. 3, 4, x. 4. 276 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. These are certainly very strong, at first sight even starthng statements, and if looked at superficiaUy, or taken up and pressed in an isolated manner, might easdy be made to teach a doctrine which would conflict with the passages previously quoted, or with the use of the law actually made in them with reference to the Christian life. That there must be a mode of harmonizing them, we may rest perfectly assured — though it can only be satisfactorily made out by a careful examination of the particular passages, viewed in their proper connection, and with due regard to the feelings and practices of the time. For the present, a general outline is aU that can be given; the detaded exegesis on which it leans must be reserved for another place. Very commonly, indeed, a comparatively brief method of explanation has been adopted by divines, according to which Christians are held to be, not under the law as a covenant, but under it as a rule of life. DoctrinaUy, this gives the substance of the matter, but with a twofold disadvantage : it leaves one point regard ing it unexplained, and in form also it is theological rather than Scriptural. In respect to form, Scripture no doubt represents the covenant of law, the old covenant, as in some sense done away, or abolished ; but then not exactly in the sense understood by the expression in the theological statement just noticed. That covenant of law, as actually proposed and settled by God, did not stand opposed to grace, but in subordination to grace, as revealed in a prior covenant, whose spiritual ends it was designed to promote ; therefore, though made to take the form of a covenant, its object stiU was not to give, but to guide life ; 1 in other words, to shew distinctly to the people, and take them bound to consider, how it behoved them to act toward God, and toward each other as an elect genera- 1 Gal. iii. 21, Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 277 tion, God's seed of blessing in the earth. But this, in the language of theology, does not materiaUy differ from the use of the law as a rule of life ; whereas, to be under the law as a covenant, means in theology to be bound by it as a covenant of works, to make good, through obedience to its precepts, a title to life. In such a sense the Israehtes were not placed under it any more than our selves ; and hence Witsius was disposed to regard it as not possessing for them the form of a covenant properly so caUed, but as presenting merely the rule of duty.1 That, however, were only to abandon a Scriptural for a theological mode of expression, for undoubtedly it is caUed a covenant in Scripture. But apart from the question of form, the manner of statement under con sideration is, in one point of view, defective ; for it does not indicate any chfference between the relation of Israel and the relation of Christians to the law, whde stiU it is clear, from several of the passages referred to, that there is some considerable difference : the law had a function to perform for Israel, and through them for the world, which is not needed in the same manner or to the same extent now. Wherein does this difference lie ? There is here evidently room for more careful and discriminating explanations. And, in endeavouring to make them, we must distinguish between what was common to Israel with the people of God generally, and what was peculiar to them as belonging to a particular stage in the Divine plan, hving under a stiU imperfectly developed form of the Divine dispensations. Viewed in the former of these aspects, the Israehtes were strictly a representative people ; they were chosen from among mankind, as in the name of mankind, to hear that law of God, which revealed His righteous- 2 De CEcon, Foed., L. iv. chap. 4. sec. 56. 278 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. ness for their direction and obedience ; and though this came in connection with another revelation, a covenant of promise through which hfe and blessing were to be obtained, yet, considered by itself, it brought out before them, and charged upon their consciences, the sum of aU moral obligation — whatever is due from men as men, as moral and responsible beings, to God Himself, and to their feUow-men. In this the law demanded only what was right and good — what therefore should have been wdlingly rendered by aU to whom it came — what, the more it was considered, men could not but the more feel must be rendered, if matters were to be put on a solid footing between them and God, and they were to have a free access to His presence and glory. But the law could only demand the right, could not secure the performance of it ; it could condemn sin, but not prevent its commission, which, by reason of the weakness of flesh, and the heart's innate tendency to ahenation from God, continued stiU to proceed in the face of the commands and threatenings of law : — so that the law, in its practical working, necessarily came to stand over against men as a righteous creditor with claims of justice which had not been satisfied, and deserved retributions of judgment which were ready to be executed. In this respect, it had to be taken out of the way, got rid of or abohshed, in a manner consistent with the moral govern ment of God — its curse for committed sin borne — and its right to lord it over men to condemnation and death brought to an end. It is this great question — a question which only primardy concerned the Jews, as having been the direct recipients of the revelation of law, but in which aU men as sinners were alike reaUy interested — that the apostle chiefly treats in the larger proportion of the passages recently referred to. It is of the law in this Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 279 point of view, that he speaks of it as a minister of death — of behevers being no longer married to it or under it — yea, of their being dead to it, dead through the law itself to the law — and of the law being consequently removed as a barrier between them and the favour and blessing of God. And he was led to do so the rather because of the deep-rooted and prevailing tendency of the time to look at the law by itself — apart from the covenant of promise — and to find in obedience to its commands a title to life and blessing. This, the apostle argues, is utterly to mis take its meaning and pervert its design. Taken so, the law works wrath, not peace ; instead of delivering from sin, it is itself the very sting of sin ; hence brings not blessing, but a curse ; not life, but condemnation ; and never till men renounce confidence in their deeds of law, and lay hold of the hope set before them in Him who for sinners has satisfied its just demands, and made reconcili ation for iniquity, can they obtain deliverance from fear and guilt, and enter into life. Thus Christ becomes ' the end of the law for righteousness to every one that beheveth : ' 1 in Him alone it reaches its proper aim as regards the interests of righteousness, for He has per fectly fulfilled its commands, in death as weU as life has honoured its claims : and this not for Himself properly, but for those who through faith join themselves to Him, and become partakers, both in the work of righteousness He has accomphshed, and the spirit of righteousness He puts into their hearts. SuGh, briefly, is the import of that class of statements in St Paul's writings ; and in this sense only do they warrant us to speak of the moral law being done away, or of our having been set free from it — a sense which ready enhances the importance of the law, most strik- 1 Rom. x. 4. 280 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. ingly exhibits its eternal vahdity, because shewing us to be dehvered from it, only that we may be brought into conformity to its spirit and requirements. And, in this respect, as we have said, there is no difference between the believer under the old covenant, and the behever under the new — except that what was httle more than hope before is reahzation now, what was then but dimly apprehended, and received only as by way of provisional forestalments, is now disclosed in ad its fulness, and made the common heritage of believers in Christ. But there was another respect in which the position of Israel is to be considered, one in which it was peculiar, since, according to it, they occupied a particular, and that a comparatively early, place in the history of the Divine dispensations. In this respect, the revelation of law had a prominence given to it which was also peculiar, which was adapted only to the immature stage to which it be longed, and was destined to undergo a change when the more perfect state of things had come. Considered in this point of view, the law must be taken in its. entire compass, with the Decalogue, indeed, as its basis, yet with this not in its naked elements and standing alone, but, for the sake of greater prominence and stringency, made the terms of a covenant ; and not only so, but, even whde linked to a prior covenant of grace, associated with pains and penalties which, in the case of dehberate trans gression, admitted of no suspension or repeal — associated, moreover, with a comphcated system of rites and ordinances which were partly designed to teach and enforce upon men's minds its great principles and obhgations of moral duty, and partly to provide the means of escape from the guilt incurred by their imperfect fulfilment or their occa sional violation. It was in this complex form that the law 'was imposed upon Israel, and interwoven with the Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 28 1 economical arrangements under which, as a people, they were placed. It is in that form that it was appointed to serve the design of an educational or pedagogical insti tute, preparatory to the introduction of Gospel times ; and in the same form only that St Paul, in various places —especiaUy in the Epistle to the Galatians, also in Eph. ii. 14-17 ; Col. ii. 14-23 — contended for its having been displaced or taken out of the way by the work of Christ. In aU the passages the moral law is certainly included in the system of enactment spoken of, but still always in the connection now mentioned — as part and parcel of a disciphnary yoke, a pedagogy suited only to the season of comparative chddhood, therefore falling into abeyance with the arrival of a manhood condition. And the necessity of this change, it wiU be observed, he presses with special reference, not to the strictly moral part of the law, but to the subsidiary rules and observances with wliich it was associated — the value of which, as to their original design, ceased with the introduction of the Gospel. His view was, not that men were disposed to make more of the Decalogue, or of the two great commandments of love, than he thought altogether proper — precisely the reverse : it was, because they were adowing the mere temporary adjuncts, and ritualistic accompaniments of these funda mental requirements, to overshadow their importance, and pave the way for substituting a formal and fictitious pietism for true godliness and virtue. And hence to prevent, as far as possible, any misunderstanding of his meaning, he does not close the epistles in question without pointing in the most explicit terms to the simply moral demands of the law as now, not less than formerly, binding on the con sciences of men.1 In short, the question handled by the apostle in this 1 Gal. v. 13-22 ; Eph. vi. 1-9 ; Col. iii. 14, seq. 282 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. part of his writings upon the law, was not whether the holiness and love it enjoined were to be practised, but how the practice was to be secured. The utterance of the law's precepts in the most peremptory and solemn form could not do it. The converting of those precepts into the terms of a covenant, and taking men bound under the weightiest penalties to observe them, could not do it. Nor could it be done by a regulated machinery of means of instruction and ordinances of service, intended to mini ster subsidiary help and encouragement to such as were willing to follow the course of obedience. Ad these had been tried, but never with more than partial success — not because the holiness required was defective, but because the moral power was wanting to have it reahzed. And now there came the more excellent way of the Gospel — the revelation of that love which is the fulfilling of the law, in the person of the New Head of humanity, the Lord from heaven — the revelation of it in fuU-orbed complete ness, even rising to the highest point of sacrifice, and making provision for as many as would in faith receive it, that the spirit of this noble, pure, self-sacrificing love should dweU as a new hfe, an absorbing and controlling power, also in their bosom. So that, ' what the law could not do in that, it was weak through the flesh, God send ing His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin condemned sin in the flesh, that the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh, but after the spirit.' He who is replenished with this spirit of life and love, no longer has the law standing over him, but, as with Christ in His work on earth, it lives in him, and he hves in it ; the work of the law is written on his heart, and its spirit is transfused into his life. ' The man (it has been justly said) who is truly possessor of " the spirit of life in Christ Jesus," cannot have any other Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 283 gods but his Father in heaven ; cannot commit adultery ; cannot bear false witness; cannot kill; cannot steal. Such a man comes down upon aU the exercises and avoca tions of hfe from a high altitude of wise and loving homage to the Son of God, and expounds practically the saying ofthe apostle, " Whosoever is born of God sinneth not, but he that is begotten of God keepeth himself, and that wicked one touch eth him not." .... Christ's cross, then, delivers Christians from what may be termed moral drudgery ; they are not oppressed and pined serfs, but freemen and fedow-heirs, serving the Lord Christ with all gladness of heart. It magnifies the law and makes it honourable, yet delivers those who accept Jesus Christ as their Saviour from the bondage of the letter. Instead of throwing the commandments into contempt, it gave them a higher moral status, and even Sinai itself becomes shorn of its greatest terrors when viewed from the elevation of tbe cross. Love was really the reason of the law, though the law looked hke an expression of anger. We see this, now that we love more ; love is the best interpreter of God, for God is love.' J Thus it is that the Gospel secures liberty, and, at the same time, guards against licentiousness. To look only, or even principally, to the demands of law, constituted as human nature now is, cramps and deadens the energies of the soul, generates a spirit of bondage, which, ever vacdlating between the fear of doing too little, and the desire of not doing more than is strictly required, can know nothing of the higher walks of excellence and worth. On the other hand, to look to the grace and hberty of the Gospel away from the law of eternal rectitude, with which they stand inseparably connected, is to give a perilous licence to the desires and emotions of the heart, nurses a 1 'Ecce Deus,' chap. xvi. 284 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. spirit of individuahsm, which, spurning the restraints of authority, is apt to become the victim of its own caprice, or the phant slave of vanity and lust ; for true hberty, in the spiritual as wed as in the civil sphere, is a regulated freedom ; it moves within the bonds of law, in a spirit of rational obedience ; and the moment these are set aside, self-wdl rises to the ascendant, bringing with it the witchery and dominion of sin.1 It is only, therefore, the combined operation of the two which can secure the proper result ; and with whom is that to be found except with those who have received the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus ? To be replenished with this Spirit, is to be brought within the sphere of Divine love, which, so far from recoiling from the law's demands, can give expression even to its noblest enthusiasm in a cordial response to the obligations they impose, and a faithful obedience to the course of action they prescribe.2 ' Rom. vi. 16. 2 So in the most emphatic moments of our Lord's life, as at Matt. xi. 26, xxvi. 39 ; Jo. x. 18. Nor is a certain correspondence wanting in the finer ex emplifications of the good in civil life — as in Lord Nelson with his famous watchword, ' England expects every man to do his duty ' — patriotism at its highest stretch being deemed capable of no loftier aspiration or more glorious service than to give honourable satisfaction to the calls of duty. Statements are often made by religious writers respecting service done with a special regard to such calls, which is not strictly correct ; as when it is said, ' Duty is the very lowest conception of our relation to God — privilege is a higher — honour a higher — happiness and delight a higher still ' (Irving's Works, Vol. I. p. 23). Doubtless, in certain states of mind it is so ; and he who does a service merely because he deems it a duty, feeling himself dragged to it as by a chain, will be universally regarded as in a low moral condition. But this is by no means necessary . A sense of the dutiful may be felt, may even be most intensely realized, when it is associated with the purest feelings and emotions ; and in the higher spheres of, spiritual light and excellence — with the elect angels in heaven, or even the more advanced saints on earth, in their seasons of deepest moral earnestness — a supreme regard to the dutiful, to the will of God as the absolutely right and good, we may not hesitate to say, is the profoundest senti ment in the bosom. All else, with such nobler spirits, is lost sight of in the completeness of their surrender to the mind and will of the Eternal. Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 285 Besides, by thus calling into play the higher elements of a Divine life, there is necessarily set to work a spring or principle of goodness in the heart, which in aim is one with the law, but which in its modes of operation no law can exactly define. Experience shews, that in the complicated affairs of human life, it is impossible to prescribe a set measure to the exercise of any of the Christian graces, not even to justice, winch in its own nature is the most determinate of them all. Numberless instances wdl arise in which, after ad our attempts at precision, principle alone wUl need to guide our course, and not any de finite landmarks previously set up on the right hand or the left. But especiaUy is this the case with love, which of aU the graces is the most free and elastic in its move ments, and, if strong and fervent, adapts itself with a kind of sacred instinct to existing wants and opportunities. There stiU is, in every variety of state and circumstances, a right and a wrong — a bad course to be shunned, a good course to be foUowed, and possibly a better course stdl, a higher and nobler development of love, which it might be practicable to adopt, were there but grace and strength adequate to the occasion. But the proper path cannot be marked out beforehand by formulated rules and legal pre cedents. Love must in many respects be a law to itself, though stdl under law to God ; and the more its flame has been kindled at the altar of Heaven, and it has caught the spirit of that Divine phdanthropy, which, with the greatness of its gifts and sacrifices, triumphs over human enmity and corruption, the more always will it be disposed to do and sacrifice in return. In this sense it may be said of Christianity, that it is more characterized by spirit than by law ; that it does 'not prescribe any system of rules,' as was connected with the Old Covenant, that ' instead of precise rules it 286 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. rather furnishes sublime principles of conduct.'1 But such general statements have their hmitations ; and if understood in an absolute sense, with reference either to the past or the present, they wdl only serve to mislead. It was characteristic of the Old Covenant that it had a system of rules, dealt in exact and definite prescriptions ; but these, it ought to be remembered, were far from de fining every thing in the wide field of duty : a very large proportion of them related merely to the sacrificial worship of the Temple, and to particular conditions and circum stances of life ; whde in a great variety of things besides, things pertaining to the weekly service of God and tlie procedure of ordinary life, men were to a large extent thrown upon principle for their guidance, and if this faded, then they had no specific rule to fall back upon. They were commanded, for example, to honour the Lord with their substance — to be kind to the stranger sojourning amongst them — to treat with compassion and generosity their poor — to love a brother, and in love rebuke him, if sin were found to be upon him : — but for carrying out such commands in all supposable cases, no precise rules either were or could be given. Some leading instances only are specified by way of example, but in the great majority of cases the exact mode of behaviour was neces sarily left to the individual. Look, for example, to the poor widow who cast in her two mites into the treasury — her whole hving — who bade her do so ? What legal enactment prescribed it ? Or that other woman, who with her penitent and grateful tears washed the feet of our Lord, and wiped them with the hair of her head — what exphcit word had so required it at her hands ? In both cases alike, we may say, love was their only law, , prompting them to do what breathed, indeed, the inmost 1 Wbately, ' Essay on Abol. of Law.' Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 287 spirit of the law, but what no express enactment of law either did or properly could demand. Yet such things belonged rather to the Old than to the New dispensation ; they occurred whde the New was still only in the forming ; and things similar in kind should much more be expected now, since the great redemption has come, elevating the whole sphere of the Divine kingdom, and giving the Spirit to its real members as an abiding monitor and guide. This Spirit, in his directive influence, is himself a living law (Spiritus Sanctus est viva lex), and renders unnecessary a detaded system of rules and prescriptions concerning ad that should be done, and how exactly to do it.1 But as regards the grand outlines of moral obhga tion set forth in the law's requirements, these not the less x Hence, the apostle Paul, when exhorting to the support of a Christian ministry, and liberality to the poor, specifies no definite proportion, such as the tenth, but calls upon believers to give according to their ability and as the -Lord had prospered them (1 Cor. xvi. 2 ; 2 Cor. viii. ix. ; Gal. vi. 6.). In like manner, when dealing with Philemon respecting Onesimus, he refrains from prescribing any stringent rule, but plies him with great principles and moving considerations. But we are not thence warranted to speak of a morality in the Gospel which ' exceeds duty and outstrips requirement' (' Ecce Homo,' p. 145) ; or, which is but another form of the same thing, prompts us to deeds of super erogation. There can be no such deeds now, any more than in former times ; no one can do more than is required of him in the law of God ; for that law is the expression of God's will , and man's will cannot be better than God's. To love the Lord with all one's heart, soul, and strength, and one's neighbour as one's self, is the perfection of moral excellence : and what is beyond or beside this , is not a higher attainment, but a vicious excess or partial development. There may well enough, indeed, be particular acts of love, or sacrifices of self- interest, which are not specifically demanded in any formal requirement ; for, as already stated, it never was meant to traverse the whole field of moral action with such special demands, and the thing is practically impossible. But those higher moral deeds still come within the sphere of the law's general require ment of love; and not properly as to the degree of love to be manifested, but only as to the particular form or direction which may be given to the manifestation, can the course of duty ever be said to lie at the option of the individual. For a safe statement and application of the distinction between principles and rules, so far as it can be said to exist in Christianity, see the admirable sermon of Augustus W. Hare, entitled ' Principles above Rules.' 288 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. remain in force ; and that love which is the peculiar fruit and evidence of the indwelhng Spirit, can only be recog nised as in any proper sense a law to itself, so long as it runs in the channel of those requirements, and is controUed by a sense of duty. When turning into other directions, it met once and again, even in the case of the chiefest apostles, with our Lord's prompt and stern rebuke.1 And St John — the most spiritual of ad the apostles, if we may distinguish among them — has in this respect most dis tinctly expressed the very heart and substance of the whole matter, when he says, ' This is the love of God that we keep His commandments ;'2 — or, as it should rather be, ' This is the love of God, in order that we may keep His Commandments," ha rag hroXag aurou rjjgS/AEv — not that we do it as a fact, but that we may and should do it as a scope or aim. It is as if the love of God were implanted in the bosom for no other end than to dispose and enable us to keep His commandments ; for only in so far as these are kept, does the love of God in us reach its proper de stination. And, therefore, the sense of duty, or the felt obligation to keep God's commandments, has with good reason been caUed the very backbone of a rehgious char acter.3 It is that which more especiady gives strength and consistency to the soul's movements, and saves love itself from degenerating into a dreamy sentimentalism, from yielding to improper sohcitations, or running into foohsh and fanciful extremes. ' He that saith I know Him, and keepeth not His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him. But whoso keepeth His word, in him verily is the love of God perfected : hereby know we that we are in Him.'4 It was but a special apphcation of this truth, when Mr 1 Matt. xvi. 23 ; Luke ix. 55. 2 1 John v. 3. 3 Temple's ' Sermons at Rugby,' p. 36. 4 1 John ii. 4, 5. Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 289 Maurice, in a recent production, along with a gentle rebuke to a Scotch friend, expressed his belief that ' the reverence for an unchangeable law and a living lawgiver, has given to the Scottish character its strength and sohdity;'1 and if so, surely an element of healthful vigour, which the friends of enlightenment and progress, instead of trying to weaken where it exists, would do weU rather to encourage and strengthen where it is com paratively wanting. It was an utterance, too, in the same hne, but with a more general reference and in a higher tone, when Ewald, who is often as true in his moral perceptions as loose and arbitrary in his theological positions, thus wrote, ' There exists among men no free and effective guidance but when the individual human spirit submits to be directed and governed by the eternal, all-ruling Spirit, because it has recognised that to resist His truths and demands is to oppose its own good. But whatever else may result from the many kinds of direction and government of men by men, this can only then prove just and beneficial when it does not run counter to this supreme law.'2 Enough, however, of human testimonies, and also of the general argument. We merely sum up in a few closing sentences what the church is entitled to hold respecting the stdl abiding use of the law. (1.) Though not by any means the sole, it yet is the formal, authorita tive teacher of the eternal distinctions between right and wrong in conduct ; the special instrument, therefore, for keeping ahve in men's souls a sense of duty. Nothing has yet occurred in the history of mankind which can with any show of reason be said to supersede this use of 1 Preface to ' Sermons on the Ten Commandments.' 2 Geschichte, II. p. 165. T 290 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. VIII. the moral law. The theorists of human progression, who conceive such landmarks to be no longer needed, who fancy the world has outgrown them, are never long in meeting with what is well fitted to rebuke their ground less satisfaction : — in the disputes, for example, among themselves as to what oftentimes should be deemed vir tuous conduct — in the spread of those phUosophic systems, of the materialistic or pantheistic school, which would sap the very foundations of piety, and unsettle the dis tinctions between good and evd — or, after a coarser fashion, in the atrocities which are ever and anon bursting forth in society, and even finding their unscrupulous apologisers. There is, we know, a condition of righteous ness for which the law is not ordained ; 1 but it is clear as day, that not only not the world at large, but not even the most Christian nation in the world, has as yet approached such a condition. (2.) The law, as the measure of moral exceUence and commanded duty, provides what is needed to work conviction of shortcomings and sins — by looking steadfastly into which, men may come to be sensible of the deep corruption of their natures, their personal inabihty to rectify the evd, their gudt and danger, so that they may betake for refuge to where alone it can be found — in the blood and Spirit of Christ. The experience of the apostle must be ever repeating itself anew, ' I had not known sin but by the law ;' ' Through the law I am dead to the law, that I might hve unto God.' Thus we come to the practical knowledge of our case ; and ' to know ourselves diseased is half our cure.' (3.) Finady, the imperfections too commonly cleaving to the work of grace in the redeemed, call for a certain coercive influence of law even for them. If it has not the function to discharge for such which it once had, it stiU has a function, there 1 1 Tim. i. 9. Lect. VIII.] ITS RELATION TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 291 being so little of that perfect love which casteth out fear, and fear being needed to awre where love has faded to in spire and animate. So, even St Paul, replenished as he was with the hfe-giving Spirit, found it necessary at times to place the severer alternative before him : ' If I preach the gospel willingly, I have a reward : but if against my wiU, a dispensation of the gospel is committed to me ; yea, woe is unto me, if I preach not the gospel.' 1 He even dehghted to think of himself as in a peculiar sense the servant, the bondman, of God or Christ.2 And for behevers generaUy the two are thus mingled together, ' Let us have grace, whereby we may serve God accept ably, with reverence and godly fear : for our God is a con suming fire.'.-3 1 1 Cor. ix. 16, 17. 2 Rom. i. ; Gal. i. 10 ; Tit. i. 1. 3 Heb. xii. 29. 292 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IX, LECTUBE IX. THE RE-INTRODUCTION OF LAW INTO THE CHUECH OF THE NEW TESTAMENT, IN THE SENSE IN WHICH LAW WAS ABOLISHED BY CHRIST AND HIS APOSTLES. rpHE history of the law, considered as a revelation of God, reaches its close in the personal work of Christ and the formal institution of His kingdom among men ; every thing pertaining to it had then, as on God's part, assumed its final norm. But there is an instructive, though at the same time a mournful sequel to that history, which it wiU be proper briefly to trace before we take leave of the subject. It is the history of man's additions to God's testimony — claiming, however, equaUy with this, the sanction of Divine authority, and, by gradual and succes sive innovations, re-imposing upon the church a legalism, precisely sinhlar in kind to that which had been done away in Christ, but greatly more pervasive and exacting in its demands, and in its practical operation fundamen tally at variance with the true spirit of the Gospel. The rise of this false direction in the Christian church is the more remarkable, that it not only had the clear revelations of the Gospel against it, but even ran counter to what may be caUed the later development of practical Judaism itself. The tendency of things under the Old Covenant, especiaUy from the time that the Theocracy began outwardly to decay, we formerly saw, was to give increasing prominence to the spiritual element in the legal economy, and to make relatively less account of the Lect. IX.] RE-INTRODUCTION OF CEREMONIALISM. 293 merely outward and ceremonial. This tendency was con siderably strengthened by the prolonged dispersion of the Jewish people, and what everywhere accompanied it, the synagogal institution, which, to a large extent, took the place of the priestly ministrations and sacrificial worship of the Temple. The synagogue, in its constitution and services, was founded upon what was general, rather than upon what was distinctive and peculiar, in Judaism ; it made account only of the common priesthood of be hevers, and the essential elements of truth and right eousness embodied in the records and institutions of the Old Covenant ; and, consequently, the worship to which it accustomed the people at their stated meetings was entirely of a spiritual kind — prayer, the reading of in spired Scripture, and occasionaUy the word of brotherly counsel or admonition from some one disposed and qualified to impart it. Priests, as such, had no peculiar place either in its organization or its services ; and the rulers who presided over every thing connected with it were nominated by the people on the ground simply of personal gifts and reputed character. There stdl remained, of course, the observance of such things as the rite of cir cumcision, of the distinction of meats, and of days sacredly set apart from a common to a rehgious use, which depended upon nothing local or individual — might be practised anywhere and by any member of the community. It was this kind of legalism which first sought to press into the Christian church — the only kind that could press into it from the synagogue; but which, though haUowed by ancient usage, and, besides, possessing nothing of a sacer dotal or ascetic nature, was yet firmly repressed by the apostles, and ejected from the bosom of the churches which had begun to follow it. No taint of evd, therefore, was allowed to insinuate itself from this quarter— not 294 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IX. even at first, when not a few from the synagogue passed over into the membership of the church ; and much less afterwards, when the synagogue everywhere arrayed itself in fierce antagonism to the church : — whde, on the other hand, in the simple polity ofthe synagogue and its spiritual, non-ritualistic, if somewhat imperfect worship, the church found a starting-point fashioned out of those elements in the Old Covenant, which had at once their correspondence and their more complete exhibition in the New. Yet, with aU this, one can easdy understand, if due regard be had to the circumstances of the early church, how a disposition might arise and grow-^-if not very carefully guarded against — to assimdate the state of things in it to that of the preceding dispensation, and effect a virtual return to the oldness of the letter. There was the general relation between the two economies to begin with. Christianity sprang out of Judaism, and stood related to it as the substance to the shadow. More than that, a principal part of the Christian, as of the Jew ish synagogal worship, consisted in the reading of the Scriptures of the Old Testament — proportionally a much larger part than in later times ; for the function of preaching was at first but imperfectly exercised, and the Scriptures of the New Testament were only by and by gathered into a volume, and made to share with those of the Old in the services of the sanctuary. Hence, the minds of the Christian people were kept habituaUy con versant with the religion, as weU as the other affairs of the Old Covenant, with the Temple and its priesthood, its rites of purification and ever-recurring oblations ; and what might, perhaps, be stdl more apt to bias their views, they heard in the prophetical Scriptures delineations of Gospel times couched in legal phraseology — intimations, for ex ample, of the Lord corning to His temple, that He might Lect. IX.] RE-INTRODUCTION OF CEREMONIALISM. 295 purify the sons of Levi, and receive from them an offering of righteousness ; of incense and a pure offering being pre sented to the Lord from the rising to the setting sun ; or of kings and far-off heathen bringing gifts to His temple. Inversely, also, in New Testament Scripture, spiritual things are sometimes described in the language of the Old — as when believers are said by St John to have an anointing from the Holy One ; or when, in the Epistle to the Hebrews, they are represented as having an altar, which those who served the tabernacle had no right to partake of, and are exhorted to have their bodies washed with pure water. Such passages, if superficially con sidered, and interpreted otherwise than in accordance with the true spirit of the Gospel, might readdy beget a disposition, might create even a kind of pious desire, to have the things of the New dispensation fashioned in some sort after the pattern of the Old, and so to give to the descriptions a concrete and sensible form, similar to what they had in the past. There was, also, it must be added, a class of services and requirements occupying from the first an important place in the activities of the Christian church, in which the New necessardy came into a formal approximation to the Old. I refer to the pious and charitable contributions which the members of the Christian community brought for the rehef of the poor, the support of the ministry, and the celebration of Divine ordinances. These contributions were essentiaUy the same in kind with the tithes and free will offerings of the elder economy ; and the apostle, when treating of them in his first Epistle to the Corin thians, brought the one into express comparison with the other ; and on the ground that they who were wont to minister about holy things hved of the Temple-offerings, he argued that they also who preached the Gospel should 296 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IX. live of the Gospel.1 In such a case the transition might seem natural from an essential to a formal agreement. Why, it might be asked, not give the New somewhat of the same sacrificial character as the Old, and invest it with the same sort of ritual accompaniments ? Such thoughts might the more readdy occur,, if there were influences at work to dispose the early believers to forsake the channels of Christian simplicity for the more sensuous attractions of ritualistic observance. Now, there were influences of this description not only existing in all the centres of Christian agency, but also very actively at work. There was a current of opinion and feeling perpetuaUy bearing in from the scenes and inter course of every -day life, in behalf of temples, altars, sacrifices, priestly ministrations and dedicatory offerings, as so essential to Divine worship that the one could hardly be conceived of without the other ; the absence of such outward materials and instruments of devotion seemed incompatible with the very existence of the religious element. Hence, the reproach which was not infrequently thrown out against the Christians as being godless — Mm — because they refused to approach the altars, and take part in the sacrificial rites of heathenism, without appear ing to have any of their own as a substitute for them.2 The proper way to meet this prevailing sentiment was to point to the one great High-Priest, the minister of a higher than any earthly temple, and to the one perfect sacrifice, by which, once for ad, He accomphshed what never could be done by sacrifices of an inferior kind, and which, by its infinite worth and ever-prevailing efficacy, imparts to those interested in it a position so high, and a character so sacred, that their services of faith and love become in the sight of God sacrifices of real value. This 1 1 Cor. ix. 12-14. 2 Justin, 'Apol.,' chap. 6 ; ' Athenagoras,' chap. 4. Lect. IX.] RE-INTRODUCTION OF CEREMONIALISM. 297 is the hght in whioh the matter is presented in New Testament Scripture, where Christ is the one and aU of a behevers confidence, and the whole company of the faithful have the character assigned them of the roval priesthood, to whom belongs the privilege of offering up in Him spiritual sacrifices, winch for His sake are accepted and blessed — the sacrifices, namely, of thanksgivings, alms-deeds, works of beneficence and well-doing, which, when springing from genuine faith and love in Christ, are regarded as offerings of sweet-smelhng savour to God.1 But the church had not proceeded far on her course when she lost to some extent this clear discernment ofthe truth, and correct apprehension of the things relating to her proper caUing and work in Christ ; and continuaUy as men who had been educated in heathenism pressed into the ranks of the visible church, the number increased of those within her pale whose preparation for the kingdom of God had been imperfect, and who had been too long accustomed to identify religion with the outward and the visible to be able to grasp sufficiently the spiritual reali ties of the Gospel. There consequently arose a tempta tion to accommodate the form of Christianity to the taste of a lower class of persons, and by means of its external services work upon their natures, as by a new law of observance and discipline. They might thus hope, with out foregoing the realities of the faith, to retain the aUegiance ofthe less informed, and accomphsh by symboli cal and ritual appliances what seemed less hkely to be reached by means of a more elevated and spiritual kind. In these circumstances, it devolved upon the church as a primary duty to take order for having proper counter acting checks and agencies brought into play ; especiaUy to see to it that those who were chosen to direct her 1 1 Pet. ii. 5 ; Phil. iv. 8 ; Heb. xiii. 15, 16. 298 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IX. counsels and preside over her assembhes, had become soundly instructed, not only in the principles of the Chris tian faith, but also in the organic connection between the Christian and Jewish dispensations, their respective differences as wed as agreements, and the points wherein it was necessary to guard Christianity against any undue approach either to Judaic or heathen observance. But this was precisely what the early church faded to do — perhaps, we may say, the greatest fadure into which she feU, the one fraught with the longest train of disastrous results. For centuries there was no specific theological training generaUy adopted for such as aspired to become her guides in spiritual things, or actuaUy attained to this position. By much the larger portion even of those who contributed in the most especial manner to mould her character and government (Justin, Tertullian, Cyprian, Ambrose, Augus tine, Jerome, etc.), were in their early days total or com parative strangers to the exact knowledge of Scripture ; their period of culture and training was spent under heathen guides, with a view to civic or military life ; and when they passed, after a brief process of trial and instruction, into the ecclesiastical sphere, it could scarcely be otherwise than with many of the influences of the age stiU cleaving to them. Coming to know Christianity before they knew much of what preceded it, they wanted what they yet very peculiarly needed — the discipline of a gradual and successive study of the plan of God's dispen sations, and the directive light of a wed-digested scheme of Scriptural theology. They knew the Bible in portions, rather than as an organic and progressive whole ; and even for that knowledge, especiaUy in its earher parts, they were but poorly furnished with grammatical helps or with judicious expositions. Should it surprise us if, in such circumstances, they should often have caught but im- Lect. IX.] RE-INTRODUCTION OF CEREMONIALISM. 299 perfectly the meaning of Old Testament Scripture—if they should even sometimes have shewn themselves to be insufficiently acquahited with its contents — and, in regard to the institutions and history of former times, should occasionaUy leave us at a loss to say whether the true or the false predominated — spirituahzing the most arbitrary going hand in hand with the crudest literahsms, profound thoughts intermingling with puerile conceits, and the most palpable Judaistic tendencies discovering themselves whUe evangelical principles were alone professedly main tained ? Such are the actual results ; and if there be one point more than another on which the spiritual discern ment of those early Fathers was obviously defective, and their authority is least to be regarded, it is in respect to the connection between the New and the Old in the Divine economy. In this particular department, so far from having any special hghts to guide them, they laboured under peculiar disadvantages ; and their proper place in regard to it is that, not of the venerable doctors of the Christian church, but of its junior students. Now let us mark the effect of the unfortunate combi nation of circumstances we have indicated, and see how, by gradual, yet by sure and successive steps, the tendency in the wrong direction, which was scarcely discernible at the outset, wrought tdl it became an evd of gigantic magnitude, and reduced the church to a worse than Judaic bondage. In the earher writings — such as have come down to us with probable marks of authenticity and genuineness — we notice nothing in the respect now under consideration, except a somewhat too close and formal apphcation of the rituahstic language of the Old Testa ment to Christian times, coupled with certain puerde and mistaken interpretations of its meaning, in the hne of extravagant literalisms. Thus, to begin with the Epistle 300 THE REVELATION OF LAW. [Lect. IX. of Clement, which in point of character as weU as time is entitled to the first place, when exhorting the Corin thians to lay aside their self -will and conform to the settled and becoming order of God's house, he refers to the pre scriptions given under the old economy respecting ser vices and offerings, which were to be done at the appointed times and according to God's good pleasure, nor any where men might please, but at the one altar and temple in Jerusalem. This Clement assigns as a reason why believers now should perform their offerings (wgoepriyoj'i) to you the Spirit,' points not to the apostle as a minister of the new covenant, but to God or Christ : it is He alone who can minister, in the sense of bestowing, the Holy Spirit. The ministration or service here meant is undoubtedly the evangelical ministry of the apostles and their followers — the teaching- function of the Gospel, as Meyer terms it, and called, he thinks, the ministration of the Spirit, because it is ' the service which mediates the Holy Spirit.' Strictly speaking, it is a ministration of word and ordi nance, but such as carries along with it, in a quite peculiar degree as compared with former times, the regenerative, life-giving power of spiritual influence (the working of the Holy Ghost); and, named from this as its most distinctive feature, it is characterized as the ministration of the Spirit — much as a . man is often called a soul, because it is from that more especially he derives what gives him his place and being in 2 COR. in. 2-18. 375 creation: — the Spirit, therefore, not hypostatically considered, but as a Divine power practically operative through word and ordinance in bringing life and blessing to the soul. Vera. 9, 10. ' For if the ministration of condemnation was in glory, much more does the ministration of righteousness abound in glory.' This is substantially a repetition of the same idea as that expressed in the immediately preceding passage — only with this difference, that the law in the letter is here presented in its condemnatory, instead of its killing, aspect— condemnatory, of course, not directly, or in its own proper nature, but incidentally, and as the result of men's inability to fulfil its requirements. Accordingly, on the other side, righteousness is exhibited as the counterpart brought in by the Gospel : what the one requires, and from not getting becomes an occasion of condemnation, the other, through the mediation and grace of Christ, actually provides. A far greater thing, assuredly — hence in connection with it a sur passing glory ; such, the apostle adds in ver. 10, that the glory which had accompanied the one might be regarded as nothing in comparison of the other. Ver. 11. A still further aspect of the subject is here presented, one derived from the relative place of the two ministrations in respect to stability or continuance : ' for if that which vanisheth away was in glory, much more is that which abideth in glory.' In this form of the compari son, reference is had to what had been already indicated in the mention of the new covenant, implying that, with the introduction of this, there was a superseding or vanishing away of what went before. The two tables —the law in the letter, which is all one with the service or ministration of Moses — formed the material of a covenant, which was intended to last only till the great things of redemption should come ; when a new covenant, and along with that a new service or form of administration, should be introduced, adapted to the progression made in the Divine economy. The former, therefore, being from its very nature transitory, could not possibly be so replete with glory as the other ; the higher elements of glory must be with the ultimate and abiding. Here properly ends the apostle's contrast between the ministration of letter, and the ministration of spirit— for what foUows is rather an application of the views unfolded in the passage we have been consider ing, than any additional revelation of doctrine. From the pregnant brevity of the passage, and the peculiar style of representation adopted in it, mistaken notions have often been formed of the apostle's mean ing—as if the contrast he presents were to be understood of the Old and New Testament dispensations generally, of aU on the one side that 376 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. was connected with the covenant of law for Israel, and what on the other is provided and accomplished for mankind in the Gospel of Christ. So understood, the passage becomes utterly irreconcilable both with the . truth of things and with statements elsewhere made by the apostle himself. If the law as given by God, and intended to be used by the covenant people, was simply a service of condemnation and death, it could have had no proper glory connected with it, and Moses, instead of being entitled to regard and honour as the mediator that introduced it, would have been the natural object of repugnance and aversion. If also the doing or vanishing away spoken of had respect to the law in its substance, as a revelation of moral truth and duty, where could be the essential oneness of God's moral character ? and how could the apostle here assert that to be done away, the very thought of doing away with which he elsewhere rejects as an impiety ? ' Do we then,' says he, ' make void (xarapyou/Atv, put away, abolish, the very word in ver. 11 here) the law through faith? God forbid, yea, we establish the law' ('mrdvoiMv, give it fixed and stable existence).1 The apostle, we may be sure, could not involve himself in such inconsistencies, nor could he mean to speak so disparagingly of the revelation of law brought in by Moses, if viewed in its proper connection, and kept in the place designed for it by the lawgiver. Moses himself, also, is a witness against the view under consideration ; for he expressly declared that, if the people hearkened to the voice of God, they should live, and that he set before them life as well as death, blessing as well as cursing.2 But, certainly, he could not have said this, if he had had nothing to point to but the terms of a law, which required perfect love to God, and the love of one's neighbour as one's-self. This law branched out into the ten commandments, which were engraved on the tables of stone, and were by Moses ministered to the people at Sinai, taken apart and read in the letter of its requirements, could never be for fallen men the path way to life, and could only, by reason of their frailty and corruption, be the occasion of more certain and hopeless perdition. And here lay the folly of so many of the Jews, and of some Judaizing teachers also in the Christian church, that they would thus take it apart, and would thus press it in the letter, as a thing by which life and salvation might be attained. It is against this that the apostle is here arguing. He is exposing the idea of Moses being taken for the revealer and minister of life through the law he introduced, and as such the author of a polity which was destined to perpetuity. No, he in effect says, Moses, as the in-bringer of the law, did but shew what constituted life, 1 Rom. iii. 31. 2 Ex. xix. 5, 6 ; Deut. xxx. 15-19.. 2 COR. in. 2-18. 377 but could not give it ; he exhibited the pattern, and imposed the obligations of righteousness, but could not secure their realization ; this was reserved for another and higher than he, who is the Life and the Light of men ; therefore, only condemnation and death can come from understanding and teaching Moses in the letter — while still, his ministration of law, if considered as an ordinance of God, and with due regard to its place in the economy of Heaven — that is, in its relation to the antecedent covenant of promise, and its subservience to the higher ends of that covenant — has in it a depth, a spirituality and perpetual significance for the church, which constitute the elements of a real glory — a glory that was but faintly imaged by the supernatural bright ness on the face of Moses. This is in truth what the apostle presently states, when shewing, as he proceeds to do, what the carnal Jews missed by their looking at the ministration of the old covenant merely in the letter, instead of finding in it, as they should have done, a pre paration for the better things to come, and a stepping-stone to the higher form of administration which was to be brought in by Christ. Ver. 12. ' Having then such hope, we use great boldness of speech.' He had said before, ver. 4, that he had such, or so great confidence toward God — on account of the grace and power which were made to accompany his ministrations ; he knew and felt that he was owned by God in his work. Now, he says he has such hope — such, namely, as arises out of the surpassing greatness of the blessing and glory con nected with the Gospel and its ministration of spirit, and this not passing away, but abiding and growing into an eternal fulness and sufficiency of both; so that hope, as well as confidence, here has its proper scope. And having it, he could be perfectly open and bold in his speech, as one who had nothing to conceal, who had nothing to gain by the ignorance or imperfect enlightenment of the people, who also needed to practise no reserve in his communications, because the great reabties being come, the clear light was now shining, and the whole counsel of God lay open. Ver. 13. ' And not' — he adds, as a negative confirmation of what he had just stated, and also as an introduction to the notice he is going to take of the culpable blindness and carnality of the Jews—' And not as Moses put a veil on his face (an elliptical form of expression for, and we do not put a veil on our face, or mode of manifestation, as Moses put a veil on his face), in order that the children of Israel might not steadfastly look to the end (or cessation) of that which was to be done away.' The fact only, as already noticed, is mentioned in the history of the transaction, that Moses put a veil over his face, but not the 378 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. purpose for which it was done — which is left to be inferred from the nature of the act, and the circumstances that led to its being done. Nor is it very distinctly indicated either here or in Exodus, whether the veil was put on by Moses while he addressed the people, or after he had done speaking with them. The authorized version, at Exodus xxxiv. 33, expresses the former view, ' And till Moses had done speak ing with them, he put a veil on his face ; ' but there is nothing in the original corresponding to the till; it merely states that he finished speaking with them, and put a veil on his face, which seems to imply, regarding that first discourse at least, that the veiling was subsequent to the speaking. And so the ancient versions give it (Sept. i-irahri xari- itaoai XaXuv iirzbi)X.i\i liii rb irpbeiititet aurov xdXvfaua ; Vul. Impletisque sermonibus posuit velamen super faciem simvi). But as to the future, it is merely said that Moses took the veil off when he went in to speak with the Lord ' until he came out ; ' and when he came out and spake, the children of Israel perceived that his face shone : ' And he put the veil upon his face again until he went in to speak with Him' (vers. 34, 35). The natural impression, however, is, that the method adopted at first was still followed (though Meyer still takes the other view), namely, that Moses did not veil his countenance quite immediately when he came out, but only after he had spoken what he received to say . to the people ; and that the direct object of the veil was to conceal from the view of the people the gradual waning and disappearance of the super natural brightness of his skin. But viewing this brightness as a symbol of the Divine mission of Moses, the apostle ascribes to him a still fur ther intention in the veiling of it — namely, that the children of Israel might not, by the perception of its transience, be led to think of the transitory nature of the service or ministration of Moses itself — for this, I think with Meyer, whom Alford follows, must be held to be the natural sense of the words, 'in order that they might not steadfastly look (irpbg rb /j,?) dnvieai-iiplg rb, with the infinitive always denoting the pur pose in the mind of the actor),1 to the end of that which was vanishing away (transitory).' The vanishing away or transitory (roo xarapyov- fjjhoo) here is a resumption of the same (rb xarapyov/xhov) in ver. 11 ; and which, as we there explained, was the service of Moses as the bringer in of objective, written law. There was a glory connected with this. indicated by the shining of his skin (the seal, in a manner, of his Divine authority), but as the symbol of the glory was transient, so also was the ministration itself ; and Moses, the apostle would have us to under stand, was aware of this ; but lest the children of Israel should also 1 Matt. v. 28, vi. 1, xiii. 30 ; Eph. vi. 11 ; 1 Thess. ii. 9, etc. 2 COR. in. 2-18. 379 perceive it, and at the very time the service was introduced might begin to look forward to its cessation, be concealed from them the fact of the passing away of the external glory by drawing over it a veil.1 Many commentators have rejected this view, because appearing to them to ascribe something derogatory, a kind of dissimulation, to Moses, as if, while legislating for the people, he wished to hide from them the pro visional nature of that legislation, and its relation to the future coming and kingdom of the Messiah. But this is to extend the object of the concealment too far : what Moses did in respect to the veil, he doubtless did under the direction of God; and what is affirmed by the apostle concerning it is, that the service of Moses as the minister of law engraven on stones (with all, of course, that became connected with this), was to be thought of as the service which they were specially to regard and profit by, according to its proper intent, without needlessly forestalling the time when it should be superseded by another service or ministration, that of the Gospel. For the former was the land of service meanwhile adapted to their circumstances ; and to have shot, as it were, ahead of it, and fixed their eyes on the introduction of a higher service, would have but tended to weaken their regard to that under which they were placed, and rendered them less willing and anxious to obtain from it the benefits It was capable of yielding. But this did not imply that they were to be kept ignorant of a coming Messiah, or were not to know that a great rise was to take place in the manifestations of God's mind and will to men ; for Moses himself gave no doubtful intimation of this,2 and it was one of the leading objects of later pro phets, to make still more distinct announcements on the subject, and foretell the greater glory of the dispensation which was to come. But even with these, a certain concealment or reserve was necessary ; and though a mighty change was indicated as going to take place, and the passing away of the old covenant itself into another, which, in com parison of it, was called new, yet so carefully was the ministration of Moses guarded, and so strongly was its authority pressed during the time set for its administration, that one of the very last words of ancient prophecy to the members of the old covenant was, ' Remember the law of Moses my servant, which I commanded unto him in Horeb for all Israel, with the statutes and judgments.'3 1 I take the concealing to be the whole that is indicated by the veil, as most indeed do. Alford would find also the idea of suspension or interruption ; but this seems fanciful ; for no ministry is perfectly continuous. St Paul's was liable to suspension as well as that of Moses. 2 Deut. xviii. 15-18. * Mai. iv. 4. 380 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. Ver. 14. At the same time, the language used by the apostle implies that this was not what should have been ; it was an imperfect state of things, and involved a measure of blame ; but the blame lay with the people, not with Moses. He could not make use of such boldness of speech, regarding Divine things, as was now done by apostles and preachers of the Gospel ; he was even obliged to practise a kind of disguise, with the view of concealing the transitory nature of the ministration with which he was more peculiarly charged. And this for the sake of the spiritual good of the people themselves ; because, considering their state of mind, more of insight in that particular direc tion might have turned to evil ; and the ultimate reason follows : ' But their understandings were hardened (voij/j,ara, thoughts = thinking powers, understandings).' The connection is not, I conceive, that given by Stanley : ' Nay, so true is this, that not their eyes, but their thoughts were hardened and dulled ' — substantially concurred in by Alford, who takes dXXd in the sense of But also, and regards it as introducing a further assertion of their ignorance or blindness — blindness in respect to things not purposely concealed from them, but which they might be said to see : such modes of connection are somewhat unnatural, and scarcely meet the requirements of the case ; for something is needed as a ground for what precedes as. well as for what follows. I take it to be this : Moses practised the concealment and reserve in question, not as if it were what he himself wished, or thought abstractedly the best ; but he did so because the understandings of the people were hardened, they had little aptitude for spiritual things, perfectly free and open discourse was not suited to them. And the apostle goes on to say, it was not peculiar to that generation to be so — it was a common characteristic of the covenant people (so Stephen also says x), ' for until this day the same veil remains at the reading of the old covenant (that is, the book or writings of the covenant), with out having it unveiled (discovered) that it (viz., the old covenant) is vanished away in Christ.' Such appears to be the most natural con struction and rendering of this last clause — dvaxaXv-xrbpsvov being taken as tbe nominative absolute, and the vanishing or being done away being viewed, in accordance with the use of the expression in the preceding context, as having respect, not to the veil, but to the old covenant, or the ministration of Moses. Having been so used once and again, it manifestly could not, without very express warrant, be understood now of some thing entirely different. It is not, therefore, as in our authorized version, the veil which is done away in Christ, but the old covenant ; 1 Acts vii. 51. 2 COR m. 2-18. 381 and the evidence of the veil being still spiritually on the hearts of the Jews, the apostle means to say, consists iu their not having it unveiled or discovered to them that the old does vanish away iu Christ. This was a far more grievous sign of a hardened understanding in the Jews of the apostle's time, than the hardening spoken of in the time of Moses; for now the disguise or concealment regarding the cessation of the Mosaic service was purposely laid aside ; the time of reforma tion had come ; and not to see the end of that which was transitory, was to miss the grand design for which it had been given. Vers. 15, 16. ' But unto this day, whenever Moses is read, a veil hes upon the heart.' This is merely to be regarded as an explanation of what was meant in the preceding sentence by the want of discern ment, as to the cessation of the old covenant in Christ. It arose from a veil being, not upon Moses, or upon the book of the covenant (for the advance of the Divine dispensations had taken every thing of that sort out of the way), but upon their own heart. There was the real seat and cause of the blindness. ' But (adds the apostle) whenever it shall have turned to the Lord, the veil is taken away ' (vipiaipeTrai, a different word from that in the preceding verse, and confining the appHcation there made of xarapys/rai to the old covenant, not to the veil). There is a certain indefiniteness in the statement, and opinions differ concerning the subject of the turning — some taking it quite generally : when any one shall have done so ; some supplying Moses as the symbol or representative of the old covenant : when application is made of this covenant to the Lord ; others, and, indeed, a much greater number, understand Israel ; with substantial correctness — though it seems better, with Meyer and Alford, to find the subject in the ' their heart ' of the immediate context : when the heart of the people, whether individually or collectively, shall have turned to the Lord, then the veil as a matter of course is taken away, it drops off. The language un doubtedly bears respect to what is recorded of Moses when he went into God's presence — as often as he did so putting off the veil ; but it cannot be taken for more than a mere allusion, as the actions them selves were materially different. Ver. 17. ' Now the Lord is the Spirit.' This is undoubtedly the natural and proper construction, taking spirit for the predicate, not (as Chrysos tom, Theodoret, and several moderns) Lord; and the apostle is to be understood as resuming the expression in the preceding verse, and con necting it with what had been said before of spirit ; q. d., Now the Lord, to whom the heart of Israel turns when converted, is the spirit which has been previously spoken of as standing in contrast to the letter, and 382 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. the ministration of which has been given as the distinctive characteristic apostolic agency. By spirit, therefore, must here be understood, not the Holy Spirit hypostatically or personally considered — for in that case it could not have been so identified with the Lord (by whom is certainly meant Christ), nor would it properly accord with the sense of spirit, in verses 6 and 8 — but the Spirit in His work of grace on the souls of men — or Christ Himself in His divine energy manifesting Himself through the truth of His Gospel to the heart and conscience, as the author of all spiritual life and blessing. So that it is the inseparable unity of Christ and the Spirit in the effect wrought by the ministration of word and ordi nance, not their hypostatical diversity, which here comes into considera tion : Christ present in power, present to enlighten and vivify, — that, as here understood by the apostle, is the Spirit (in contradistinction to the mere ' f orm of knowledge and of truth in the law ') ; ' but (the apostle adds — 8s as the particle of transition from an axiom to its legitimate con clusion) where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty ' — not there in the local sense (for ixii is wanting in the best authorities, K A B C D, also in the Syriac and Coptic versions, nor is its employment in such a maimer quite in accordance with the usage of the apostle) ; but merely as, along with the substantive verb, declarative of a certain fact : the man who is spiritually conversant with Christ, who knows Him in the spirit of His grace and truth, there is for such an one a state of hberty — he is free to commune with Christ himself, and to deal with the realities of His work and kingdom, as at home in the region to which they belong, and possessing, in relation to them, the spirit of sonship.1 Not merely is the hardened understanding gone which prevents one from seeing them aright, but a frame of mind is acquired, which is in fitting adaptation to them, relishing their light and breathing their spirit. Ver. 18. A still further deduction follows, the climax of the whole passage, rising from the matter discoursed of to the persons in whom it is realized : ' but we all with unveiled face beholding in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are transformed into the same image from' glory to glory, as from the Lord the Spirit.' The but at the beginning indicates a certain implied contrast to the state of others — the bondmen of the house of Israel, who knew not the Lord as the Spirit, and the spiritual liberty such knowledge brings, but it is otherwise with us. We all — that is, we who are Christians, not apostles merely, or Christian ministers and evangelists, for the expression is purposely made quite general, in order to comprehend, along with himself, the whole of those whose case the apostle is now 1 Rom. viii. 15. 2 COR. in. 2-18. 333 handling—' We all with unveiled face behold.' The last reference to the veil had represented it as being upon the heart of the Israelites ; for it was as hearers of tho law that he (hen contemplated them ; but now, as it is in connection with the sight that he is going to unfold the privilege of New Testament believers, he returns to the thought of the face in relation to the veil— the face of Moses having been veiled indeed, to the people, but unveiled in the presence of the Lord, whence it received impressions of the glory that shone upon it from above. So we all— after the manner of Moses, though in a higher, because more spiritual, sense, but unlike the people for whom the glory reflecting itself on his countenance -was veiled — ' behold in a mirror the glory of the Lord.' I adhere to this as the most natural and also the most ' suitable sense of the somewhat peculiar word xarovrpi^bfhiwi, as opposed to that of ' reflecting as in a mirror,' adopted by Chrysostom, Luther, Calov, also by Olshausen and Stanley. There is no evidence of the word having been employed in this sense. In the active, it signifies to ' mirror,' or shew in a glass ; in the middle usually, to 'mirror one's-self,' or ' look at one's-self in a mirror,' of which examples may be seen in Wetstein on the passage, but which is manifestly out of place here ; and to turn the seeing one's-self in a mirror, into re flecting one's likeness from it, is to introduce an entirely new and unwarranted idea into the meaning. Nor could it, if allowable, afford an appropriate sense ; for the mention of the unveiled face undoubtedly presents a contrast to the representation in vers. 14-16, and has respect to the free, untrammelled seeing of the Divine glory. There is also in Philo one undoubted use of the word in this sense (' Leg. Allegor.,' III. 33, fiySt xaw7rrpi6ai/J,7)v- h aXXu) nvl rr\v er\v id'sav -r] iv so! rw &£a>, neither would I see mirrored in any other, etc.) The plain meaning, therefore, is, ' We all with unveiled face (the veil having been removed in con version) beholding in a mirror (or seeing mirrored) the glory of the Lord.' The apostle does not say where or how this mirrored glory is to be seen, but he supplies the deficiency in the next chapter, when at ver. 4 he speaks of the light, or rather ' shining forth of the Gospel of the glory of Christ' (which Satan prevents natural men from perceiving), and at ver. 6 (when speaking of the contrary result in the case of believers), he represents God as ' shining in their hearts to the illumination of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.' The glory, therefore, in so far as it is now accessible to the view of believers, is to be seen mirrored in the face or person of Jesus Christ, or, as it is otherwise put, in the Gospel of the glory of Christ — that is, the Gospel which reveals what He is and has done, and thereby unfolds 384 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. His glory. This is now freely opened to the inspection of believers, and by beholding it with the eye of faith, ' we are transformed into the same image' (rriv ahrr\i tixbva /xira/Mp at the commence ment is evidently intended to individualize very particularly the speaker, ' I for myself ; ' it is Paul's own experience that he relates, and relates for the purpose of shewing how the law, when rightly apprehended, recoils as it were upon itself, renders an escape from its dominion necessary for the sinner. And the proof contained in this declaration, for the purpose more immediately in hand, lies, as noted by Meyer, specially in the result being said to have been reached 8id vo'/iou ; ' for he who through the law has been delivered from the law, in order that he might stand in a higher relation, and again falls back into the legal relation, acts against the law.' There can be no reasonable doubt, that the law through which the death is accomplished, is the same as that to which the death is represented as taking place — not, as Jerome, Ambrose, Erasmus, Luther, Bengel, etc., the Gospel law, the law of the spirit of life in Christ in the one case, and the Mosaic law in the other ; for even if it were admissible to take the term law in such different senses, the point of the apostle's argument would be lost. It was the law itself in its accusing, condemning power upon his conscience, which made him die to it as a ground of justification and hope ; so that it was in the interest of the law that he died to it (vo>w dirUawv, dat. commodi),1 the object and result being that he might live to God. It is the same thought which, at greater length, is unfolded, also in connection with Paul's own experience, in Rom. vii. But the process is briefly indicated also here, in what follows. 1 See Ellicott here, and Eritzsche on Rom. xiv. 7. 390 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. Ver. 20. 'I have been crucified with Christ' — eweera-jpu/iai, the perfect, pointing therefore to the past, but extending also to the present time, and so may be understood indifferently of the one or the other. It gives the explanation of his death to the law without defeating, but rather promoting the law's interests. Realizing that through sin he had fallen under the curse of the law, and that Christ died to bear its curse for them that believe on Hun, he entered in the spirit of faith into Christ's death, and became partaker in the benefits of His crucifixion. As put by Chrysostom, ' When he said / died, lest any one should say, How then dost thou live ? be subjoined also the cause of his life, and showed that the law, indeed, killed him when living, but that Christ taking hold of him when dead quickened him through death ; and he exhibits a double wonder, both that He (Christ) had recalled the dead to lhe, and through death had imparted life.' This higher kind of life, growing out of his fellowship with Christ's crucifixion, the apostle describes as one not properly his own, not belonging to his natural self, but flowing into him from Christ his living Head. It is difficult to render his words here, so as to give them the precise point and meaning of the original. The authorized version, adopting a punctuation formerly common (£3 Sr ovxen iyo), Zri Si h s/mi X/>.), translates, ' Nevertheless I live, yet not I but Christ liveth in me,' — which, however, would have required an dXXd before oux'sri, and is now, therefore, wisely abandoned. The apostle assumes that his crucifixion with Christ was, as in Christ's case, but the channel to a higher life, and so he does not simply tell us that he lives, but whence he has the source and power of life : ' I have been crucified with Christ ; but no longer is it I who live (or, a httle more paraphrastically, thus : but as for living, it is no longer I that do so), but Christ liveth in me.' It is the appropriation of Christ's own words : ' I am the living bread that came down from heaven ; if any man eat of this bread he shall live for ever ; and the bread that I will give is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world.' ' As the living Father hath sent me, and I live by the Father, so he that eateth me, even he shall live by me ;' l it is expressed also by others of the apostles, as by John, — ' He that hath the Son hath life.'2 Christ dwell ing by faith in the heart has become the principle of a new hfe — a life hid with him in God, from which, as an inexhaustible fountain- head, the believer ever draws to the supply of his wants and his fruit- fulness in well-doing. And so, the apostle adds, ' that which I now live in the flesh (so far, that is, as I now live in the flesh) I live in faith — that of the Son of God who loved me and gave Himself for me.' 1 John vi. 51-57. 2 1 John v. 12 ; compare 1 Pet. i. 2, 3. CAL. ii. 1-1-21. 39| What he now regards as his life in the flesh, what properly distinguishes and makes it what it is, is its being in the faith of Christ, finding in such faith its proper element, and being thereby kept in perpetual fellow ship with the fulness of life aud blessing that is in Him. And recog nising again the great truth, that it was as the dying and atoning Saviour that Jesus thus became the new source of life for mankind, he allows his faith to run out into the touching expression of appropriating confidence, ' who loved me and gave Himself for me.' Ver. 21. ' I do not make void {adtru, set at nought, or rather, render nought) the grace of God,' — namely, as manifested in the gift and death of Christ, for our deliverance from sin and justification by faith in His blood ; then follows the reason, ' for if righteousness [come] through the law (through this, that is, as the ground or medium of attaining to justification), then Christ died without cause : ' not in vain, or to no effect (for Sapedv never bears that sense, but always that of the Latin gratis), though this too might have been said ; but the exact meaning is, there would have been no occasion for his death, or, as Chrysostom expresses it, the death of Christ would have been superfluous (nspirrbg b nZ Xpmrou Sdmrog). Thus ends the argumentation, which throughout magnifies the grace of God in the salvation of men through the sacrificial death and risen life of Christ, and depreciates, in comparison of it, works of law — but depreciates them simply on the ground that they are, in the proper sense, unattainable by fallen man — that the law's requirements of holiness only reveal man's sin and ensure his condemna tion — and that, consequently, obedience to these can never be made the ground of a sinner's confidence and hope toward God, but to his own shame and confusion. Gal. iii. 19-26. Ver. 19. T/ oZ» b w/ms; etc. 'Wherefore, then, the law! It was added because of the transgressions, until the seed shall have come to whom the promise has been made, being appointed through angels in the hand of a mediator. 20. Now a mediator is not of one ; but God is one. 21. Is the law then against the promises of God? God forbid ! For if a law were given which could have given life, verily righteousness should have been of the law. 22. But, on the con trary, the Scripture shut up all under sin, in order that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe. 23. But before the faith came we were kept in ward, shut up under the law for the faith which was going to be revealed. 24. So that the law has 392 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. become our pedagogue in respect to Christ, in order that we might be justified by faith. 25. But now that the faith has come, we are no longer under a pedagogue. 26. For ye are aU sons of God through the faith in Christ Jesus.' This section respecting the law comes in as a natural sequel to the line of argumentation which had been pursued by the apostle from the beginning of the chapter. In that his object was to prove that salva tion or blessing was now, and had always been, of promise — of promise as unfolding the free grace of God to sinful men, and by them appre hended and rested on in faith ; it had been so in the case of Abraham hundreds of years before the law was given at Sinai — nor for Abraham as an individual merely, but as the head of a family, of Gentile as well as of Jewish origin, who were all destined along with himself, and in the same manner, to receive the blessing ; and the law, which came so long after, could not by possibility disannul the provisions thus secured by promise to the believing ; least of all could they be secured by the law, which carries with it a curse to as many as are under its dominion, because they have all violated its precepts (v. 10, 11). But if the pro mise did so much, it might seem as if the law were disparaged ; hence the question that follows. Ver. 19. 'Wherefore then the law?' Literally, 'What then the law ? ' viz., What does it do ? What is its place and object ? The r/, therefore, may be taken in its usual sense, and the passage regarded as elliptical ; but, as to the import, it is all one as if it were put for 8i& ri, wherefore. The answer is, ' It was added because of the transgres sions ' — rojv irapafidaeojv xdpiv. Does this mean in their interest, for their sake ? So Hilgenfeld, Meyer, Jowett, Alford, Lightfoot (Meyer, ' It was added in favour, zu Gunsten, of transgressions ; ' Lightfoot, still more strongly, 'to create transgressions'). But to this view, Ellicott justly objects, that ' it ascribes a purpose [viz., in respect to the exis tence of transgressions] directly to God ;' it would imply not the fact merely, that by means of the law, and, as Paul elsewhere states, by reason of the weakness or perversity of the flesh,1 transgressions were multiplied, but that the production of these was one of the purposes for which it was given- — which seems to come very near making God the intentional author of sin. Alford explains, that St Paul is here treating of the law in its propaedeutic office, as tending to prepare the way for Christ, and says that this office consisted in ' making sin into trans gression, so that what was before not a transgression might now become one' — surely a somewhat arbitrary distinction, as if sin 1 Rom. vii. 5, 8, viii. 3. GAL. in. 19-20. 393 (a/uxpria) and transgression (tapd^amg) differed materially from each other, and what were the one might not also be the other. Neither Paul's writings generally, nor the statements in this particular section, afford any ground for such a distinction ; for what is here called trans gression, and as such is associated with the law, is presently called sin (ver. 22), as it is also elsewhere.1 And the apostle John expressly identifies sin and transgression : ' He that committeth sin, trans - gresseth also the law (rr)v dvo^iav toisT, does lawlessness, violation of law=transgression) ; for sin is transgression' (violation of law).2 To speak of the law as creating either sin or transgression, is to present moral evil as something arbitrary or factitious ; consequently some thing that might, and, but for the creative power of formal law, should, not have come into existence. The earliest extant interpreta tion, the one adopted by the Greek commentators, and by the Fathers generaUy, takes the expression of the apostle in a quite opposite sense, that the law was added for the purpose of preventing or restraining the spirit of transgression. Thus Chrysostom, ' The law was given because of transgressions ; that is, that the Jews might not be aUowed to live without check, and glide into the extreme of wickedness, but that the law might be laid on them like a bridle, disciplining, moulding them, restraining them from transgression, if not in regard to all, yet certainly in regard to some of the commandments ; so that no small profit accrues from the law.' To the same effect Jerome, ' Lex trans- gressiones prohibitura successit,' referring to 1 Tim. i. 9 ; also Occum. Theoph., with a great multitude of modern commentators — Erasmus, Grotius, Morus, Rosenmuller, Olshausen, De Wette, etc. This view, however, is rejected by recent scholars, as attributing to yfpw a sense which is without support — a kind of practically reversed meaning of the natural one — importing, not in favour, but in contravention of, opposed to. It is further alleged, that the sense thus yielded, if it were grammatically tenable, would not suit the connection; as the apostle's object in the whole of this part of the epistle is to shew, not what benefit might be derived from the law in the conflict with sin, but rather what power sin derives from the law. There is, un doubtedly, force in both of these objections— though, in regard to the former, the readiness and unanimity with which the Greek expositors ascribed such an import to %«/?/», may fairly be taken to indicate, that the sense was not altogether strange to them, and, if rarely found in / written compositions, may have been not unknown in colloquial usage. But it appears better, with EUicott and others, to take x&f" ^ the 1 Rom. v. 13, 20, vii. 7, etc. 3 1 John iii. i. 394 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. somewhat general sense of propter, causa, on account of — a sense it un questionably bears.1 The sense of the passage will then be, the law was given on account of the proneness of the people to transgress ; pointing merely to the fact, but with a certain implication in the very maimer of expression, that the evil would not thereby be cured, that transgressions would become but the more conspicuous. For the law of itself could not repress the tendency, or diminish the number of transgressions ; on the contrary, its tendency was to render them both more palpable and more aggravated — while still, if contemplated and used according to the design of God, as an handmaid to the covenant of promise, it would have helped most effectually to promote the cause of holiness, and consequently to repress and limit the manifestation of sin. But the apostle is here viewing it, as the Jews of his day generally viewed it, and as the Judaizing teachers in Galatia were evidently doing, in its separate character and working — as a great institute commanding one class of things to be done, and the opposite class not to be done — an institute, therefore, taking to do with transgressions, on account of which it actually came into being, but which it served rather to expose and bring to light, than to put down. Thus the law was given on account of transgressions. And the apostle subjoins a definition of the period up to which the law in this objective and covenant form was to continue : ' until the seed shall have come to whom the promise has been made ' — the form of the sentence to be explained from the circumstance, that the apostle puts himself in the position of one at the giving of the law, and from that as his starting-point looks forward to the moment in the future, when the seed shall have appeared in whom the promise was to reach its fulfilment. The meaning is, that while the covenant of promise was in a provisional state, travelling on to its accomplishment, the law was needed and was given as an outstanding revelation ; but when the more perfect state of things pointed to in the promise entered, the other would cease to occupy the place which had previously belonged to it. A clause of some difficulty is added as to the spiritual agencies entrusted with its introduction, ' being ordained through angels (ordered or enjoined through the medium of angels), in the hand of a mediator.' Very much the same thought is expressed by Stephen on his trial, when he says the Israelites received the law elg Siaray&g dyysXuv, at the ordination (according to the arrangements) of angels ; and again in Heb. ii. 2, where the law is characterized as ' the word spoken by angels.' It is rather singular that in these passages such prominence 1 See Liddell and Scott, Rost and Palm, on the word. CAL. in. 19-20. 395 should have been given to the ministration of angels at the giving of the law, while iu the history no notice is taken of them, nor any allusion even to the presence of angels in connection with the law, except the passing one iu the blessing of Moses on the tribes : ' The Lord came from Sinai, and rose up from Seir unto them ; He shined forth from mount Paran, and He came with ten thousands of saints (literally, from amid myriads of holiness) ; from His right hand went a fiery law for them.'1 The presence of myriads at the giving of the law is re ferred to also in Fs. lxviii. 17 ; aud their mediating agency is more distinctly expressed by Josephus (fipuv Ss rd xdXXisra rw 8oy/*druv xa! beitLrara, ruv iv ro?g \ib'j.oig Si dyyiXuv irapd rou ©eou pa66v-ruv, Ant. V. 5, sec. 3). and by Philo ('De Somn.,' p. 642, M.). But how this change in the mode of representation came about, or what might be its precise object, we are unable to say. The passages in Old Testament Scripture referred to, speak merely of the presence of angelic hosts as attendants on the Lord at Sinai, but say nothing of their active service in com municating the law to Moses ; throughout Old Testament Scripture it is simply from the Lord that Moses is said to have received the law ; and the introduction of an angelic ministry as mediating between the two, could scarcely have been thought of for the purpose of enhancing the glory of the law, since it appeared to remove this a step farther from its Divine source. Accordingly, in the Epistle to the Hebrews, the ministration through angels is regarded as a mark of relative inferiority, when compared with the direct teaching of the Lord Jesus Christ; but when not so compared, as in the speech of Stephen, or in the passages of Philo and Josephus, it is fitly enough associated with the ideas of peculiar majesty and sacredness. Here, I am inclined to think with Meyer and Alford, that the mention of angels cannot justly be under stood in a depreciatory sense ; for the covenant of promise itself, as established with Abraham, which is the more immediate object of comparison with the law, was also connected with angelic administra tion — more expressly so connected than the giving of the law.2 The fact alone of an angelic medium is stated by the apostle, as a matter generaUy known and believed — though how it should have been worked into the beliefs of the people, while Old Testament Scripture is so sUent upon the subject, we have no specific information ; aU we can say is, that it had come somehow to be understood. As to the mediator, in whose hands the law was established at Sinai, there can be no reason able doubt that Moses was meant; he literaUy bore in his hand to the people, from the mount, the tables that contained its fundamental 1 Deut. xxxiii. 2. 2 Gen, xxii. 11. 396 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. principles.1 Philo and the Rabbinical Jews so regarded Moses ; 2 the Fathers (BasU and Theodoret excepted) mistook the meaning of the apostle when, under mediator, they understood him to point to Christ ; and they are followed by several modern interpreters of note — Calvin, Pareus, Calov, etc. But the other view is so much the more natural one, and is now so generally acquiesced in, that there is no need for en larging on it. In the mention of a mediator, however, I see no ground for discovering (with Ellicott)_ an intentional note of inferiority in the law as compared with the covenant of promise. A mark of difference it certainly formed, but we have no reason to think of any thing more. Ver. 20. This point of difference is here more distinctly exhibited: ' Now a mediator is not of one ; but God is one.' The passage is some what famous for the variety of interpretations to which it has given rise.3 A very considerable number, however, are manifestly fanciful and arbitrary ; and among recent commentators of note there has been a substantial agreement in regard to the leading thoughts presented in the words, a difference chiefly discovering itself in the application. ' A mediator is not of one ' — a general proposition ; the office from its very nature bespeaks more than one party, between whom it is the part of the mediator to negotiate — hence (though this is left to be inferred, suggested rather than indicated), involving a certain contin gency as to the fulfilment of the contract, since this depends upon the fidelity of both parties engaging in it. ' But God is one,' — the God, namely, who gave to Abraham the promise ; He gave it of His own free and sovereign goodness, therefore it depends for its fulfilment 1 Ex. xxxi. 18, xxxii. 15. 2 See Schottge.n and Wetstein here. 3 This circumstance, however, has been very loosely stated, and in a way fitted to produce erroneous impressions. Ellicott notes that it is said to have received in terpretations ' which positively exceed 400.' Jowett is more explicit, and affirms, ' It has received 430 interpretations ; ' but in what sense or on what authority nothing is indicated. Lightfoot, however, is more moderate, and speaks of only 250 or 300 ; but he, equally with the others, conveys the impression that the interpretations all differ from each other, which is by no means the case. It is apparently a remark of Winer, in his Excursus on the passage, which has occasioned this manner of speech. He says that some had set forth, iu separate publications, varias et antiquorum et recentiorum theologorum explicationes (dueentae fere sunt et quinquaginta) ; and he refers in a note particularly to a person of the name of Keil who had done so, and Weigaud, who had brought together 243 interpretations. But these various exposi tions were not all different ; there were so many interpreters, but nothing like so many interpretations. Winer himself coincides with Keil ; and among English interpreters, a great many are substantially agreed. If the same mode were adopted with other passages, there is scarcely a text of any difficulty in the New Testament, on which hundreds of interpretations might not be produced. GAL. in. 19-26. 3 9 f solely on Him, and as such is sure to the seed, since the oneness which belongs to His being, equally belongs to His character and purposes. That sort of distance, or diversity of state and mind, implied in the work of mediation, is totally awanting here ; every thing hangs on the wUl and efficient power of the God of the promise. But then the thought naturally arises, that to bring in, subsequent to the promise, a covenant requiring mediation, and consequently involving dependence on other wiUs than one, is fraught with danger to the promise, and renders its fulfilment after aU uncertain. This is the thought which the apostle raises in the form of a question in the next verse, and answers negatively by pointing to the different purposes for which law and pro mise were respectively given. Ver. 21. 'Is the law then against the promises of God? (promises in the plural, wiht reference, not only to the frequent repetitions of the word of promise, Gen. xii. 7, xv. 5, 18, xvii., xxii., etc., but also to the different blessings exhibited in it). God forbid! for if a law were given which could have given life, verily righteousness should have been of the law.' The expression, vo>os b Suvd/Mvog (the article with a participle foUowing the noun serving to define and limit the sense in which the idea in the noun is to be understood, Winer, Gr., sec. 20, 4), means precisely a law which could, or, a law such as could, possess the power of giving life. The apostle had already said that the covenant of grace or promise bestowed life (ver. 11), and in the previous chapter had enlarged upon it with special reference to his own experience ; and he now adds, that if this inestimable boon for a perishing world could have been obtained by a legal medium, this would certainly have been chosen ; for in that case man would only have been enjoined to do what lay within the reach of his capacities and powers, and the humilia tion, and shame, and agony of the cross had been unnecessary. But the thing was impossible ; to give life to a sinful, perishing world is essentiaUy Divine work ; if it comes at all it must come as the fruit of God's free grace and quickening energy. Whatever ends, therefore, the law might be intended to serve, this could not possibly be one of them ; and to look to it for such a purpose was entirely to mistake its design, and seek from it what it was powerless to yield. Not, however, after the fashion of Jowett, who represents the meaning thus : ' The power- lessness of the law was the actual fact; in modern language it had become effete ; it belonged to a different state of the world ; nothing spiritual or human remained in it.' What the apostle means is, that, for the object here in view, it never was otherwise : as regards life-giving, the law in its very nature was powerless. 398 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. Ver. 22. ' But on the contrary (dXXd, a strong adversative, and re quiring more than a simple but to bring out its force) the Scripture shut up all under sin' — euvsxXsmsv, not shut together, as remarked by Meyer, Ellicott, Alford, against Bengel, as if the sw had respect to the num bers embraced in the action, and whom it coerced into one and the same doomed condition. It merely strengthens the meaning of the verb, so as to indicate the completeness of the action — the closing rn^ or shutting up under sin was, so to speak, on eveiy side. And this is further strengthened by the rd itdvra, in the neuter, as if he would say, men and all about them. (Elsewhere, however, he uses the masculine, in a very similar declaration.)1 The act is justly represented as 'done by the Scripture, not by the law — for the law by itself merely required holiness, and forbade or condemned sin ; but the Scriptures of the Old Testament, or God in these, had (as already indicated, ii. 16, iii. 10, 11) pronounced all to be guilty of sin, and so had, in a manner, shut them up without exception under this, as their proper state or condition — marked them off as violators of law. Not, however, for the purpose of leaving them there, but ' that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe.' The word promise is here evi dently used concretely for all that the word of promise contained — the blessing of life and salvation ; which is again said to be ' of faith, h viarsoig, out of this as the source whence it is derived, but of faith as related to Jesus Christ, and finding all its sufficiency in Him. And to render the matter still more explicit, to shut out the possibility of the good being supposed to come through any other channel than faith, it is added, ' to them that have faith,,' or believe — faith's promised bless ing is realized simply through the exercise of faith. Ver. 22. ' But before the faith came' — faith, that is, in the specific sense just mentioned, but with reference more particularly to its objec tive reality in Christ, with which it is in a manner identified — ' we were kept in ward (such is the exact and proper meaning of ippovpo-j/jjidot,, Vulg. custodiebamur, kept asirip iv rnyia nvi, Chrysostom), shut up under the law for the faith which was going to be revealed.' The apostle here associates himself with believers in legal times, personifies the entire body and succession of such, and represents them as in the hands of a sort of jailer, who by reason of their transgressions had them at his mercy, or rather in strict and jealous surveillance, waiting the time of their deliverance, when it should be given them to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. So far from being able to set them free from their guUt and liability to punishment, the law was their perpetual 1 Rom. xi. 32. GAL. m. 19-26. 399 monitor in respect to these — bound these upon them, but only that they might the more earnestly and believingly look for the mercy of God in Jesus Christ, as the only way of escape. The elg, for — for the faith which was going to be revealed — is to be taken ethically, denoting the aim or destination which the law, in this respect, was intended to serve : ' to the inteut, that we should pass over into the state of faith.' x And the piXXovgav, as Meyer also notes, stands before the iriariv, an inversion of the usual order, because the subsequent manifestation of faith in the future was set over against the existing state, in which it was still wanting. Ver. 24. The apostle now draws the proper conclusion from this wardship under law, ' so that the law has become (yiyoviv) our peda gogue for (in respect to) Christ, in order that we might be justified by faith.' The rendering in the authorized version, ' our schoolmaster,' does certainly not give the exact idea of nraiSayoiybg ; for it suggests simply teaching or instruction, which was not properly the part of the ancient pedagogue, but that rather of the slave, who had to take charge of the boy on his way to and from the school, and to watch over his behaviour when at play. The pedagogue was the guardian and moral trainer of the boy tiU he arrived at puberty. And this corresponds to the office of the law, which, in the respect now under consideration, was not so much to teach as to discipline, to restrain, and direct to the one grand aim — namely, Christ, ' the end of the law for righteousness.'2 The old Latin translation, however, gave the same sense as our English Testa ment ; and Ambrose refers to it with approbation : Paidagogus enim, sicut etiam interpretatio Latina habet, doctor est pueri; qui utique imperfectae aetati non potest perfecta adhibere praecepta, quae sus- tinere non queat.3 Such a rendering, and the comment founded on it, may f ably be regarded as evidence, that a certain amount of instruction was not unusually communicated by the pedagogue to the boy under his charge— for Ambrose could scarcely be ignorant whether such was the case or not ; but this was certainly not the predominant idea ; and, as applied by Ambrose, it serves to give a wrong turn to the allusion here. Instruction, of course, respecting moral truth and duty, was inseparable from the law ; but it is the strict, binding, and imperative form in which this was given that the apostle has in view, and, con sequently, not so much the amount of knowledge imparted^ as the restraining and disciplinary yoke it laid upon those subject to it. The law would not have men to rest in itself, but to go on to Christ, where alone they could get what they needed, and enjoy the hberty which is suitable to persons in the maturity of spiritual life. i Meyer. 2 Rom. x. 4. 3 ' Ep. Classis,' n. Lxxi. 2. 400 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. Vers. 25, 26. ' But now that the faith has come, we are no longer under a pedagogue ; for ye are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus,' — the advance from the nonage state, which required the services of a pedagogue, to that of comparative maturity, in which the youth is able to take charge of himself. Ye are sons, viol — not rixva merely, not even vaiSsg, in a mere boyish condition — but sons, with the full powers and privileges that belong to such ; and this ' through the faith in Christ Jesus,' that is, through the faith which rests in Christ, and brings the soul into living fellowship with Him. In plain terms, the law as an external bond and discipline is gone, because as partakers of Christ we have risen to a position in which it is no longer needed — the Spirit of the law is within. Gal. iv. 1-7. Ver. 1. ' Now I say that the heir, as long as he is a child, differs in nothing from a bond-servant, though he be lord of all ; 2. But is under guardians and stewards, until the time appointed of the father. 3. Even so we, when we were children, were kept in bondage under the rudi ments of the world. 4. But when the fulness of the time came, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law, 5. That He might redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons. 6. But because ye are sons, God sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts, crying, Abba Father. 7. So then thou art no more a bond-servant, but a son ; and if a son, an heir also through God.'1 It is unnecessary to enter into a detailed explanation of these verses, for they are merely a fresh illustration (under a slightly diversified figure) of the thought expressed in vers. 24-26 of the preceding chapter. In this respect, however, they are important, as they unfold more dis tinctly how the transition is made from the legal to the Christian state, not only without any danger to the moral condition of those who make it, but to their great gain. The figure is still that of a child (vtiirug), but a child with reference to the inheritance to which he has been born, not to his personal liberty. However sure his title to the inheritance, and however direct his relation to it, he is stiU kept from the proper fruition of it, during the period of his childhood, because wanting the mind necessary to make the proper use of it : therefore, placed under i The correct text here seems to be xXngovifct; S;i e=»J, which is the reading of SABC, .Vulg., Cop., and many of the Fathers. GAL. iv. 1-7. 401 guardians and stewards, in a virtual position of servitude, till the time set by his father for his entering on the possession. Of a quite similar nature, the apostle affirms, was the state of men in pre-Christian times : 'We too,' says he, identifying himself with them, 'when we were children, were kept in bondage under the rudiments of the world ' rd eroiyiTa roo xbafj.no. It is a strong mode of expression, but intention ally made so, for the purpose of shaming the Galatians out of their backsliding position. The term aroiyiTov originally signifies a pin or peg, then a letter, a component part or element of a word, then an element of any sort — whether physically, in respect to the composition of material nature, or morally, in respect to what goes to constitute a system of truth or duty. Once only in New Testament Scripture is the word employed with reference to the physical sphere of things — namely, in 2 Peter iii. 10, where 'the elements' are spoken of as melting with fervent heat under the action of that purifying fire which is one day to wrap the world in flames. Misled by this passage, and by the common use of the word in this sense, most of the Fathers took it here also in a kind of physical sense, as pointing to the festivals, such as new moons and sabbatical days, which are ruled by the course of the sun and moon (Chrysostom, Theodoret, Ambrose), or to the worship of the stars and other objects in nature (Augustine), in which they have been foUowed by a few moderns. But this is unsuitable to the connec tion which, however it may include a respect also to heathenish forms of worship, undoubtedly has to do maiidy with the observances of Judaism, which had no immediate relation to the powers or elements of nature, but were strictly services of God's appointment. It is neces sary, therefore, to take the word here in an ethical sense, and to under stand it of the elementary forms or rudiments of a religious state — the A, B, C, in a manner, of men's moral relationship to Goel. The apostle says, the world 's rudiments, not simply those of the covenant people ; for, whUe the ritual of the old covenant was speciaUy for the seed of Israel, it was never meant to be for them exclusively ; others also were invited to share in its services and blessings ; and, such as it was, it formed the best, indeed, the sole divinely authorized form of religious homage and worship for the world in pre-Christian times. In it the world had, whether consciously or not, the style of worship really adapted to its state of spiritual non-age. Besides, as it was not merely, nor even chiefly, to Jewish Christians that the apostle was writing, but to those who are presently said to have formerly done service to false gods (ver. 8), an aUusion is made, in the very form of the expression, to the rehgious rites of heathendom, which, in their prevaUing carnality 2 C 402 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. and outwardness, had a point of affinity with those of the law. The mode of speech is purposely made comprehensive of heathen as weU as Jewish ceremonialism. And though, as Meyer notes, Paul had to do only with backslidings of a Judaistic nature, yet this does not prevent him, with the view of making his readers more thoroughly ashamed of the trammeUed condition to which they had returned, from designating it in such a manner as to bring it under one idea, and place it in the same category, with the worship of heathendom. While there was a spiritual element in the one which was wanting in the other, it was not on this account that the Galatians had fallen back upon it, but rather for the sake of that outwardness which was common to both (ver. 10) — a palpable proof, therefore, of their stiU low, childish tone of thought and feeUng. The expression eror/sTa, roij %o'o>ou is found much in the same sense at Col. ii, 8. Having noticed this proof of inferiority or servitude in pre-Christian times, the apostle proceeds (ver. 4) to speak of the time and mode of deliverance : ' When the fulness of the time was come (rb mXripwjha, what filled up, or gave completeness, namely, to the preparatory period of the world's history, parallel therefore to aypi T*iS nrpokeiJ,6ag rou Trarpbg, in ver. 2), God sent forth from Himself (s^airigruXev, denoting both pre-existence in Christ and close proximity to the Father) His Son, born of a woman, born under law.' Born is here the more exact equivalent to yivbptvov, rather than made — nothing being indicated by the expression but the fact of our Lord's coming into the world with the nature, and after the manner, of men. The birth, we know, was the result of an altogether peculiar, supernatural operation of Godhead; but that belongs to an earher stage than the one here referred to by the apostle, which has to do simply with Christ's actual appearance among men. Born under law — not become man merely, but become also subject to the bonds and obligations of law. The definite article is better omitted in English before law, as it is in the Greek (M vo/mv) ; for, whUe special respect is no doubt had to the law as imposed on the Jews, yet the meaning is not, as too many (including Meyer, Alford, • EUicott) would put on it, that our Lord appeared as a Jew among Jews, and entered into the relations of His countrymen. For the whole nature and bearings of His work are here spoken of — His salvation in its entire compass and efficacy for mankind ; and so, not what was distinctly Jewish must have been contemplated in the bond which lay upon Him, but the common burden of hmnanity. All this, however, was in the law, rightly considered, which was revealed at Sinai; the heart and substance of its requirements of duty, and (implied) threatenings against GAL. v. 13-15. 403 sin, relate to Gentile as well as Jew ; they belong to man as man ; and no otherwise was redemption possible for mankind than by our Lord's perfect submission, iu their behalf, to its demands and penalties.1 His atoning death, therefore, was, in this point of view, the climax of His surrender to the claims of law ; as said in Heb. x. 10, ' By the which will (fulfilled even unto the bearing of an accursed death) we are sanc tified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all.' The result, as stated in the words that foUow here, has a threefold issue, ' in order that He might redeem (i^ayopdun, might buy off by pay ing what was due, as from a state of hopeless servitude) those that were under the law ; [and this] in order that they might receive the adoption of sons. And because ye are sons (not, with Chrysostom, Theodoret, and not a few moderns, that ye are sons, or in proof and token of your being such, but because, or since ye are so, on the ground of your having received this place and privilege), God sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts, crying Abba Father.' All follows by natural consequence from the spiritual union through faith of the soul with Christ : this brings, first, deliverance from the law's curse, which falls into abeyance by the removal of sin ; then, it secures admis sion into the f amUy of which Christ is the head, makes them sons after the pattern of His sonship; and, finaUy, because the soul and spirit here must correspond with the condition, the Spirit of sonship, with its sense of joyous freedom and enlargement, comes forth to rule in their hearts. Hence, as the apostle concludes in ver. 7, having risen to such a condition of sonship, and become endowed with the spirit proper to it, they could be no more bondmen ; they were free, yet not to do what was contrary to, but only what was in accordance with, the spirit and tenor of the law. This latter point is brought out distinctly in another passage — the last we splect from this epistle. GAL. V. 13-15. ' For ye were caUed for freedom, brethren ; only [use] not your liberty for an occasion to the flesh, but by your love serve (do the part of bondmen to) one another. For the whole law is fulfilled in one word, in this, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. But if ye bite and devour one another, take heed that ye be not consumed one of another.' 1 Compare the comment on Rom. iii. 20, where there is noted a precisely similar fulness of reference in what is said of law. 404 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. The thought expressed in these words is much more fully unfolded in the epistle to the Eomans, so that a few remarks here may suffice. The for at the commencement connects the passage with the wish expressed in the preceding verse, that the zealots of the law, who had been disturbing the Galatians, might be cut off, as tending to mar the very end of their Christian calling. ' For ye were called for freedom ' — iir ihrokpiu,, the purpose or aim for this as your proper condition, called that you might be free.1 Yet this freedom, from its very nature, involves a species of service — if free in one respect, bound in another — bound by love to serve one another, and, of course, also to serve God. He therefore defines the freedom : ' only not the liberty (fxbvov r^v iXiofoplo.v) which is for an occasion to the flesh' — so the sentence might be construed, taking ti)v iXso in opposition to the previous sentence, and explanatory of it; but it is better perhaps to regard this part of the verse as elliptical, supplying irotiin, or some such verb, and thus giving the sentence an independent, horta tory meaning, ' only use not your liberty,' etc. It is a liberty, the apostle would have them to understand, very different from an unre strained license, or fleshly indulgence; and the reason follows, that though the external bond and discipline of the law is gone, its spirit ever lives, the spirit of love, which Christians are most especiaUy bound to cherish and exhibit. In this respect, the law speaks as much as ever to the conscience of the believer, and can no more be set aside than the great principles of God's moral government can change. The explana tion of Meyer here is excellent : ' The question, how Paul could justly say of the whole law, that it is fulfilled through the love of one's neighbour, must not be answered by taking vb/Aog to signify the Chris tian law (Koppe), nor by understanding it only of the moral law (Estius and others), or of the second table of the Decalogue (Beza and others), or of every divinely revealed law in general (Schott) ; for b t'dg vbfia; can mean nothing else, from the connection of the entire epistle, than the whole law of Moses — but by placing one's-self on the elevated spiritual level of the apostle, from which he looked down upon all the other commands of the law, and saw them so profoundly subordinated to the law of love, that whosoever has fulfilled this command, is not to be regarded otherwise than as having fulfilled all. > Contemplated from this point of view, every thing which does not accord with the precept of love, falls so entirely into the background,2 that it can no more come into consideration, but the whole law appears to have been already fulfilled in love.' Brotherly love alone was mentioned by the apostle, because 1 Winer, sec. 48, c. 2 Rom. xiii. 8-10. ROM. n. 13-15. 405 what is here specially in view was the relation of Christians to each other — their imperative duty to serve one another by the mutual exercise of love, instead of, as he says in ver. 15, biting and devouring one another. But no one can fail to understand, that what holds of love in this lower direction, equally holds of it in the higher ; indeed, rightly understood, the one, as stated by Meyer, may be said to include the other. Rom. ii. 13-15. ' For not the hearers of the law are just before God, but the doers of the law shall be justified. For when Gentiles, who have not the law, do by nature the things of the law (viz., the things prescribed in it), these, though they have not the law, are to themselves the law, being such as shew the law's work written in their hearts, their con science jointly bearing witness, and their thoughts (or judgments) among one another accusing or also excusing.' I take this to be a section by itself, and cannot concur with those commentators (including, certainly, some men of note — Calvin, Koppe, Harless, Hodge), who would connect what is said in vers. 14 and 15 about Gentiles doing the law, and being a law to themselves, not with the immediately preceding verse, but with the statement in ver. 12, that those who have been without the written law shall be judged without it, and those who have been under such law shall be judged by it. This seems arbitrary and unnatural, and could only be justified if the statement in the immediately preceding verse were obviously parenthe tical, and incapable of forming a suitable transition to the assertions that Mow. But such is by no means the case. The apostle's line of thought proceeds in the most regular and orderly manner. There are (he virtually says) grounds for judgment in the case of all, whether they have been placed under the written law or not, and ample materials for condemnation ; for the mere privilege of hearing that law does not give any one a title to be called righteous in God's sight ; this does not make the essential difference between one man and another, which turns mainly on their relation to the doing of what is required ; the doers alone are justified, and though the heathen have not been hearers like the Jews, they may be viewed with reference to doing. It is no proper objection to this view of the connection, that it seems to bring in out of due place the subject of justification, and to represent the apostle as indicating the possibility of some among the heathen 406 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. being justified by their works. Justification, in the full Gospel sense of the term, as acquittal from all guilt, and being treated as righteous, does not come into consideration here. The question contemplated is a narrower one — namely, what, in regard to particular requirements of the law, forms the proper ground of approval, or constitutes a good char acter ? Is it bearing or doing ? Doing, says the apostle ; and then goes on to add that, on this account, Gentiles may justly be placed in the same category with Jews. ' For when ' — here comes his matter of fact proof or reason — ' Gentiles, who have not the law, do by nature the things of the law, these are to themselves the law.' It is not said of the Gentiles as a whole that they do this, but only when they do it, or in so far as any of them do it — implying, no doubt, that what is done by some may and should be done by others, yet this only as matter of inference. The want of the article, therefore, has its mean ing — not rd iDiit), but merely thy ; for, though the latter is sometimes undoubtedly used of the Gentiles in their totality (as at ch. iii. 29, ix. 24), yet this is only when the things affirmed are applicable to them universally, which is palpably not the case here. The statement is indefinite, both as to what proportion of the heathen might be char acterized as doers of the law, and to what extent they were so. To do the things of the law is indeed to do what the law prescribes (x. 5 ; Gal. iii. 12); but (here we concur with Dr Hodge) ' whether complete or partial obedience is intended depends on the context. The man who pays his debts, honours his parents, is kind to the poor, does the things of the law ; for these are things which the law prescribes. And this is all the argument of the apostle requires, or his known doctrine aUows us to understand by the phrase, in the present instance.' Indeed, that such is his meaning, we have only to look to the examples which the apostle himself adduces a few verses afterwards, which include merely the law's precepts against stealing, adultery, and sacrilege ; and the qualification which the whole current and tenor of his argument oblige us to put upon what he states here as to the doing of the law, con firms the perfectly simUar qualification that we have shewn, ought to be put upon the justifying spoken of in the verse immediately preced ing. It has respect simply to the actions which, in a legal point of view, are worthy of approval on the one side, or of condemnation on the other. And as regards the performance of what is ascribed to such heathen, the law-making (we are told) is of themselves — that is to say, it is the dictate of their own instinctive sense of right and wrong, forming, to a certain extent, a substitute for the written law; so also the \&w-doing is by nature (ou, up to the time when it came), sin was in the world ; ' that is, not only were men involved in the one act of Adam's transgression, but sin, as a principle, continued to live and work in them onwards tiU the period of the law-giving at Sinai, as weU as after it — shewing (for that is what it was needful to prove, and what the statement does prove) that sin in Adam waS disease in the root, and that, as those who sprung from him ever mani fested the same moral obliquity, they could not be placed in another category, or treated after another manner. They, too, were all sinners ; but ' sin (the apostle adds) is not reckoned where there is no law;' sin and law are correlates of each other; hence, though not, like Israel after wards, placed under formed law, those earlier generations must have been virtually, really under the obligations of law — as, indeed, all by the very constitution of their nature are (according to what had already been stated, ii. 9-16). This, however, was not the whole : ' But death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over those who had not sinned after the similitude of Adam's transgression;' that is, as I understand it, not only those who had themselves sinned, who by their violations of moral duty had given palpable evidence that actual sin was in the world from Adam to Moses, but even such as were not capable of sinning like Adam, sinning by any personal overt transgression (infants must be chiefly understood), these, as well as others, were during aU that time subject to the penalty of sin— death. Relationship to Adam, therefore, renders all alike, from the first, partakers of a heritage of sin, and as such subject to condemnation ; of which we have two proofs— first, that 2D 418 EXPOSITION OF PASS'AGES. throughout past generations, before the law as well as after it, sin has been ever manifesting itself in those who were capable of committing it, and that in the case of others who, by reason of age, were not so capable, death, which is the penalty of sin, still reigned over them — though they had not sinned like Adam, they nevertheless died like Adam. Vers. 13 and 14 thus contain a double proof of the general position laid down in ver. 12 — the universal prevalence of sin (in such as were capable of committing it), and the universal dominion of death (whether there had been actual sin or not). And that the former — the prevalence of actual sin — is included in the apostle's proof, as well as the latter, seems clear both from the natural import of the words (sin was in the world, the world all through has been a sinful one), but also from the account made in the comparative view which follows of the actual sins or offences of mankind. These, along with the sin of Adam, constitute the mass of guilt from which deliverance had to be brought in by the second Adam, and out of which justification unto life eternal had to be imparted ; while the sin of the one man wrought for all unto condemnation and death, the righteousness of the other pre vailed, not only against that sin, but against numberless offences besides, unto justification and hfe (ver. 16). Interpreted thus, every part of the apostle's statement is taken in a quite natural sense, and has its due effect given to it ; but the other interpretations which have been adopted always fail, in one part or another, to give what seems a full or natural explanation. For example, the clause respecting the reckoning or imputing of sin, is understood by a large number of commentators (Augustine, Ambrose, Luther, Calvin, Beza, Stuart, etc.) as referring to men's own sense of sin ; being with out law, they did not charge guilt upon their consciences, did not take it to heart, or, as put by Usteri, Tholuck, and others, ' Man did not feel his sin as a punishment.' But this is to take the verb in an arbi trary sense, which plainly denotes a formal transaction, a legal reckon ing, as of a matter that may or may not justly be placed to one's account ; and it also introduces an irrelevant consideration ; for the question here was not what men thought of themselves, but how they stood in reference to the judgment and procedure of God. The view of Meyer, Alford, and several recent commentators, appears equally untenable : they understand the passage to say, that while there was sin constantly existing in the world before Moses, yet it was not reckoned to men as formal transgression, or as deserving of punish ment, because the law had not been given. According to Meyer, ' it was not brought into reckoning, namely, for punishment, and iadeed ROM. v. 12-21. 419 by God — for it is of the Divine procedure, in consequence of the fall, that the whole context treats.' Alford modifies it a little, as if the representation of Meyer were somewhat too strong : ' In the case of those who had not the written law, sin (d^apria) is not formally reckoned as transgression (Tapd.fia.sig) set over against the command; but in a certain sense, as distinctly proved, ch. ii. 9-16, it is reckoned, and they are condemned for it ' — that is, reckoned, indeed, but reckoned as ' in a less degree culpable and punishable.' But this is to put a meaning on Paul's language, for which Paul himself gives no warrant ; he is speaking, not of degrees of culpability, but of what might or might not be reckoned sin, and, as such, deserving of death. Besides, to distinguish between sin and transgression in this way, when the matter relates to actual guilt, is to make too much hang on a verbal difference ; nor is it warranted by other passages of Scripture.1 Un questionably, before the giving of the law, men were not only spoken of as sinners, but formally reckoned such, judged, held deserving of the severest penalties ; 2 and the apostle merely epitomizes this part of Old Testament history, when he states that sin was in the world up to the giving of the law, and consequently bespoke the existence of law (though not formally enacted as from Sinai) of which it constituted the violation. It is true, he does not ascribe the heritage of death to these actual violations of law, but only to the sin of Adam ; this, however, does not prevent his seeing in them a proof, that all were held to have sinned in Adam, and in him to have fallen into a state of depravity and condemnation — the point immediately in hand. So far, I entirely con cur with Dr Hodge : ' If there is no sin without law, there can be no imputation of sin. As, however, sin was imputed (or reckoned), as men were sinners, and were so regarded and treated before the law of Moses, it foUows that there must be some more comprehensive law in relation to which men were sinners, and in virtue of which they were so regarded and treated.' Assuredly, but I see no reason for holding that this has reference simply to original sin, or to men's relation to the one sin of Adam— that they were regarded and treated as sinners, merely because they were viewed as having sinned in Adam; for this would be to put rather a forced inter pretation on the clause, that sin was in the world till the law, making it to mean that the sin of Adam's first transgression was in the world. This were unnatural, especially just after that sin had been mentioned as a past act; and, besides, by fixing attention only on that one sin, 1 See the remarks at Gal. iii. 19. 2 Gen. iv. 8-12, vi. 3-7, 13, etc., ix. 6, xi. 1-8, xviii. 17, xix. 29, etc. 420 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. the thought of actual offences would be virtually excluded ; while yet these, as we presently find, form an important item in the comparative view drawn by the apostle. Take the line of thought to be that which we have presented, and there is no ground for such objections. ' All sinned in Adam ' — this is the general position ; and the proof is, sin was in the world from Adam to Moses, as well as since, at once the fruit of Adam's sin, and the parent of numberless other sins; but, apart also from these, death has reigned with undistinguishing equality over one and all, whether or not chargeable with personal transgressions. Having made this explanation about sin and death in relation to Adam's fall, the apostle now begins to wend his course back to the comparison of the two great heads of humanity ; and first notices the resemblance, by saying of Adam, that he was ' the type of the future One ' — of the Man, by way of eminence, that was afterwards to come. He was the type in regard to the great principle of headship — it being true alike of both, that their position in the Divine economy carried along with it the position of all who are connected with them — the one in nature, the other in grace. But with this general resemblance, the apostle goes on to say, there were important differences ; and more especially, first, in regard to the kind of results flowing from the con nection — in the one case evil, condemnation, death ; in the other good, justification, life ; secondly, in regard to the mode and ground of pro cedure — one man's sin bringing upon the many such a heritage of evil, the righteousness of the other (because of its absolute perfection and infinite worth) prevailing over many sins to secure a heritage of good, greatly more than counterbalancing the evil.; hence, thirdly, the sur passing excellence of grace as manifested in the one line of operations, as compared with the actings of nature in the other. Two points only, and these of a somewhat incidental kind, caU for a brief notice. One is, as to the place where the explanatory matter ends, and the apostle formally concludes the comparison begun in ver. 12. It is, as all the better commentators now agree, at ver. 18, where there is a recapitulation of what had been previously stated, and a pressing of the formal conclusion : ' Therefore as through one offence [it came] upon all men to condemnation, so also through one righteous act (Si hbg Sixaibb/jMrog, pointing specially to the consummation of Christ's work on the cross) [it came] upon all men unto justification of life,' etc. The other point has respect to what is said of the law in its bearing on the subject, which was, not to provide the means of justification, but rather to increase the number of offences from which ROM. vi. 14-18. 421 justification was needed : ' But the law came in besides (rapusnXhv, subintravit, entered by the way as a kind of subsidiary element, there fore with power only to modify, not to alter essentially, the state of matters) in order that the offence might abound '—not, of course, in an arbitrary way to increase the number of sins, or strictly for the purpose of working in this direction, but with such a certain knowledge of its tendency so to work, that this might be said to have been its object. Prescribing to men the way of righteousness, and commanding them to observe it, the law did but shew the more clearly how far they had gone from it, and by its very explicitness as to duty, served to multiply the number and aggravate the guUt of transgressions. SubstantiaUy the same thought is expressed in Gal. iii. 19, so that it is unnecessary to enlarge on the subject here. Rom. vi. 14-18. ' For sin shaU not have dominion over you : for ye are not under the law, but under grace. 15. What then ? May we sin, because we are not under the law, but under grace ? God forbid ! 16. Know ye not, that to whom ye yield yourselves servants for obedience, his servants ye are whom ye obey, whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness. 17. But thanks be to God, that ye were the servants of sin, but ye obeyed from the heart that form of instruction to which ye were delivered. 18. And being freed from sin, ye became servants to righteousness.' This passage respecting the relation of believers to the law, forms part of a much longer section, in which the apostle handles the connec tion between justification and sanctification — shews how the doctrine of a gratuitous salvation through the faith of Christ, so far from leading to a life of sin, renders such a life impossible, makes holiness, not sin, the rule and aim of the believer's course. The fundamental ground of this result, as the apostle states at the outset (near the beginning of the chapter) lies in the believer's relation to Christ ; he becomes, by the very faith which justifies him, vitally united to Christ, and consequently participates in that death of Christ to sin, and that lhe to righteousness, which characterize Him as the spiritual Head and Redeemer of His people. This, therefore, is the security of the believer, and his safe guard against the dominion of sin in his soul, that the grace which saves him has, at the same time, transplanted him into a new state, has brought him into connection with holy influences, and changed the 422 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. current of his desires and purposes. Hence, the apostle exhorts those who have undergone this blessed change to realize the great truth involved in it, and give themselves in earnest to the life of faith and 'holiness to which it called them. Sin had no longer any right to reign over them, and they should not allow it, in fact, to do so. This is what is meant in ver. 14, ' For sin shall not have dominion over you ' — it/tut ov xupievifei, shall not domineer, or lord it over you ; the power to do this was now effectually broken, and they should act under the buoyant and joyous feeling, that they did not need to be in bondage, that spiritual liberty was secured for them. Then comes the reason or ground of this freedom, ' for ye are not under the law, but under grace.' In endeavouring to get at the precise meaning of this statement, which has been variously understood, there is no need for raising any question as to what is intended by law, whether the Mosaic, or some other form of law. The proper explication cannot turn on any difference in this respect ; for it is plainly of the law as a system of requirements (no matter what these might specifically be), of the law as contradistinguished from grace, God's system of free and unmerited benevolence, that the apostle is speaking ; consequently, law is taken into account merely as the appointed rule of righteousness, which men are bound as rational creatures to keep, and which, for the subjects of revelation, would naturally be identified with that of Moses. The law so understood, and by reason of its very excellence as the revelation of God's pure righteousness, so far from being the deliverer from sin, is the strength of sin ; 1 for if placed simply under it, the condition of fallen man becomes utterly hopeless ; it sets before him, and binds upon his conscience, a scheme of life, which lies quite beyond his reach, and he falls like a helpless slave under the mastery of sin. But believers are otherwise situated ; they stand under an administra tion of grace, which brings the mighty power of redeeming love to work upon the heart, and, freeing it from condemnation, inspires it with the life and liberty of the children of God. This new and better' constitution of things supplants, for those who are interested in it, the ground of sin's dominion in the soul, and opens for it the way to ulti mate perfection in holiness.2 The apostle, however, was writing to those who were still but im perfectly acquainted with the operation of grace ; and readdy conceiv ing how they would startle at the thought of believers being no longer under the law, as involving a dangerous sort of licence, he turns as it were upon himself, and asks, ' What then ? May we sin (the proper 1 1 Cor. xt. 56. 2 The point is unfolded at much greater length in chap. vii. ROM. vi. 14-18. 423 reading is undoubtedly dpaprrisupev, the subjunctive of deliberation, not the future d'j.aprr]soij,sv) because we are not under the law, but under grace ? ' The question is asked only that an indignant disclaimer may be given to it : l (hid forbid !' The thought is not for a moment to be entertained ; and the moral contradiction, which the supposed inclina tion and liberty to sin would involve, is exposed by presenting sin and obedience (much as our Lord presented God and mammon1) as antagonistic powers or interests, to the one or other of which all must stand in a relation of servitude. There is no middle course, as the apostle states : one must either act as the servant of sin, and receive the wages thereof in death, or in the spirit of obedience (namely, to God), and attain to righteousness. ' Servants of obedience ' is certainly a peculiar expression, and would probably have been put, as in ver. 18, servants of righteousness, but for the purpose of keeping up the parallel— on the one side sin unto death, on the other obedience unto righteousness. This personified obedience, however, involves the idea of God, as the One to whom it is due : the servants of obedience are those who realize and feel that they must obey God, and this by aiming at righteousness. And it is implied, that as the service of sin finds in eternity the con summation of the death to which it works, so also with the righteous ness which is the result of obedience ; it is consummated only in the life to come, when they who have sincerely followed after it shall receive ' the crown of righteousness from the Lord, the righteous Judge.'2 Righteousness so considered is not materially different from eternal life. Further, it is clear, that as obedience implies objection to au authoritative rule, and the life of grace is here identified with obedience, the child of grace is not more freed from the prescription of a rule than those who are in the condition of nature. The life to which he is called, and after which he must ever strive, is conformity to the Divine rule of righteousness ; just as, on the other side, all sin is a deviation from such a rule. The apostle, in ver. 17, expresses his gratitude to God that those to whom he wrote had passed from the one kind of service to the other : ' But thanks be to God that ye were the servants of sin (the stress should be on the were, thanks that this is a thing of the past, and can be spoken of as such), but ye obeyed from the heart that form (rlnrov, type, rather) of instruction into which ye were delivered.' The form of expression in this last member of the sentence is peculiar, sig h vapsSbfyrs riiTov 8,8aXng, literally, obeyed into what pattern of instruc tion ye were delivered; evidently a pregnant form of construction for i Matt. vi. 24. 2 2 Tim. iv. 8. 424 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. obeyed the pattern of instruction into which ye were delivered (rQ rim rr\g (5/(5. ilg 8v TapaSbSnn). The Christian instruction they had received is viewed as a kind of pattern or mould, into which their moral natures had been in a manner cast, so as to take on its proper impress, and give forth suitable manifestations of it. It is a question with commen tators, whether this plastic sort of instruction is to be understood generally of the rule of faith and manners in the Gospel, or more speciaUy of St Paul's mode of teaching the Gospel, as contradistin guished from the Judaistic type of Christian doctrine. De Wette, Meyer, and some others, would take it in the latter sense ; but appar ently without any sufficient reason, as it would involve a closer relation ship on the part of the Romish community to St Paul's teaching than we have any ground for supposing. It is quite enough to understand by the expression, the Gospel of the grace of God in its grand outlines of truth and duty, through whatever precise channel it might have reached the believers at Rome ; this they had not only received, but from the heart obeyed. ' Paul,' to use the words of Calvin, ' compares here the hidden power of the Spirit with the external letter of the law, as though he had said : " Christ inwardly forms our souls in a better way, than when the law constrains them by threatening and terrifying us." Thus is dissipated the following calumny, "If Christ free us from subjection to the law, He brings liberty to sin.'7 He does not, indeed, allow His people unbridled freedom, that they might frisk about with out any restraint, like horses let loose in the fields ; but He brings them to a regular course of life.' It is the same truth substantially which is taught by our Lord when He says : ' Ye are clean through the word which I have spoken unto you ; ' and again, ' Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.' x And finally, let there be noted here the beautiful combination in the apostle's statement of the action of Divine grace and of man's will. ' They obeyed the doctrine heartily ; in this they were active : yet they were cast into the mould of this doctrine, and thereby received the new form of faith, obedience, and holiness, from another hand and influence. So that they were active in obeying the truth ; and at the very same time were passive with regard to the superior influence.' 2 The apostle adds, virtually repeating what had been said before, only with special application to the Christians at Rome : ' And being freed from sin, ye became servants to righteousness.' This is probably as fit a rendering of the words (iSouXdJ^n rp dixaiosvvp) as can be obtained. The rendering of Alford, ' Ye were enslaved to righteousness,' though 1 Jo. xv. 3, viii. 32. See also 1 Pet. i. 22. 2 Eraser. ROM. vn. 425 apparently nearer to the original, is in reality not so ; for, to speak of enslavement iu the spiritual sphere can scarcely fail to convey to an English reader the idea of unwilling constraint, a sort of compulsory service, which certainly was not what the apostle meant. It is merely a thorough, life-long, undivided surrender to the cause of righteousness. And he proceeds to unfold, to the end of the chapter, the blessed nature of the service to which they had thus given themselves, as contrasted with that from which they had been withdrawn, and to press the things which belonged to it on their regard, both from consideration of the present benefits to be derived from it, and the relation in which it stands to the eternal recompenses of blessing in God's kingdom. Rom. vii. ' Know ye not, brethren (for I speak to them that know the law), that the law has dominion over a man so long as he lives ? 2. For the married woman is bound by the law to her living husband ; but if the husband have died, she is loosed (lit., made void) from the law of her husband. 3. So, then, wlfile her husband lives, she shall be called an adulteress if she become another man's ; but if her husband have died, she is free from the law, so as not to be an adulteress though she have become another man's. 4. Wherefore, my brethren, ye also were made to die to the law through the body of Christ, that you might become another's, even His who was raised from the dead, in order that ye might bring forth fruit to God. 5. For when we were in the flesh, the motions of sins which were through the law wrought in our members to the bringing forth of fruit unto death. 6. But now we have been delivered from the law, having died to that wherein we were held, so that we serve in newness of spirit and not in oldness of letter. 7. What shall we say, then 1 Is the law sin 1 God forbid ! On the contrary, I had not known sin except through the law ; for, indeed, I had not known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not lust. 8. But sin, taking occasion by means of the commandment, wrought in me aU manner of concupiscence ; for without the law sin is dead. 9. I was alive, indeed, without the law once ; but when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died. 10. And the commandment which was for life, even this was found by me unto death. 11. For sin, taking occasion through the commandment, deceived me, and through it slew me. 12. So that the law is holy, and the commandment holy, and just, and good. 13. Did, then, the good become death to me? God forbid ! [not that] but sin, in order that it might appear sin, through the good 426 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. working in me death, in order that sin, through the commandment, might become exceeding sinful. 14. For we know that the law is spiritual; but I am carnal, sold under sin. 15. For what I, effect I know not ; for not what I wish do I perform ; but what I hate, that do I. 16. But if I do that which I wish not, I consent to the law that it is good. 17. Now, however, it is no longer I that effect it, but sin that dwelleth in me. 18. For I know that in me, that is, in my flesh, good does not dwell ; for to wish is present with me, but to perform that which is good is not ; 1 9. For not the good which I wish, but the evil which I do not wish, that I do. 20. But if what I do not wish, that I do, it is no longer I that perform it, but sin that is dwelling in me. 21. I find, then, this law to me, when wishing to do good, that evil is present with me. 22. For I consent to the law of God after the inner man. 23. But I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity with the law of sin that is in my members. 24. Wretched man that I am ! who shall deliver me from the body of this death? 25. Thanks be to God through Christ Jesus our Lord. So, then, I myself with my mind indeed serve the law of God, but with my flesh the law of sin.' The leading object of the apostle in this section is to bring out pre cisely the relation of the believer to the law, with the view at once of establishing the law, and of shewing that he is not under it (ch. iii. 31, vi. 14), but, on the contrary, is freed from it, or dead to it.1 It is the latter point which comes first, and in treating it, he avails himself of the image of the marriage-tie, which, as every one acquainted with the law in such matters knows, holds so long as the contracting parties live, but when the husband dies, the wife is set free to become united to another spouse. In like manner, says the apostle, there has been a death in our experience which has dissolved our original connection with the law, and united us to the risen Saviour, that we may bring forth fruit of righteousness to God. This is the comparison in its essential 1 The relation of this whole chapter to chap. vi. 14, is very well stated hy Mr Owen in his note to the translation of Calvin on Romans, at ch. vii. 1 : ' The connec tion of the beginning of this chapter with the 14th verse of the former chapter deserves to he noticed. He says there, that sin shall not rule over us, beca-use we are not under law, but under grace. Then he asks in ver. 15 : " Shall we sin because we are not under law, but under grace ? " This last subject, according to his usual mode, he takes up first, and discusses it till the end of the chapter ; and then, in this chapter, he reassumes the first subject — freedom from the law. This is a striking instance of the apostle's manner of writing, quite different from what is usual with us in the present day. He mentions two things ; he proceeds with the last, and then goes back to the first.' • ROM. vii. 427 points of agreement ; but as actually applied, there is a difference in detail. In the natural relation employed, as -it is the woman that represents the case of believers under the Gospel, so it is not her death, but the death of her husband which dissolves the bond of her obliga tion, and sets her free to enter into a new alliance. But with believers it is their own death, that is, their fellowship with Christ in his death, which has changed their relationship to the law, and made them partakers of a life which it had no power to impart. It was, no doubt, to render the parallel more complete, that the received text, on the authority of Beza, adopted the reading aToSavbvrog in ver. 6, instead of aToktvbvn;, to convey the meaning that the death in question had passed upon the la w, not upon us (against all the uncial MSS. X A B C K L, and other authorities). The apostle never speaks of the law as under going change or dying ; but in ver. 4 he had expressly said of believers, that they had died — nay, had been put to death or slain (UavMnri) to the law through the body of Christ. The form of expression is purposely made stronger here than in the case of the natural relation, to indicate that the death in this case had to do with the infliction of a penalty, and an infliction in which the law itself might be said to have a part ; for it has respect to Christ's crucifixion or death under the curse of the law, which is in effect also theirs ; so that through the law they become dead to the law,1 yet in such a sense dead as at the same time to pass into another and higher life. The comparison, therefore, only holds, and was only intended to hold, in regard to the fact of death in either party putting an end to the right and authority of law : with the inter vention of death, the prior relation ceased, and it became competent to enter into a fresh alliance. But what in this connection is to be understood by the law ? and what by the marriage-like relation supposed to have been held to it ? Here a certain diversity meets us among commentators — though, among the better class, less now than formerly. The Grotian school, including Hammond, Locke, and some others in this country, con sidered the law, as here used, to be meant chiefly of religious rites and judicial institutions, or the law in its distinctively Jewish aspect, as the ground and basis of the temporal economy under which Israel was placed. But such a view is entirely arbitrary and superficial, and as such has been generally abandoned. The whole tenor of the apostle's discourse is against it, which never once points to that part of the Old Testament legislation which was in its own nature provisional and temporary. The law of which he speaks is one that penetrates into i Gal. ii. 19. 428 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. the inmost soul, comes close to the heart and conscience, is in itself spiritual, holy, just, and good (vers. 7, 12, 14), and one's relation to which determines the whole question of one's peace and hope toward God (vers. 24, 25). How any intelligent critics could ever have thought of finding what corresponded to such a description in the outward ritual and secular polity of the Hebrew commonwealth, it is difficult to con ceive. There is no need, however, while rejecting this view, to go with some to the opposite extreme of maintaining that the language has respect exclusively to the moral law, and that what seemed to the Grotian school to be its one and aU, must be altogether eliminated from it. Speaking, as the apostle does, without reserve or qualification of the law, and taking for granted the familiar acquaintance of those he addressed with what was implied in the term, we can here think of nothing else than the law of Moses — only, it is to be borne in mind here, as in passages already considered, that of that law the ten com mandments occupied, not only the chief, but the properly fundamental place— the principle of the whole is there as to what it involved of moral obligation. When reasoning, therefore, of men's relation to the law, the apostle must be understood to have had this part of the Mosaic legislation prominently in view; and, consequently, while there is a direct reference in what he says to the law as ministered by the hand of Moses, it is of this substantially, as the rule of God's righteous government, that he speaks ; the law as the sum of moral and religious duty. Hence, the term ' brethren,' by which he designates the persons whom he sought to instruct respecting the law, is to be taken in the full sense, not of the Jewish-Christians only at Rome, but of the whole body of believers ; for all alike were interested in the law as here dis coursed of, and stood essentially in the same relation to it. But of that relation in its earlier form, how are we to understand it ? The com parison of the apostle implies, that it was somewhat like a marriage, and might be presented under that aspect — though he says nothing as to when or how such a relation was constituted. Indeed, it is not so properly the formation, or the existence of the relation in question, as its termination, on which the apostle seeks to fix the attention of his readers. ' Wherefore,' says he, after stating the law of marriage, or, ' So then, my brethren, ye also were made to die to the law through the body of Christ, that you might become another's.' StUl, the disso lution of the one, that the other might be formed, bespoke a formal resemblance between the relations — a marriage to the law in the first instance ; then, on the dissolution of that, a marriage to Christ. How, then, was that previous marriage formed, and when ? Is it to be simply ROM. vn. 429 identified with the establishment of the covenant at Sinai ? And shall we, with Mat-knight, explicate the apostle's meaning, by referring to those passages in which God represents his connection with the Jews as their king, uuder the idea of a marriage solemnized at Sinai1 — a marriage ' which was to end when they, with the rest of mankind, should be put to death in the person of Christ?' But this was altogether to shift the ground assumed by the apostle — since to be married to God, and married to the law, are very different things ; God being to His people the fountainhead of grace as well as of law, and, indeed, of grace more prominently than of law. This was recognised in the Decalogue itself, which avowedly proceeded from God in the character of their most gracious Benefactor and Redeemer. To identify their being married to Him, therefore, with being married to the law (in the sense here necessarily understood), were virtually to say, that they entered into covenant with God, or stood related to God, under only one aspect of His manifestations, and that for fallen men not the primary and most essential one. It were also at variance with the view, given by the apostle in another passage,2 of the relation of Israel to the law, which was no more intended, on the part of God, to be per se a spouse and a parent of children to the covenant people, than Hagar in the house of Abraham : when contemplated in such a light, it was diverted from its proper purpose, and looked to for results which it was not given to secure. We must, therefore, ascend higher in the order of God's dipensations for the proper ground of the apostle's representation here respecting the law. The marriage relation which he assumes to have existed between us and it, must be regarded as having its ground in the constitution of nature rather than of grace ; and it is associated with the law as given to Israel, not as if that law had been formally propounded as a basis on which they might work themselves into the possession of life and blessing, but because in its great principles of truth and duty it pre sents the terms which men are naturally bound to comply with, in order that they may warrantably expect such things, and because Israel, whenever they sought in themselves what they so expected, acknow ledged their obligation to seek for it according to the terms therein prescribed : they sought for it, ' as it were by the works of the law.' Here, therefore, was the natural ground of such a relationship as that indicated by the apostle. Contemplated as in substance the revelation of that righteousness which God has inherently a right to demand of His rational creatures as a title to His favour, the law holds over men, i Jer. ii. 2, iii. 14 ; Ezek. xvi. 8. 2 Gal. iv. 21-31. 430 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. merely as such, an indefeasible claim to their fealty and obedience; they cannot, by any right or power of their own, shake themselves free from it ; the bond of its obligation is upon their conscience, and they are held by it, whether they will or not (ver. 6) : while yet, whenever they look seriously into the height and depth of its requirements, and consider the sanctions which enforce its observance, and the penalties which avenge its violation, they necessarily die to aU hope of making good what it exacts at their hands to secure the blessing. As children of promise, the covenant people were not called to stand in such a rela tion to the law ; to place themselves in it was to fall from the grace of the covenant ; but with reference to the responsibUities and calling of nature, it is the relation in which not only they, but mankind generally, stood and must ever stand to it. Vers. 5, 6. The statements in these verses are more especially designed to confirm and illustrate what had been said immediately before as to the advantage yielded by the new marriage relation over the old — viz., that it is fruitful of good, while the other was not ; but they also incidentally support the view just given of the first marriage relation as one pertaining to the state of nature, as contradistinguished from the state of grace. For when we were in the flesh — this stands opposed to the being killed or crucified with Christ in the immediately preceding verse, and so is much the same with being in the state of fallen nature — subject to the law, yet with a frame of mind utterly opposed to its pure and holy requirements. It is the state in which the merely human element (sdp%) bore sway, and, according to its native tendency, fretted against and resisted the will of God. To understand it, with Grotius, Hammond, Whitby, etc., of subjection to the ordinances of the Old Testament, which, as compared with those of the New, are elsewhere called fleshly, carnal, beggarly,1 is entirely to mistake the meaning of the expression. For in that case it would include God's true and faithful people, as well as others, since they also were subject to the legal observances of the old covenant, and yet, being men of faith and love, were endowed with the Spirit, and brought forth fruit to God. The state of such is always substantially identified by the apostle with that of believers under the Gospel, not set in formal opposition to it. But to be in the flesh is to be in a state of sin, working unto death — as he himself, indeed, explains in chap. viii. 5-8, where ' having the mind of the flesh,' or ' walking after the flesh,' is represented as being in a state of ungodliness, utterly incapable of pleasing God, nay, in living and active enmity td Him. 1 Gal. iii. 3, iv. 9. ROM. vii. 431 So also at Gal. v. 17-21, where the lusting of the llesh and its natural results are placed in opposition to the life and Spirit of God. In all such expressions, the flesh indicates human nature iu its present depraved state ; so that ' to be in the flesh ' is merely to be under the influence or power of human depravity. And this is all one with being under the law ; for it is the universal condition of men, who have not received the Spirit of God,1 and the Spirit does not come by the law, but by the faith of Christ. Had the true members of the old covenant stood simply under the law, this would necessarily have been their condition ; but they were under the law as the heir, though a child, having also the covenant of promise ; 2 and therefore were not left merely to the dominion of flesh and law, but were in a measure partakers of grace, and as such capable of doing acceptable service to God. Of men, so long as they are in the flesh, the apostle says, that the motions (Taty/Mara, affections, stirrings) of sins which icere through the law icrought in our members to the bringing forth of fruit unto death. The idea of this passage again recurs and is more fully expressed in ver. 13. We, therefore, need not dwell upon it here. Its chief peculiarity consists in saying, that the sinful emotions which work in men's souls before they come under grace are through the law (Sid rou vbfj.no), ascribing to the law some sort of instrumental agency in their production. This cannot be better stated than it was long ago by Fraser : ' It is just to say, that the precept, prohibition, and fearful threatening of the law do, instead of subduing sinful affections in an unrenewed heart, but irritate them, and occasion their excitement and more violent motion. Nor is this a strange imputation on the law of God, which is not the proper cause of these motions. These are to be ascribed to the corruption of men's hearts, which the apostle insinuates when he ascribes these sinful motions by the law to men in the flesh. The matter has been often illustrated by the similitude of the sun, by whose light and heat roses and flowers display their fine colours, and emit their fragrant smell ; whereas by its heat the dunghill emits its unsavoury steams and ill smell. So the law, which to a sanctified heart is a means of holy practice, doth, in those who are in the flesh, occasion the more vehement motions of sinful affections and lustings, not from any proper causality of the law, but from the energy of the sinful principles that are in men's hearts and nature. There was great wrath and sinful passion in Jeroboam by the reproof of the prophet3— which was not to be imputed to the prophet, but to Jeroboam, a man in the flesh. In David, a man of very different character, Nathan's i Gal. viii. 9. 2 Gal. iv. 1-3. 3 1 Kings xiii. 4. 432 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. very sharp reproof had no such effect.' In saying that there not only - were such sinful emotions, stirred rather than repressed by the law, but that they brought forth fruit unto death — had this, as it were, for their aim and result — the apostle has respect to the natural design of marriage as to yielding fruit, but characterizes the fruit in this case as the reverse of what one desires and expects — a fruit not for hfe but for death— hence not to be hailed and rejoiced in, but to be mourned over and deplored as the just occasion of bitterness and grief. The death, also, in such a case, must evidently be of a spiritual rather than of a corporeal nature. ' But now,' the apostle adds, giving the reverse side of the picture, ' we have been delivered (xarnpyrjOrifitv, made void, discharged) from the law, having died to that wherein we were held, so that we serve in newness of spirit, not in oldness of letter.' The deliverance or freedom from the law here mentioned is that already explained — namely, release from it as the ground of justification and lhe. We die to it in this respect when we enter through faith into the fellowship of Christ's sufferings and death ; but not with the effect of getting free from any duties of service — with the effect rather of serving in a higher style of obedience — serving in newness of spirit (which is all one with bringing forth fruit to God), not in oldness of letter (bringing forth fruit to death). These expressions have been virtually explained in the exposi tion of 2 Cor. iii. 6, and a few words here may suffice. It is implied, that those who owned their relation to the law, and were conscious of no higher relationship, would endeavour after some sort of obedience. But then, with no power higher than human, and with tendencies in the human ever running in the opposite direction, the obedience could have no heart or lhe in it ; it could be only such outward formal obedience as a fearful, slavish, mercenary spirit is capable of yielding — looking at the mere letter of the command, and trying to maintain such a con formity to it by a fair show in the flesh. This is what is meant by serving in oldness of letter — the only kind of service which old corrupt nature is capable of rendering, and one that can bring no real satisfac tion to the conscience, or receive any blessing from God. Believers in Christ are freed from such service, because raised, through fellowship with Christ, above nature — brought into the region of the Spirit's grace and power, so that what they do is done under the influence of things spiritual and Divine, with a sincere and loving heart, and with an unaffected desire of pleasing God. There is a newness in such service, and it is newness of spirit, as contradistinguished from the flesh's old ness — the mere formalism of a carnal and hireling service. As to the ROM. vii. 433 things done, it may be the same service still (no change in this respect is here indicated), but it is service of quite another and higher kind. Ver. 7. ' What shall we say then > Is the law sin "i ' etc. The apostle here formally states and answers a question, which naturally suggested itself from his apparent identification of the dominion of sin with sub jection to the law. Was the law, then, the actual source and parent of sin '? Is it in itself evil ? He repels the idea with a /aj) yivoiro, God forbid. But not satisfied with this, he proceeds to unfold, by a refer ence to his own experience, the true relation of the law to sin, and shews how, by reason of its very goodness, it tends to evolve the element of sin, and aggravate the sense of it in the soul. The reason for adopting this mode of representation is stated with admirable pro priety and clearness by Alford : ' I ask, why St Paul suddenly changes here to the first person ! The answer is, because he is about to draw a conclusion negativing the question, Is the law sin ? upon purely sub jective grounds, proceeding on that which passes within, when the work of the law is carried on iu the heart. And he is about to depict this work of the law by an example which shall set it forth in vivid colours, in detafi, in its connection with sin in a man. What example, then, so apposite as his own I Introspective as his character was, and purified as his inner vision was by the Holy Spirit of God, what example would so forcibly bring out the inward struggles of the man, which prove the holiness of the law, while they shew its inseparable connection with the production of sin ? If this be the reason why the first person is here assumed (and I can find no other which does not introduce into St Paul's style an arbitrariness and caprice which it least of aU others exhibits), then we must dismiss from our minds all exegesis which explains the passage of any other, in the first instance, than of Paul himself: himself, indeed, as an exemplar, wherein others may see themselves : but not himself in the person of others, be they the Jews, nationally or individually, or all mankind, or individual men.' Entirely concurring in this, which is substantially the Augustinian view of the pas sage—the view also which, with solid argument in the main, and sound evangelical feeling, was set forth and vindicated with great fulness in the last century by Mr Fraser in bis work on Sanctification — we set aside as arbitrary and unnatural the view of the Grotian school, which regards Paul as personating here the Jewish people, before and after the introduction of the law of Moses ; the view also of Meyer and many others, that Paul gives, in his own person, a kind of ideal history of humanity, first in its original state, then as under law, and lastly as redeemed in Christ; with various subordinate shades of difference under 2 E 434 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. each of these general modes of representation. But holding the delin eation of experience to be properly personal, and only as such repre sentative, there is no need for supposing that it should in every part exhibit what is peculiar to the regenerate. The operation of law on the natural conscience will often, to a considerable extent, produce the same feelings and convictions as are experienced in a more intense and vivid form, as with more permanent results, by those who are the subjects of renewing grace. There is nothing here, however, which does not more or less find a place in the history of every one who has come under the power of the quickening Spirit — although some parts of the description belong more to the initiatory, others to the more advanced exercises of the believer, several again to those complex operations, those interminghngs of the flesh and the Spirit of which all believers are at times conscious, and those always the most who are most sensitively alive to the claims of the Divine righteousness, and most watchful of the movements of their own souls in reference to these. A spirit of discrimination, therefore, is needed for the interpre tation of the particular parts, even when there is a proper understand ing of the general purport and bearing of the passage. The principle with which the apostle sets out in this narrative of his inward experience, and which he keeps in view throughout, is one he had already announced, that ' by the law is the knowledge of sin ' (iii. 20) ; for, obviously, what discovers evil cannot be itself evU ; it must be the opposite of evil — good. In answer therefore to the ques tion, whether the law is sin, after a strong negation, he says, ' On the contrary (dXXd, I cannot see why Alford should regard this simply adversative sense as not exactly suitable here — the apostle is going to state precisely the reverse of what an affirmative to the question would have implied), I had not known sin, except through the law ' — literally, I was not knowing (obx lyvuv), I was in ignorance of sin, except through the law. This might be taken two ways, either that he did not know such and such a thing to be in its own nature sinful, unless the law had condemned it ; or he did not know the existence and operation of sin as a principle in his soul, unless the law had brought it to light. Both to a certain extent are true, though from the context it is clear that the latter is what the apostle has mainly, if not exclusively, in view. It only holds of some things, that they could not have been known to be sinful but through the law ; in regard to many, especially such as relate to breaches of the second table, the natural light of conscience is quite sufficient to pronounce upon their character (as the apostle, indeed, had already affirmed, ii. 14, 15). But ROM. vn. 435 it is not specific acts of sin, and their objective character, that the apostle here has in his eye ; it is the principle of sin in his own bosom, as a deep-rooted, latent evil, which was naturally at work there, but which he was not sensible of till the law, by its prohibition, discovered it.1 And so he adds, in further explication of his meaning, ' For indeed I had not known lust except the law had said, Thou shalt not lust.' It is not something strictly new that is here introduced, but a particular example in illustration of the general statement made immediately before (rs ydp, denn-ja, fortius est quam yap solum ; scUicet n istud non copulat, sed leuius affirmat quam rm, unde natum est, Fritzsche). The lusting (iTikifiia, sometimes, desire generally, but here inordinate desire, concupiscence, so elsewhere 1 Tim. vi. 9 ; 2 Tim. ii. 22 ; 1 John ii. 17, etc.) is not to be confined to mere sensual appetite, but includes all the undue affections and desires of the heart, which, if carried out, might lead to the overt violation of any of God's commands. The closing prohibition, therefore, of the Decalogue spreads itself over all the other precepts, and includes, in its condemnation, every sort oi lusting or concupiscence which tends to the commission of the acts forbidden in them. Hence it was that the consideration of this par ticular command let in such a flood of hght upon the apostle's soul, as to his real state before God. ' He had been a Pharisee, and with great zeal and earnest effort serving in the oldness of the letter, as he under stood it. His mind being biassed by corrupt teaching and sentiment, he thought himself chargeable with no sin, until the law struck at his heart within him, as subject to its authority and direction no less than the outward man. Until then he thought aU his works were good. Now he sees all his works, taking into the account the evil principles, and the concupiscence which in various forms was set at the root of all his works, to be evU. Instead of keeping all the commandments from his youth up, he then saw he had truly fulfilled none of them.' We have, indeed, the same confession substantially from the apostle 1 Of this use of uftxgrU to denote, not actual sin, but a habitual tendency and con stitution of the inward life, Miiller says, in his work on Sin (B. I. P. 1, chap. 3) : ' In that passage which gives us the fullest and minutest instruction of sin and its develop ment in man, Rom. vii., it cannot be doubted that apxgrU is used in the significa tion of a power dwelling and working in man, including a sinful bias, a perverted constitution. So especially in Rom. vii. 8-11 . Sin, which before was dead, by the entrance of the law, revived, and took occasion, by the commandment, to put man to death ; this can have no meaning, unless the term sin means a power dwelling in man in a, concealed manner.' He points to Matt. xii. 33, xv. 19 ; 1 John ii. 16 ; James i. 14, 15, as teaching the same truth, though the term ipajW* is not always used. 436 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. as here, only more briefly unfolded, and with reference more to actual change of state than to the workings of inward experience, in Phil. iii. 6-10. There also the apostle expresses a perfect satisfaction with his condition at one time, as if all were right, and then represents this as giving way to an entirely opposite state of feeling, when he came to see into the reality of things. What before seemed good, now was found worthless ; what was thought gain, came to be reckoned loss ; what had looked like life, was but death in disguise, and the true life only found when confidence in the law was forsaken for confidence in Christ. Ver. 8. ' But sin, taking occasion by means of the commandment, wrought in me all manner of concupiscence ; for without the law sin is dead.' Sin here is still the principle of sin in the soul, which exists whether there is any sense or not of its contrariety to law, but only in a kind of unconscious or slumbering state, tiU it is confronted with the peremptory nay of the command. This rouses it into conscious and active opposition. The command here meant (fi ivroXr)) is not the law in general, but the specific precept referred to just before, ' Thou shalt not lust.' And the principle of the passage is very much the same with that of Prov. ix. 17, ' Stolen waters are sweet,' or with the nitimur in vetitum semper cupimusque negata of Ovid. So also Augustine : ' The law, though in itself good, yet, by forbidding, increases sinful desire ; for somehow that which is desired becomes more pleasant simply by being forbidden.' 1 It is good, but ' weak through the flesh.' The ungodly heart chafes against the restraint laid on it, and the evil, com paratively latent before, rises into active opposition. But when the apostle says, that ' without the law sin was dead,' he can only mean dead in the sense and feeling of the soul ; for sin not only exists with out the law as a principle in the soul, but is ever ready also to go forth in active exercise on the objects around it ; living, therefore, in reality, though not consciously known and realized as such. Ver. 9. '/was alive without the law once, but when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died.' Recognising the principle that sin, by inevit able necessity, is the source of death, it naturally follows that, according to the conscious presence and vitality of sin or the reverse, so should also be the sense of life or death in the soul. While ignorant of the depth and spirituality of the law, the apostle was unconscious of sin, and as a matter of course felt and acted as one in the enjoyment of life ; but when the commandment eutered with its penetrating light and Divine authority into the convictions of the inner man, it was like the opening of a new sense to him ; sin sprung into conscious activity, 1 ' De Sp. et Lit.,' sec. 6. ROM. vn. 437 and the pains of death took hold of him. It could be but a relative thing in the one case, the slumber of sin and the enjoyment of life, and the quickening of sin into activity, with its production of death, in the other ; for the commandment did not create the evil principle or its deadly fruit, only awoke the sense and realization of them in the soul. It is of this, therefore, that the apostle speaks, primarily in his own case, and indirectly in the case of others. Up to the time that the law, in its wide reaching import and spiritual requirements, takes hold of the heart, it is as if a mau's hfe were whole iu him : whatever errors and imperfections he may perceive in his past course, they appear but as incidental failings or partial infirmities, which can easily be excused or rectified ; they seem to leave untouched the seat of lhe. But with the right knowledge of the law, if that ever comes, there comes also a true insight into his case as a sinner ; and then all his fancied beauty and blessedness of life are felt to consume away ; he sees himself corrupt at the core, and an heir of condemnation and death. Such an experience, of course, belongs to the very threshold of the Christian life, when the powers of regeneration are just beginning to make themselves known in the soul. Ver. 10. 'And (or, so) the commandment which was for life, even this was found by me unto death ' — a mere sequel to the preceding. The commandment was designed for, or had respect to life ; because making known that wherein life, in the higher sense, properly consists — the moral purity, rectitude, loving regard to God and man, which are essential to the harmonious action and blessed fellowship of the soul with God. But this delineation of life, when turned as a mirror in upon the soul, served but to bring to hght the features and workings of a spiritual malady, which had its inevitable result in death. Ver. 11. This is further explained by the statement, ' For sin, taking occasion through the commandment, deceived me, and through it slew me.' The indwelling principle of sin did with the apostle, by the law, much what the tempter did with Eve by the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. It gave rise to false expectations, and so entailed disastrous results. How should it have done so ? Simply by leading him to imagine that he should find life and blessing in another way than that prescribed by the commandment. Striving to resist the Divine call, it would have him seek his good in the gratification of forbidden desires, but only to involve him in the forlornness and misery of death, when the living force and authority of the commandment took hold of his conscience. Then experience taught him the hollowness of sin's promises, and the stern reality of God's prohibitions and threatenings. 438 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. Ver. 12. Now foUows the legitimate inference in regard to the law: ' So that the law is holy, and the commandment holy, and just, and good.' The distinction between the law and the commandment is merely between the whole and a principal part : all is alike holy, and that which more especially laid its bond on the desires and affections of the soul, so far from being excepted, has even two additional epithets applied to it (just and good), as if on purpose to shew how entirely accordant even these more spiritual demands are with the claims of rectitude and the truth of things. The experience of the apostle certi fied such to be the character of the law, as being in no proper sense the cause of the death which he felt had come upon him, but only the means of discovering the real nature and tendency of what the sinful principle in his soul had prompted him to covet and seek after. Ver. 13. ' Did then the good become death to me ? ' The question might seem unnecessary after the statements already made ; but to remove the possibility of misapprehension, and present the matter in a little different light, the apostle puts it. The reply is very explicit in meaning, but in form somewhat eUiptical : ' God forbid ! [not the law of God, which is good, was made death to me], but sin [was so] ; in order that it might appear sin, through the good working death in me, in order that sin through the commandment might become exceeding sinful.' A twofold design — that sin might be exposed in its real char acter, and that the heinousness of its evil might appear in turning the good itself into the occasion and instrument of bringing home to his experience the pains and sorrows of death. It is here with life in the spiritual precisely as in the natural sphere. When a deadly disease has taken possession of the bodUy frame, what is the class of things that most conclusively prove the presence of such a disease? Not those which are in themselves unfavourable to health, and tend to impair bodily vigour — for, in that case, one naturally associates the evil with these, to which no doubt they partly contribute. But let the reverse supposition be made — let the circumstances of one's position be altogether favourable — let the subject of disease have the benefit of the most bracing atmosphere, the most nourishing diet, and of every thing fitted to minister support and comfort : if still the frame continues to languish, and the symptoms of death come on apace under the very regimen of health, who can then shut his eyes to the fact, that a fatal malady has seized the vitals of his constitution, since the good with which it is plied, instead of mastering the evil, serves but to discover its strength, and develop its working? So exactly with the good exhibited in the law of God : when this is brought to bear on the cor- ROM. vii. 439 rupt nature of man, the evil not being thereby subdued, but only rendered more clearly patent to the view, and more sensibly destruc tive of all proper life and blessing, it is then especially seen to be what it really is; namely, sin— and, as such, hateful, pernicious, deadly. Vers. 14-25. It is unnecessary here to go into a detailed exposition of these concluding verses ; for, with the exception of the first clause, ' We know that the law is spiritual '—which is also but another form of the statement in ver. 12, that the law is holy— the passage has respect, not properly to the apostle's relation to the law, but to his relation to indwelling sin. And the chief question it gives rise to is, whether the apostle, in the description he gives of the conflict between good and evil, represents what he, as a settled believer, and as an example of believers generally, was conscious of at the time he wrote the epistle, or what he merely, as a natural man, thought and felt, personating what natural men generally must think and feel, when awaking to a right knowledge of truth and duty, but still without the grace needed to conform them in spirit to it ? Both sides of this alter native question have been espoused by commentators from compar atively early times, as they still are ; and it is quite possible to make the latter alternative, which is usually the one that commends itself to the less deeply exercised and spiritual class of minds, appear the more plausible and safe, by pressing one class of expressions to the utter most, and passing hghtly over another. But undoubtedly the natural supposition is, that as the apostle had, in the verses immediately preced ing, exhibited his own experience as one just awaking under the power of Divine grace to a right view of his own condition, so, continuing as he does still to speak in his own person, but in the present tense, he should be understood to utter the sentiments of which he was presently conscious. Any view inconsistent with this, or materiaUy differing from it, would require for its support very conclusive proof, from the nature of the representation itself. This, however, does not exist. Certainly, when he describes himself as being ' carnal, sold under sin,' ' doing what he did not wish,' ' not having good dweUing in him,' ' brought into captivity by the law of sin in his members,'— if such declarations were isolated, and the full sense put upon them which, taken apart, they are capable of bearing, the conclusion woidd be inevitable that they cannot be understood of one who is in any measure a partaker of the Divine life. But this would not be a fair mode of deafing with them, especially when they are coupled with statements that point in the opposite direction— statements which cannot with any propriety be 440 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. applied to those who are strangers to the lhe and grace of the Spirit. The very first announcement is of this description : ' We know that the law is spiritual ' — for who can be truly said to know this, except such as reaUy have the discernment in Divine things which it is the part of the Spirit to bestow ? 1 In like manner, to wish sincerely what is spiritually good, to consent to it as good, to hate what is of an opposite nature, to hate it so truly and fixedly that it could be said when done not to be done by that which constituted one's proper personality as a man of God, to delight in the law of God, and with his mind to serve it, these are things which plainly distinguish the regenerated and spiritual man from one still remaining in the carnality and corruption of nature. And pointing as they do to the state of thought and feeling in the higher region of his being, in what the apostle calls ' the inner man,' they necessarily include the more essential characteristics of the personal state — those which relate to the deeper springs of its moral being — and must ultimately determine its place and destiny. What, therefore, the apostle says on the other and lower side must be taken in a sense not incompatible with those higher characteristics — must be understood, in short, of that other self, that old man of flesh or corrup tion, which, though no longer predominant, was still not utterly destroyed. Indeed, the apostle himself furnishes the key to this inter pretation, when he distinguishes so sharply between the me in one sense and the me in another (' in me, that is in my flesh,' ver. 18, ' I myself with my mind,' ver. 25), between the law in his members, working unto sin, and the law of his mind, consenting unto and desiring the good. He is conscious of a sort of double personality, or rather a twofold potency in his person, the one derived from nature still adhering to him and troubling him with its vexatious importunities and fleshly tendencies, the other holding of the risen lhe of Christ, and ardently desirous of the pure and good. And it is, it can only be, of the sinful emotions, and usuaUy repressed, but sometimes also successful, workings of that old self, that he speaks of himself as destitute of good, carnal, and in bondage to the power of evil. Entirely similar confessions of the dominancy of indwelling sin, and lamentations over it, have often been heard in every age of the church, from spirituaUy-minded persons ; and are to be regarded as the indica tion, not of the absence of grace, nor of the prevalence of sinful habit, but of that tenderness of conscience, that delicate perception of the pure and good, and sensitive recoil from any thing, even in the inner move ments of the soul, that is contrary to the holiness of God, which is the 1 1 Cor. ii. 14. ROM. vn. 441 characteristic of a properly enlightened and spiritual mind. So, in ancient times, for example, Job who, in his more advanced stage of enlightenment, confessed himself to be vile, yea abhorred himself, and repented iu dust and ashes (xl. 4, xlii. (!) ; so in many places David;1 and very strikingly the writer of Psalm 119, who, after unfolding in every conceivable variety the thoughts ami feelings, the desires and purposes, of the devout Israelite in reference to the law and service of Cod, after repeatedly declaring how he loved the law of God, and delighted in His commandments, winds up the whole by what cannot but seem to the mere worldling or formalist a somewhat strange and inconsistent utterance: 'I have gone astray hke a lost sheep: seek thy servant; for I do not forget thy commandments.' It is the same still. ' If one over heard a serious, upright Christian saying, on some occasion, with much deep regret — as many such have done — Ah ! what a slave am I to carnal affections and unruly passions ! How do they carry me away and captivate me ! — would he hastily say, that this complaint had no foundation at all in truth > Or, would he conclude, if it had, that this man was truly and absolutely a slave of sin, and still unregenerate ? A person so judging, I should think, would not deserve to be favour ably regarded.' 2 And in respect to the relative preponderance of the two counter-forces in the apostle's representation, the same judicious author observes : ' AVhat here would strike my mind free of bias is, that this / on the side of holiness against sin, is the most prevailing, and what represents the true character of the man ; and that sin which he distinguishes from this / is not the prevailing reigning power in the man here represented ; as it is, however, in every unregenerate man.' So, also, Augustine happily of himself : * I indeed in both, but more I in that of which I approved, than in that which I disapproved of as being in me.' 3 We must not enlarge further in this line ; but two points of great importance for our present investigation come prominently out in this disclosure of the apostle's experience. One is, that, though writing under the clear light of the Gospel, and a spiritual acquaintance with its truths, he has no fault to find with the law as a revelation of duty, or a pattern of moral excellence. What he misses in the law is not the perfect exhibition to our knowledge of moral goodness, but the power to communicate moral life. The only reason specified why it cannot help one to the possession of righteousness, is because of the prevent ing flesh, or law of sin in the members, which works in opposition to 1 Ps. xix. 12, 13, xii. 12, li. 3. 2 Fraser. 3' Confes.,' L. viii. 5. 442 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES the better knowledge derived from the law of God, and the better impulse implanted by grace. So that, viewed as an exhibition of good, the law is represented as in unison with the desires of the regenerated moral nature, and simply by reason of its goodness, coupled with remaining imperfections in himself, giving rise to trouble and distress. The other point is, that so far from there being any contrariety between the scope of the law's requirements and the spirit of the new lhe, the apostle rejoiced in the higher powers. and privileges of this life, chiefly because through these the hope had come to him of gaining the victory over the contrariety in his nature to the good in the law, and having it yet realized in his experience. As thus replenished from above, his more settled bent and purpose of mind were now on the side of the righteousness exhibited and enjoined in the law — nay, with his mind he served it (ver. 25) ; or, as he expresses himself in the following chapter, his general characteristic now was to walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit, and, in proportion as this was the case, to have the righteousness of the law fulfilled in him (viii. 4). Hence, also, in this epistle, precisely as in that to the Galatians, when he comes to the practical exhortations, he points to the law still as the grand outline, for Christian not less than earlier times, of moral obligation, and urges his readers to the regular and faithful exercise of that love, which is the heart and substance of its precepts, as for them also the sum of all duty (xiii. 8-10). As regards men's relation to the law, therefore, in the sense meant by the apostle throughout this discussion, the differ ence between Old and New Testament times can have respect only to relative position, or to the form and mode of administration, not to the essentials of duty to God and man. Rom. x. 4-9. ' For Christ is the end of the law for (or unto) righteousness to every one that believeth. 5. For Moses describes the righteousness which is of the law, that the man who has done those things shall live in them.1 6. But the righteousness which is of faith speaks thus, Say not in thine heart, Who shall go up into heaven ? that is to bring Christ down. 1 The reading here is a little different in three of the older MSS. NAD and the Vulgate, which omit the «»« (those things), and change (with the exception of D, but here B takes its place) the aS™7s at the close into airy. But the sense is much the same, only, instead of those things, in the doing of which the righteousness consists, the righteousness itself becomes prominent ; it then reads, ' the man who has done [it] shall live in it. ' Rom. x. 4-9. 443 7. Or, Who shall go down into the deep (abyss)? that is to bring Christ up from the dead. 8. But what saith it? The word is nigh thee, in thy mouth and in thy heart ; that is, the word of faith which we preach ; 9. That if thou wilt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and believe in thy heart that God raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved.' The subject which gave rise to this fresh statement respecting the law and its righteousness, as contrasted with the way of salvation by Christ, was the sad case of the unbelieving Israelites. They had sought righteousness, iudeed, but sought it in the way which lies beyond the reach of f aUen man — the way of their own goodness ; hence they had not submitted themselves to, but strenuously resisted the righteousness of God. The statement implies, that what, in such a case, is of man, and what is of God, belong to quite different categories — they are mutuaUy antagonistic. And this is confirmed by the declaration in ver. 4 as to God's method of making righteous, For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth. The general meaning is plain enough ; it affirms that Christ is set for righteousness as well as the law, and that for the believer in Christ this righteousness is made practically available — he actually attains it. But it is a matter of dispute in what sense precisely the end (rsXog) of the law is to be under stood. Does it denote simply the termination of the legal dispensation — its termination in the death of Christ, which provided the new method of justification? Or does it, along with this, indicate the aim and object of the law — as having found in the work of Christ its destined completion? There is no lack of authorities on both sides of this question (for the first, Augustine, Koppe, Riickert, De Wette, Olshausen, Meyer, Hodge, &c. ; for the other, Chrysostom, Therphylact, Beza, Grotius, Wetstein, Tholuck, Alford, &c). I am inclined to agree with the latter class, on the ground that the simple fact of the law's termina tion in its provisional character as for a time forming an essential part in the revealed plan of salvation, scarcely comes up to what seems required for the occasion. Beyond all doubt, the law had an aim in this matter, as well as a period of service ; nay, just because it had an aim, and that aim reached its accomplishment in Christ, in a way it never had done or could do of itself, it therefore ceased from the place it had occupied. And as the expression here quite naturally carries this idea, there seems no valid reason why it should not be included. The law, taken in its complete character, certainly aimed at righteous- ' ness ; so also does Christ in His mission as the Redeemer ; with this all-important difference, that what could never be properly accomplished 444 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. by the one is accomplished by the other — hence, also, the provisional character of the one, while the other is permanent. The sense could scarcely be better given than it was by Chrysostom: 'If Christ is the end of the law, he who has not Christ, though he may appear to have it, has it not ; but he who has Christ, though he have not fulfilled the law, has yet obtained all. So, too, the end of the medical art is health. As, therefore, he who has proved able to give health, though haply unskilled iu medicine, has every thing, while he who is unable to cure, however he may seem capable of administering the art, has altogether failed. So also in respect to the law and faith ; he who has this has also attained to the end of that; but he who is destitute of the former, is an alien from both. For what did the law seek ? To make a man righteous ; but it was not able to do so ; for no one fulfilled it This same end, however, is better accomplished by Christ through faith.' The verses that follow give the proof of this proposition — give it out of Moses — the lawgiver himself being called as a witness against his misguided and foolish adherents in apostolic times. For Moses describes the righteousness which is of the law, that the man who has done those things shall live in them.1 The passage referred to, and almost literally quoted, is Lev. xviii. 5 ; and the those things are the statutes and judgments mentioned immediately before ; for the whole passage runs thus : ' Ye shall do my judgments, and keep mine ordinances, to walk therein ; I am Jehovah your God. Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgments ; which if a man do, he shall live in them.' Taken in its original connection, the passage undoubteclly points to Israel's happy privilege as well as sacred calling. Their condition is contrasted with that of the Egyptians and Canaanites, whose ordinances and customs, especially in regard to the gratification of lust, are declared to be matters of horror and abomination before God (vers. 3, 30) ; they are solemnly charged to avoid these, and to keep the Lord's ordinances, statutes, and judgments, both because Jehovah is their God, and because by doing them they should find life in them, while practices of an opposite kind had brought judgment and destruction on the Canaanites. Such is the connection and the import of the original statement. And it seems, at first sight, somewhat strange, that the apostle should here refer to it in the way he does, as describing the righteousness which is obtained by doing in contradistinction to that which comes by believing, as if the way of attaining lhe for the members of the Theocracy were 1 The same use is made of the passage in Gal. iii. 12, but without any formal citation of it. ROM. x. 4-<). 445 essentially different from, and in some sort antagonistic to, that under the Gospel. He has so often asserted the reverse of that, and in this very epistle (ch. ii. 17-29, iii. 19, 20, iv., etc.), that it would certainly be to misunderstand the application to take it iu that absolute sense. The life which Israel had, whether viewed with respect to the earthly inheritance, or to the everlasting kingdom of which that was but the shadow, unquestionably came from their relation to Jehovah in the covenant of promise, and not from what was imposed in the covenant of law ; the law, with its demands of holiness, its statutes of right, and ordinances of service, was no further ordained for life than as describing the moral characteristics in which life, so far as it existed, must exhibit itself, or, when these faded, appointed what was needed to obtain cleansing and restoration. The amplest proof has been already adduced of this (in the exposition of the passages in Corinthians, Romans, and Galatians, also in Lee. IIL). Yet from the prominence of law in the Theocracy — which was such that even the things which pertained to forgiveness and the promise of blessing usually took a legal form — the language employed respecting the calling of the people and their pros pects of good were naturally thrown in many cases into the same form. The people were told that they should live and prosper, only if they obeyed God's voice, or kept the statutes and ordinances imposed on them — but without intending to convey the impression, that they were actuaUy placed under a covenant of works, and that they could attain to the good promised, and avoid the evil threatened, only if they did what was enjoined without failure or imperfection. On the con trary, those very statutes and ordinances had bound up with them pro visions of grace for aU but obstinate and presumptuous offenders ; by the terms of the covenant — that is, by the law in its wider sense — they were caUed to avail themselves of these, and to make their resort to God as 'rich in mercy, and plenteous in redemption.' Still, the language even in such parts carried a legal impress ; it linked the promised good to a prescribed ritual of service ; and if people were minded, in their pride and self-sufficiency, to lay the stress mainly on the legal element in the covenant— if they should imagine that every thing was to be earned by the completeness and merit of their obedience, then it must be meted to them according to their own principle, and they should have to face the sentence uttered from the sterner side of the covenant : ' Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the law to do them.' 1 Now, keeping these considerations in mind, it is not difficult to Deut. xxvii. 26 ; Gal. iii. 10. 446 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. understand how St Paul should have singled out the brief passage under examination as being, when looked at merely by itself, descrip tive of the righteousness which is won by obedience to precepts of law, while yet it was not meant that Israel were expected to attain to such righteousness, or were, in the strict and absolute sense, dependent on the attainment of it for life and blessing. It set before them the ideal which they should earnestly endeavour to realize — which also to a certain extent they must realize as partakers, if only in an incipient state, of the Divine life ; but not unless they were minded (as the unbelieving Jews of the apostle's day certainly were) to stand simply upon the ground of law, and be in no respect debtors of grace, was a complete and faultless doing to form the condition of receiving the promised heritage of lhe. In this case, it assuredly was. The words must then be pressed in the full rigour and extent of their requirement ; for hfe could only be ministered and maintained on a legal basis, if the con dition of perfect conformity to law had been made good. That Moses, however, no more than the apostle, intended to assert for Israel such a strictly legal basis as the condition of life, is evident, not only from the connection in which that particular declaration stands, but also from other parts of his writings, in which the evangelical element comes distinctly into view, in his words to the covenant people. To one of these, the apostle now turns (vers. 6-9) for a proof of the righteous ness of faith ; for it must be held with Meyer, Fritzsche, and others, that it is Moses himself who speaks in the words contained in these verses. 'The Se in ver. 6 places the righteousness of faith over against the just-mentioned righteousness of the law, for both of which kinds of righteousness the testimony of the lawgiver himself is adduced. The expression, " for Moses describes," in ver. 5, does not merely apply to the word in that verse, but also stretches over vers. 6-8 ; and so the objection is not to be urged against our view of the want of a citation formula at these verses.'1 The passage quoted, though with some freedom, is in Deut. xxx. 10-14. And it is to be noticed, as a confirmation of the explanation we have given of the preceding passage from Leviticus, that this also, though embodying the evangehcal element, and for that very purpose quoted, also carries the form of law. In the original it stands thus, ' For this command ment which I command thee this day, it is not hidden from thee, neither is it far off. It is not in heaven that thou shouldst say, Who shall go up for us to heaven, and bring it unto us, that we may hear it and do it ? Neither is it beyond the sea, that thou shouldst say, Who shall 1 Meyer. ROM. x. 4-9. 447 go over the sea for us, and bring it unto us, that we may hear it and do it? But the word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth and in thy heart, that thou mayest do it.' The general import is here again quite plain ; namely, that the way of peace and blessing had been made alike clear and accessible ; no one could justly say it was difficult to be understood, or mocked their efforts with impossibilities, as if, in order to reach it, heaven had to be scaled, or the boundless ocean to be crossed : — no, the word was nigh them, and every thing provided to their hand which was needed to secure what it set before them. But commentators are divided on the points, whether the passage as spoken by Moses properly bears the spiritual sense put upon it by the apostle, or has this sense infused into it by giving it a kind of secondary pro phetical bearing — whether the questions, also, considered with regard to this spiritual sense, are questions of unbelief, questions of embarrassment, or questions of anxiety. It is not necessary for our immediate purpose to go into the examination of such points ; and for any purpose of a strictly expository nature, it appears to me that very little depends on them. A somewhat too specific or realistic view is taken of the words by those who chiefly raise the questions. The description, in itself, is so far general, that it might be applied to the calling of the church of God in every age. Moses applied it, in the first instance, to the members of the old covenant ; Paul, on the ground of this original appUcation, points to Moses as a witness of the way of salvation by faith ; but in doing so, intersperses comments by way of guiding its application to Christian times. He takes for granted that those to whom he wrote looked for salvation, or the righteousness connected with it, only in Christ ; to them, if Christ was near or remote, salvation would be accessible or the reverse. And the original import of the word, with this fresh application of it, amounts to nothing more than the foUowing : God's method of salvation is such, so easy, so accessible, that no one needs to speak about climbing heaven on the one hand, or diving into the lowest depths on the other, in order to have the Saviour brought near to him — He is already near, yea, present, with all His fulness of life and blessing, in the word of His Gospel ; and aU that is necessary for the sinner is to receive this word with an implicit faith, and give evidence of his hearty appropriation of it, in order to his finding right eousness and salvation. Between the case of believers, in this respect, under the old, and that of believers under the new covenant, there is no other difference than that now the way of salvation by faith is more gloriously displayed and more easily apprehended by those who are in earnest to find it. 448 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. ROM. xiv. 1-7. ' Now, him that is weak in the faith receive ye, but not for judg ments of thoughts. 2. One believes he may eat all things ; but he that is weak eateth (only) herbs. 3. Let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not ; and let not him that eateth not judge him that eateth.; for God has accepted him. 4. Who art thou that judgest the servant of another ? To his own master he stands or falls ; but he shall be made to stand, for the Lord is able to make him stand. 5. One esteems one day above another [lit., day above day] ; another esteems every day : let each be fully persuaded in his own mind. 6. He that regards the day, to the Lord regards it ; and he that eats, to the Lord eats, for he gives God thanks ; and he that eats not (viz., flesh), to the Lord eats not, and gives God thanks. 7. For none of us lives to himself, and none dies to himself ; for if we live, we live to the Lord, and if we die, we die to the Lord,' &c. The subject handled in these verses, as in the chapter generally from which they are taken, is the treatment that should be given by Christians of enlightened understandings and ripe judgment in Divine things to those whom the apostle calls weak in the faith — persons who, whUe holding the faith of Christ, were restrained by some scruples of conscience, or some apprehensions of evil, from using the liberty in certain respects to which they were called in Christ. But from the imperfect description which is given of their case, it is extremely difficult to arrive at an intelligent view of their religious position, and consequently to determine the precise bear ing of the apostle's remarks concerning them on questions of legal obligation or Christian duty in present times. The general principle announced at the commencement, that persons weak in the faith should be received, that is, acknowledged as of the brotherhood of faith, must be understood as implying, that the weakness did not touch any vital doctrine, or commonly recognised Christian duty; for in that case it had been the part of the more intelligent and steadfast believers to endeavour to convince them of their error, and, till this was accomplished, keep them at some distance, lest others should become infected with their leaven. So much is plain ; and hence the negative prescription given in connection with the receiving of them, that it should not be for judgments of thoughts (iig Siaxplaug SiaXoyispuv) — that is, for doing the part of censorious critics and judges on the views peculiar to the persons in question. This, certainly, is ROM. xiv. 1-7. 449 the meaning of the expression — not, as in the English Bible, to doubtful disputations, which the original words will not strictly bear, and which also, in its natural import, seems to point rather in the wrong direction. For the apostle could not mean to say, that it was doubtful which of the two parties occupied the right position, since he characterized the one as relatively weak, and as such, of course, falling below the mark, which they should have aimed at and might have attained. But he means to say, that the specific weakness having its seat in the thoughts of the mind, and these thoughts exercising themselves about matters of no great moment to the Christian life, no harsh judgments should be passed upon them ; the persons should be treated with forbearance and kindness. But to what type or class of early Christian converts shaU the persons spoken of be assigned ? On this point there has been a con siderable diversity of opinion, and the materials apparently are wanting for any very certain conclusions. They could not be, as some have supposed, Jewish-Christians, who stood upon the legal distinctions respecting meat and drink ; for these distinctions said nothing about total abstinence from flesh, or the ordinary use of wine. Nor, with others, can we account for those self-imposed restraints, by supposing that it was flesh and wine which had been used in heathen offerings that the persons in question would not taste ; for no limitation of this sort is so much as hinted at in the apostle's words, nor, if that had been the precise ground of their refusal, would he have characterized it as simply a weakness ; in another epistle he has at great length urged abstinence from such kinds of food as a matter of Christian duty. 1 Then, in regard to the distinguishing of days, so as to make account of some above others, it is difficult to understand how this could be meant of a scrupulous adherence to the Jewish observances as to times and seasons, as if any thing depended on such observances for salvation ; for, in the case of the Galatians, the apostle had charac terized such adherence to the Jewish ritual, not as a tolerable weakness, but as a dangerous error — a virtual departure from the simplicity of the faith. That the parties are to be identified with Christians of the Ebionite school (according to Baur), who were tinged with the Gnostic aversion to every thing of a fleshly and materialistic nature, while they retained their Jewish customs, is altogether improbable — both because there was no such distinctly formed Ebionite party at the time this epistle was written, and because, if there had, they could certainly not have been treated so indulgently by Paul, whose teaching stood in 1 1 Cor. viii.-x. 2 F 450 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. such direct antagonism to their views.1 And though there is a nearer approach to the apparent circumstances of the case in the supposition of others (Ritschll, Meyer, etc.), that the weak Christians of our passage were a class of supra-legal religionists, believers probably of the Essene sect, who brought with them into Christianity some of their rigid observ ances and ascetic practices, yet there is no proper historical evidence of such converts to the faith of Christ existing anywhere, and parti cularly at so great a distance from the seat of the Essene party, at the early period to which the epistle to the Romans belongs. Besides, as the ascetic and ritualistic peculiarities of the Essenes were essentially of that type, against which Paul, in other places, 2 so earnestly pro tested, and in which he descried the beginnings of the great apostacy, one is at a loss to understand how, on the supposition of its represen tatives being found at Rome, he should have made so little account of the fundamentally erroneous principles interwoven with their beliefs. Amid this uncertainty as to the specific position of the persons referred to, it is necessary to proceed with caution in the interpretation of what is written, and to beware of deducing more general inferences from it than the expressions absolutely warrant. It was one of the exhibitions given, the apostle tells us, of weakness of faith, that one believed he should eat simply vegetables or herbs, while the relatively strong was persuaded he might partake of whatever was edible ; and it is implied, in ver. 21, that the weakness also shewed itself with some in a religious abstinence from wine. But on what grounds the abstinence was practised — whether as a species of fasting, with a view to the mortifying of the flesh, or as a protest and example for the good of others in respect to prevailing excesses in meat and drink, or, finally, from lingering doubts, originating in ascetic influences, as to the Divine permission to use such articles of diet — on such points nothing is here indicated, and we are entitled to make no positive assertion. The personal incident mentioned by Josephus, that, after having in early lhe sought to make himself acquainted with the distinctive Jewish sects, he took up for a time with one Banos, who lived in the desert, and scrupulously abstained from any clothing but what grew on the trees, and ate no food but the spontaneous products of the earth ; and the additional fact given in the same direction, that two priests, whom he describes as excellent men, and whom he accompanied to Rome to plead their cause, chose for their food only figs and nuts, 3 clearly shew that peculiarities of this sort were not of infrequent occurrence at that 1 See Weander, ' History of Planting of Christian Church,' B. iii. c. 7. 2 Col. ii. ; 1 Tim. iv. 3 ' Life, ' sees. 2, 3. ROM. xiv. 1-7. 451 time among the Jews, though they were probably of too irregular and arbitrary a character to come under any common religious definition. Of the persons here referred to by the apostle, we merely know that, for some conscientious reasons (adopted by them as individuals, not as belonging to certain sects), they had thought it their duty neither to eat flesh nor to drink wine ; and the apostle's advice respecting them was, that they should not on this accouut be treated with harshness or contempt. It was a weakness, no doubt, but still one of a comparatively harmless nature ; it had approved itself to their own conscience ; let the matter, therefore, be left to Him who is Lord of the conscience, and who would not fail to sustain and guide them, if their hearts were right with Him in the main. It is scarcely possible to be more particular in regard to the other form of weakness specified ; it is not even very definitely indicated on which side the weakness lay, or how far there was a weakness. Two facts only are stated : ' One man esteems one day above another ; another esteems every day ' (the alike added in the authorized version is better omitted). We naturaUy infer, from the mode of putting the statement, that the weaker was he who made the distinction of day above day ; but then how was the distinction made ? Wherein did he shew his esteeming of it ? Could this have consisted only in his con sidering it proper to devote one day in the week more especially to religious employments and works of mercy ? This had surely been a strange manifestation of weakness", to be marked as such by the apostle, who himself was wont, along with the great body of the early Chris tians, to appropriate the first day of the week to such purposes, and to style it emphatically the Lord's day.1 Nor has the experience of the past shewn it to be a weakness, but, on the contrary, to be at once a source and an indication of strength, to avail one's-self of those statedly recurring opportunities to withdraw from worldly toU, and have the soul braced up by more special communion with itself and Heaven for the work of a Christian calling. Wherever such opportunities are neglected, and no distinction of days is made as to religious observance, the result that inevitably ensues is a general decay and gradual extinc tion of the religious sentiment. This is admitted by ah thoughtful men, whether they hold the strictly Divine institution of the Lord's day or not. It is impossible St Paul could be insensible to it, or could wish to say" any thing that tended to such a result. If, therefore, the esteeming of one day above another is represented as a weakness, one may suppose that some specific value was attached to the day per se, i Acts xxi. 17 ; 1 Cor. xv. 2 ; Rev. i. 10. 452 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. as if it had the power of imparting some virtue of its own to the things done on it, apart from their own inherent character. To attach such ideas, either to the Jewish weekly and other Sabbaths, or even to the Christian Lord's day, might be regarded as a weakness ; since, while the setting apart of such days for special exercises had important ends to serve under both economies, it was only as means to an end ; the time by itself carried no peculiar virtue ; and, in contradistinction from any feeling of this description, every day should be esteemed. But no day should, in that case, be disesteemed, or regarded as unfit for religious and beneficent action. Nor does the apostle say so, when the correct form of his statement is given, as by Lachmann (approved also by MiU, Griesbach, Meyer1). The words run thus : ' He that regards the day to the Lord regards it ; and he that eats (viz., flesh), eats to the Lord ; for he gives God thanks ; and he that eats not, to the Lord eats not, and gives God thanks.' The negative, as well as the positive side is exhibited as regards the eating ; for both alike eat, and give thanks for what they eat, only the one in his eating confines himself to a veget able diet. But in the other case, the positive alone is exhibited ; for while one may, with a true religious feeling, regard one day more than another, and even carry this to a kind of superstitious extreme ; yet not to regard the day can scarcely be represented as a thing done to the Lord. Not the regarding of no particular day is the counter- position indicated by the apostle, but the regarding of every day — this, it is implied, would bespeak the strong man, if so be the other betrayed something of weakness ; and the strength in that case would necessarily consist in giving one's-self to do every day what others deemed it enough, or at least best, to do more especially on one — to do, that is, what- may more peculiarly be caUed works of God. So to employ one's- self would put aU the days on a kind of equality ; but, certainly, not by depriving them alike of regard, or by reducing them to the same worldly level ; on the contrary, by raising them to a common elevation, devoting them to the special service of Heaven, and the best interests of humanity. So did our Lord, the highest exemplar of healthful and sustained energy in the Divine life ; His works were all works of God, proper therefore for one day as well as another ; 2 so that it might be 1 These authorities omit the clause in ver. 6, xx) i pAi ipgnSv rm v/tigx*, xugif 'i ipfcm, with all the best MSS., S ABCDEFG, the Italic, Vulgate, Aeth. Copt. versions, Jer., Aug., and other authorities. To admit a text with such evidence against it, and only one uncial MS. L. of no great antiquity for it, were to violate all the established canons of criticism ; besides that, it makes no proper sense ; at least not without some considerable straining. 2 John v. 17. EPH. n. 11-17. 453 truly said of Him, He regarded every day. And yet it was deemed by Him no way incompatible with this, that He should shew His regard to the seventh day in a somewhat different manner from what He did iu respect to the other days of the week. In principle, the works done on this and other days were alike, yet they took, to some extent, their distinctive forms of manifestation. So that, however often the passage before us has been held by certain interpreters to argue something at variance with the religious observance of a Christian Sabbath, this is found rather by ascribing to it an imaginary sense, than by evolving its legitimate and proper import. Eph. ii. 11-17. 'Wherefore remember, that once ye, Gentiles in the flesh, who are caUed Uncircumcision by that which is called Circumcision in the flesh wrought by hands; 12. That ye were at that time without Christ, alienated from the commonwealth of Israel, and estranged from the covenants of promise, not having hope, and without God in the world. 13. But now in Christ Jesus, ye who once were far off were brought nigh in the blood of Christ. 14. For He is our peace, who made both one, and broke down the middle wall of the partition — (15) the enmity — in His flesh, having done away the law of commandments in ordinances, that he might make the two in Himself into one new man, making peace; 16. and that He might reconcile both of us in one body to God through the cross, having slain on it the enmity. 17. And having come, He preached peace to you who were far off, and peace to them that were nigh; 18. For through Him we have our access, both of us, iu one Spirit to the Father.' This passage has obviously a monitory aim, and is chiefly designed to awaken a sense of gratitude in the minds of the Ephesians on account of the wonderful change which, through the mercy of God in Christ, had been made to pass over their condition. Their elevated state, as participants in the benefits of Christ's death and the glory of His risen hfe, had been described in the preceding verses ; and now the apostle calls upon them to remember how far otherwise it was with them iu their original heathenism, and how entirely they were indebted for the change to the work of reconciliation accomplished by Christ. The first two verses delineate in dark colours their position prior to their interest in Christ. Remember that once ye (tots bpsTg, the Tori before vpeTg with the best MSS. NABD), Gentiles in the flesh (a compound expression denoting 454 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. the category or class to which they belonged — Gentiles, or heathen, as contradistinguished from Jews, and this iv sapxi — without the article, because forming one idea with the rd I6vn, Winer, Gr. 20, sec. 2 — in their corporeal frame without the mark of covenant relationship to God, hence visibly in an unsanctified condition), who are called Uncircumcision by that which is called Circumcision in the flesh wrought by hands. This points to the hereditary antipathy cherished, or the sacred recoU felt toward them on the part of the covenant people, so long as they were in their heathenish state ; for to be caUed Uncircumcision by them was aU one with being accounted reprobate or profane. But when the apostle speaks of the Circumcision, who so called them being the Circumcision in the flesh wrought by hands, he insinuates that those who apphed the reproachful epithet to the heathen, and cherished the feelings it ex pressed, might not themselves possess the reahty which the rite of circumcision symbolized ; it might be, after aU, in their case but an out ward distinction. The apostle does not venture to say it was more, knowing weU how commonly the rite had lost to his countrymen its spiritual significancy, and with how many circumcision was no more than a mere conventional sign or fleshly distinction. But even so, it drew a line of demarcation between them and the Gentile world, and bespoke their external nearness to the God of the covenant : it con stituted them, as to position and privUege, the chosen people, on whom God's name was called, while the others wanted even the formal badge of consecration. In so far as the circumcision was only in the flesh, these who possessed it had of course little reason to boast it over the uncircumcised Gentiles, for in that case both alike needed the real sanctification which is required for true access to God ; and while this thought could not but appear to aggravate the former degradation of these believing Gentiles, as having been counted profane by those who were themselves but nominally otherwise, it at the same time implied that, as regarded effectual rectification, both parties were substantially on a footing — what was needed for the one was needed also for the other. Ver. 12. The apostle here resumes his interrupted sentence, com mences afresh : that ye were at that time (corresponding to the on tote bfjbsTg in ver. 11) without Christ ; that is, not only destitute of the actual knowledge of Him, but away from any real connection with Him or friendly relation to Him — so that the hope of a Saviour (which the Jews had) was as much wanting as the personal enjoyment of His salvation. What this separation implied, and how far it reached, is stated in what follows, alienated from the commonwealth of Israel, and estranged from the EPH. ii. 11-17. 455 corenants of promise, not having hope, and without God in the world. By the ToXirtia, or commonwealth of Israel, is evidently meant the theo cratic constitution and people of the old covenant, as those alone which had associated with them the elements of life and blessing — the one state and community iu which fellowship with God was to be found. From this they were in their heathen condition alienated — aTnXXorpiu- p'svoi — at the opposite pole, as it were, from the rights of citizenship, but without implying any thing as to a prior state of connection ; for such an idea, which some would find in the description, would be out of place here ; it is the actual state alone which the apostle characterizes. Further, they were estranged from (lit., strangers of, i^ivoi ruv, the %'svoi being put as a sort of antithesis to xXripbvo/j.01, heirs or possessors of) the covenants of promise. Under covenants of promise, the apostle could scarcely mean to include the covenant of law along with the covenant of Abraham, for the former is not of promise ; so that we must either understand by the expression the successive and somewhat varied forms given to the Abrahamic covenant, or perhaps that covenant itself in conjunction with the new covenant of Jeremiah xxxi. 31, which was also justly entitled to be called a covenant of promise. As heathen, the Ephesians, in their unconverted state, were entirely out of the region of these covenants — strangers to the field they embraced with their blessed prospects of better things to come. And, as the necessary consequence of this unhappy isolation, they had not hope — that is, were devoid of this in any such sense as might properly meet the wants of their condition ; hope, as the web-grounded and blessed expectation of a recovery from the evUs of sin, was unknown to them ; and they were without God in the world, unconscious of, and incapable of finding where they were, any spiritual link of connection with Him. ' They had not God, but only thoughts about Him; Israel, however, had God and the living word of His mouth. Hence there belonged to the covenant people what did not come from themselves, but from that which is greater than man's heart, the hope of the coming salvation. Heathenism, however, had but the product of its own state, hopes which had no better security than the uncertain [utterly inadequate] ground of personal piety.'1 Ver. 13. But now in Christ Jesus ye who once were far off were brought nigh in the blood of Christ— the contrast to the former state, and strikingly exhibited as a change that was once for all effected (potentially) in the atoning work of Christ— though actually experienced, of course, only when they came to a personal interest in His salvation. So, too, St Peter speaks of the resurrection of Jesus Christ as having begotten believers ' Harless. 456 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. to a lively hope (1 Pet. i. 3) — as if the accomplishment of the one carried the other also in its bosom. The blood of Jesus Christ, by making provision for the pardon of sin, lays open the way for all to the bosom of God's household, and of any individual who enters into the fellow ship of this blood, or who takes up his standing in the faith of Jesus as the crucified for sin, it may be said he was brought nigh in the blood of Christ ; in the shedding of that blood, he sees for ever removed the alienation caused by sin. And to mark very distinctly the efficacious ground or living source of the boon, the apostle designates the reci pients as first ' in Christ Jesus,' and again as finding all ' in the blood of Christ.' Vers. 14, 15. A further grounding and explanation of the statement follows : for He is our peace, who made both one, and broke down the middle wall of the partition. The language here also is very forcible and preg nant. The work of incorporation into God,'s blessed household is repre sented as done once for aU in Christ — ideally, the reunion has attained to realization in Him. Hence, he is called ' Our Peace ' — not simply as Bengel notes, our Pacificator, peacemaker, but the one who, by the sacrifice of Himself, has procured peace, and is Himself the bond of union to both (ipse vinculum utrorumque). He is such as regards Jew and Gentile, having made the twain (the divided parts, ra d^onpa,) one, not by acting directly upon their mutual antagonism, and applying Himself to heal the breach it occasioned, but by elevating both to a higher unity — effecting for them alike reconciliation with God through the blood of His cross. Brought through this one medium of reconcili ation into a common relation to God, and recognising themselves as alike children of the one Father of a redeemed and blessed family, the cause of enmity and alienation as a matter of course fell away — both parties being lifted into a position where it no longer had room to operate. This is the apostle's solution of the difficulty, as to the exist ing separation between Jew and Gentile : he regards it as the offshoot of a higher and graver quarrel — the sinful departure and alienation of both from God ; and the healing of the grand breach carries in its train the healing of the smaller one, by taking out of the way the circum stances that incidentally ministered to it. The apostle expresses the mode of accomplishing the result by saying that Christ broke down the middle wcdl of the partition, or the fence ; figurative language, proceed ing on the assumption, that the two parties — the one of whom had been outwardly near, the other far off from, the region of life and blessing — were both in a manner fenced off from that region — the one more palpably so, indeed, than the other; separated and fenced off even EPH. n. 11-17. 457 from those who were comparatively near, because wanting the very appearance and formal badge of a consecrated condition. But the apostle sees in this only the outer line, as it were, or lower half of that partition-bouudary which lay between men and the proper fellowship of love iu God; for those who were called near, were still, while the old state of things existed, at some distance ; they had not free access to the presence of God (as the veil in the temple, and the manifold restrictions of its appointed ritual, too clearly indicated), and were rather, for the time, tolerated in a measure of nearness, than frankly, and as of right, admitted into the joyous liberty of Divine communion and blessedness of life. For both parties, therefore, something had to be broken down, in order to have the way laid open into the holiest, and through this into the full brotherhood of love with each other. What it was, the apostle more distinctly expresses in the next term, the enmity (' broke down the middle wall of the partition — the enmity — in His flesh ' — so the passage should be pointed and read). The enmity stands in apposition to the middle wall of partition in the preceding clause, and more exactly defines it. That this enmity has a certain respect to the hostile feeling and attitude subsisting between Jew and GentUe, seems clear from the reference goiug before to that antagon istic relationship and its abolition in Christ (' made both one,' ver. 14, though previously one stood aloof from the other as profane and out cast, ver. 11). But it seems equally clear, that no explanation can be satisfactory which would limit the expression to this lower sphere ; for the enmity, which Christ destroyed in His flesh, or, as again said, which He slew through His cross, naturally carries our thoughts up to the great breach in man's condition, and the great work done by Christ to heal it. In other expressions, also, the apostle plainly identifies the removing of this enmity with the reunion of sinners to God ; for it is in reconciling the parties spoken of to God that he describes the enmity as being slain ; and, by the act of gracious mediation which effects this, Christ is represented as becoming the peace of those who were near, as weU as those who were far off — implying that the one, as weU as the other, notwithstanding their relative advantages, had in their condition an obstructive barrier to be thrown down, an enmity to be overcome. Both alike also are represented as partaking of the same regenerating process— raised together, so as to become not one man merely, but one new man, as contradistinguished from the old state of each. Throughout the passage, Christ is plainly described as doing substantially one and the same work for both, and that a work which bore directly on their relation to God, while it carried along with 458 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. it also conciliatory and peaceful results in respect to their mutual relationship to each other. There is no way of understanding this but by supposing that the apostle saw, in the one class of relations, the fruit and reflex of the other. The mutual enmity which, hke a partition- wall, shut off Jew from GentUe, had in his view no independent existence ; it was merely the shadow and incidental effect of that common alienation which sin had produced between man and God ; and it was, he would have his readers to understand, by striking au effectual blow at that tap-root of the evil (as it might be called) that Christ had become the medium of a proper reconciliation in regard to the other and merely consequential form of alienation. That the destruction of the enmity, through the introduction and establishment of a state of blessed nearness to God, is said to have been done in the flesh of Christ, can only be regarded as a brief expres sion for His great work in the flesh — virtually synonymous with the words 'in His blood' in ver. 13, and 'through His cross' in ver. 16. The expression itself might be coupled either with what precedes, or with what follows : we might either say [having destroyed] ' the enmity in His flesh,' or, ' in His flesh having abolished (made void) the law of commandments,' etc. The latter is the connection adopted in the authorized version, ' having abolished in His flesh the enmity, even the law of commandments,' etc., including also in the sentence the ttjv syfpav, and taking the enmity as parallel with the law of commandments. But this, though supported by many commentators, proceeds on a somewhat unnatural mode of construing the words ; and it better accords with the proper parallelism of the passage, and also with the general usage of the two verbs (as one can readily enough speak of dissolving or breaking down an enmity, but not so well of making it void, and so abolishing it). But the general sense still remains much the same ; and certainly with the breaking down of the partition-wall, or dislodging the enmity, the apostle couples the annulling or doing away of the law of commandments in ordinances as either coincident with the other, or somehow essential to it. How then was it so? What precisely is meant by the law of commandments in ordinances ? And in what sense was the doing away of this in Christ necessary to the bringing about of the reconcUiation and enmity ? The law of com mandments in ordinances is but another name for the Sinaitic legislation, or the old covenant. This was, by way of eminence, the law, and as such composed of specific enactments ; these formed its contents ; and when further said to be iv Sby^asiv (the latter without the article, because expressive of one notion with rSiv ivroXuv, commandments in individual EPH. ii. 11-17. 459 ordinances '), it poiuts to the form of the contents as being of an imperative or decretory character, so that the expression may be fitly enough rendered, with Alford, 'the law of decretory commandments,' or of ' decretory ordinances,' with EUicott. It comprised the whole system of precepts, moral and religious, which were introduced by Moses, and peremptorily enjoined on the covenant people : the law, in its economical character, as a scheme of enactments or form of administration, which was intended, indeed, to mediate the intercourse between God and man, but was perceived, even while it stood, to be imperfect, and declared as such to be transitory, destined one day to be supplanted by another and better.2 The apostle had already, in various passages, given forth a similar judgment ; had affirmed it to be incapable of providing an effectual remedy for the evils adhering to human nature, fitted rather to make known and multiply transgression than deliver from its guUt and doom, hence done away in Christ who brings in the real deliverance.3 So, here again, when setting forth Christ as the only true Peace of the world, the apostle represents the system of law, with its commands and ordinances, as done away, in order that humanity might, through faith in the incarnation and atoning death of Christ, be lifted out of its con demned and alienated condition, might be formed into a kind of corpo rate body with Himself, and participate in that feUowship of peace and blessing which He ever enjoys with the Father. But this, obviously, is a kind of doing away, or making void, which at the same time confirms. It loosens men's relation to the law in one respect, but establishes it in another ; releases them from it as a provisional arrangement for coming at the righteousness and life which are essential to an interest in God, but only that they might find the end it aimed at in this respect through faith in Christ4— find it as a gift brought to their band through the infinite grace and prevailing media tion of Christ. Thus, there is nothing arbitrary in the change here indicated by the apostle : it is a change of form, but not of substance, for the same great principles of truth and duty characterize both economies, only brought now to their proper establishment in Christ, and associated' with results which, tiU then, had been but faintly appre hended or partiaUy experienced.5 » Winer, sees. 31, 10, obs. 1. 2 Jer. xxxi. 31. » 2 Cor iii 11, U ; Gal. iii. 19 ; Rom. v. 20, vii. 5-8. Rom. x. 4. 5 The rendering of the two verses (vers. 14, 15), in the authorized version, is in several respects unfortunate-first, inserting between us, namely, Jew and Gentile, after the words, 'broken down the middle wall of partition ' thereby confining this to the earthly sphere ; second, separating between the middle wall and the enmity, 460 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. There is, it is proper to add, a certain difference in the doctrinal statements here made respecting the law, and those elsewhere given ; but it is merely a formal one, and such as naturally arose from the nature of the subject. The point more immediately handled here has to do, not with justification before God, but with reconciliation and peace toward Him, and between one portion of the human family and another. These, however, are but diverse aspects of the same question; and the necessity of doing away with the decretory ordinances and precepts of the old covenant, in order to meet the wants of man's con dition, and placing in its stead the atoning work of Christ, holds alike in both aspects of the matter. But in none of the passages can the doing away be understood in an absolute sense ; it must be taken relatively. And here, in particular, the apostle, as justly remarked by Harless, indicating also the connection between this and other state ments of the apostle, ' does not treat of the law as regards any part of its contents, but of the form, the legal externality of its demand, which, as unfulfilled, wrought enmity, because it pronounced the judgment of condemnation upon men's guilt, and hence is rendered without effect. This is done objectively without us, through the atoning death of Christ.1 Subjectively, it is realized in us, when, as the apostle else where expresses himself, the word of faith comes to be in the mouth and iu the heart,2 or, as stated presently here, when Christians, through the redemption in one Spirit, have access to the Father, and are built into an habitation of God in the Spirit. This is the subjective realization of by throwing the latter into the next clause, and joining it to xtrxgywxs, instead of to the preceding \6trxs ; third, identifying the enmity with the law of command ments, ' the enmity, even the law of commandments. ' In the general structure and connection of the passage, I follow Meyer, Ellicott, Alford, who, es ecially the two former, have clearly shewn the advantage in naturalness and grammatical accuracy of the mode preferred by them over others, also the inadmissibility of joining li %'oyfixiriv with xxTxgyims (with the Vulgate, Chrysostom, Theodore, also Grotius, Bengel, Fritzsche, Harless), as if the meaning were, having abolished, by means of Christian doctrines, the law of commandments, or, as Harless, abolished the law on the side of, or in respect to, the commanding form of its precepts. The New Testa ment usage will not admit of either mode of exposition. But the Greek commenta tors (Chrysostom, Theophylact, and CEcumenius) were substantially right in their general view of the passage, understanding the separation and enmity on the one side, and the reconciliation and peace on the other, to have respect, not merely to Jew and Gentile, but primarily and mainly to men's relation to God, and only subordin- ately to the other. Meyer, with many more, take the other view of the partition- wall and the enmity ; the expositions of Calvin, and many of the earlier Protestant commentators, were by no means satisfactory in the treatment of the passage. 1 Col. ii. 14. 2 Rom. x. 8. EPH. n. 11-17. 461 the law's displacement. The apostle speaks of it iu Rom. vii. 6, when he says, " We are delivered (xarripyrid7ifj.lv) from the law," as, inversely, they who would be justified by the law are delivered (xarnpy^nrs) from Christ.'1 All, therefore, depends upon the sense in which such expressions are understood, or the respect in which they are applied. They merely tell us that we have the law made of no force and effect to us, done away as the ground of justification before God, or as the means of obtaining a solid reconciliation and peace with Him : but this simply on account of the high and holy nature of the require ments it sets forth, which for fallen men made the good it aimed at practicably unattainable. Its relation to men's responsibilities as the revelation of God's righteousness, in the sphere of human life and duty, remains thereby untouched. Vers. 16-18. These verses, which contain merely some further expansion and application of the principles exhibited in the preceding context, call for no lengthened remark here. And that He might reconcile both of vs in one body to God through the cross : this was the higher end of Christ's work on earth — the lower having been mentioned just before, namely, the uniting of the divided human family into one new corporate body ; and the former, though the last to be named, the first in order, as being that on which the other depends. It is the recon ciliation of both parties to God through the peace-speaking blood of Christ's cross, which carries them over the fence of earthly divisions and antipathies. And this being said to be done in one body, points — not, as some would understand it, to the corporeal frame of Christ, in which respect the idea of plurality was, from the nature of things, excluded — but to the compact society, the one corporate, mystical body which Christ forms for Himself out of the scattered and too often' antagonistic members of the human family. Alike drawn through the cross to God,2 their common enmity to Him, and their individual enmities one toward another, receive, in a sense, their death-blow ; they melt away under the redeeming love of the cross ; but only, of course, as regards men's personal experience, when this comes to be reahzed as a Divine power in the heart. To this the next clause refers, which says of Christ, 'And having come, He preached peace to you who were far off, and peace (the sipww should be again repeated, with all the better MSS., and most of the ancient versions) to them that were nigh. This also is ascribed to Christ, for His agency was continued in that of the apostles, who, in preaching the tidings of salvation to Jew and GentUe, derived their authority from His commission, and their success from i Gal. v. 4. 2 Jolm xii- 32- 462 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. His presence.1 So that to Christ belongs at once the effective means of reconciliation, and the bringing of these to bear on the personal state of mankind. The relatively near (Jews) and the relatively far off (Gentiles) alike need the salvation provided, and they alike have it brought within their reach. Then foUows the ground or reason on which the proclamation and assurance of peace proceeds, for through Him we have our access, both of us, in one spirit to the Father — to (Tpbg) the Father as representing the Godhead, through (Sid) the Son as Mediator, and by or in (iv) the Spirit as the effective agent — shewing clearly the pre-eminent regard had by the apostle in the whole matter, to the peaceful relationship of the parties to God. It is this more especially that is mentioned here, because this is what is primarily and directly secured by the death of Christ ; and the distinction between Jew and GentUe falls away, because, as component parts of one redeemed family, they are animated by one Spirit (the Spirit of life and holiness in Christ Jesus), and in that Spirit are enabled to draw near, and abide near, to God — equally inmates of His spiritual house, and alike free to partici pate in its blessed privileges and hopes. Col. ii. 11-17. ' In whom (Christ) ye also were circumcised with a circumcision not wrought by hands, in the putting off of the body pf the flesh in the circumcision of Christ ; 12. Buried together with Him in your baptism, wherein also ye were raised up with Him through your faith in the operation of God, who raised Him from the dead. 13. And you who were dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, He quickened together with Him,2 having forgiven us aU our trespasses ; 14. Having wiped out the handwriting in ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to His cross ; 15. Having put off principalities and powers, He boldly made a show of them, while in it (viz., the cross) He triumphed over them. 16. Let no one, therefore, judge you in eating or in drinking, or in tbe matter of a feast, or of a new moon, or of Sabbaths ; 17. Which are a shadow of things to come, but the body is of Christ.' The phase of false teaching which the apostle meets in this and othefc parts of the epistle to the Colossians, is somewhat different from any 1 Matt, xxviii. 20 ; John xiv. 18 ; Acts iii. 26, xxiv. 23. 2 The better authorities (S A C K L) have here a second tip*;, repeated for the sake of emphasis, ' you who were dead ... He quickened you. ' COL. ii. 'n-17. 463 thing that presents itself iu his other epistles. That it contained a strong Judaistic element, is plain from the injunctions pressed against a return to the distinctive rites and services of Judaism ; but the parties espousing and propagating it cannot be regarded as simply Judaising Christians. For evidently a philosophical or Gnostic element mingled with the Judaistic, in this peculiar form of false teaching, laying an undue stress upon the possession of a speculative sort of knowledge, which sought to carry the mind beyond the province of Scripture, and to elevate the tone of the religious life by fancied revelations of the angelic world, and by the practices of an ascetic piety. Apparently, therefore, the false teaching warned against was a compound of Jewish and Gnostic pecuharities, somewhat after the fashion of what is reported to have become known at a later period as the doctrine of Cermthus, or is associated with the Gnostic Ebionites, who were probably a sect of Christianized Essenes. Neither the time at which this epistle was written, nor the region in which it contemplates the false teaching in question to have appeared (Phrygia), admits of our connecting it with the heretical parties just referred to. But there were tendencies work ing in the same directions, which found a congenial soil in that part of Asia Minor, and which, notwithstanding the remonstrances and warn ings here addressed to the church of Colossae, continued long to hold their ground and to prove a snare to behevers. In one of the earliest councUs of which the canons have been preserved, that of Laodicea, a place quite near to Colossae, it was found necessary to prohibit the practice of angel worship, and also of adherence to some Jewish cus toms.1 So late as tbe fifth century, Theodoret makes mention, in his comment on this epistle, of oratories stUl existing in that quarter dedicated to the Archangel Michael. In the passage more immediately before us, it is the Judaistic element in the false doctrine beginning to prevail about Colossae which the apostle has in view, and which he endeavours to expose by shewing how the design and object of the Jewish law, with its religious obser vances, had found their realization in the work and Gospel of Christ. Pointing first to the initiatory ordinance of the old religion, he declares circumcision, not in form, but in spirit, to belong to those who have heartily embraced the Gospel of Christi-the great truth underlying it, and for the sake of which it was appointed, having, in the most effec tive manner, become exemplified in their experience. In whom ye also were circumcised with a circumcision not wrought by hands; that is, a work accomplished by the power of the. operation of God upon the soul, as i Neander, ' Planting of Christian Church,' B. iii. ch. 9. 464 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. contradistinguished from a mere fleshly administration, which is else where characterized as a thing wrought by hands.1 When applying the term circumcision in this way, the definite article should be wanting in the Enghsh, as it is in the Greek — for it could not be referred to as a thing familiarly known to the Colossians : it was not the, but a, circumcision, yet one which rose immensely in importance above the other, and could be made good only by a Divine agency. It was nothing, however, absolutely new ; for in Old Testament Scripture, also, it was spoken of as a thing that should have gone along with the external rite, though too frequently wanting in the outwardly circum cised.3 So much was this the case, that the apostle, in describing circumcision according to its true idea, denies it of the act performed on the body, as apart from the spiritual change this symbolized, ' it is of the heart, in the spirit, and not in the letter,'3 and what was merely in the letter he stigmatizes with the name of the concision — as if it were nothing more than a corporeal cutting.4 The spiritual act, the inward circumcision, is described as the putting off of the body of the flesh in the circumcision of Christ. By the body of the flesh is undoubtedly meant the same as what is elsewhere called 'the old man which is corrupt,'5 and by a still stronger term, 'the body of sin,'6 and 'sinful flesh,' literally, 'flesh of sin;'7 the bodily or fleshly part of our natures being viewed as the seat of the lusts, which are the prolific source of sin, and bring forth fruit unto death. To have this put off, therefore, in a spiritual respect, is to be delivered from the dominion of sin, to die to sin as a controlling and regulating power, by the pure and holy principles of a Divine hfe taking root in the soul, and giving another tone and direction to the general procedure. When this spiritual change is accomplished, the flesh is, so to speak, evacuated of its sinful quality — instead of domineering, it becomes subservient to the good ; and the change is wrought, the apostle says, in the circumcision of Christ, that is, in the spiritual renewal which a union to Him brings along with it. We are not, with some, to think here of Christ's personal circumcision, which is entirely against the connection, since it would introduce an objective ground where the discourse is of a subjective personal operation. The forming of Christ in the soul as the author of a new spiritual life — that is for the individual soul the circumcision of Christ, or, as we may otherwise call it, the new birth, which, by the Divine impulses of a higher nature, casts off the power of corruption. Essentially, it is the action of Spirit 1 Eph. ii. 11. 2 pjeut. x. 16, xxx. 6 ; Ezek. xliv. 7. 3 Rom. ii. 29. 4 Phil. iii. 2. 5 Eph. iv. 22, Col. iii. 9. » Rom. vi. 6. 7 Rom. viii. 3. COL. n. 11-17. 465 upon spirit ; and the apostle elsewhere describes it as wrought by the Lord the Spirit,1 or as the result of Christ dwelling in him by faith.2 But here, in what immediately follows, he couples it with baptism, to shew that, in this higher style of things belonging to New Testament times, there is substantially the same relation of the inward reality to an outward ordinance that there was in the Old. Ver. 12. Buried along with him in your baptism, wherein also ye were raised through your faith in the operation of God, who raised him from the dead. It is clear that baptism is viewed here, as in the corresponding passage of Kom. vi. 3, 4, in its full import and design, ' in the spirit and not in the letter,' as a practical and living embodiment of the great things which had already taken place in the experience of the believing soul. Baptism, in this sense, formed a kind of rehearsal of the believer's regeneration to holiness — solemnly attesting and sealing, both on his part and God's, that feUowship with Christ in His death and resurrec tion, on which aU personal interest in the benefits of His redemption turns. Commentators very generally assume that a reference is made to the form of baptism by immersion, as imaging the spiritual death, burial, and resurrection of those who truly receive it. This is not, however, quite certain, especially as, at the passage in Bomans, he couples with the burial a quite different image — that, namely, of being planted together with Christ. Nor is it really of any moment; for beyond doubt the meaning actually conveyed in the language has respect to the spiritual effect of baptism as sealing the participation of believers in the great acts of Christ's mediation — identifying them with Him in His death, burial, and resurrection. The apostle brings prominently out the latter point of this fellowship with Christ, because the other was but as the necessary channel to it : wherein also (iv Z xal) ye were raised up together with Him, so I think it is most naturally ren dered, taking the h $ as referring to the baptism. It might certainly be understood, with many commentators, of Christ (in whom also) ; but it seems more natural to confine the reference to the immediate ante cedent, and to regard the apostle as indicating, that the whole process of a spiritual renovation— the rise to newness of life as well as the death to the corruption of nature-has its representation and embodi ment in baptism. And to shew how the outward is here based on the inward and derives from this whatever it has of vital force, he adds, through the faith of the operation of God (that is, as the great majority of the better commentators understand it, faith ,» Gods operation, the srenitive after Tisng being usually expressive of the object on which it g 12 co, iii. 18. 2Gal.ii.20,Eph.ii.5-8. 2 G 466 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. rests) ; the spirit of faith in the baptized appropriates the act of God's mighty power in Christ when He raised Him from the dead, as an act which transmits its virtue to all who in faith realize and lay hold of it. Spiritually, they have thus already risen with Him ; and therein have the pledge of a literal rising also, when the time for it shaU have come.1 Vers. 13-15. In these verses, there is nothing properly additional to what has been already stated regarding the work of Christ in its effect upon the soul ; but there is a specific application of this to the believing Gentiles whom the apostle was addressing, and a more detaUed explanation of the matters involved in it. First, their personal quickening out of a state of spiritual death and defilement : you being dead (or when you were dead) in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh; that is, the uncleanness which attached to them as abiding in their still unsanctified fleshly natures ; this as the root of the evil, though from his particular point of view placed last in the apostle's statement, and the other, the death in trespasses, the fruit that sprung from it, and gave evidence of its malignant nature ; both alike were put away by the renewing and quickening energy which flowed into their experience from the risen life of Christ. Then, as the essential groundwork and condition of this quickening, there was the free pardon of their sins : having forgiven us (the apostle including himself, and making the statement general) all our trespasses — yupisd- fj,ivng, the indefinite past, indicating that the thing was virtuaUy done at once, that forgiveness was secured through the vicarious work of Christ, as a boon ready to be bestowed on every one who might in a living faith appropriate the gift. Hence, thirdly, as the necessary con dition of this, or its indispensable accompaniment, there was the remov ing of what stood in the way of their acquittal from guilt — the con demning power and authority of the law ¦ having wiped out the hand writing in ordinances that was against us, which was contr eery to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to His cross. What here is meant by the handwriting in ordinances (xeipbypapov ro?g Sbypusiv) must be the same with that which fastened on them the charge of guUt and condemnation, and, as such, formed the great barrier against forgiveness. This, there can be no doubt, was the law, not in part but in whole — the law in the 1 All this, of course, is to be understood directly of adult baptism — the baptism of actual believers, or such as had the profession and appearance of believers. The application of it to the children of believers necessarily calls for certain modifications in the doctrinal aspect of the matter, as already stated in Lecture VIII. But it is unnecessary to enter on these here. COL. ii. 11-17. 4 (i7 full compass of its requirements ; called here the humlwritiiig, with reference to the frequent mention of writing in connection with it;1 and this in, or with ordinances, namely, decretory enactments (the dative of instrument, as ypdfj.fj.asiv at Gal. vi. 11, the enactments form ing the material with which the writing was made), pointing to the peremptory form which the revelation of law assumed. The ex pression has already been under consideration at Eph. ii. 15. It cannot be limited to outward observances, though it is clear, from the use of the verb and its connection in ver. 20, that these were here specially in view. Of the law thus described, the apostle says, it was against us, and as if this were not explicit enough, he adds the separate statement, which was contrary, or hostile, to us : not meaning, of course, that it was in itself of a grievous or offensive nature (he elsewhere calls it ' holy, just, and good ' 2), but that it bore injuriously upon our condition, and, from its righteous demands not being satisfied, had come to stand over against us like a bUl of indictment, or Divine summary of undischarged obligations. But Christ, says the apostle, or God in Him, wiped out the writing (i~a7-.styag, precisely as in Acts iii. 19, with reference to sins, and in Eev. iii. 5, with reference to a name in a book) ; that is, in effect deleted it, and so took it out of the way, carried it from among us, namely, so far as, or in the respect in which, it formed an accusing witness against us. But, plainly, this could not be done by an arbitrary abobtion of the thing itself ; moral and religious obligations cannot be got rid of in such a way ; they must be met by a just and proper satisfaction ; and this is what was stated by the apostle in the next clause under the figurative expression, nailing it to His cross. Ostensibly and really Christ's body was the only thing naUed there ; but suffering, as He did, to bear the curse of the law for sin, and actually enduring the penalty, it was as if the law itself in its condemnatory aspect toward men was brought to an end — its power in that respect was exhausted. ' Never,' says Chrysostom, ' did the apostle speak so magniloquently (but this applies also to ver. 15). Do you see what zeal he exhibits to have the handwriting made to disappear ? To wit, we were all under sin and punishment : He being punished, made an end both of sin and punishment; and He was punished on the cross. There, therefore, He transfixed it (the handwriting), and then, as having power, He tore it asunder.' Did with it, in short, what the satisfied creditor does with his charge of debt, or the appeased judge with his biU of indictment; canceUed it as a claim that could involve us any more in guilt and 1 Ex. xxxi. 18, xxxiv. 1, 27 ; Deut. x. 4, xxvii. 3, etc. 2 Rom. vii. 12. 468 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. condemnation, if we receive and trust in Him as He is there presented to our view.1 FinaUy, a statement is made respecting the relation of Christ's work for His people on the cross to what he calls the principalities and powers : the original is, aTixbusd/Mvog rag dpydg xal rag i^ovaiag iSsiypbdriSsv iv TapprjSia, 8piafj,(3ivSag abrovg h abrw. The exact import of some of the words, and the proper mode of explicating the sentiment contained in them, have given rise to some difference of opinion, and are not quite easily determined. The general bearing of the statement, however, on the more immediate subject of discourse, is plain enough, and this, amid the diversity of opinion which exists in other respects, should not be forgotten. Obviously, it is intended in the first instance to convey an impression of the completeness of Christ's work on the cross as to the procuring of forgiveness for sin, and the effecting of a true cleansing or renewal of state in as many as believed : in this point of view, the scene of deepest humiliation had become the chosen theatre of Divine glory — the place and moment of victory over evil. Then, in token of this, we are told that whatever orders or powers of a higher kind had, or were anyhow supposed to have, an interest in retaining things as they were, and consequently in opposing this result, these, instead of triumphing, as might to the bodily eye have seemed to be the case, were themselves effectually overthrown on the cross — the ground and occasion of their power to carry it against men, being thereby taken out of their hand. So much seems plain ; no one can well fail to derive this amount of instruction from the words ; but when we go into detail, and ask, what precisely are to be understood by those principahties and powers, who are here said to have lost their ascend ency and their means of strength, or how explain the specific acts to which the result is ascribed, there is some difficulty in arriving at a satisfactory answer. By far the commonest, as it was also the earliest, ' It was chiefly on the ground of this passage, including also Eph. ii. 13-17, that a mode of representation, once very common among a certain class of preachers in this country, was adopted — namely, that in respect to sinners generally 'aU legal barriers to salvation have been removed by Christ. ' The representation is perfectly Scriptural and legitimate, if understood with reference to the objective manifestation of Christ, and the exhibition of His offered grace to the souls of men. It is un doubtedly under this aspect that the truth is here presented by the apostle ; and it is quite in accordance with his statement, to go to sinners of every name and degree, and tell them to look in faith to Christ, and to rest assured, if they do so, that, by His work on the cross, all legal barriers have been removed to their complete salva tion. But the expression may be, and undoubtedly has sometimes been, used as importing more than this ; and consequently, if still employed, should be cleared of all ambiguity. COL. n. 11-17. 469 s view of commentators regarding the principalities and powers, hold them to be demons, the spirits of darkness, who, as instruments of vengeance, ever seek to press home upon men the consequences of their sin, but who by reason of the satisfaction given to the demands of God's law through the death of Christ on the cross, have had the ground of their successful agency taken from them — the curse given them to execute has been fully borne — and, instead of now being at liberty to spoil, and ravage, and destroy, they are themselves, as regards believers in Christ, in the condition of spoiled and vanquished forces — their prey gone, their weapons of war perished. Some, how ever (Suicer, RosenmuUer, etc.), have conceived that the principalities and powers iu question are to be sought for in the earthly sphere, and are none other than the authorities, priestly and secular, who arrayed themselves in opposition to Christ, and thought by crucifying Him to put an end to His cause. More recently, Hofmann,1 Alford, and a few more, take the expression to refer to good angels, as having ministered at the introduction of the law, and thereby thrown around God a sort of veU, which hindered the free outgoing of His love, and shrouded His glory to the view of the heathen, and in a measure also to the covenant people — this, like an old vesture, being now rent off and cast aside through the atoning death of Christ, the angelic powers associated with it are said to be put aside along with it, exhibited as in a state of com plete subjection to Christ, and made to foUow, as it were, in the triumphal procession of Him who is the one Lord and Saviour of men. This last mode of explanation manifestly carries a strained and unnatural appearance, and represents the angels of Heaven as standing in a rela tion to Christ and His people, which is without any real paraUel in other parts of Scripture. According to it, they did the part not of subordinate agents merely in God's earlier dispensation, but in some sense of antagonistic forces, and required to be exposed in no very agreeable aspect, nay, triumphed over, and driven from the field. There is nothing at aU approaching to this in any other passage touch ing on the ministry of angels, and the endeavour to accommodate the language of the apostle so understood to the general doctrine of angels in Scripture, can only be regarded as a play of fancy. The second view, also, which has never met with much acceptance, has this fatal objec tion against it, that the terms, principalities and powers, always bear respect in St Paul's writings to spiritual beings and angelic orders ; 2 whether of a good or of an evil nature, is left to be gathered from the context. Of the two passages just referred to in the Epistle to the 1 < Schriftb.' I. p. 350, seq. 2 Eph. i. 21, vi. 12 ; Col. i. 16, ii. 10. 470 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. Ephesians, the first applies the terms to good, the second to malignant, spirits ; and it can, therefore, be no valid objection to a like application in the latter sense here, that in two earlier passages of this epistle they have been used of the higher intelligences in the heavenly places. The things asserted of them in each case leave httle room to doubt to what region they should be assigned, and with what kind of agency associ ated. And here, both the natural import of the language, and the very general consent among commentators of all ages in the interpretation of it, seem to shut us up to the first view specified, and oblige us to regard the principalities and powers, whose ascendency and influence for evil received a fatal blow on the death of Christ, as belonging to the empire of darkness, and not of light. It is no valid objection to this view, that the definite article is used before the terms in question, as if pointing to the kind of principalities and powers mentioned in preceding pas sages ; J for at Eph. vi. 12 also, where the terms undoubtedly refer to hostile agencies, the definite article is employed, notwithstanding that, in the earlier passage where they occur, the words were used in a good sense. There can be no reason why the same peculiarity might not occur here ; especiaUy as the very nature of the subject implies a certain individualizing — the principalities and powers, not all such, but those who, from their antagonism to the good, occupied a hostile relation to Him who undertook the cause of our redemption. But allowing this to be the kind of intelligences referred to, there is still room for difference of opinion respecting the specific acts of dealing said to have been practised upon them. These are in our version spoiled, made an open show of, triumphed over. The diversity turns chiefly on the first, and whether it should be having spoiled, divested them of, or having stripped off from himself divested himself of. The former is the render ing of the Vulgate, expolians, which has been followed by all the English versions, and by the great body of modern expositors : ' it contemplates the principalities and powers as having been equipped with armour, which God as their conqueror took from them and removed away.' 2 And this, as preparatory to their being exhibited in humble guise and carried off in triumph, undoubtedly presents a quite suitable meaning, and has hence met with general acceptance. But exception has been taken to it by some (Deyling, Hofmann, EUicott, Alford, Wordsworth), on the ground that the verb aTixSvai, in the middle, never bears that sense, and that the apostle himself very shortly after, in ch. iii. 9, uses exactly the same part of it as here, aTixSvadfisvog, in the sense, not of having spoiled, but of having put off, or divested one's-self of, namely, 1 Alford. 2 Meyer. COL. n. 11-17. 471 the old man and his deeds. This also is the meaning ascribed to the word by Origen (exuens principutus et potestates ]), by Chrysostom, who says the apostle speaks of diabolical powers here, 'either because human nature had put on these, or, since it had them as a handle, He having become a man, put off the handle;' and, to the like effect, Theophylact and others. Such, undoubtedly, is the more natural and best supported meaning of the expression ; and the exact idea seems to be that our Lord (whom, and not God, against Meyer and Alford, we take to be the proper subject), when He resigned His body to an accursed death, that He might pay the deserved penalty for our sin, at the same time put off, or completely reft from Him, and from as many as should share with Him in His work of victory, those diabolical agencies who, by reason of sin, had obtained a kind of right to afflict and bruise humanity ; this, as the house of their usurped dominion, or the victim they hung around with deadly and destructive mahce, was now wrung from their grasp, and they were cast adrift like baffled and discomfited foes, their cause hopelessly and for ever gone. So that, by suffering for righteousness, Christ most effectually prevailed against the evh in our condition ; 2 and thus turned the shame of the cross into the highest glory,3 made it the instrument and occasion of boldly (iv Tap'pr\sla, in an assured and confident manner) putting to shame the patrons and abettors of the evU, or exposing their weakness in this mortal conflict, and triumphing over them even amidst their apparent victory. Thus explained, though the radical idea is a little different, the general meaning is much the same as in the authorized version. In vers. 16, 17, we have the practical inference from the view that had been given of the work of Christ : let no one, therefore, judge you in eating or in drinking, or in the matter of a feast, or of a new moon, or of Sabbaths ; which are a shadow of things to come, but the body is of Christ. The term fipusig is not exactly food, but eating, the act of taking food— as appears by comparing Rom. xiv. 17, 1 Cor. viii. 4, 2 Cor. ix. 10, with others in which the passive form, fipZ/M, is employed for the thing eaten, or the food itself.4 But what, of course, is meant by the expression is the kind of food which one takes, and which was hmited by express enactment in the law of Moses. And the same also in regard to drink (Tos,g)— though here there was no general limitation under the ancient economy ; only in the case of the ministering priest, and of persons under the Nazarite vow, was a restraint laid in respect to tbe temperate use of wine.5 Horn, in Jos. 8. 2 Heb. ii. 14 ; 1 Pet. iii. 18-22. 3 Jo. iii. 14, 15 xii. 32. * 1 Cor. iii. 2, vi. 13, x. 3, &c. 5 ^- *¦ » i N™- vl- 3- 472 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. These cases, however, were so partial and peculiar, that some have supposed (in particular Meyer, Elhcott) that among the parties referred to additional practices of an ascetic kind had been introduced respecting drinks, of a theosophic or rabbinical origin. This is possible enough ; but no special account can be made of it here, as the distinctions in question are presently affirmed to stand in a definite relation to the realities of the Gospel, and, consequently, are contemplated as of Divine appointment. When he says, Let no one judge you on the subject of eating and drinking, he may be understood generally to refer to articles of diet ; in respect to these, the distinction as between clean and un clean was now gone ; and whatever one might take he must not on this score be judged, or held to act unsuitably to the true ideal of a Christian lhe. And, in hke manner, with respect to, or in the matter of (for such undoubtedly is the meaning of it p'spa1) a feast, a stated solemnity (such as the Passover or Pentecost), or of a new moon (not strictly a holy day, except the seventh, but one marked by a few additional obser vances), or of Sabbaths. That the latter include, and indeed chiefly designate, the weekly Sabbath of the Jews, can admit of no reasonable doubt, both from days of that description comprising by far the greater part of those bearing the name of Sabbaths, and also because nearly, if not all, the other days to which the term Sabbath was applied, were already embraced in the feasts and new moons previously specified. Thus the distinctively sacred days appointed in the Mosaic law, together with its stated festivals, its distinctions of clean and unclean in food, and, by parity of reason, other things of a hke outward and ceremonial nature, are here placed in one category, and declared to be no longer binding on the consciences of believers, or needful to their Christian progress. And for this reason, that they were all only shadows of things to come, while the body is of Christ ; that is, they were no more than imperfect and temporary prefigurations of the work He was to accomplish, and the benefits to be secured by it to those who believe ; and as such, of course, they feU away when the great reality appeared. It might seem as if something further should have been concluded — not merely the non-obligatory observance of those shadowy institutions of the old covenant, but, as in the Epistle to the Galatians, the essential antichristianism of their observance. There is, however, a difference in the two cases ; the churches of Galatia had actuaUy f aUen back upon Jewish observances as necessary to their salvation, but the Colossians were as yet only exposed to the temptation of having in their neigh bourhood persons whose teaching and practice lay in a similar direction. i 2 Cor. iii. 10, ix. 3. COL. n. 11-17. 473 So far as yet appeared, correct views of the truth and of their liberty in Christ might be all that was required to guard against the danger. But was there no danger from the apostle's own doctrine in another direction ? In coupling Sabbath days with the other peculiar observ ances of Judaism, as things done away in Christ, does he not strike at the obligation of maintaining the observance of one day in seven for the more especial service of God, and break the connection between the Lord's day of Christians and the Sabbath of earlier times ? So it has often been alleged, and, among others, very strongly by Alford, who says, 'If the observance of the Sabbath had been, in any form, of lasting obhgation on the Christian church, it would have been quite impossible for the apostle to have spoken thus. The fact of an obligatory rest of one day, whether the seventh or the first, would have been directly in the teeth of his assertion here : the holding of such would have been stUl to retain the shadow, whUe we .possess the substance.' To this Ellicott justly replies, that such an assertion ' cannot be substantiated. The Sabbath of the Jews (he adds), as involving other than mere national reminiscences, was a sxia (shadow) of tbe Lord's day : that a weekly seventh part of our time should be specially devoted to God, rests on considerations as old as the creation : that that seventh portion of the week should be the first day, rests on apostolical, and perhaps, inferentiaUy, Divine usage and appointment.' Substantially concurring in this, I still deem it better to say, that in so far as the Sabbath was a shadow of any thing in Christian times, it was, with all of a like nature, abolished in Christ ; and on that account particularly (though also for other reasons), the day which took its place from the beginning of the Gospel dispensation, and had become known and observed, wherever the Christian church was established, as emphatically the Lord's day, was changed from the last to the first day of the week. The seventh day Sabbath had been so long regarded as one of the more distinctive badges of Judaism, and had also, as an important factor, entered into many of the other institutions of the old covenant (the stated feasts, the sabbatical year, tbe year of Jubilee), that it necessarily came to partake, to some extent, of their typical character, and, in so far as it did so, must, like them also, pass away when the time of reformation came. But this is only one aspect of the sabbatical institution— not the original and direct, but rather a subsidiary and incidental one. As in a peculiar seuse the day of God— the day, as Jesus Himself testified, which was made for man, and of which He claimed to be the Lord,1 the Sabbath was essentially one with the Lord's day of the Christian church, ,. Matt. xii. 8 ; Mark ii. 27, 28. 474 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. which, when the apostle wrote, was everywhere recognised and observed by believers. For in that respect there was nothing in the Sabbath of earher times properly shadowy, or typical of redemption. It commenced before sin had entered, and while yet there was no need for a Redeemer. Nor was there any thing properly typical in the observance of it imposed in the fourth commandment ; for this was a substantial re- enforcement of the primary institution, in its bearing on the general relation of men to God, and of members of society to each other. When associated with the typical services of the old covenant, the same thing virtually happened to it as with circumcision, which was the sign and seal of the Abrahamic covenant of grace, and had no immediate connection with the law of Moses ; while yet it became so identified with that law, that it required to be supplanted by another ordinance of nearly similar import when the seed of blessing arrived, in which the Abrahamic covenant was to find its fulfilment. So great had the necessity become for the abolition of the one ordinance and the introduction of the other, that the apostle virtuaUy declares it to have been indispensable, when he affirms (in his Epistle to the Galatians), of those who would still be circumcised, that they were debtors to do the whole law. At the same time, as regards the original design and spiritual import of circumcision, this he makes coincident with baptism 1 — speaks here (v. 11) of baptized believers as the circumcision of Christ ; and so presents the two ordinances as in principle most closely associated with each other, differing in form rather than in substance. We have no reason to suppose his meaning to be different in regard to the Sab bath ; it is gone so far as its outward rest on the seventh day formed part of the typical things of Judaism, but no further. Its primeval character and destination remain. As baptism in the Spirit is Christ's circumcision, so the Lord's day is His Sabbath ; and to be in the Spirit on that day, worshipping and serving Him in the truth of His Gospel, is to carry out the intent of the fourth commandment.2 1 Tim. i. 6-11. ' In respect to which things [viz., love out of a pure heart and a good conscience, and faith unfeigned], some having gone astray, turned aside to vain talk ; 7. Wishing to be teachers of the law, without 1 Eom. ii. 28, 29, iv. 11. 2 See 'Typology of Scripture,' Vol. II. p. 146, from which some of these later remarks are taken. 1 TIM. i. c-n. 475 understanding either the things they say, or concerning what things they make asseveration. 8. Now we know that the law is good, if one use it lawfully ; 9. Knowing this, that the law is not made for a righteous man, but for lawless and unruly persons, for impious and sinful, for unholy and profane, for smiters of fathers and smiters of mothers ; 10. For fornicators, abusers of themselves with mankind, slave-dealers, liars, perjurers, and if there is any thing else that is contrary to the sound teaching ; 11. According to the Gospel of the glory of the blessed God, with which I was put in trust.' This passage contains the last recorded statement of St Paul regard ing the law ; and it is of importance, for a correct understanding of its import, and bearing on the Christian lhe, to have a distinct perception of the point of view from which the apostle is here contemplating it. This was determined by the class of errorists against whom he was now seeking to warn Timothy — a class differing materially from those whom he found it necessary to contend against in his other epistles (to the Galatians, the Romans, and the Colossians) on the subject of the law. The latter were sincere, but mistaken and superficial, adherents of the law in the letter of its requirements, and the full compass of its ceremonial observances — legalists of the Pharisaical type. But those here in the eye of the apostle were obviously of a quite different stamp. So far from being sincere and earnest in their convictions, they are represented as morally in a very degenerate and perverted condition ; entirely lapsed, or erring from (dsroyfisavng), what must ever dis tinguish the genuine believer, whether altogether enlightened or not in his apprehensions of the truth— the love which springs from a pure heart, a good conscience, and faith unfeigned. They not only wanted this essential characteristic of a sound moral condition, but had, in a spirit of error and declension, gone into another direction, and for the exercise of a pure and elevating love had fallen into a kind of empty talk. Then as to the manner in which this empty talk exhibited itself, he tells us, that while it turned somehow upon the law, of which they wished to be more especially the teachers, yet so little were they qualified for the task, that they neither understood what they spake about it, nor had any proper acquaintance with the things on which they made asseveration, or delivered themselves with an assured confidence (S.afisfia.outrai). How could they, indeed, since they wanted the love which is the very essence of the law, and the purity of heart and conscience, which a real conformity to its demands must ever pre suppose and require ? In such a case, if they continued to make any account of the law, they necessarily turned aside to some arbitrary or 476 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. f anciful applications of it, which were fitted rather to gratify an idle curiosity or a vain conceit, than to promote its spiritual -ends. What precisely, then, was the character of their perverted ingenuity ? Baur has endeavoured to prove that it took the form of antinomianism ; that the assumed teachers of the law were in reahty opponents of the law ; that they were in fact heretics of the Marcionite school, who repudiated the Divine authority of the law, and were anti-legalists of the most advanced type. But to caU such parties ' teachers of the law ' would be an abuse of terms, besides involving, as a matter of course, the spurious character of the epistle, since the school of Marcion belongs to a period considerably subsequent to the apostolic age. The view, therefore, has met with few supporters even in Germany ; and, indeed, carries improbability on the face of it ; for, not only are the parties in question represented as in some sort teachers of the law, but contem plating them as such, and conceding somewhat to them in that respect, the apostle begins his counter-statement by saying, ' Now we know that the law is good ' — as much as to say, on that common principle we are agreed ; we have no quarrel with them as to the excellence of the law. The parties, therefore, were legalists, yet not after the fashion of the Jewish- Christians of Galatia and Colossae, for the manner of meeting them here is entirely different from that adopted in the epistles to those churches ; they are charged, not with pressing the continued observance of what about it was temporary, or with exalting it as a whole out of its proper place, but with ignorance of its real nature, and making confident assertion of things respecting it which had no just foundation. Now, one can readUy understand how weU such a description would apply to persons of a dreamy and speculative mood — disposed formally to abide by the revealed law of God ; but, instead of taking its pre scriptions in their plain and natural sense, seeking to refine upon them, and use them chiefly as an occasion or handle for certain mystical allegorizings and theosophic culture. And this is precisely the form of evU which (as is now generally beheved — for example, by De Wette, Huther, Ellicott, Alford) prevailed among a class of Jewish believers about Ephesus — a class combining in itself certain heterogeneous elements derived from an incipient Gnosticism on the one side, and a corrupt Judaism on the other. The parties in question would keep by the law, they would even make more of it than the apostle did ; but then it was the law understood after their own fashion, lifted out of its proper sphere, and linked to airy speculations or fanciful conceits. In the works of Philo — probably the soberest, certainly the best surviving 1 TIM. i. 6-11. 477 specimens of this tendency— we find the law to a large extent evacuated of its moral import, and much that should have been applied to the heart and conscience turned into the channel of a crude and ill-digested physics. But iu the case of inferior men, morally as well as intellect ually inferior, men of a perverted and sophistical cast of mind, both the fancifulness of the expositions given of the law, and its application to other than the moral and rehgious purposes for which it was revealed, would naturally be of a more marked description. There would now be wUd extravagance, and, under lofty pretensions to superior wisdom, a mode of interpretation adopted which aimed at establishing a licentious freedom. And so, indeed, the corresponding passage in Titus distinctly informs us,1 where the apostle, evidently referring to the same sort of pretensions and corrupt legalists, says, ' There are many unruly and vain talkers and deceivers, specially they of the circumcision, whose mouths must be stopt, who subvert whole houses, teaching things which they ought not for filthy lucre's sake.' He further characterizes them as persons who give heed to Jewish fables and commandments of men, which turn from the truth, in their actings abominable, and in their veiy mind and conscience defiled. So that their f anciful and per verted use of the law must have led them quite away from its practical aim, into purely speculative or allegorical applications. And in such writings of the apostle John, as were more immediately addressed to the churches in the same Asiatic region, but at a period somewhat later, we find indications of a perfectly similar state of mind, only in a more advanced stage of development. They make mention of the ' blasphemy of those who say they are Jews and are not, but are of the synagogue of Satan,' of persons who taught the doctrine of Balaam, who practised the seductions of Jezebel, who were familiar with the depths of Satan, etc. :2— statements which could only be made of such as had given way to foohsh imaginations, and lost the right moral perception of things. To teach the law, therefore, as those persons did, must have been virtually to defeat its end, because keeping it apart from the practical designs and purposes which it aimed at securing. Vers 8 9 In opposition to this misuse of the law, the apostle pro ceeds to indicate its proper use-which he makes to consist in a plain, direct, and peremptory repression of the corruption and vicious prac tices which are at variance with its precepts. Now we know that the law is good ; so far we are perfectly agreed ; m rtself the aw is unnn- peachle, and can work only good, if one use * lawfully ; m other woTds ap'ply h to the great moral ends for which it was given. Then, i Titus i. 10. sEev.n.9,14,20,24. 478 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. as regards this legitimate use, the apostle indicates just one condition, a single guiding principle, but this perfectly sufficient to check the per nicious errors now more immediately in view : knowing this, that the law is not made for a righteous man. Though the article is not used before vb/j,og, it must plainly be taken (as the great majority of expositors, Chry sostom, Theophylact, and latterly De Witte, Huther, Weisinger, Alford, EUicott) in the specific sense of God's law — the law by way of eminence — the Decalogue. While, grammatically, Middleton's explanation, ' No law is enacted,' might be adopted — understanding law in the general sense, but inclusive of the law of Moses — the connection and obvious bearing of the passage does not properly admit of such a comprehensive reference ; it is the law, emphatically so called, in the view of God's professing people, as is clear alone from the respect had in the enume ration of crimes (vers. 9, 10) to the successive precepts of the Decalogue. By the just or righteous person (Sixaiog), for whom the law is not made (xsTrai), that is, constitutionally enacted or ordained, must be under stood not such merely, as in the estimation of the world, are moraUy correct, but those 'who, in the higher Christian sense, are right before God — very much the same with the class of persons described in ver. 5, as having attained to the end of the commandment, by the possession of love, out of a pure heart, and a good conscience, and faith unfeigned. This certainly includes their justification through faith in the blood of Christ, but it includes sanctification as weU ; it is indeed their complex condition that is indicated, as persons in whose experience the great principles of righteousness had come to the ascendant and bore rule. As such, they already have what the law aims at producing ; they are moving in the way which it prescribes ; and so, for them it may justly be said not to have been enacted. Then, on the other side, the apostle goes on to describe the different sorts of persons for whom it is enacted — those whom it is given to check and restrain, and bring to a better state ; beginning with designations of a more general kind, and after wards employing the more specific. There is no need for dwelling on them : they are, the laivless and unruly, persons of a self-willed, way ward, and rebellious spirit ; the ungodly and sinful, the same characters again, only contemplated from a more distinctly religious point of view, as devoid of respect to the authority and will of God ; the unholy and profane, differing from the immediately preceding epithets, only as pointing to the more positive aspect of the ungodly disposition, its tendency to run into what is openly wicked and irreligious — all, though general in their nature, having respect to men's relation to God, and their contrariety to the things enjoined in the earlier precepts of the 1 TIM i. G-ll. 479 Decalogue. Then follow a series of terms which, in regular succession, denote the characters in question, with reference to the later precepts of the Decalogue : smiters of fathers and smiters of mothers — breakers of the fifth command of the law, yet not perhaps strictly parricides and matricides, as the verb dXodu, or dXotdu, which enters into the com position of TarpoXiliaig and fj,rjrpoX<^a.ig, signifies merely to thresh, smite, and such like, so that the compound terms do not necessarily import more than the dishonouring in an offensive manner, the contemptuous and harsh treatment of parents ; men-slayers, the violators of the sixth com mand ; fornicators, abusers of themselves with mankind (Sodomites, dpsivo- xoiraig), the violaters of the seventh ; men-stealers, kidnappers and slave- dealers, the most obnoxious class of transgressors in respect to the eighth ; finaUy, liars and perjurers, the open and flagrant breakers of the ninth. But the apostle had no intention of making a full enumeration ; he points only to the more manifest and palpable forms of transgression under the several kinds ; and, therefore, he winds up the description by a comprehensive delineation, and if there is any thing else that is contrary to the sound teaching — that, namely, which proceeds from the true servants and ambassadors of Christ, and which is characterized as sound, healthful (byiahoos-f), in opposition to the sickly and unwhole some kind of nutriment ministered by the corrupt teachers of whom he had been speaking. This term, though used only in the two epistles to Timothy, is aptly descriptive of the persons referred to — a class of theosophists, who thought themselves above the ordinary teach ing of the Gospel, and the plain precepts of the law, who, in their aspirations after what they deemed the higher kind of hfe, restrained themselves from things in themselves lawful and good ; while, on the other hand, they were deahng falsely with their consciences as to the fundamental distinctions between right and wrong in their behaviour, and, under the cloak of godliness, were prosecuting their own selfish ends. In ver. 11a word is added to indicate the conformity of the apostle's view of the matter with the Divine commission he had received : according to the Gospel of the glory of the blessed God with which I was put in trust. The connection with what precedes is general rather than particular; and the utterance is not to be limited merely to the sound teaching going before (as if it had been SiSasxaXia rjj, or rfj Ibsn, xard rb iuayy'sXiov), but must be taken as embracing the whole of the preceding statement. His view of the law, and of the classes of character against whom it was more especially directed, its use rather in repressing evU and convicting of sin than carrying the 480 EXPOSITION OF PASSAGES. spiritual and good to the higher degrees of perfection, so far from being a doctrine of his own devising, was in accordance with that Gospel which is emphaticaUy the revelation of God's glory. It was not therefore to be thought of or characterized as a low doctrine, but was in accordance with the essential nature of Godhead, and the high aims of redeeming love. INDICES. PASSAGES OF SCRIPTUEE MORE PARTICULARLY REFERRED TO AND EXPLAINED. Gen. i. 26, 27, „ ii. 19, . Ex. xix. 3-7, xx., xxi. 2, . xxi. 7-11, xxi. 20, 21, xxi. 23-25, xxxiv. 30, xxxiv. 33, Numb. xxxv. 25, Deut. v. 6-21, „ xv. 16-17, ,, xxiv. 1-4, Ps. 1., ,, cxliii. 2, . Isa. i. 12-15, „ ix. 7, Jer. xxxi. 33, Mai. iii. 1-6, . „ iv. 4, . Mat. v. 17, v. 19, 20, v. 21, seq.. vii. 12, xii. 1-14, xv. 3-6, xvii. 24-27, xix. 7, 8, xix. 16, Mark xii. 31, . PAGE PAGE . 36 Luke x. 25, .... "in . 38 ,, xxii. 19, . 261 . 80 John ii. 1-10, . 218 . 82 ii. 13-22, 217 . 115 „ v. 17, . . 238 . 117, 125 ,, xiii. 34, . 241 . 120 Acts vii. 53, . . 394 . 103 ,, XV., . 256 . 372 Rom. i. 19-32, . 74 . 378 ii. 13-15, . 405 . 110 „ iii. 19, 20, 408 . 325 ,, iii- 25, . 273 116 iii. 31, . 412 . 127 „ v. 8-10, . 247 . 174 v. 12-21, . 415 . 387 vi. 14-18, . 421 . 175 ,, vii., . 425 . 204 „ x. 4-9, . 442 . 205 „ xiv. 1-7, . 448 . 206 2 Cor. iii. 2-18, . 366 . 201 „ v. 21, . Gal. ii. 14-21, „ iii- 13, • . 247 . 385 . 247 . 223 ,, iii. 19, 26, . 391 . 224 „ iv. 1-7, . . 400 . 228 ,, v. 13-15, . 403 . 230 . 235 Eph. ii. 11-17, Phil. iii. 6, . . 453 176, 436 240 Col. ii. 11-17, . 462 . 217 1 Tim. i. 8-11, . 474394 . 128 Heb. ii. 2, . . 240 . 240 1 Jo. ii. 4, 5, . „ v. 3, . 288 . 288 2 H 482 INDICES. II. AUTHORS AND SUBJECTS. PAGE Adam, the first and second compared, 54 Alexandrian Jews as interpreters of Moses, 210 Angels, as related to the giving of the law 394 Apostles, their teaching in reference to the moral law, . . .273 Aquinas, on man's original perfection, 39 Argyll, Duke of, on natural law, . 8 Atonement of Christ, false views of, 248 — Its relation to God's justice, . 251 Auberlen, on objections of students and critics to Divine revelation, 394 Augustine, on changes in the Divine statutes, 133 — On Christ as fulfilling the law, 224 — On the multiplication of cere monies in the Christian church, . 315 — On the division of the Decalogue, 331 — On the historical element in the law, 342 Avenger of blood, the statutes re garding, 106 Baptism, how few prescriptions re garding its celebration, . .258 Barnabas, epistle of, its style of interpretation, .... 302 Baur, G., on the Prophetical insti tution, 195 Blunt, on patriarchal ritualism, . 64 Boston, on the law given to Adam, 46 — On law as a covenant, . . 156 Bellarmine, Ms principle respecting lawful ceremonies, . . . 318 Butler, Bishop, on devotion, . . 68 — On conscience, .... 72 — On probable evidence, . . 352 Caklyle, on moral law, . . 23 ' Cautions to the Times, ' in respect to apostolical succession, . .321 Ceremonial law, its nature and design, 134 Ceremonialism, growth of, in early church, ..... 311 — Greatly more burdensome and complicated than in Judaism, . 320 Chrysostom, on ceremonial obser vances, 313 Cicero, on eternal and immutable law, 71 Cities of refuge, wise regulations concerning, . . . .111 Civilization, imperfect when the law was given, .... 96 PAGE Clement of Borne, on the Christian ministry and worship, . . 300 Cocceius, his views on the covenant of law, 154 Cocceian school, their views on the same, 156 Copernicus, how influenced in his investigations by a regard to symmetry 10 Darby, his views on the law, 30, 158 Darwinian theory of development, . 17 Davison, on the law in relation to redemption, . . . .170 Death, its relation to the law, 372, 416 Decalogue, its general character, 82 — Double form of, ... 325 — Division into two tables, . . 330 Devotion, how practised after the fall, 68 Divorce, statutes respecting, . 127 Domer, on Christ's sinlessness, 243 'Ecce Deus,' on Mill's view of Christian morality, . . . 234 — On the believer's relation to the law, 283 ' Ecce Homo, ' contradictory views on Christian law, ... 48 — On the negative and positive in revealed law, .... 233 — On goodness exceeding law and duty, 287 Essenes, their character as reformers, 209 Eucharist, as a designation for the Lord's Supper, . 304 Ewald, on the Jewish priesthood, . 138 — On the law as comprehensive of all excellence, .... 289 — On importance of the Sabbath, 342 Fall of Man, and its consequences, 57 Faith, its fundamental importance, 267 — How related to law, . . - 269 Fear, character of in Old Testament times, 170 Fichte on man's calling, . . 23 Froude, his objection to the obliga tory nature of a historical revela tion, 349 God, knowledge of, preserved by the law, ... .164 Goel, rights and duties of, . . 106 INDICES. 483 Goethe, his view of man's vocation, Goode, on the Patristic view of the sacraments, Gordon, Dr Robert, on the covenant of law, Harless, his view of man's original state, — On the Divine origin of the law, — On the lawfulness of oaths, Hegel on punishment, . Historical element in the revelation of law, ..... — How related to moral obligation, — Essential to progression in reve lation, .... Hodge, Dr A. A., on the Atonement, Holiness, how promoted by the law, Hooker, on the nature of law, — On its universality, . Home, Bishop, on the imprecatory Psalms Idealists, Moral, their views of law Ignatius, on the government and worship ofthe church, Image of God, its component ele ments, Irenaus, on the Eucharist, . Irving, Edward, on the sense of duty, Israel, their low moral condition in Egypt, ..... — Their peculiar place and calling as a redeemed people, . — Their position and calling under the law, — What they owed to the law, — Sad consequences of misunder standing and resisting it, . Jerusalem, council of, in refer ence to Judaic observances, Jesus Christ, His profound insight into the nature of His Divine mission, — His views on the ceremonialism of the old covenant, . — His exposition of the morallaw, — His new commandment, . — His perfect obedience to law, . — How He magnified the law in His death, Johnstone, Bev. J., on the law's design, Jowett, on the idealizing of law, . Judicial statutes in the law, then- design and use, . Justin Martyr, on Christian worship, page 11 30!) 157 43 203 232 102347 346354 251 167 182 252 358 301 37 303 284 80 147104 170 IV, (J 212216 223241212 240 151 2694 302 Law, its sphere and operation in the natural world, — The principles unfolded regard ing it in the Bible, . — The moral, elements of, in man's condition after the fall, — Why its formal revelation so long deterred, — Its professed design, — In its form and substance, — Its relation to the covenant of promise, .... 78. — Its imperative character, . — How related to the principle of love, — Alleged omissions of moral duty in, — The penalties of it, why so severe, — Relation of ceremonial to moral precepts, — As a covenant, for what end, — A preparation for redemption, . — Economical aspects and bear ings of, — Its outwardness, a source of weakness — The spiritual element in it, and how evolved, — How related to the mission and work of Christ, .... — Whether, and how far, binding on the Christian church, . — Abolition of what was cere monial, — Apostolic enforcement of what was moral, — In what sense done away, — In what sense binding, — Distinction between its essential principles and specific rules, — Its abiding uses, — Re-introduction into the Church in the sense in which it was abolished by Christ, . — In what respect man's relation to it is like a marriage, Lecky on the Bible and conscience, Letter and spirit, their proper con trast, Liberty of the Gospel, how related to the law Lightfoot on the law given to Adam, Lord's Supper, comparative freedom in, from ritualistic prescriptions, 11 65 7578 8284 868798 100 134 159 169180 181 187 214 253 254 273 281282285 289 292 427 24 370 -'So 46 260 Macaulay, on apostolical succes sion, Man, his original charge and duty, Manning, on the discipline of the church, . . . - 321 50 319 484 INDICES. PAGE Mansel, views on the authority of conscience, 44 Marriage, fundamental law of, 66, 122 — Statutes in Israel respecting its violation, 131 Marrow of Modern Divinity, on the covenant of law 156 Materialistic philosophy, its posi tion in regard to moral law, . 20 Maurice, on the distinction between moral and ceremonial in the law, 146 — On obedience to the law, . . 289 Michaelis, his low views on the law, 150 Milligan, Dr, on the Decalogue, . 29 Mill, J. S. , on the teaching of the prophets, 199 — On the character of Christian morality, . . . .234 Moore, Dr, on the first man's place in creation, ... .51 Miiller, J., on Christ's interpreta tion of the law, . . . 235 Murder, statutes respecting, . . 104 Mysteries, heathen, their pervert ing influence on Christian worship, 308 Newton, Sir Isaac, his view of God as the Creator and Governor of the world 7 — On the possibility of God's in terference with natural law, . 19 Neonomianism, what, . . 27 Oaths, Christ's teaching in regard to them " 232 Ordinances, law of, relation of the Christian church to such, . . 257 Particular providence, views of Scripture regarding, . . .18 Patriarchal times peculiarly distin guished by promise and kindness, 76 Pedagogue, in what sense the law was such, 398 Pharisees, their fatal mistakes about the law, 207 Philo, his defective views of the law, 210 Plumptre, on Christ's exposition of the law 231 . — His use of a legend in Clement, 239 Plymonthists, their views on the covenant of law, .... 158 Polycarp, on Christian worship and service, 301 Polygamy contrary to the law, . 122 Progression, principle of, in the Divine economy, ... 61 Prophets, their calling, in relation to the law, 195 — Schools of, their design, . 191 Proverbs, book of, its bearing on the law, 1 S8 Psalms, book of, the light thrown by it on Israel's relation to the law, 18!l — Its great service in spiritualiz ing the Old Testament worship, 193 Rabbinism, spirit of, in interpreta tions, 369 Recompense, law of, vindicated, . 103 — How related to Christ's teaching, 104 Revenge, forbidden in the law, . 98 — Whether countenanced in the Psalms and the prophets, . . 356 Robertson, of Brighton, assertions on the law 25 Rogers, Henry, on probable evi dence, 352 Sabbath, its relation to man's state and calling, .... 52 — Christ's interpretation of the law on, 235 Sacraments of the church, mode of institution, with reference to law, 258 — Their relation to Christian life, 264 Sadducees, their failure to under stand the law, or Christ's work, 208 Sermon on the Mount, as compared with the revelation of the law, . 220 Sin, right views of, preserved by the law, .... 167 Slavery, statutes regarding, . . 112 Stahl, on punishment, . . . 102 Stanley, Dean, on the teaching of the prophets, . . 200 Tabernacle, why only one allowed, 136 Taylor, Jeremy, views on the law, 150 Taylor, Isaac, on imprecatory psalms, 357 Tertullian, on the law given to Adam, 45 — On the Christian priesthood, . 305 — His ceremonialism, . . .312 — On the historical element in the law 342 Tholuck, on Christ's exposition of the law, 231 Tree of Knowledge, design of its appointment, .... 55 Warburton, Bishop, his view of the dispensation of law, . .150 Weber, on the Levitical prescriptions, 137 Whately, Archbishop, his views on the abolition of the law, . . 27 Wife, high place of, in the old cove nant, 122 Witsius, on the covenant of law, . 155 Wuttke, on the Sabbath, . . 53 — On Christ's exposition of the law, 235 3 3 9002 00748