|#> ^J" ',*ii, ¦1*^..-; Bought with the income ofthe Ellen Battell Eldridge Fund Deposited in the Linonian and Brothers Library THE PLACE OF CHRIST IN MODERN THEOLOGY THE PLACE OF CHRIST MODERN THEOLOGY A. M. FAIRBAIRN, M.A., D.D. rmiMCIPAL OF MANSFIELD COLLEGE, OXFORD ; GIFFORD LECTURER IN THE UNIVERSITTf or ABERDEEN; LATE HORSE LECTURER IN UNION SEMINARY, NEW YORE ; AND LTMAH BEECHER LECTURER IN YALE UNIVERSITY NEW YOEK CHAELES SCEIBNER'S SONS 1907 THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO MY WIFE, -WHOSE QUIET HELPFULNESS AND FAIR COMPANIONSHIP HAVE MADE IHE TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF OUR -WEDDED LIFB YEARS OF HAPPY LABOUR AND GRACIOUS PEACE. Bathgate, February 2jt/t, 1868. Oxford, Febrjtary 7M, 189^ PREFACE. I TREATISES in Systematic Theology are not so -¦- common as they once were, nor are they so easy either to write or to read. Criticism has become so much a mental habit and has changed so many things that we find it hard to be patient with any process that is not critical, or to agree with any principle or method that professes to be constructive. Construction, indeed, without criticism is sure to be invalid ; but the criticism which does not either end in construction or make it more possible, is quite as surely without any scientific character or function. Hence, though modern criticism, philosophical, literary, and historical, has made systematic treatises of the old order im possible, it has only made a new endeavour at cc2 struction the more necessary. This book does not profess or claim to be a system of theology, but it is an attempt at formulating the fundamental or material conception of such a system ; or, in other words, it is an endeavour through a Christian doctrine of God at a sketch of the first lines of a Christian Theology. This endeavour is due to the feeling that criticism via PREFACE. has placed constructive thought in a more advantageous position than it has ever before occupied in the history ofthe Christian Church. It has done this by making our knowledge more historical and real, and so bringing our thought face to face with fact. But, for the Christian theologian, the most significant and assured result of the critical process is, that he can now stand face to face with the historical Christ, and conceive God as He conceived Him. What God signified to Jesus Christ He ought to signify to all Christian Churches ; and here all can find a point from which to study themselves and their systems. Theology as well as astronomy may be Ptolemaic ; it is so when the interpreter's Church, with its creeds and traditions, is made the fixed point from which he observes and conceives the truth and kingdom of God. But theology may also be Copernican ; and it is so when the standpoint of the interpreter is, as it were, the consciousness of Jesus Christ, and this consciousness where it is clearest and most defined, in the belief as to God's Fatherhood and His own Sonship. Theology in the former case is geocentric, in the latter heliocentric ; and only where the sun is the centre can our planetary beliefs and Churches fall into a system which is but made the more complete by varying degrees of distance and differences of orbit. Of the two Books into which this work falls, the PREFACE. ix first is concerned with historical criticism, the second with theological construction ; but the critical process is an integral part of the constructive endeavour. We must understand the factors and forces that have moved and shaped the theologies of the past before we can, even in rudest outline, draw the ground- plan of a theology for the present. Hence came the necessity for the discussion, even within our narrow limits, of so large and complex a question as the evolution of theology and the Church. The origin and action of elements alien to the consciousness of Christ had to be discovered, and the development of those native to it traced. Then, it was no less necessary that we should follow the course of the speculation and criticism that have compelled the Churches, often against their wills and in spite of their own inherent tendencies, to return to Christ. The two histories — the evolution of theology on the one hand, and the return through criticism to Christ on the other — raise the question of the Second Book : the significance for theological thought of the Christ who has been, as it were, historically recovered. And here the Author regrets that he has been forced to move within limits which have prevented more detailed discussions and elucida tions. The omission of these, especially in the third division of the Second Book, has been to him a real, though possibly a necessary, act of self-denial. It remains for him only to thank certain friends X PREFACE. who have helped him by kindly reading the proofs, and with criticisms and suggestions as well as correc tions ; and among these he would name, in particular, the Rev. Dr. Mackennal, of Bowdon ; Mr. P. E. Matheson, M.A., Fellow of New College ; and Mr. Vernon Bartlet, M.A., Tutor of Mansfield College. In a very special degree he has to thank Mr. J. Gordon Watt, B.A., of Mansfield College, for two careful and excellent pieces of work — the Table of Contents and the Index. This book appears as the Morse Lecture, but it contains matter that was also delivered in the Lyman Beecher Lectures at Yale, besides much matter that has never been delivered at all. The author does not, for both literary and scientific reasons, like to see either the limits or the form of the lecture preserved in the book ; and so he has not attempted here to reproduce the lectures, but simply to discuss his subject in the form and within the limits its importance seemed to demand. He is grateful for the oppor tunity here afforded of expressing his sense of the honour done him both by Union Seminary and Yale University in the appointment to these Lectureships. TABLE OF CONTENTS. INTRODUCTION. THE RETURN TO CHRIST. i. The Ne-w Element in Theology. The growth of the historical spirit .... Its interpretation of Christ and revivifying of theology iL Theology as the Historical Spirit found it. Schools in theology : the Evangelical and the Anglican The theological library as it was. Its wealth of apologetics Biblical exegesis and dogmatics .... But lack of any history of Christ .... iiL The Recovery of the Historical Christ. The theological library as it is The revi-vification of the New Testament . . , The significance of the change for theology . . II1317 18«9 BOOK I. HISTORICAL AND CRITICAL. Div. I.— the LAW OF DEVELOPMENT IN THEOLOGY AND THE CHURCH. CHAPTER I. THE DOCTRINE OF DEVELOPMENT. L On THE History of the Doctrine. Introduction of term and idea into English theology by Newman 25 History of the doctrine in Protestant and Catholic controversy 27 Newman's theory of development ...... 32 iL The Idea of Development. Its character dependent on its field of activity . . . 34 Historical development must be biological .... 3$ Newman's theory merely logical ...... 36 xii TABLE OF CONTENTS. PAGE iii Development in the Church. Its environments : how these affected the interpretation of Christ 38 iv. The Realm of the Law. Christ equally for all Churches the test of development . . 42 The law universal and impartial in its scope . . • « 44 CHAPTER II. DEVELOPMENT OF THE ANCIENT CHURCH. L The Creative Organism. Jesus Christ the creative and normative Person * a • 47 His religion, priestly in character, yet priestless ... 48 ii. The Primitive Environments. Originally Judaic, but soon Gentile 5" Judaism the enemy of Christianity, yet medium for its inter pretation 52 iiL The Immediate Result. The sub-Apostolic age guided by vulgar tradition rather than by Apostolic thought SS CHAPTER IIL NEW FACTORS AND NEW LINES OF DEVELOPMENT. Summary of Positions Determined. ..... S^ i. The New Factors : the External. I. Greek philosophy .........59 3. Roman polity .........60 3. Popular religion ......... 61 Interpreted through these, Christianity became Catholicism . 62 ii. Ancient Philosophy and Theology. Two internal factors : Hebrew religion and Christian history . 63 Hebrew religion, through Philo, changes philosophy into theology 64 iiL Christian History and Theology. Christian history creates the problems of Christian theology . 66 Theology Eastern and soteriology Western • • • . 70 CHAPTER IV. THE GREEK MIND AND THEOLOGY. L Two Minds and Two Churches. Greek philosophy and Roman law in the Greek and Roman Churches 71 Contrast of thought and systems ..••., 73 TABLE OF CONTENTS. xiii iL The Greek and Latin Fathers. The Greek metaphysical and speculative . , . , .75 The Latin political and forensic 76 iii. The Greek Theology. It continues, completes, and reflects Greek philosophy . . 78 Sketch of ante-Nicene development of theology ... 81 iv. The Terminology. Derived from Greek philosophy ...... 85 Elaborated and defined through controversy . . . . 86 V. The Merits and the Defects of the Theology. God a unity, more metaphysical than ethical .... 89 CHAPTER V. THE LATIN THEOLOGY AND CHURCH. L Their Distinctive Factors. Organization and thought ......,, 93 Imperial Church and legal theology ...... 94 iL Tertuluan. His Stoic philosophy ..95 His Roman jurisprudence . 98 His sacerdotalism and forensic soteriology .... 100 iiL The Old Religions and the New. The Church at its origin without an official priesthood . . 101 The sacerdotal tendency in Tertullian and Cyprian . , . 104 Its Hebrew and Gentile causes 105 iv. Thought and Organization in the Western Church. The Church supersedes and inherits Roman Imperialism . 107 Summary and Conclusion « .110 CHAPTER VI. SCHOLASTICISM. i. The New Races and the Old. The seat of the Church in Rome Ill Scholastic philosophy provincial, the work of the new Northern peoples 112 iL The New Races and the Old Problems. The problems Augustine's : his innate dualism . . .US The transitional period significant for polity . . . .117 xiv TABLE OF CONTENTS. PAGB iii. Scholasticism. A theological period : Anselm and Aristotle . . . .118 I. The religious question : the relation of Reason and Faith 119 2. The theological question : the Atonement . . . 122 3, The philosophical question : Nominalism and Realism . 124 CHAPTER VII. THE RENAISSANCE AND THE REFORMATION. L The Time and the Men. The decay of Medisevalism ....... 127 The Italian and Teutonic Humanisms ..... 130 ii. The Renaissance in Christian Literature: Erasmus. Contemporary comparison of primitive Christianity and Catholicism 131 Erasmus : his labours on the New Testament .... 132 His criticism of Catholic doctrines and practices ... 134 iiL The Reformation : Luther. Protestantism and Humanism . 137 Luther, a reformer by necessity : his doctrine of grace . . 138 The new movement : its leaders and its failures ... 141 iv. Calvin and Geneva. Calvin and Luther contrasted 1 44 His doctrine of God ; his unconditionalism in theology and polity 145 Calvinism the conscious and constructive antithesis to Rome . 148 The influence of Geneva 150 CHAPTER VIIL THE MODERN CHURCHES AND THEIR THEOLOGIES. The Return to the Religion of the Sources . . . 152 i. Relation of Church to Theology. Institutional Theologies and theological Churches The material conceptions of the modem Churches ii. Catholicism and Theology. Catholic theology political and polemical . , Tradition and Scripture ..... iii. The Lutheran Theology. Its determinative idea : justification by faith . The Scriptures and the Sacraments . The commiinicatio idiomatmn and scientific Christology IS4 155 156 158 159161 161 TABLE OF CONTENTS. xv _ _ _ PAGE The Reformed Theology. Its determinative idea : the sovereignty of God . . 162 I. The supralapsarian school • . . . t . 163 Its affinity to Stoicism and Pantheism .... 164 2. The sublapsarian school , . i58 The double criticism of Calvinism. A. The Arminian : its conditionalism .... 169 B. The Socinian 172 Consequent modifications in soteriology and theology . . 173 The modem evangelical theology ...... 175 Theology and the English Church. The institutional schools, the High Church and the Broad . 176 The theological schools, the old Puritan and the modern Evangelical 179 Puritan and Anglican ideals compared 180 Anglican theology 182 Its apologetic and antiquarian character ..... 183 Retrospect and Conclusions. The modern return to the historical Christ . • • . 186 Note to p. 182 188 Div. ll.— HISTORICAL CRITICISM AND THE HISTORY OF CHRIST. CHAPTER I. THROUGH LITERATURE AND PHILOSOPHY TO CRITICISM. The Anglican Revival and German Criticism . . .191 L The Beginnings of Historical Criticism: Literature. I. Lessing, its founder : on revelation and religion . . . 192 2. Schiller 19S 3. Goethe 196 ii. Historical Criticism : Romanticism and Theology. Herder's influence on theology and Biblical study ... 199 iiL Philosophy and Historical Criticism. I. Philosophy English and German . ..... 203 2. Kant's ethical Theism ........ 205 3. Jacobi's Intuitionalism 206 4. Fichte's Idealism : his Johannean theology .... 207 XVl TABLE OF CONTENTS. MGS iv. Philosophy and the Incarnation: Schellino. His speculative Christianity ....•• 209 The Incarnation, the Church, Redemption . . « • 3II T. Philosophy and Historical Christianity: Hegel. His philosophy historical, but not critical .... 214 The absolute religion, one with the absolute philosophy . .217 Philosophy transfigures dogmatic 221 vi. Historical Criticism and Theology: Schleiermacher. His versatility and enthusiasm 223 The feeling of dependence in religion 224 The consciousness of Christ and the Christian consciousness . 226 CHAPTER IL PHILOSOPHICAL CRITICISM AND THE HISTORY OF JESUS. The Beginnings of Criticism of the Gospels . . . 230 L Strauss and his Masters. Strauss in Berlin • . • • 232 The influence of Hegel and Schleiermacher .... 233 iL The " Leben Jesu." Strauss a speculative philosopher . , , , . .235 The mythical theory ........ 240 iii. The Counter Criticism. The criticism of panic ........ 242 Relevant criticism ......... 245 Iv. Concessions and Conclusion. His irenical attitude . ........ 247 Jesus the religious genius 248 Withdrawal of concessions .... ..252 CHAPTER III. LITERARY CRITICISM.— THE TUBINGEN SCHOOL. L The Critical Problem and Christology. Historical criticism corrects speculation ..... 254 The new Christologies . . , . , , , .257 U. Ferdinand Christian Baur. His mental history . . . , . , , , .259 His conversion to Hegelianism. ...,,, 261 TABLE OF CONTENTS. Xvii iii. How Baur came to his Problem. His speculative Christology -...,.. 263 To him the historical problem positive . . , , , 265 The Pauline and Petrine antitheses . . . . , , 267 iv. How Baur solved his Problem. The Catholic Church the synthesis of these antitheses . . 269 The theory of tendencies and the Gospels .... 270 The Tubingen School 272 V. Where the Tubingen Criticism failed, and why. The criticism subjective and one-sided ..... 273 Its want of historical veracity . . , , . , .275 CHAPTER IV. THE NEWER HISTORICAL CRITICISM AND THE HISTORICAL CHRIST. i. Through Criticism to History. Histories of Christ, French, English, and German . . . 278 " Vie de Jesus " 278 " Ecce Homo " 279 The New Strauss and other German works . • • . 280 ii. Through History to Theology. I. Contemporary history more fully studied .... 286 3. Constructive historical criticism 288 3. The newer literary criticism 291 4. Biblical theology ......... 292 iii. Results and Inferences. I. The recovery of the historical Christ . . . • • 294 2. The new feeling for Him in literature ..... 294 3, 4. He is the norm for all Churches ..... 293 5, 6. And the starting-point for criticism and theology . . 396 Xvm TABLE OF CONTENTS. BOOK II. THEOLOGICAL AND CONSTRUCTIVE. Div. X.—THE NEW TESTAMENT INTERPRETATION OF CHRIST. CHAPTER I. THE EXPOSITORY BOOKS. PAGE The Interpretation of Christ in the New Testament . 302 L The Pauline Christology. A. Historical relations and characteristics .... 303 B. I. The theology. Jesus, the Messiah 306 His Divine Sonship ..... i . 307 II. The soteriology. I. The system of the earlier Epistles . . . .310 Christ, the Second Adam . , . , .310 The Pauline philosophy of history ; the old order and the new 314 3. The later system 317 The Son, alike Creator and Saviour ; His cosmical relations 318 iL The Christology of Hebrews. A. Its specific character . ...... 320 B. Its theology : Jesus the Son of God 322 The essential relation of the Son to the Father . . 323 The finality of the New Covenant : a series of contrasts . 324 iii. The Minor Christologies. A. The Jacobean •••....,. 328 B. The Petrine .••...... 330 C. The Apocalyptic , 332 CHAPTER II. THE HISTORICAL BOOKS. i. The Synoptic Gospels. ^- M"l^ 334 B. Matthew 235 C Luke ...••..,,,, 2^7 TABLE OF CONTENTS. Xi.KPAGE n. The Fourth Gospel. A. Relations and characteristics of the Gospel ... 338 B. Christology : the Word and the Son 341 The history symbolical ot the ideal 342 iii. The Ideal Person and the Real History. Jesus supernatural, yet human 346 The Temptation : the normal humanity of Christ . . . 348 His supernatural office and work 353 CHAPTER IIL THE CHRISTOLOGY OF CHRIST. i. Significance of His Names. A. The Christ 358 B. The Son of God 359 C. The Son of man : its personal and its official sense . . 361 ii. The Names and the Mission. The double Sonship 364 Correlation of the terms in the Fourth Gospel .... 365 Sonship and Fatherhood 368 iii. His Person and Place. His message to man — the interpretation of Himself. . . 369 The necessary, sufScient, and accessible Mediator . . .371 CHAPTER IV. THE RELATIONS AND THE REASON OF THE CHRISTOLOGIES. L Comparison of the Apostolic Christologies with Chrisi's. Affinities, historical, religious, philosophical, and theological . 373 Ii. CONCLUSORY and Transitionau The Apostolical and naturalistic interpretations of Christ . 377 The verdict of history on the Person and His work . . . 378 The vindication of the Apostolical theology . . • .381 Its influence on the thought and life of men . • • . 382 Div. U.— CHRIST THE INTERPRETATION OF GOD. CHAPTER L THE GODHEAD. L The Doctrine of the Godhead and Revelation. God and the Godhead • . 3^5 Revelation changes idea of God into knowledge of the Godhead 386 XX TABLE OF CONTENTS. iu The Doctrines of God and the Godhead. Their history and function in Christian theology . Consequent conceptions of the sonship of man . iiL Christ and the Godhead. Father and Son in the Godhead . . . • The Christian Trinity and ethnic parallels . . iv. The Godhead as a Doctrine. The Sonship of Christ and the sonship of humanity The essential distinctions in the unity of God , . 388 390391 395 397 398 CHAPTER IL THE GODHEAD AND THE DEITY OF NATURAL THEOLOGY. L God in Theism and Theology. The philosophical and the religious conceptions of God . , 401 ii. The Godhead and the Character of God. Unethicized conceptions of God ...... 403 The Christian conception completely ethicized . . . 405 iii. The Godhead as it affects the Notions of Creator and THE Creation. Theistic difflculties : the relation of God to the world , . 406 How mitigated by the conception of the Godhead . , , 408 The eternal love of God the motive of the creative act . . 410 iv. The Godhead and Providence. Deism and Pantheism ........ 414 Deity transcendent, yet immanent . . . . , . 41S V. The Godhead and the External Relations of God. The instrumental and the personal worlds .... 417 Nature a middle term between God and man .... 419 The personal world alone real to God . . , , ,421 The creative Will, eternal and universal . , , , .421 Resultant ethicized conception of the universe .... 423 CHAPTER IIL THE GODHEAD AND THE DEITY OF CONSTRUCTIVE THEOLOGY. L The Theistic Conception and Theology. A communicatio idiomatum between God and the Godhead , 426 ii. The Juridical Deity. In Catholicism, as political and legal • • , , , 429 In Calvinism, as the sovereign Will .»•,,, 430 TABLE OF CONTENTS. xxi ... ,„ PAGE 111. Whether and in what Sense God is a Sovereign. Dr. Candlish's position examined ...... 432 Paternity and sovereignty indissoluble 434 iv. The Sovereignty of Law and of God. Legal V. paternal sovereignty 436 God in the filial consciousness of Christ 439 V. God as Father and as Sovereign. The unity of love and righteousness . ..... 441 Both necessary to God 443 vL Paternity and Sonship. Fatherhood primary and determinative of sovereignty . . 444 The sonship of nature and the sonship of grace . . . 446 Div. III.— a. god AS INTERPRETED BY CHRIST THB DETERMINATIVE PRINCIPLE IN THEOLOGY. CHAPTER L THE FATHERHOOD AND SIN. L The Formal and the Material Principle of Theology. The formal, the consciousness of Christ ..... 449 The material, the Fatherhood of God 451 iL The Doctrine of Sin. Sin how defined and conceived ...... 452 The peculiar creation of Christianity 454 iii. The Permission and Diffusion of Sin. Sin and obedience as related to sonship 456 Original sin and heredity 458 iv. Sin Common and Transmitted. The sin of nature 459 The unity and solidarity of the race ...... 460 T. Sin and the Regal Paternity. The Father wills the salvation of man ..... 463 The Sovereign wills the expulsion of sin . . . . .465 Neither annihilation nor compulsory salvation .... 466 CHAPTER IL THE FATHERHOOD AND SOTERIOLOGY. L The Incarnation. Jesus Christ, the incarnate Son of God . . • • • 470 The two natures : Sonship involves their afflnity ... 472 The attributes of God and the kenosis . . . . .475 The relation of the natures within the incarnate Person . . 478 xxil TABLE OF CONTENTS. PAGE iL The Atonement. The condemnation of sin the ground of salvation . . . 479 The sacrifice of the Son and the revelation of the Father, . 483 A new consciousness of God and of sin 485 Principles deduced ......... 486 iii. The Holy Spirit. The immanent presence of God in man ..... 487 The Spirit in the teaching of Christ and the Church . . 488 The Holy Spirit, the renewer and revealer . . . .49' CHAPTER III. REVELATION AND INSPIRATION. L Religion and Revelation. Revelation a necessity to religion ...... 493 The place of an historical revelation. ..... 495 ii. Revelation and Inspiration. Their correlation and functions ..... 49^ The Scriptures and the Church ...... 498 iii. The Scriptures and Criticism. Catholic and rationalist polemic ...... 500 The legitimacy of the higher criticism 5°2 The authority of the Scriptures as a revelation. ... 504 iv. The Bible as the Authority in Religion. Function of canonization 5°^ Authority attribute not of book but of revelation ... 508 v. Whether a Constructive Doctrine be Possible. The essentials and the accidents of revelation and religion . 509 The Spirit and the Word 510 3.— GOD AS INTERPRETED BY CHRIST THE DETERMINATIVE PRINCIPLE IN THE CHURCH. CHAPTER L THE DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH IN THE NEW TESTAMENT. i. The Conceptions of God and the Church. The Monotheism of Jesus Christ ...,,, S'S ii. Christ and the Idea of the Church. The kingdom of God , .515 Its ministry not sacerdotal . . . . , , .517 TABLE OF CONTENTS. XXlll PAGE iii. The Apostolic Idea of the Church. The Church or ecclesia . . . , . . . .519 hoca.1 ecclestai : their autonomy ...... 520 The universal «cc/«Jza, the body of Christ. .... 522 The mystical Church, the spouse of Christ .... 525 iv. The Church as the Kingdom and People of God. Ideas of Church and kingdom 528 The Church the filial society . 529 V. The Church and its Organization. Apostolic succession 531 The priesthood 533 CHAPTER II. THE CHURCH IN THEOLOGY. i. The Church and its Polity. Material and formal character . 535 Polity and community 537 Apostolic descent of the Church 54° iL The Church Visible and Invisible. Doctrine and difficulties of Augustine ..... 541 Doctrine of Reformers 543 iii. The Church of God — Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic His people 545 The Church is as God ia 547 Index 549 INTRODUCTION: THE RETURN TO CHRIST. Kal 4 6ed! atnhv inrepitpiixre, Kol ^x^p'"''"'' n^V -ri Svo/ia tJ iirip wSv (Svoyiio" Iva iv rip dvo/ian 'I7)(ro0 jrai" 76i'i/ Kdp. ivSpmrot eariv. — Philo, " De Som.," i., § 37 ; torn, i., 653. HapairoiKiiXei yhp &v ri ruv ivBpiSnear yivoi, d li^ i irivTiav Seairtmit KoL 'ZiaT^p ToB GeoS Tlis vapeyeyovei rp6t rb toS Bcwdrov riXot.— A-rHANASius, " De Incar. Verbi," ix. 4. Hunc ille Platonicus non cognovit esse principium ; nam agnosceret purgatorium. Neque enim caro principium est, aut anima humana, sed Verbum per quod facta sunt omnia. Non ergo caro per se ipsam mundat, sed per Verbum a quo suscepta est, cum Verbum caro factum est, et habitavii in nobis. — ^Augustine, " De Civ. Dei," x. 24. Quatenus autem Christus mundum vivificat: hinc est quod deus deique filius est, non quod caro est. — ZwiNGLi, "Ep. ad Alberum," Opera, vol. iii,, p. 595 (1832 ed.). Der eigentliche Inhalt des Christenthums ist aber ganz allein die Person Christi : . . . Man kann also sagen : In einer Philosophie der OfTenbarung handle es sich allein oder doch nur vorzdglich darum, die Person Christi zu begreifen. Christus ist nicht der Lehrer, wie man zu sagen pflegt, Christus nicht der Stifter; er ist der Inhalt des Christenthums. — Schellinc, " Philos. der Offenbaning," Vorlesg. xxv. f I.— The New Element in Theology, THE most distinctive and determinative element in modern theology is what we may term a new feeling for Christ By this feeling its specific character is at once defined and expressed. But we feel Him more in our theology because we know Him better in history. His historical reality and significance have broken upon us with something of the surprise of a discovery, and He has, as it were, become to us a new and more actual Being. It is certainly not too much to say, He is to-day more studied and better known as He was and as He lived than at any period between now and the first age of the Church. There is indeed this difference between then and now — He is studied now through the intervening history and in its light ; He was studied then only in the light of His personal history and the past that lay behind it. But, apart from this necessary difference, we feel His personal presence in all our thinking more in the manner of the apostolic than of any other age ; and so we are being forced to come to the theology of the schools and the conventions of the Churches through Him rather than to Him through these. This may be said to be the distinction between the old theology and the new : the former was primarily doctrinal and secondarily historical ; but the latter is primarily historical and secondarily doctrinal. The old theology came to history through doctrine, but the new comes to doctrine through his tory ; to the one all historical questions were really dogmatic, 4 the renaissanck but to the other all dogmatic questions are formally his torical. This does not mean the surrender of doctrine, but rather the enlargement of its meaning and scope. For when history is read through doctrine, the realm of realities is reduced to the size and beaten into the shape of a very restricted and rigorously ordered world of ideas ; but where doctrine is read through history, the realm of ideas must be so widened and articulated as to represent the realm of realities. Harmony of history with belief was the note of the one school ; harmony of belief with history is the note of the other ; and of these harmonies the second, as the more natural, is at once the more necessary and the more difficult to attain. This recovery of the historical Christ, and consequent new feeling for Him, is due to many causes, mainly to the growth of the historical spirit. This spirit is not new, though its methods are ; but it is more scientific, sympathetic, veracious, than of old. In its more modern form it may be said to have begun with Romanticism, or the attempt by a poetic interpretation of the past to escape from the prosaic realities of the present Romanticism differed from the classical Renaissance in the field it selected for its imaginative activity and appreciation, but agreed with it in the tendency to idealize and in the endeavour to imitate what it found and admired in its selected field. The ideals of the Renaissance were all classical ; the literatures of Greece and Rome were to it the standards of taste, imitation of their flexible yet stately elegance at once its inspiration and its despair ; it studied classical art, derived from it all its ideas of the beautiful, and laboured to embody them in a sculpture and architecture that were judged to be most excellent when most like their models. The dream ofthe Renaissance was to escape from the Italy of the fifteenth century into the Athens of Pericles or Plato, or into the Rome of Cicero or Augustus, But the ideals of Romanticism lay in the past of the Western ROMANTICISM. 5 European peoples and of their religion. Its field was the Middle Ages ; it glorified their chivalry, legends, poetry, art, faith, and what it glorified it could not help attempting to imitate. Literature became disdainful of the cold and artful elegance of the classic style, and grew warmer, more vehement, quicker to feel and to reflect the more rudimentary emotions of human nature, those primitive and spontaneous passions which culture tends to tame or expel. In Painting there was formed the pre-Raphaelite school, which studiously aimed at breaking away from a classicism that had become conven tional and attaining a more realistic idealism, an art that should in the interests of the ideal be frankly natural, though in its members, according to their native tempers, now the natural and now the ideal predominated. In Architecture the move ment found expression in the Gothic revival ; ruined abbeys were curiously studied, old churches incautiously restored, new churches built in every variety of Gothic, hideous, hybrid, and historical, and, in general, the idea zealously preached and industriously realized that Gothic was the only fit style for the religious edifice. In Worship the imitative mediaevalism which is known as ritualism came to be, and vestments, acts, articles, and modes proper to the worship of the period represented by the buildings were so used as to make the revival complete. The course and the phenomena of the classical and the mediaeval revivals are thus exactly parallel ; each is alike imitative, in each imitation runs into extravagance, and ex travagance ends in the exhaustion whose only issue is death. But neither passed away resultless. Out of the Renaissance came, after the season of imitative subserviency to Greece and Rome had ceased, the mastery of classical literature and the knowledge of classical art that have made them the great instruments of culture, though their power lies in their being instruments commanded by the mind, not commanding it. Out of Romanticism there has come, for all save those who 6 THE SUPREMACY OF CHRIST. are still in the stage of servile reproduction, love of the past, the knowledge of it that can come only through love, and the sense of the connection and the continuity of man in all the periods and in all the places of his being. Both had, therefore, a kindred though not an identical function ; each, by creating knowledge of a specific past, helped to supply history with the ideas and the spirit that made it a science. They taught us to see events in their relations, to search into their causes, to study persons through their times and the times in the persons, to discover the conditions that regu lated the growth and decay of institutions, to find in what seemed a chaos of conflicting wills a principle of order and a law of progress. And just as we have learned to read the past truly we have come to understand man really ; what makes the race re-live its life to the imagination makes the reason know not only the race but the units who compose it To penetrate the secret of man is to discover the truth of God ; in a sense higher than Feuerbach dreamed of anthro pology is theology. Now, the historical spirit could not do its now destructive and now constructive work and ignore the Supreme Person of history. He has left the mark of His hand on every generation of civilized men that has lived since He lived, and it would not be science to find Him everywhere and never to ask what He was and what He did. Persons are the most potent factors of progress and change in history, and the greatest Person known to it is the One who has been the most powerful factor of ordered progress. Who this is does not lie open to dispute. Jesus Christ is a name that repre sents the most wonderful story and the profoundest problem on the field of history — the one because the other. There is no romance so marvellous as the most prosaic version of His history. The Son of a despised and hated people, meanly born, humbly bred, without letters, without oppor tunity, unbefriended, never save for one brief and fatal THE ROMANCE OF HISTORY. 7 moment the idol of the crowd, opposed by the rich, resisted by the religious and the learned, persecuted unto death by the priests, destined to a life as short as it was obscure, issuing from His obscurity only to meet a death of unpitied infamy, He yet, by means of His very sufferings and His cross, enters upon a throne such as no monarch ever filled and a dominion such as no Caesar ever exercised. He leads captive the civilized peoples ; they accept His words as law, though they confess it a law higher than human nature likes to obey ; they build Him churches, they worship Him, they praise Him in songs, interpret Him in philosophies and theologies ; they deeply love, they madly hate, for His sake. It was a new thing in the history of the world ; for though this humble life was written and stood vivid before the eye and imagination of men, nay, because it veritably did so stand, they honoured, loved, served Him as no ancient deity had been honoured, loved, or served. We may say, indeed. He was the first being who had realized for man the idea of the Divine ; He proved His Godhead by making God become a credible, conceived, believed, real Being to man. And all this was due to no temporary passion, to no transient madness, such as now and then overtakes peoples as well as persons. It has been the most permanent thing in the history of mind ; no other belief has had so continuous and invariable a history. The gods of Greece lived an even more changeful life than the Greek men ; the Zeus of Homer and of Plato, though one in name, is in character not only two, but two radical opposites. The history of religion in India is but a record of the variations and the multiplication of deities. The mythologies of Mesopotamia and Egypt were never fixed ; they bewilder by the number and extent of the changes in the crowd of figures they present for analysis. But the belief in Christ has for now almost two thousand years lived under a criticism the most searching and scientific that ever assailed any idea of mind or fact of history, and yet this criticism 8 CRITICISM AND FAITH. has only made the belief more active, more vigorous, more sure of its intrinsic truth and reasonableness. What makes the result more wonderful is, that the criticism was at its thoroughest when the faith seemed at its weakest In the first centuries of its existence, when it had to suffer from the reproach of its recent and mean origin, the infamy of its Founder's death, the poverty and ignorance of its adherents, and its varied offences against Greek culture and Roman policy, — it had to bear the malignant yet searching criticism of Celsus, the witty satire of Lucian, the vindictive and insolent invective of the rhetors and their schools. Yet the men of the new religion were, even within the arena of letters, victorious over the men of the old learning. And both in the last century and in this, when it seemed weak through continued supremacy, the exercise of a too secular lordship, and the reproach of lives which it nominally guided but did not really command, it received but renewal at the hands of the subtle scepticism of Hume and the destructive criticism of Strauss. The wonderful thing in the story is, that what in the abstract would have seemed impossible romance is in reality the most sober fact ; while out of the story, when viewed in relation to the course of human development, rises for philosophy the problem. Can He, so mean in life, so illustrious in history, stand where He does by chance ? Can He, who of all persons is the most necessary to the orderly and pro gressive course of history, be but the fortuitous result of a chapter of accidents? Now, how has this new feeling for Christ affected construc tive Christian theology? We have just seen that historical inquiry raises questions that belong to the philosophy of history, which is but the most concrete form of the philosophy alike of nature and man. We cannot conceive and describe the supreme historical Person without coming face to face with the profoundest of all the problems in theology ; but then we may come to them from an entirely changed point of view, SCHOOLS IN THEOLOGY. 9 through the Person that has to be interpreted rather than through the interpretations of His person. When this change IS ettected, theology ceases to be scholastic, and becomes historical ; and this precisely represents the change which it has undergone or is undergoing. The speculative counter part of the new feeling for Christ is the rejuvenescence of theology. But that we may understand what this new factor in theology means, we must briefly review the state of theo logical knowledge and inquiry in the period which saw the birth of our modern historical criticism. § II. — Theology as the Historical Spirit found it. When the new historical spirit began to concern itself with theology, the field of dogmatic thought was with us occupied by two opposed schools — the Evangelical and the Anglican — then just entering upon the specific phase known as the Tractarian. The Evangelical represented the beliefs that had during the previous century been the most active and vigorous, the most charged with creative enthusiasm and recreative energies ; the Anglican represented beliefs that had been long decadent, and were now blindly and stormily struggling towards a second birth. The Evangelical, though touched with a Puritan tendency, had almost lost the Puritan spirit, having become individualistic in a sense and to a degree the Puritans would have abhorred ; the Anglican, though with some Catholic impulses and many claims to an historical temper, was still strongly provincial and arbitrary, not to say violent. The Evangelicals had ac complished the religious revival of the eighteenth century, had contended against its sordid earthlincss, its low morals, its sodden and conventional unbelief, and had created the great philanthropies that improved the prisons, reformed manners, befriended the lower races, and emancipated the 10 the evangelical and the ANGLICAN. slaves ; but the Anglicans had the spirit and the passion that were to achieve the distinctive revival of the nineteenth century. The speech of the Evangelical was of doctrine, i.e., revealed truth correctly taught, conceived, and received ; the speech of the Anglican was of dogma, i.e., truth as defined, formulated, and enforced by the decree of a body politic, or the heads of such a body. The Evangelical position, as in essence doctrinal, conceived the relations of God and man as determined by certain beliefs which, articulated in fixed formulae, were alternatively represented as " the truth " or " the Gospel " or " the plan of salvation " ; but the Anglican position, as in its essence political, con ceived and represented the relations of God and man as regulated by certain fixed and persistent institutions, as de pendent for their happy realization on a specific polity and certain offices, rites, and instruments variously designated as " Apostolical Succession," " the Priesthood," " the Sacra ments," and " the Church." The Evangelical position, as mainly doctrinal, was intellectual and individualistic ; the Anglican, as mainly political, was historical and collective : but the collectivism of the one was less universal than the individualism of the other. The Evangelical tended, by his distrust of mere institutions, to a reluctant Catholicity ; the Anglican, by so emphasizing special offices, persons, and acts, tended to as reluctant a particularism. They both agreed in their evidential method or process of proof — it was an appeal to actual authorities ; but they differed in the authorities appealed to — the Evangelicals were Biblical, the Anglicans less Biblical than Patristic. In handling their authorities they were alike uncritical and unhistorical ; the authority of the Evangelicals was a Bible which the higher criticism had not been allowed to touch, while the Anglicans, with more need for science, and a larger yet easier field for its exercise, were in their use of the Fathers still more strenuously unscientific But while they differed as to their authorities. the Theological library as it was. ii they agreed not only in method but in the principle which underlay it — viz., what the authority appealed to could be made to prove must be accepted as the very truth of God. But the character of the theology will become more apparent if we survey the then current theological literature. What were the great books, and what their special questions and method ? Suppose we had entered while the century was yet in the thirties a well-stocked clerical library— what should we have found ? Apologetics would be represented by Butler and Paley, and the most popular of the Bridgewater Treatises, especially Chalmers and Whewell. For Theism the argument from design was in the ascendant ; adaptation was as charmed a word then as evolution is now ; everything was judged by its fitness for its end — the more perfect the contrivance the more irrefragable the evidence. Design was discovered in the organs of sense, in the hand of man, in the relation between the functions of digestion and the chemistry of food, in all the adaptations of man to nature and nature to man. Christianity was proved to be divine, partly, by its being an instrument or institution so excellently adapted to the improvement of man, especially in the conditions in which he here finds himself ; and, partly, by the testimony of its first preachers, who must be believed as honest men, because rogues would not and fools could not have endured the sufferings and made the sacrifices they did for the sake of the Gospel. It was characteristic that Butler's " Analogy " was more esteemed than his " Sermons on Human Nature "; an argument that proved natural religion which yet never was a religion of nature, to be more heavily burdened by intellectual and moral difficulties when taken by itself than when completed and crowned by revealed, was much better adapted to the age than one built on the supre macy of conscience. The latter was so little considered that its fundamental inconsistency with the doctrine of probability on which the " Analogy " is based, was never perceived. But while these were the typical apologetical works others would 12 apologetics. not be absent. Hume, of course, as a highly respectable and deeply subtle opponent, would be there, but flanked by Reid's reply to his philosophy, possibly supported and supplemented by James Beattie's " Essay on Truth," and by Campbell's answer to his argument against miracles. If the deistical controversy was exceptionally well represented, then Leland would give the general survey of the field and the men who had worked in it ; Samuel Clarke would by " the high priori road " demonstrate the being and attributes of God ; Berkeley by his new theory of knowledge would show how the vanity of the new materialism could be exposed and spirit made the only real thing in the universe ; Sherlock would examine his witnesses to prove the Resurrection no fraud ; Conyers Middleton would prove how miracles restricted to the apos tolic age simplified the controversy, and strengthened the apologist by relieving him from the cruel necessity of either defending ecclesiastical miracles or sacrificing to their mani fold incredibilities the credibility of the Biblical ; Warburton would maintain his audacious paradox, and argue that the legation of Moses was revealed and divine, because, while every other legislation created, ordered, and enforced obedi ence by the penalties of a life to come, he alone never invoked the sanctions of a future state ; Jeremiah Jones would tell how the canon was formed and ought to be defended ; while Nathanael Lardner's large and massive scholarship would bring the cumulative evidence of antiquity to prove the credibility of the Gospel history. By the help of these the theologian could do his apologetical work, and marshal his evidences and his arguments against Voltaire or Bolingbroke, Collins or Tindal, Hume or Gibbon, Rousseau or Tom Paine, who, though dead, yet lived in the only infidelity then known. But apologetics could not stand alone ; the Scriptures must be explained as well as defended. So Home's " Introduction " would be on hand, possibly also Michaelis' as Englished, biblical exegesis. 13 augmented, and amended by Marsh ; and if his " Introduction " was known, so also would be his " Commentaries on the Laws of Moses," which had been translated by a Scotch minister, Alexander Smith, of Chapel of Garioch. Commentaries would be numerous ; the rich collections and erudite disser tations of the Critici Sacri and the industrious compilations of the Poll Synopsis Criticorum. would be at command ; while Grotius and Vitringa, Coccejus, Geierus, Calovius, and Clericus, represented the older scholasticism, Ernesti and Gesenius, Rosenmiiller and Eichhorn, would shed the newer and drier light of the rationalism that was just ceasing to be. If the minister was very venturesome, he might have acquainted himself with the daring critical speculations of Bretschneider's " Probabilia," or the ingenious theories of Schleiermacher, whose essay on Luke a bold young man of the name of Thirl- wall had translated and published in 1825, though even he had not dared to avow the work. If the library was a scholar's, he would, of course, have Brian Walton and Mill, and would turn hopefully to a new critical text of the New Testament which a young German, Lachmann by name, had just published ; and he would seek help from the great patristic commenta tors, Origen, Theodore of Mopsuestia, Theodoret, Theophy- lact, Chrysostom, Augustine, and Jerome. Or if it was a working cleric's, he would, according to his taste, have Whitby and Hammond, or Patrick and Lowth, Matthew Henry, 01 Thomas Scott, or Adam Clarke. There would, of course, be the classical books on certain special subjects, periods, or persons. Prideaux " On the Connection of the Old and New Testaments," Lowth on Hebrew Poetry and on Isaiah, Home on the Psalms, Luther on Galatians, Brown of Wham- phray on Romans, Owen on Hebrews, Leighton on Peter. For his archasology and philology he would have Lightfoot and the Buxtorfs, as well as such fresh and unexpected light as had just been supplied by the lexicons and grammars of Gesenius and Winer, and by the researches of Robinson, while 14 theology systematic Josephus would be a standing authority, and the sacred text itself the most certain and fruitful of all his sources. But what would give its distinctive character to the library would be its dogmatic theology. If it were an Anglican's, his books would have much to say about the Calvinistic and Arminian controversies, the divine origin or the excellent expediency of Episcopacy, the mind of the Fathers and the meaning of the Creeds. There would be a curious absence of what the Lutheran and Reformed Churches understood by "systematic theology" — great systems, in their sense, being quite unknown in the English Church. The book that approaches most nearly to this idea could not but be there ; it bears the characteristic name, " The Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity " — i.e., religion is considered as institutional, a theory of social order, a state whose laws may be explicated as they must be enforced. Beside it, almost as much honoured, though standing on a far lower plane, would be Pearson " On the Creed," and with him would be Bull, maintaining against Jesuit and Socinian alike the Nicene orthodoxy of the ante-Nicene Fathers, and Waterland, with all the apparatus of a most elaborate and well-equipped scholasticism, vindi cating the same faith against the Arians of his own Church. Burnet " On the Articles " would find a less favoured place ; while Whitby " On the Five Points " and Tomline's " Refu tation of Calvinism " would be memorials of what was even then a burnt-out controversy. Of course, as one who held the faith of Ken, he would hold in peculiar reverence the Fathers who lived before the division of East and West, and would study the ancient Church, its constitution and customs, by the help of Bingham. If, however, the library belonged to an Evangelical or Presbyterian or Independent the books would differ in character and range ; those already named would almost certainly be present, but amid companions that modified their speech. The burning controversy was now the Calvinistic and Socinian, which was very unlike the Arian and polemical. 15 controversy of the days of Waterland and Clarke. Then the emphasis fell on the person of the Redeemer, but now it fell on His work, or on the person just so far as it was con cerned in the work. The Evangelical revival was largely responsible for the change ; its watchword had been " Salva tion," and it had, on the one side, magnified conversion as its subjective condition, and on the other the Atonement as its objective ground. Hence came the inevitable question — In what relation did Jesus Christ, and especially His supreme act, His sacrifice or death, stand to the forgiveness of sins ? What was the precise thing it was meant to accomplish ? And what must it be to accomplish this thing ? The Socinian said. He is an example. He saves by the moral influence of His life and death ; the Evangelical said, He is a sacrifice. He saves by making expiation on our behalf and propitiating Divine justice — i.e., by becoming our substitute He bears our punish ment, and so enables God justly to forgive our sins. The books written during the controversy form a library in them selves. They were, in form at least, largely Biblical. While the theories of inspiration differed, yet on both sides the authority of the Scriptures was assumed, the Socinians, indeed, venturing in their own interests on an " Improved Version of the New Testament," which was often remarkable for its deft defiance of grammar. In the doctrinal question their champions were Priestley and Belsham, Toulmin and Kentish, Lant Carpenter and Yates, who skilfully made the worst of their opponents' case and the best of their own, especially by contrasting the grace and love of the Gospel with the severities of Calvinism, and by transferring the rather vindictive jurisprudence of its representatives from the abstract forms they loved to the concrete which they wished to avoid — t.e., from impersonal law to personal God. On the Calvinistic side the critics and apologists were a multitude. Horsley's charges and letters against Priestlfey would be sure of a place, not simply because of their racy and merciless polemic, 1 6 THE SACRIFICE OF CHRIST, but as forming the link that connected the new Socinian with the old Arian controversy. In one of the most striking pieces of autobiography in the language, Thomas Scott, of Aston Sandford, makes his own experience testify to the verity of his beliefs, and certainly his " Force of Truth " would be among the books of every Evangelical. There, too, would be his friend, sturdy and stalwart Andrew Fuller, with his comparison of the Calvinistic and Socinian systems, and his vigorous assault on the new Unitarians. Archbishop Magee would be in evidence with his two discourses, which were brief, and his notes, which were voluminous, in proof of the scriptural doctrines of the Atonement and Sacrifice. Edward Williams, too, would unfold his doctrine of Sove reignty, which showed that God, as rector or ruler of the moral universe, was bound to uphold law, and could uphold it only by enforcing its sanctions, though He would, when His mercy required it and the common good allowed it, so modify the form of infliction as to accept the sufferings of an innocent Person in lieu of the penalty due to the guilty. His distinguished pupil, John Pye Smith, was certain of a place for his works on the " Priesthood of Christ," which showed how well he had learned the principles and method of Williams, and on the " Scripture Testimony to the Mes siah," which showed that he had studied to higher purpose under mappers then much feared because foreign. Beside him would stand the lectures and treatises of George Payne, Ralph Wardlaw, Joseph Gilbert, and Thomas Jenkyn, who all on similar principles, though with various modifications of method and terms, described, explained, and defended the theistic grounds, but legal nature, necessity, functions, and ends, of the Atonement The relations of God and man were expressed and explicated through the categories of a special jurisprudence ; theology was, as it were, done into the language of the bar and the bench. Yet the system was not irrational ; indeed, its rationalism was its most BUT NO HISTORY OF HIM. 1 7 remarkable feature. It was built up with elaborate care, and exhibited such rare architectonic skill that one could not but confess, were the universe a constitutional state which had broken out in rebellion, and God its monarch, thus and not otherwise, if He were to be at once merciful and just, would He be obliged to act Of course, the principle or essence of the thought might be correct ; it was the forms or categories of interpretation that were inadequate. But what was not found in the library would be to us more remarkable than what was, especially its poverty in books dealing with Jesus as an historical person. Books of a kind would indeed be here abundant Harmonies of the Gospels bearing great names, like those of Gerson and Jansen, or Chemnitz and Lightfoot, or Bengel and Greswell, and exhibiting extraordinary feats of conciliatory exegesis ; defences of miracles, and especially the Resurrection, against deists and deniers of every sort; poetic presentations of sacred history, and especially its most dramatic events ; edifying and devotional works, calling us with k Kempis or Jeremy Taylor to the imitation of our " Great Exemplar," or with Bishop Hall to the " contemplation " of Him. But hardly a book attempting to conceive and represent Him just as He appeared in history would have been found. Of course, Fleetwood was everywhere, especially in the homes of the people, but seldom read, scarcely worth reading, certainly not worth a place amid the books of a serious theologian. If Milner's " Church History " was taken down, it began with the Apostles ; if Mosheim, he gave only an insignificant chapter to Jesus ; if the newer Waddington, he started with A.D. 60. It was indeed a strange and significant thing : so much speculation about Christ, so little earnest inquiry into His actual mind ; so much knowledge of what the creeds or confessions, the liturgies or psalmodies, of the Church said ; so little knowledge of the historical person or construction of the original documents as sources 2 1 8 THE THEOLOGICAL LIBRARY AS IT IS. of real and actual history. It is still more significant that the men who were then most seriously intent on the revival of religion through the revival of the Church, were the very men who seemed least to feel or conceive the need of the return to Christ They were possessed of the passion to find and restore the Church of the Fathers, and to the Fathers they appealed for direction and help ; but in no one of their multitudinous tracts or treatises is there any suggestion or sign that Christ, as the Founder, supplied the determinative idea of His own Church. The men were true sons of their generation, and for it the historical sense, especially in this province, was not yet born. § III. — The Recovery of the Historical Christ. But what a contrast does the workshop of a living theo logian present to the library of the older divine ! Dogmatics and apologetics have almost disappeared from it, and in their place stand books on almost every possible question in the textual, Hterary, and historical criticism of the Old and New Testaments. Harmonies have almost ceased to be, and instead we have discussions as to the sources, sequence, dependence, independence, purpose, dates, of the four Gospels. Lives of Christ by men of all schools, tendencies, churches, abound, each using some more or less rigorous critical method. Beside these, and supplementary to them, are histories of New Testament times, which show us the smaller eddies as well as the greater movements, and supply both the background and the light and shade needed to throw the central Figure into true perspective. Then we have monographs on Jewish and heathen teachers, on Hellen istic and Talmudic beliefs, on Judaic sects and Gentile schools and usages, on early heresies and primitive societies, with the result that the age of Christ and His apostles is ex periencing such a resurrection as Ezekiel saw in his valley revivification of the new testament. 19 of vision. Paul is studied not simply as the pre-eminent dialectician of the apostolic period, but through his psychology, his personal experience, his antecedents, discipline, relations — in a word, as a man who lived among living men ; and in consequence his work and his epistles have grown full of meanings once altogether overlooked. The Gospels are no longer studied simply in relation to each other, but also in relation to the other literature of the New Testament and the thought of sub-apostolic times, and so have helped to make us conscious of the forces that organized and built up the Christian society. The Apocalypse has ceased to be read and interpreted as a mysterious prophecy which conceals even more than reveals all the destinies of all the empires that rule the Christian, centuries, and has become one of our most significant documents for the interpretation of the mind of the parties within the primitive Church. The analytical process is not yet complete, and the synthetic has hardly well begun ; yet enough has been achieved to warrant us in saying that the second half of our century may be described as the period when the history of the New Testament has, through its literature, been recovered, and in this history by far the greatest result is the recovery of the historical Christ. We are speaking meanwhile only of a result which we owe to historical criticism ; we are not as yet concerned with its religious or theological import. The claim does not for the moment transcend the sphere of historical inquiry and know ledge. It is neither said nor meant that our age is distinguished by a deeper reverence or purer love for the Redeemer, or even a stronger faith in Him. In these respects we might claim pre-eminence for other ages than our own. In the hymns of the early and mediaeval Church, of the Lutheran and Moravian Churches, of the Evangelical and Anglican revivals, there is a fine unity of spirit due to all possessing the same simple yet transcendent devotion to the person of the Christ This 20 CHRIST IN SONG devotion it is impossible to excel ; we confess our sense of its truth, its intensity, elevation, humble yet audacious sin cerity, by the use of the hymns that were its vehicle. So true is the faith of those hymns that they compel all Churches, even the most proudly exclusive, to forget their differences and divisions, and in the high act and article of worship to realize their unity. The high Anglican praises his Saviour in the strains of Luther and Isaac Watts, Gerhardt and Doddridge ; the severe Puritan and Independent rejoices in the sweet and gracious songs of Keble and Faber, Newman and Lyte ; the keen and rigid Presbyterian feels his soul uplifted as well by the hymns of Bernard and Xavier, Wordsworth and Mason Neale, as by the Psalms of David. And this unity in praise and worship which so transcends and cancels the distinctions of community and sect, but expresses the unity of the faith and fellowship of the heart in the Son of God. In the regions of the higher devotion and the purer love all differences cease. And as in worship so in theology ; the greatest of the older divines were those who most laboured to do honour to Christ The very goal of all their thinking, the very purpose of all their systems, was to exalt His name, to assist and vindicate His supremacy in thought and over His Church. Here East and West are agreed ; Augustine vies with Athanasius, John of Damascus with Anselm, Luther with Loyola, Calvin with Bellarmine, Howe with Hooker, Rutherford with Milton. In the homage of the intellect to Christ no Church or age can claim to be pre-eminent ; here there has been unity, an almost passionate agreement, intensest and most real when the Church or age was most in earnest The statement, then, that our age excels all others in the fulness, objectivity, and accuracy of its knowledge of the historical Christ must not be construed to mean the superiority of our age in its sense of dependence on the Redeemer and reverence for Him. It knows Him as no other age has done as He lived and as He lives in history, a Being who looked before and after, within the limits and AND IN THOUGHT. 21 under the conditions of time and space, influenced by what preceded Him, determining what followed. What the theological consequences of this larger and more ac curate knowledge may be is more than any one can tell as yet To deduce or indicate some of these is the purpose of this book. Our discussion will fall into two main parts : one historical and critical, and one positive and constructive. The historical and critical will deal with two questions : first, the causes that have so often made theology, in the very process of interpret ing Christ, move away from Him ; and, secondly, the causes that have contributed to the modern return to Him. The positive and constructive will also be concerned with two questions : first, the interpretation of Christ given in the Christian sources ; and, secondly, the theological significance of Christ as thus interpreted. BOOK I. HISTORICAL AND CRITICAL. DIV. I.— THE LA W OF DEVELOPMENT IN THEOLOGY AND THE CHURCH. DIV. II.— HISTORICAL CRITICISM AND THE HISTORY OF CHRIST. "Ey ipxS ^v i Aiyos, koJ 4 A070S Ijo vpit rhr 9eiv, koI 9cii ^ 4 Ai70«. oSros ^v iv dpxv ""pfts Tbv Qiiv. irdvTa St' airoS iyivero, Koi, xwpJj airoO iyivero oidi Iv t yiyovev. iv aiT "Development of Christian Doctrine," p. 5. THE TEST OF DEVELOPMENT. 43 as it is, IS but a fraction of Christendom ; on the one side of it lies the Greek, on the other side the Anglican, and beyond these the Churches, in all their branches and varieties, that have been in a peculiar degree the creators of the modern world— the Lutheran and the Reformed. No Church can claim to be " historical Christianity " ; for it is equal to all the Churches, yet it is much more than they all. Each may have played its own part in history, but its part has been small compared with its Founder's. His religion is co extensive with His influence ; under its vast canopy the stateliest Church and the meanest conventicle alike stand, and in His presence all degrees cease, grandeur is abased, and lowliness is exalted. But if Churches are to be understood, it must be not through the claims they make for themselves, but through their relations to Him ; each is an example at once of His power and action on the world, and of the world's power and action on Him through His people. Development cannot concern itself with less than this. If it did so, then it could be no theory or law exhibiting the growth of the faith and life of Christ in man. Both of these have existed outside as well as inside the Churches, often in nobler forms without than within ; and everywhere they have been His and from Him. Certainly, if all good and holy living be due to Him, it comes dangerously near impiety to limit His " covenanted mercies " to systems which the hands of man have built and the vanity of man has called the Church of Christ. The phenomena we have called qualitative or intensive are those attributes or elements which Churches have claimed as their distinctive characteristics. These may be matters of polity, or doctrine, or offices and worship, or discipline and conduct, or all these combined. A scientific theory of development must seek to explain all the Churches and theologies of Christendom, with all they claim to be, making all equally and in all things subjects of investigation and of 44 THE LAW AS APPLIED IN HISTORY equal investigation. We must carefully guard against as sumptions which either exempt from its action the phenomena which it is most needed to explain, or which affirm it in the region where it is a convenient apologetic while excluding it from the region where it becomes a reasonable but unwelcome explanation. Thus (Newman's development postulates the being and claims of the Roman Church, its infallibility and truth ; but while he skilfully used it in justification of his Church, he as skilfully avoided its use in the explanation of its genesis. Concede the Roman claim, and his theory was an ingenious " hypothesis to account for a difficulty " ; regard it as a claim which must be read through its natural history as a problem in evolution, and the " hypothesis " cannot be got upon its feet ; it is absolutely without reason or function.j Again, it is equally impossible to limit development to a pro cess of formal without substantial change, which the Church is said to conduct with a view to adjusting herself to the changed conditions of the time.* For it is evident that the Church and its Creed are assumed to be exempted from its operation — i.e., the developmental process is not one which can be applied to this Church and Creed, but one which they direct. Their being and truth must be granted before it can be called into action, and even then it can act only under their superintendence. But development must try whether it can explain the Church and the Creed before they can be allowed to use development ; and this is the more neces sary, as "Christian Church" here means not the Church of Christ, but a specific ecclesiastical body, and "Creed" the faith of certain among its members. The theory, then, must be either rigorously applied, or not at all ; exceptions in favour of particular Churches are impossible. History must be impartial ; it knows no schism and recog nizes no dissent; for it the claims of Churches are subjects for investigation, not sanctities beyond it Infallibility may » Moehler, " S^-mbolik," § 40. Cf. " Lux Mundi," pp. viii., ix IS UNIVERSAL IN ITS SCOPE. 45 command or satisfy faith, but it only whets the cuiiosity of science by presenting it with a large and complex problem. The historian sees that the Christian religion is a vaster thing than any Christian Church, or than all the Churches ; he sees too that these Churches differ from age to age both in character and action. He perceives that Catholicism in the early Middle Ages helped to organize modern civilization, but has been in later times possibly the most disintegrating of all our social forces. The countries which most suffer from revolution are the countries where its rule is or has been most absolute ; the countries where it has least authority most represent order and progress. The historian then cannot accept a Church at its own estimate ; he must study it in relation tc its place and time, ask how and why it came to be, how it behaves, and with what results. For him its offices, orders, creeds, councils, its whole systems of polity and belief, are matters for inquiry and explanation ; and only when nature has been completely exhausted is there even a possible apology for an appeal to the supernatural. Start with the supernatural as a first principle, invest the forms of the society or its political framework with Divine right or infallible authority, and it is so lifted out of historical conditions that it ceases to be an object to which development can be applied.' ' Mr. Gore begins his work on " The Church and the Ministry " by making two assumptions, one being " the truth of the Incarnation " (p. 6). But one may, because of his very reverence for " the truth of the Incarna tion," object to it being assumed as an apology for a polity well known outside Christianity, and within it easily capable of explanation without any such assumption. The author who proceeds in this way only assumes the appearance of the historical inquirer in order the more effectually to do the work of the dogmatic divine. He acts as would the man of science who, in order the more conclusively to prove some theory of his own, should begin by solemnly assuming the omnipotence of the Creator, so using his laith on the one hand to become independent of nature, and on the other to suggest that the opposite theory means a nature without God. But here as elsewhere the law of parsimony rules superfluous causes out of court. Apart from this there is no disproof of Mr. Gore's theory of the Church ao strong as the Incarnation and the terms in which it is stated. 46 IT MOVES IN THE REALM OF SCIENCE. To speak of it in the terms of evolution is to use language that has no meaning ; to employ scientific methods in the investi gation of its origin, behaviour, arid growth is to force science into a region where it has no place and no problem. To ascribe development to it is only to say that it uses its Divine attributes to act on fit occasions as becomes the Divine. But in all this, as there is no nature or law, so there is no room for the inquirer whose function is to explain nature by the discovery of her laws. CHAPTER II. DEVELOPMENT OF THE ANCIENT CHURCH. THE exposition of the idea or doctrine of development has implied throughout that for it there is only one method of verification — viz., the comparison and correlation of the various factors and forms of change. The primitive organism must be studied till it is known, and so must the primitive en vironment ; the result must then be examined and compared with the forces active in organism and environment respectively. Only by a method like this can we discover what each has con tributed to the total effect. Of course the old forces will not remain as old when new-combined ; and so, while the forces are correlated, the changed or modified structure must always be compared with the original, in order that we may know whether there has been variation, and to what degree ; whether its efficiency has been increased or decreased ; and whether the organism has been more powerful to subdue the environ ment, or the environment the organism. All we can do here is to illustrate the process in outline ; to exhibit it in detail would be to write a constructive history of the Church. § L— The Creative Organism. This Is the causal Person and Mind, Jesus Christ The religion is His creation ; all Churches derive, directly or indirectly, their being from Him. How we conceive Him and His Church will appear later. Enough to say here, while He 48 THE CREATIVE PERSON NORMATIVE. institutes a new society and fills it with His own life, He gives it no fixed or formal political constitution. He is its Founder, its Head, its inspiration, its personalized ideal of religion. His people are intended to be like Him — as it were His person augmented, immortalized, multiplied into innu merable hosts, and enduring through all ages. Now, what sort of religious ideal did He personalize ? What was most distinc tive of Him was His consciousness of God, the kind of God He was conscious of, and the relation He sustained to Him. God was His Father ; He was God's Son. What God was to Him He desired Him to be to all men ; what He was to God all men ought to be. In Christ's ideal of religion, then, the most material or determinative truth is the conception of God. He appears primarily, not as a God of judgment or justice, but of mercy and grace, the Father of man, who needs not to be appeased, but is gracious, propitious, finds the Propitiator, provides the propitiation. His own Son is the one Sacrifice, Priest, and Mediator, appointed of God to achieve the recon ciliation of man. Men are God's sons ; filial love is their primary duty, fraternal love their common and equal obliga tion. Worship does not depend on sacred persons, places, or rites ; but is a thing of spirit and truth. The best prayer is secret and personal : the man who best pleases God is not the scrupulous Pharisee, but the penitent publican. Measured by the standard of a sacerdotal religion, Jesus was not a pious person. He spoke no word, did no act that implied the necessity of an official priesthood for His people : He enforced no sacerdotal observance, instituted no sacerdotal order, pro mulgated no sacerdotal law, but simply required that His people should be perfect as their Father in heaven is perfect. And so what He founded was a society to realize His own ideal, a kingdom of heaven, spiritual, internal, which came without observation ; a realm where the will of God is law. and the law is love, and the citizens are the loving and the obedient, whose type is the reverent and tender and trustful A RELIGION WITHOUT PRIESTS. 49 child, not the hard and boasting man. In its collective being it has a priestly character, but is without an official priesthood. It has airoa-ToXoi^ irpo^'^Tai,^ hricrKOTroi^ irpea-^VTepoi* iroiiJLeve';^ SiBda-icaXoi,' BiaKovoi,^ eva Luke vi. 13 ; Matt, x i ; Acts i. 2, 26, iv. 33 ; I Cor. xii. 28, etc. » I Cor. xii. 28 ; Eph. ii. 20, iii. 5, iv. 11. » Acts XX. 28 ; Phil. i. I ; Tit L 7. * Acts xiv. 23, XV. 2, 4, 6, 22, 23 ; i Tim. v. 17. »Eph. iv. II. • Acts xiii. I ; i Cor. xii. 28, 29 ; Eph. iv. 11 ; i Tim. ii. 7 ; 3 Tim. I-II. ' I Cor. iii. 5 ; 2 Cor. iii. 6, vi. 4, xi. 23 ; Eph. iii. 7 ; Phil. i. I. • Acts xxi. 8 ; Eph. iv. 11 ; 2 Tim. iv. 5. 4 50 THE PRIMITIVE ORGANISM was, as regards its essential character, the religion which Jesus Christ instituted. But how was it to be realized? under what forms and by what agencies organized ? It was full of infinite possibilities of all kinds — intellectual, moral, social, political, religious. It involved new beliefs as to God, as to its Founder, as to man ; as to their natures, characters, rela tions ; as to all the religions of the world, their worth, function, history ; as to all the ideas that most command men and organize society. It was a source of new moral forces, intro duced higher and nobler ideals, created a finer sense of obliga tions towards God, and a more sensitive conscience as regards man. It formed a brotherhood that was ambitious to embrace the world. It was bound to feel after the polity or social framework that should best help it to fulfil all its functions, and to seek methods of worship and religious association that would enable it to do justice to all its own possibilities and all the needs of man. And these elements stood so related to one another that whatever touched any affected all. Here, then, is the problem : How did this parent germ or crea tive organism — i.e., the religion instituted by Christ — behave in its various environments ? What was their action on it and its action on them ? How far were the forms it assumed and the elements it incorporated due to the immanent laws of its own being or to the action of the medium in which it lived ? To these questions we must return as clear an answer as our limits will allow. § II. — The Primitive Environments. The environment in which the religion began to be was Judaic. Its Founder was of Jewish descent His theistic, religious, ethical, social ideals, so far as they have any prior history, find it in Judaism ; institutions of its creation, as the school and the synagogue, were used by Him and His disciples for the spread of the religion ; their termini technici. AND PRIMITIVE ENVIRONMENT. ' 5 1 BaffiKela rov deov or twi' ^ ovpav&v,^ BcaOrjicr)^ eKKkrjaia,* vo/xo?,' 7rpo(f)7}Teia,'' TricTTt?,' SiKaooavvr),^ afiapTia,^ aTroKoXvyjri';,^'' Xptcr- Tos," ui'o? TOU avOpmiTov,^^ vib<; rov ©eoO," .4670?," can be con strued only through the Judaism either ofthe motherland or of the dispersion. It creates as it were the atmosphere in which the New Testament as a whole lives ; its terminology, theses, antitheses, its modes of argument and of proof, its conflicts, controversies, policies, its local colourings and questions, its very attempts to break from the bonds of the law and become spiritual and universal, are all conditioned by Judaism. The types are many, but the system is one : now it is the Judaism of Palestine, as in Matthew ; of Asia Minor, as in' the Apoca lypse ; of the tolerant metropolis, as in Romans ; of a narrow and hot-blooded province, as in Galatians ; of a philosophical community, which has idealized the wor.ship and history of the Fathers, as in Hebrews ; but whatever the peculiarity of local type the thing remains. John and Luke are as full of it as Matthew and Mark ; it as subtly penetrates Epistles to Gentile Churches, full of the passion of spiritual universalism, like Corinthians and Colossians, as those expressly addressed to Jews, like James and i Peter. But these conditions hardly outlived the first generation. Two things happened almost sim.ultaneously : Jerusalem was destroyed, depriving » Matt. vi. 33, xii. 28 ; Mark i. 15, iv. 11, 26, 30, etc. • Matt. iv. 17, V. 3, 10, 19, 20, xiii. 11, 24, 31, 33. » Matt xxvi. 28 ; i Cor. xi. 25 ; 2 Cor. iii. 6 ; Heb. vii. 22, viii. 6, 8, 9, 10, etc. * Matt xvi. 18, xviii. 17; Acts v. 11, viii. i, xiv. 23, etc. ' Matt v. 17, vii. 12, xi. 13; Rom. ii. 12, 14, 15, iii. 19, 20, 21, etc. • I Cor. xii. 10, xiv. 6, 12, etc. » Rom. i. 5, 17, iii. 22, v. I ; i Cor. xv. 14, 17 i Gal. i. 23, iii. 9, etc. • Rom. i. 17, iii. 21, 22, 25, 26, x. 3 ; 2 Cor. v. 21. • Mark i. 4, ii. 5 ; John i. 29 ; Rom. v. 12, 13, 20, 21, vii. 7, 8, 14, 17. '» Rom. xvi. 25 ; I Cor. i. 7, xiv. 6, 26 ; Eph. i. 17, iii. 3. " Matt. xxii. 42, xxiv. 5, 23, xxvi. 63. " Matt xii 8, i2, 40, xiii. 37 ; Mark ii. 10, 28, etc. " Matt. XVI. 16. xxvi. 63 ; Mark iii. il ; John i. 34, 50, iii. 18, xi. 27. "John i. I, 14; I John i. i. 52 JUDAISM THE ENEMY OF CHRISTIANITY, the Jewish religion of its Temple and priesthood, and reducing it to a mere system of customs and instruction accommodated to the needs of a homeless people ; and the Church, opened by the preaching of Paul, became more Gentile than Jewish. This meant a change at once of race and of home ; the cradle of the religion ceased to be its nursery. So it forgot the tongue of its birthplace and learned the speech of its new motherland ; in other words, while it was still in its infancy all the historical conditions with all their determinative factors, everything that could be denoted by the terms blood, language, institutions, associations, traditions, habits, customs, mind, culture, religious consciousness, literature, history, were completely changed, with the inevitable result that new evolu tionary forces were called into being by the new conditions. And these forces became factors of both formal and material changes, and their power was enhanced rather than weakened by the action of old agencies within the new medium. But while Christianity escaped from Judaism, yet it was not delivered from the Jews ; they represented its bitterest enemies, its acutest opponents, the source of its most serious dangers. The heresies it had most to fear, the differences and divisions that had been most threatening and most nearly disastrous, the tales that had most deeply affronted its ethical and reverent spirit, had been of Jewish origin.* Hence came an attitude to Judaism and the Jews^ which had its strongest possible contrast in the ideal attitude to their history and religion and Scriptures. Jesus had been born a Jew. He had come to fulfil the law and the prophets ; to their authority " Justin, " Apol.," i., cc. 31, 36 ; " Dial.," cc. 16, 95 ; " Martyr. Polyc," cc. 17-19 ; Origen, "Contra Cels.," i. 28-39. ' Barnabas, iv. 6-8, says that they lost the covenant as soon as they had received it; ix. 4, were instructed by an "evil angel " ; and xiv. I, did not receive the covenant because of their sins. So Freed. Petri, in Clem. Al. "Strom.," vi. 5, 41, affirms that they do not know God, and worship, instead of Him, angels and archangels, moons and sabbaths. Cf. Justin, "Apol.," i. 36, 37, 47, S3; "Didache," viii. i ; "Ign. Ep. ad Mag.," x. 2. Judaism is described as t^i/ koktiv ^v\irfv t^v irdKtuoidelcrav Koi ivo^Lr), cc. 23, 34, 35; as tA ypa(f>e'iov, 28; as ai iepai ypa Of course this refers to the earlier Gnostic schools and the sources of the elements they compounded. Later the chief seat of their activity was Alexandria. Cf. Lipsius, " Der Gnosticismus," pp. 105 ff. ; Baur, " Manichaische Religionssys.," pp. 404-493. As to the neo-Pythagoreansi there is an interesting discussion in R6ville, " La Religion k Rome soua les Sevferes," pt. ii. BEGIN TO ACT ON CHRISTIANITY. 6 1 protect their rights, husband and distribute their resources within the limits of the Roman law, provincial and imperial. With the actual and organised polity must also be taken the theoretical, the philosophical interpretation and expansion of the law which was so characteristic of the Roman jurists. 3. The popular religion was the system of worship which anywhere prevailed, whether as public or private, an affair of the city and temple and priesthood, or of the home and the mysteries. The period was a period of syncretism ; the universalism of the Empire had resulted in a mixture of all its religions ; the old deities lived no more within their ancient limits ; the gods of Egypt and Syria, of Phrygia and Persia, of East and West, invaded Rome, and in their train came their respective worships.* In the sphere of religion a sort of assimilative or encyclopaedic frenzy was abroad, and men and cities did not feel happy or safe unless they had offered hospitality to some of the many migrating deities. Now, Christianity could not live amid these varied forces or tendencies, and remain unaffected by them. Each became a factor of distinct yet parallel lines of thought, — philosophy affected doctrine ; polity, organization and thought ; religion, cultus. Ancient philosophy passed into theology ; Roman polity survived in an ecclesiastical, which was too wise to disguise its true descent ; and the old religions were per petuated in the new worship. Yet they did not all operate with equal or uniform force within the same areas. The theological development was most active within what had been the home of philosophy, the countries of Greek speech and blood ; the political was at first richest in Syria,=' but > Rgville, " La Religion k Rome sous les SSv^res," pt. i. • For the irregular distribution in the growth of episcopacy, see Light- foot's essay on "The Christian Ministry," 206 ff. His examination of the causes of its early development in Syria and Asia Minor seems inadequate and partial. The tendency had rather a common and native than a personal origin, and the persons involved are, save in one case, little better than mythical. 62 PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY : was later perfected in the West, mainly in and through Rome ; the religious was more uniform in its operations, though as varied in its elements els were the cults within the Empire. These factors did not indeed in any sense generate the life of the society, but they determined the forms that its life assumed. In their collective and correlated action they by a twofold process secured its naturalization as a citizen of the world — a process, on the one hand, of interpenetration, and, on the other, of mediation and reconcilement It is the one because the other ; the old and the new faiths inter penetrate that the new religion may the better win and master the ancient mind. Catholicism is the interpretation of the Christian idea in the terms and through the associa tions of the ancient world, and as such represents on the largest scale the continuity of religion in history. Its work was a needed work, for man is incapable of transitions at once sudden and absolute ; the construction of Christianity through the media of the older philosophies and religions was a necessary prelude to its construction by a spirit and through a consciousness of its own , creation. The absolute ideal had, in order to be intelligible, to use constituted and familiar vehicles, but only that it might win the opportunity of fashioning vehicles worthier of its nature and fitter for its end. § II. — Ancient Philosophy and Theology. But " factor " is a very ambiguous and elastic term, and so it may be as well here to define the idea it is meant to denote. This can best be done by the discussion of the concrete question, In what sense can Greek philosophy be described as a factor of Christian theology? Theology is the universe construed through the idea of God ; philosophy is the universe construed through the idea of man, but man as mind. Theology is as necessary to faith as philosophy how related and how distinguished. 63 to reason. If a man asks, Why and what am I and my universe ? the result is a philosophy ; if a man or society asks. What does the truth we believe mean? the result is a theology. Each is a science of being, but the highest constructive principle of the science is in the one case the thought or consciousness of the thinker ; in the other, it is his highest and most necessary idea. The standpoint is in philosophy subjective, a particular reason is made determina tive of the universal, the means by which truth is to be discovered and explicated ; the standpoint in theology is objective, a universal intelligence is made the explanation of the intelligible world with all its intellects and all their mysteries. This distinction shows at once their difference and their relation. They differ because theology starts with an idea which philosophy has to discover and define ; but they are related because, while all the problems of theology do not emerge in philosophy, all those of philosophy emerge in theology, though in a different order and from a changed point of view. Now, the relations of Greek philosophy and Christian theology illustrate this distinction. These relations were both historical and material. In history the philosophy preceded the theology ; the century that saw the one begin to be saw the other cease from being. In a sense ancient philosophy died into theology, and for centuries all the life it had was in this form and under this name. The last of the Greek philosophers were theologians, Plotinus, Porphyry, and Proclus quite as much as Clement, Origen, and Dionysius. But the change in name implied a change in the thing named. The new theology was not the old philosophy, nor can the one be stated in the terms of the other and yet remain the same. The cause of the difference was this : beside Greek philosophy as an external factor of theology two internal factors must be placed— Hebrew religion and Christian history. The philosophy determined all that was formal in 64 HEBREW RELIGION CHANGES the problems to be solved, and supplied the speculative faculty, the dialectical temper, the logical and evidential method, and the scholastic terminology needed for their solution. The religion gave the material theistic ideas, the historical perspective required for their concrete being, and the literature by which they could be illustrated and verified. The history furnished the Person and events which alone could, by being interpreted, interpret the ideas and turn the highest of all theological into the most fundamental of all philosophical questions. It was by virtue of the re "gious and historical factors that the new theology differed from the ancient philosophy. The action of Hebrew religion was the earlier and pre paratory, qualifying philosophy for the new work it had to do. The philosophies that had owed their being to the Greek genius were made in the image of Greek man, but even he had too narrow a humanity behind and around as well as within him to be just to man universal, and so his systems had feeling enough for the Hellenic individual and State, but not for mankind, collective and historical They were too appreciative of the philosophers who ought to govern to be just to the manhood which needed government They started outside religion, and became religious only by force of reason and in its terms. Their theistic conception was metaphysical rather than ethical, never even in its ethics transcending metaphysics, ever remaining an object of contemplation or thought, never becoming an object of worship and conscience. In other words, the Deity was reached through subjective criticism, and had all the qualities of an objectified idea. He was more impersonal than per sonal, a regulative notion rather than a conscious reason and an active will. This was equally true whether the Divine was with Plato conceived under the form of the Good or the True, or with Aristotle, of the End or the Reason, or with the Stoic, of Law or the immanent Order. The universe philosophy INTO THEOLOGY. 65 interpreted was in a sense as limited as the interpreting manhood. Now, to this most specifically Greek philosophy Hebrew religion came, and by filling it with the idea of a living God gave it a larger life, a nobler and vaster outlook. This God was what no Greek deity, so far forth as a religious being, had been conceived to be — the creator of all things, the ruler of all men. He was no pale abstraction or personalized idea, but a conscious will which moved in all things and lived in all, one and personal, ethical and infinite. The man who brought the two together was Philo. As a philosopher he cannot be compared with Plato, but for the history of religion and religious thought he is even more important Two streams meet in him, and flow henceforth in a common bed. From the moment that he attempted to unite Israel and Greece, Moses and Plato, the prophets and the philosophers, a new goal was set before the reason, and philosophy struggled towards theology. The men who came after him were not as the men who went before ; he made neo-Platonic and Christian speculation alike possible, and these two agree in the very point that distinguishes both from the older Platonism ; it was a philosophy, they are theologies. And just where they agree, and because of their agreement, modern is different from ancient thought. God holds a place in all systems subsequent to Philo such as He had never held in those prior to him. And this point of distinction is a sign of pre-eminence. For the thinker who seeks to construe man and history through the idea of the one moral and personal Deity, attempts a grander and more rational problem than is possible to him who would read the universe through even Hellenic man. For the universe must be so conceived as to be worthy of its God, the God so conceived as to be equal to all the needs of His universe. Where He runs through all history, its periods must exhibit reason and law. Where He is equally related to all men they must all be equal in lowliness and in dignity before Him. In their S 66 THEOLOGY GROWS LESS TRADITIONAL, very differences they must be akin, all their truths and all their religions be of Him and through Him. All is sublimer and vaster interpreted through a universal God than through the Greek ideal of man, sublime though it be. § III.— Christian History and Theology. But while Hebrew religion enlarged and enriched all the problems of philosophy, the Christian history made them much more concrete, imperious, and acute. This history must be understood to mean both the creative Person and the sacred literature which described at once His actual being and ideal significance. It is necessary to emphasize the place of this literature ; the rise of a coherent and comprehensive theology was coincident with its recognition and a symbol of its function and power. The remarkable phenomena that meet us at the beginning of the second century, before the literature, as distinct from tradition, had made its collective appeal to mind, continue into the middle and even towards the end. Apostolic Christianity is not appre hended as a whole, and so tar as its parts are apprehended they are apprehended only in part. It has all the defects of an apprehension attained through tradition and in fragments by the unprepared and undisciplined mind, unexercised and uncorrected by the study of a normative sacred literature. The apologists are not strictly Christian theologians ; their thought is Christian, they exhibit Christianity in process of assimilation by philosophical minds, but the last thing that can be claimed for them is that their theology is Apostolic. In Justin there is much more of Plato than of Paul ; indeed, we may say he is often as antipathetic to the one as he is sympathetic with the other.* But when we come to the end ' There is a careful and judicial discussion of Justin's relation to Paul in Engelhardt, " Das Christenthum Justin's," pp. 352-369. Cf. exposition of the opposed views in Ritschl, " Altkath. Kirche," pp. 303 ff. ; and Baur, " Kirchengesch. der drei erst. Jahrhs.," 140, Eng. trans., vol. i., p. 147. MORE BIBLICAL AND ADEQUATE. 6"] of the century we find men who have stood face to face with the Christian history, and endeavoured to construe the literature. Irenaeus is not a philosopher, but a Biblical theo logian, the first of the kind, with the Christ and not the Logos as the centre of his system. Many things had gone to his making ; he had learned from his early masters how to love and follow the truth, how to treasure the words of the holy and the good, from the Gnostics how to value the intellect in religion, from Marcion how to make a direct appeal to the Scriptures, yet what to avoid in making this appeal ; but most of all he had been formed by his study of the Apostolic mind. He is the earliest example of what has been illustrated often since — that for the Christian spirit there is no secret of rejuvenescence like a bath in the original sources. But tradition enfeebled and obscured his vision. Though steeped in Paul, and owing to him his noblest and most characteristic ideas — the dvaKecfjaTMiaa-i';, the unities which he opposes to the Gnostic dualisms, the unity of God, of the person of Christ, of the human race, of history, of the purpose of God and the plan of salvation, of the Church — yet he often misses or fails to read aright the Apostle's mind, or even quite perverts it.* Tertullian and Clement, each in his own way, illustrate the same truth, but Origen more than either. He is a Christian thinker because a Biblical scholar. With him constructive theology begins to be, and it was but fit that the most learned of all the Fathers should ' Proof ol this position would require a more detailed exposition than is here possible, but the points we should emphasize are these : — What we may term the residuary dualism which, in spite of his loved unities, still works within his theistic conception, his whole doctrine of the devil, with his established and, as it were, recognized place over against God, and the consequent external and adventitious doctrines of sin and redemption ; the related legalism in his conception of the Gospel, which makes it not so much a fulfilment as an enlargement and republication of law, involving a most unapostolic prominence to the institutional as distinguished from the fiduciary element in Christianity ; his views as to forgiveness and grace, his tendency through inadequate appreciation of what they mean to de-ethicize 68 THE PROBLEMS OF CHRISTIAN HISTORY also be the first systematic theologian and the source of the most fruitful ideas in Greek patristic thought. Now, this Christian history was transacted, as it were, within the Hebrew religion, and incorporated its most funda mental ideas ; nay, appeared as its historical end and final cause. As such it came to the philosophy which had already become theological, demanding to be interpreted and ex plained. But to attempt this was to read the universe and all its mysteries from an entirely new point of view. Here was Christ born as all men are, said to be the Son of man, yet no man's son. Son of God, second Adam, source of a new race. Saviour of men, — how, then, was He to be conceived alike as regards His nature, His person, and His relation to God and man? Two things were necessary: His person must be held a historical reality, and must be so construed as to make God more real, living, credible, than He had been either in Greek philosophy or Hebrew religion. The history could not be allegorized or the Person evaporated into a semblance, resolved into a phantasm of the imagination or a freak of nature. Allegory was well known to the current philosophies, especially the Stoic and neo-Platonic. By its help the most offensive incidents in the ancient mythologies had become symbolical of hidden sciences or rarest moral wisdom. Philo had known it, and so used it as to bring out of the Mosaic histories the philoso phies of Greece. The Christian Fathers followed the fashion of their day, and found both history and nature rich in allegory and ideal symbolisms. But they could not use this picvailing fashion to turn their sacred history into vehicles the great Pauline ideas, and by emphasizing the accidents to lose the very essence of the dvaKe