ON THE MORAL PERFECTION OF JESUS.
Let no reader peruse this chapter,
who is not willing to enter into a discussion, as
free and unshrinking, concerning the personal excellencies
and conduct of Jesus, as that of Mr. Grote concerning
Socrates. I have hitherto met with most absurd
rebuffs for my scrupulosity. One critic names
me as a principal leader in a school which extols
and glorifies the character of Jesus; after which
he proceeds to reproach me with inconsistency, and
to insinuate dishonesty. Another expresses himself
as deeply wounded that, in renouncing the belief that
Jesus is more than man, I suggest to compare him to
a clergyman whom I mentioned as eminently holy and
perfect in the picture of a partial biographer; such
a comparison is resented with vivid indignation, as
a blurting out of something “unspeakably painful.”
Many have murmured that I do not come forward
to extol the excellencies of Jesus, but appear to prefer
Paul. More than one taunt me with an inability
to justify my insinuations that Jesus, after all,
was not really perfect; one is “extremely disappointed”
that I have not attacked him; in short, it is manifest
that many would much rather have me say out my whole
heart, than withhold anything. I therefore give
fair warning to all, not to read any farther, or else
to blame themselves if I inflict on them “unspeakable
pain,” by differing from their judgment of a
historical or unhistorical character. As for
those who confound my tenderness with hypocrisy and
conscious weakness, if they trust themselves to read
to the end, I think they will abandon that fancy.
But how am I brought into this topic?
It is because, after my mind had reached the stage
narrated in the last chapter, I fell in with a new
doctrine among the Unitarians, that the
evidence of Christianity is essentially popular and
spiritual, consisting in the Life of Christ,
who is a perfect man and the absolute moral image of
God, therefore fitly called “God
manifest in the flesh,” and, as such, Moral Head
of the human race. Since this view was held in
conjunction with those at which I had arrived myself
concerning miracles, prophecy, the untrustworthiness
of Scripture as to details, and the essential unreasonableness
of imposing dogmatic propositions as a creed, I had
to consider why I could not adopt such a modification,
or (as it appeared to me) reconstruction, of Christianity;
and I gave reasons in the first edition of this book,
which, avoiding direct treatment of the character
of Jesus, seemed to me adequate on the opposite side.
My argument was reviewed by a friend,
who presently published the review with his name,
replying to my remarks on this scheme. I thus
find myself in public and avowed controversy with one
who is endowed with talents, accomplishments, and
genius, to which I have no pretensions. The challenge
has certainly come from myself. Trusting to the
goodness of my cause, I have ventured it into an unequal
combat; and from a consciousness of my admired friend’s
high superiority, I do feel a little abashed at being
brought face to face against him. But possibly
the less said to the public on these personal matters,
the better.
I have to give reasons why I cannot
adopt that modified scheme of Christianity which is
defended and adorned by James Martineau; according
to which it is maintained that though the Gospel Narratives
are not to be trusted in detail, there can yet be no
reasonable doubt what Jesus was; for
this is elicited by a “higher moral criticism,”
which (it is remarked) I neglect. In this theory,
Jesus is avowed to be a man born like other men; to
be liable to error, and (at least in some important
respects) mistaken. Perhaps no general proposition
is to be accepted merely on the word of Jesus;
in particular, he misinterpreted the Hebrew prophecies.
“He was not less than the Hebrew Messiah,
but more.” No moral charge is established
against him, until it is shown, that in applying the
old prophecies to himself, he was conscious
that they did not fit. His error was one of mere
fallibility in matters of intellectual and literary
estimate. On the other hand, Jesus had an infallible
moral perception, which reveals itself to the true-hearted
reader, and is testified by the common consciousness
of Christendom. It has pleased the Creator to
give us one sun in the heavens, and one Divine soul
in history, in order to correct the aberrations of
our individuality, and unite all mankind into one
family of God. Jesus is to be presumed to be
perfect until he is shown to be imperfect. Faith
in Jesus, is not reception of propositions, but reverence
for a person; yet this is not the condition
of salvation or essential to the Divine favour.
Such is the scheme, abridged from
the ample discussion of my eloquent friend. In
reasoning against it, my arguments will, to a certain
extent, be those of an orthodox Trinitarian; since
we might both maintain that the belief in the absolute
divine morality of Jesus is not tenable, when the
belief in every other divine and superhuman
quality is denied. Should I have any “orthodox”
reader, my arguments may shock his feelings less,
if he keeps this in view. In fact, the same action
or word in Jesus may be consistent or inconsistent
with moral perfection, according to the previous assumptions
concerning his person.
I. My friend has attributed to me
a “prosaic and embittered view of human nature,”
apparently because I have a very intense belief of
Man’s essential imperfection. To me, I confess,
it is almost a first principle of thought, that as
all sorts of perfection coexist in God, so is no sort
of perfection possible to man. I do not know how
for a moment to imagine an Omniscient Being who is
not Almighty, or an Almighty who is not All-Righteous.
So neither do I know how to conceive of Perfect Holiness
anywhere but in the Blessed and only Potentate.
Man is finite and crippled on all
sides; and frailty in one kind causes frailty in another.
Deficient power causes deficient knowledge, deficient
knowledge betrays him into false opinion, and entangles
him into false positions. It may be a defect
of my imagination, but I do not feel that it implies
any bitterness, that even in the case of one who abides
in primitive lowliness, to attain even negatively an
absolutely pure goodness seems to me impossible; and
much more, to exhaust all goodness, and become a single
Model-Man, unparalleled, incomparable, a standard
for all other moral excellence. Especially I
cannot conceive of any human person rising out of obscurity,
and influencing the history of the world, unless there
be in him forces of great intensity, the harmonizing
of which is a vast and painful problem. Every
man has to subdue himself first, before he preaches
to his fellows; and he encounters many a fall and
many a wound in winning his own victory. And
as talents are various, so do moral natures vary,
each having its own weak and strong side; and that
one man should grasp into his single self the highest
perfection of every moral kind, is to me at least
as incredible as that one should preoccupy and exhaust
all intellectual greatness. I feel the prodigy
to be so peculiar, that I must necessarily wait until
it is overwhelmingly proved, before I admit it.
No one can without unreason urge me to believe, on
any but the most irrefutable arguments, that a man,
finite in every other respect, is infinite in moral
perfection.
My friend is “at a loss to conceive
in what way a superhuman physical nature could tend
in the least degree to render moral perfection more
credible.” But I think he will see, that
it would entirely obviate the argument just stated,
which, from the known frailty of human nature in general,
deduced the indubitable imperfection of an individual.
The reply is then obvious and decisive: “This
individual is not a mere man; his origin is
wholly exceptional; therefore his moral perfection
may be exceptional; your experience of man’s
weakness goes for nothing in his case.”
If I were already convinced that this person was a
great Unique, separated from all other men by an impassable
chasm in regard to his physical origin, I (for one)
should be much readier to believe that he was Unique
and Unapproachable in other respects: for all
God’s works have an internal harmony. It
could not be for nothing that this exceptional personage
was sent into the world. That he was intended
as head of the human race, in one or more senses, would
be a plausible opinion; nor should I feel any incredulous
repugnance against believing his morality to be if
not divinely perfect, yet separated from that of common
men so far, that he might be a God to us, just as
every parent is to a young child.
This view seems to my friend a weakness;
be it so. I need not press it. What I do
press, is, whatever might or might
not be conceded concerning one in human form,
but of superhuman origin, at any rate,
one who is conceded to be, out and out, of the same
nature as ourselves, is to be judged of by our experience
of that nature, and is therefore to be assumed
to be variously imperfect, however eminent and admirable
in some respects. And no one is to be called an
imaginer of deformity, because he takes for granted
that one who is Man has imperfections which were not
known to those who compiled memorials of him.
To impute to a person, without specific evidence, some
definite frailty or fault, barely because he is human,
would be a want of good sense; but not so, to have
a firm belief that every human being is finite in
moral as well as in intellectual greatness.
We have a very imperfect history of
the apostle James; and I do not know that I could
adduce any fact specifically recorded concerning him
in disproof of his absolute moral perfection, if any
of his Jerusalem disciples had chosen to set up this
as a dogma of religion. Yet no one would blame
me, as morose, or indisposed to acknowledge genius
and greatness, if I insisted on believing James to
be frail and imperfect, while admitting that I knew
almost nothing about him. And why? Singly
and surely, because we know him to be a man:
that suffices. To set up James or John or Daniel
as my Model, and my Lord; to be swallowed up in him
and press him upon others for a Universal Standard,
would be despised as a self-degrading idolatry and
resented as an obtrusive favouritism. Now why
does not the same equally apply, if the name Jesus
is substituted for these? Why, in defect of all
other knowledge than the bare fact of his manhood,
are we not unhesitatingly to take for granted that
he does not exhaust all perfection, and is at
best only one among many brethren and equals?
II. My friend, I gather, will
reply, “because so many thousands of minds in
all Christendom attest the infinite and unapproachable
goodness of Jesus.” It therefore follows
to consider, what is the weight of this attestation.
Manifestly it depends, first of all, on the independence
of the witnesses: secondly, on the grounds of
their belief. If all those, who confess the moral
perfection of Jesus, confess it as the result of unbiassed
examination of his character; and if of those acquainted
with the narrative, none espouse the opposite side;
this would be a striking testimony, not to be despised.
But in fact, few indeed of the “witnesses”
add any weight at all to the argument. No Trinitarian
can doubt that Jesus is morally perfect, without doubting
fundamentally every part of his religion. He believes
it, because the entire system demands it, and
because various texts of Scripture avow it:
and this very fact makes it morally impossible for
him to enter upon an unbiassed inquiry, whether that
character which is drawn for Jesus in the four gospels,
is, or is not, one of absolute perfection, deserving
to be made an exclusive model for all times and countries.
My friend never was a Trinitarian, and seems not to
know how this operates; but I can testify, that when
I believed in the immaculateness of Christ’s
character, it was not from an unbiassed criticism,
but from the pressure of authority, (the authority
of texts,) and from the necessity of the doctrine
to the scheme of Redemption. Not merely strict
Trinitarians, but all who believe in the Atonement,
however modified, all who believe that Jesus will be the future Judge, must
believe in his absolute perfection: hence the
fact of their belief is no indication whatever that
they believe on the ground which my friend assumes, viz.
an intelligent and unbiassed study of the character
itself, as exhibited in the four narratives.
I think we may go farther. We
have no reason for thinking that this was the
sort of evidence which convinced the apostles themselves,
and first teachers of the gospel; if indeed
in the very first years the doctrine was at all conceived
of. It cannot be shown that any one believed
in the moral perfection of Jesus, who had not already
adopted the belief that he was Messiah, and therefore
Judge of the human race. My friend makes the
pure immaculateness of Jesus (discernible by him in
the gospels) his foundation, and deduces from
this the quasi-Messiahship: but the opposite
order of deduction appears to have been the only one
possible in the first age. Take Paul as a specimen.
He believed the doctrine in question; but not from
reading the four gospels, for they did
not exist. Did he then believe it by hearing
Ananias (Acts i enter into details concerning
the deeds and words of Jesus? I cannot imagine
that any wise or thoughtful person would so judge,
which after all would be a gratuitous invention.
The Acts of the Apostles give us many speeches which
set forth the grounds of accepting Jesus as Messiah;
but they never press his absolute moral perfection
as a fact and a fundamental fact. “He went
about doing good, and healing all that were oppressed
of the devil,” is the utmost that is advanced
on this side: prophecy is urged, and his resurrection
is asserted, and the inference is drawn that “Jesus
is the Christ.” Out of this flowed the
farther inferences that he was Supreme Judge, and
moreover, was Paschal Lamb, and Sacrifice, and High
Priest, and Mediator; and since every one of these
characters demanded a belief in his moral perfections,
that doctrine also necessarily followed, and was received
before our present gospels existed. My friend
therefore cannot abash me by the argumentum ad verecundiam;
(which to me seems highly out of place in this connexion;)
for the opinion, which is, as to this single point,
held by him in common with the first Christians, was
held by them on transcendental reasons which he totally
discards; and all after generations have been confirmed
in the doctrine by Authority, i.e. by the weight
of texts or church decisions: both of which he
also discards. If I could receive the doctrine,
merely because I dared not to differ from the whole
Christian world, I might aid to swell odium against
rejectors, but I should not strengthen the cause at
the bar of reason. I feel therefore that my friend
must not claim Catholicity as on his side. Trinitarians
and Arians are alike useless to his argument:
nay, nor can he claim more than a small fraction of
Unitarians; for as many of the them believe that Jesus
is to be the Judge of living and dead (as the late
Dr. Lant Carpenter did) must as necessarily
believe his immaculate perfection as if they were
Trinitarians.
The New Testament does not distinctly
explain on what grounds this doctrine was believed;
but we may observe that in 1 Peter and 2 Cor.
, it is coupled with the Atonement, and in 1 Peter
i, Romans x, it seems to be inferred from
prophecy. But let us turn to the original Eleven,
who were eye and ear witnesses of Jesus, and consider
on what grounds they can have believed (if we assume
that they did all believe) the absolute moral perfection
of Jesus. It is too ridiculous to imagine then
studying the writings of Matthew in order to obtain
conviction, if any of that school, whom
alone I now address, could admit that written documents
were thought of before the Church outstept the limits
of Judea. If the Eleven believed the doctrine
for some transcendental reason, as by a
Supernatural Revelation, or on account of Prophecy,
and to complete the Messiah’s character, then
their attestation is useless to my friend’s argument:
will it then gain anything, if we suppose that they
believed Jesus to be perfect, because they
saw him to be perfect? To me this would
seem no attestation worth having, but rather a piece
of impertinent ignorance. If I attest that a
person whom I have known was an eminently good man,
I command a certain amount of respect to my opinion,
and I do him honour. If I celebrate his good deeds
and report his wise words, I extend his honour still
farther. But if I proceed to assure people, on
the evidence of my personal observation of him,
that he was immaculate and absolutely perfect, was
the pure Moral Image of God, that he deserves to be
made the Exclusive Model of imitation, and is the
standard by which every other man’s morality
is to be corrected, I make myself ridiculous;
my panegyrics lose all weight, and I produce far less
conviction than when I praised within human limitations.
I do not know how my friend will look on this point,
(for his judgment on the whole question perplexes me,
and the views which I call sober he names prosaic,)
but I cannot resist the conviction that universal
common-sense would have rejected the teaching of the
Eleven with contempt, if they had presented, as the
basis of the gospel their personal testimony
to the godlike and unapproachable moral absolutism
of Jesus. But even if such a basis was possible
to the Eleven, it was impossible to Paul and Silvanus
and Timothy and Barnabas and Apollos, and the
other successful preachers to the Gentiles. High
moral goodness, within human limitations, was undoubtedly
announced as a fact of the life of Jesus; but upon
this followed the supernatural claims, and the argument
of prophecy; without which my friend desires
to build up his view, I have thus developed
why I think he has no right to claim Catholicity for
his judgment. I have risked to be tedious, because
I find that when I speak concisely, I am enormously
misapprehended. I close this topic by observing,
that, the great animosity with which my very mild
intimations against the popular view have been met
from numerous quarters, show me that Christians do
not allow this subject to be calmly debated, end have
not come to their own conclusion as the result of
a calm debate. And this is amply corroborated
by my own consciousness of the past I never dared,
nor could have dared, to criticize coolly and simply
the pretensions of Jesus to be an absolute model of
morality, until I had been delivered from the weight
of authority and miracle, oppressing my critical powers.
III. I have been asserting, that
he who believes Jesus to be mere man, ought at once
to believe his moral excellence finite and comparable
to that of other men; and, that our judgment to this
effect cannot be reasonably overborne by the “universal
consent” of Christendom. Thus far
we are dealing a priori, which here fully satisfies
me: in such an argument I need no a posteriori
evidence to arrive at my own conclusion. Nevertheless,
I am met by taunts and clamour, which are not meant
to be indecent, but which to my feeling are such.
My critics point triumphantly to the four gospels,
and demand that I will make a personal attack on a
character which they revere, even when they know that
I cannot do so without giving great offence. Now
if any one were to call my old schoolmaster, or my
old parish priest, a perfect and universal Model,
and were to claim that I would entitle him Lord, and
think of him as the only true revelation of God; should
I not be at liberty to say, without disrespect, that
“I most emphatically deprecate such extravagant
claims for him”? Would this justify an
outcry, that I will publicly avow what I judge
to be his defects of character, and will prove
to all his admirers that he was a sinner like other
men? Such a demand would be thought, I believe,
highly unbecoming and extremely unreasonable.
May not my modesty, or my regard for his memory, or
my unwillingness to pain his family, be accepted as
sufficient reasons for silence? or would any one scoffingly
attribute my reluctance to attack him, to my conscious
inability to make good my case against his being “God
manifest in the flesh”? Now what, if one
of his admirers had written panegyrical memorials
of him; and his character, therein described, was so
faultless, that a stranger to him was not able to descry
any moral defeat whatever in it? Is such a stranger
bound to believe him to be the Divine Standard of
morals, unless he can put his finger on certain passages
of the book which imply weaknesses and faults?
And is it insulting a man, to refuse to worship him?
I utterly protest against every such pretence.
As I have an infinitely stronger conviction that Shakespeare
was not in intellect Divinely and Unapproachably
perfect, than that I can certainly point out in him
some definite intellectual defect; as, moreover, I
am vastly more sure that Socrates was morally
imperfect, than that I am able to censure him rightly;
so also, a disputant who concedes to me that Jesus
is a mere man, has no right to claim that I will point
out some moral flaw in him, or else acknowledge him
to be a Unique Unparalleled Divine Soul. It is
true, I do see defects, and very serious ones, in the
character of Jesus, as drawn by his disciples; but
I cannot admit that my right to disown the pretensions
made for him turns on my ability to define his frailties.
As long as (in common with my friend) I regard Jesus
as a man, so long I hold with dogmatic and
intense conviction the inference that he was
morally imperfect, and ought not to be held up as
unapproachable in goodness; but I have, in comparison,
only a modest belief that I am able to show
his points of weakness.
While therefore in obedience to this
call, which has risen from many quarters, I think
it right not to refuse the odious task pressed upon
me, I yet protest that my conclusion does
not depend upon it. I might censure Socrates
unjustly, or at least without convincing my readers,
if I attempted that task; but my failure would not
throw a feather’s weight into the argument that
Socrates was a Divine Unique and universal Model.
If I write note what is painful to readers, I beg
them to remember that I write with much reluctance,
and that it is their own fault if they read.
In approaching this subject, the first
difficulty is, to know how much of the four gospels
to accept as fact. If we could believe
the whole, it would be easier to argue; but my friend
Martineau (with me) rejects belief of many parts:
for instance, he has but a very feeble conviction
that Jesus ever spoke the discourses attributed to
him in John’s gospel. If therefore I were
to found upon these some imputation of moral weakness,
he would reply, that we are agreed in setting these
aside, as untrustworthy. Yet he perseveres in
asserting that it is beyond all reasonable question
what Jesus was; as though proven inaccuracies
in all the narratives did not make the results uncertain.
He says that even the poor and uneducated are fully
impressed with “the majesty and sanctity”
of Christ’s mind; as if this were what
I am fundamentally denying; and not, only so far as
would transcend the known limits of human nature:
surely “majesty and sanctity” are not
inconsistent with many weaknesses. But our judgment
concerning a man’s motives, his temper, and
his full conquest over self, vanity and impulsive
passion, depends on the accurate knowledge of a vast
variety of minor points; even the curl of the lip,
or the discord of eye and mouth, may change our moral
judgment of a man; while, alike to my friend and me
it is certain that much of what is stated is untrue.
Much moreover of what he holds to be untrue does not
seem so to any but to the highly educated. In
spite therefore of his able reply, I abide in my opinion
that he is unreasonably endeavouring to erect what
is essentially a piece of doubtful biography and difficult
literary criticism into first-rate religious importance.
I shall however try to pick up a few
details which seem, as much as any, to deserve credit,
concerning the pretensions, doctrine and conduct of
Jesus.
First, I believe that he habitually
spoke of himself by the title “Son of Man” a
fact which pervades all the accounts, and was likely
to rivet itself on his hearers. Nobody but he
himself ever calls him Son of Man.
Secondly I believe that in
assuming this title he tacitly alluded to the viith
chapter of Daniel, and claimed for himself the throne
of judgment over all mankind. I know no
reason to doubt that he actually delivered (in substance)
the discourse in Matth. xxv. “When the Son
of Man shall come in his glory,... before him shall
be gathered all nations,... and he shall separate
them, &c. &c.”: and I believe that by the
Son of Man and the King he meant himself.
Compare Luke xi, i.
Thirdly, I believe that he
habitually assumed the authoritative dogmatic tone
of one who was a universal Teacher in moral and spiritual
matters, and enunciated as a primary duty of men to
learn submissively of his wisdom and acknowledge his
supremacy. This element in his character, the
preaching of himself is enormously expanded in
the fourth gospel, but it distinctly exists in Matthew.
Thus in Matth. xxiii 8: “Be not ye called
Rabbi [teacher], for one is your Teacher, even
Christ; and all ye are brethren"... Matth. : “Whosoever shall confess ME before
men, him will I confess before my Father which is
in heaven... He that loveth father or mother more
than ME is not worthy of ME, &c."... Matth.
x: “All things are delivered unto
ME of my Father; and no man knoweth the Son but
the Father; neither knoweth any man the Father,
save the Son; and he to whomsoever the Son will
reveal him. Come unto ME, all ye that labour,...
and I will give you rest. Take MY yoke
upon you, &c.”
My friend, I find, rejects Jesus as
an authoritative teacher, distinctly denies that the
acceptance of Jesus in this character is any condition
of salvation and of the divine favour, and treats of
my “demand of an oracular Christ,” as inconsistent
with my own principles. But this is mere misconception
of what I have said. I find Jesus himself
to set up oracular claims. I find an assumption
of pre-eminence and unapproachable moral wisdom to
pervade every discourse from end to end of the gospels.
If I may not believe that Jesus assumed an oracular
manner, I do not know what moral peculiarity in him
I am permitted to believe. I do not demand
(as my friend seems to think) that he shall be
oracular, but in common with all Christendom, I open
my eyes and see that he is; and until I had
read my friend’s review of my book, I never
understood (I suppose through my own prepossessions)
that he holds Jesus not to have assumed the
oracular style.
If I cut out from the four gospels
this peculiarity, I must cut out, not only the claim
of Messiahship, which my friend admits to have been
made, but nearly every moral discourse and every controversy:
and why? except in order to make good a predetermined
belief that Jesus was morally perfect. What reason
can be given me for not believing that Jesus declared:
“If any one deny ME before men, him will I
deny before my Father and his angels?” or
any of the other texts which couple the favour of
God with a submission to such pretensions of Jesus?
I can find no reason whatever for doubting that he
preached HIMSELF to his disciples, though in the three
first gospels he is rather timid of doing this to
the Pharisees and to the nation at large. I find
him uniformly to claim, sometimes in tone, sometimes
in distinct words, that we will sit at his feet as
little children and learn of him. I find him
ready to answer off-hand, all difficult questions,
critical and lawyer-like, as well as moral. True,
it is no tenet of mine that intellectual and literary
attainment is essential in an individual person to
high spiritual eminence. True, in another book
I have elaborately maintained the contrary. Yet
in that book I have described men’s spiritual
progress as often arrested at a certain stage by a
want of intellectual development; which surely would
indicate that I believed even intellectual blunders
and an infinitely perfect exhaustive morality to be
incompatible. But our question here (or at least
my question) is not, whether Jesus might misinterpret
prophecy, and yet be morally perfect; but whether,
after assuming to be an oracular teacher, he
can teach some fanatical precepts, and advance dogmatically
weak and foolish arguments, without impairing our
sense of his absolute moral perfection.
I do not think it useless here to
repeat (though not for my friend) concise reasons
which I gave in my first edition against admitting
dictatorial claims for Jesus. First, it is an
unplausible opinion that God would deviate from his
ordinary course, in order to give us anything so undesirable
as an authoritative Oracle would be; which
would paralyze our moral powers, exactly as an infallible
church does, in the very proportion in which we succeeded
in eliciting responses from it. It is not needful
here to repeat what has been said to that effect in
. Secondly, there is no imaginable criterion,
by which we can establish that the wisdom of a teacher
is absolute and illimitable. All that
we can possibly discover, is the relative fact, that
another is wiser than we: and even this
is liable to be overturned on special points, as soon
as differences of judgment arise. Thirdly,
while it is by no means clear what are the new truths,
for which we are to lean upon the decisions of Jesus,
it is certain that we have no genuine and trustworthy
account of his teaching. If God had intended
us to receive the authoritative dicta of Jesus,
he would have furnished us with an unblemished record
of those dicta. To allow that we have not this,
and that we must disentangle for ourselves (by a most
difficult and uncertain process) the “true”
sayings of Jesus, is surely self-refuting. Fourthly,
if I must sit in judgment on the claims of
Jesus to be the true Messiah and Son of God, how can
I concentrate all my free thought into that one act,
and thenceforth abandon free thought? This appears
a moral suicide, whether Messiah or the Pope is the
object whom we first criticize, in order to
instal him over us, and then, for ever after,
refuse to criticize. In short, we cannot build
up a system of Oracles on a basis of Free Criticism.
If we are to submit our judgment to the dictation
of some other, whether a church or an individual, we
must be first subjected to that other by some event
from without, as by birth; and not by a process of
that very judgment which is henceforth to be sacrificed.
But from this I proceed to consider more in detail,
some points in the teaching and conduct of Jesus, which
do not appear to me consistent with absolute perfection.
The argument of Jesus concerning the
tribute to Caesar is so dramatic, as to strike the
imagination and rest on the memory; and I know no
reason for doubting that it has been correctly reported.
The book of Deuteronomy (xvi distinctly forbids
Israel to set over himself as king any who is not
a native Israelite; which appeared to be a religious
condemnation of submission to Caesar. Accordingly,
since Jesus assumed the tone of unlimited wisdom,
some of Herod’s party asked him, whether it
was lawful to pay tribute to Caesar. Jesus replied:
“Why tempt ye me, hypocrites? Show me the
tribute money.” When one of the coins was
handed to him, he asked: “Whose image and
superscription is this?” When they replied:
“Caesar’s,” he gave his authoritative
decision: “Render therefore to Caesar
the things that are Caesar’s.”
In this reply not only the poor and
uneducated, but many likewise of the rich and educated,
recognize “majesty and sanctity:”
yet I find it hard to think that my strong-minded
friend will defend the justness, wisdom and honesty
of it. To imagine that because a coin bears Caesar’s
head, therefore it is Caesar’s property,
and that he may demand to have as many of such coins
as he chooses paid over to him, is puerile, and notoriously
false. The circulation of foreign coin of every
kind was as common in the Mediterranean then as now;
and everybody knew that the coin was the property
of the holder, not of him whose head it bore.
Thus the reply of Jesus, which pretended to be a moral
decision, was unsound and absurd: yet it is uttered
in a tone of dictatorial wisdom, and ushered in by
a grave rebuke, “Why tempt ye me, hypocrites?”
He is generally understood to mean, “Why do you
try to implicate me in a political charge?”
and it is supposed that he prudently evaded
the question. I have indeed heard this interpretation
from high Trinitarians; which indicates to me how
dead is their moral sense in everything which concerns
the conduct of Jesus. No reason appears why he
should not have replied, that Moses forbade Israel
voluntarily to place himself under a foreign
king, but did not inculcate fanatical and useless rebellion
against overwhelming power. But such a reply,
which would have satisfied a more commonplace mind,
has in it nothing brilliant and striking. I cannot
but think that Jesus shows a vain conceit in the cleverness
of his answer: I do not think it so likely to
have been a conscious evasion. But neither does
his rebuke of the questioners at all commend itself
to me. How can any man assume to be an authoritative
teacher, and then claim that men shall not put his
wisdom to the proof? Was it not their duty
to do so? And when, in result, the trial has proved
the defect of his wisdom, did they not perform a useful
public service? In truth, I cannot see the Model
Man in his rebuke. Let not my friend say
that the error was merely intellectual: blundering
self-sufficiency is a moral weakness.
I might go into detail concerning
other discourses, where error and arrogance appear
to me combined. But, not to be tedious, in
general I must complain that Jesus purposely adopted
an enigmatical and pretentious style of teaching,
unintelligible to his hearers, and needing explanation
in private. That this was his systematic procedure,
I believe, because, in spite of the great contrast
of the fourth gospel to the others, it has this peculiarity
in common with them. Christian divines are used
to tell us that this mode was peculiarly instructive
to the vulgar of Judaea; and they insist on the great
wisdom displayed in his choice of the lucid parabolical
style. But in Matth. xii-15, Jesus is made
confidentially to avow precisely the opposite reason,
viz. that he desires the vulgar not to
understand him, but only the select few to whom he
gives private explanations. I confess I believe
the Evangelist rather than the modern Divine.
I cannot conceive how so strange a notion could ever
have possessed the companions of Jesus, if it had not
been true. If really this parabolical method
had been peculiarly intelligible, what could make
them imagine the contrary? Unless they found it
very obscure themselves, whence came the idea that
it was obscure to the multitude? As a fact, it
is very obscure, to this day. There is
much that I most imperfectly understand, owing to
unexplained metaphor: as: “Agree with
thine adversary quickly, &c. &c.:” “Whoso
calls his brother a fool, is in danger of hell
fire:” “Every one must be salted
with fire, and every sacrifice salted with salt.
Have salt in yourselves, and be at peace with one
another.” Now every man of original and
singular genius has his own forms of thought; in so
far as they are natural, we must not complain, if
to us they are obscure. But the moment affectation
comes in, they no longer are reconcilable with the
perfect character: they indicate vanity, and incipient
sacerdotalism. The distinct notice that Jesus
avoided to expound his parables to the multitude,
and made this a boon to the privileged few; and that
without a parable he spake not to the multitude; and
the pious explanation, that this was a fulfilment of
Prophecy, “I will open my mouth in parables,
I will utter dark sayings on the harp,” persuade
me that the impression of the disciples was a deep
reality. And it is in entire keeping with the
general narrative, which shows in him so much of mystical
assumption. Strip the parables of the imagery,
and you find that sometimes one thought has been dished
up four or five times, and generally, that an idea
is dressed into sacred grandeur. This mystical
method made a little wisdom go a great way with the
multitude; and to such a mode of economizing resources
the instinct of the uneducated man betakes itself,
when he is claiming to act a part for which he is
imperfectly prepared.
It is common with orthodox Christians
to take for granted, that unbelief of Jesus was a
sin, and belief a merit, at a time when no rational
grounds of belief were as yet public. Certainly,
whoever asks questions with a view to prove
Jesus, is spoken of vituperatingly in the gospels;
and it does appear to me that the prevalent Christian
belief is a true echo of Jesus’s own feeling.
He disliked being put to the proof. Instead of
rejoicing in it, as a true and upright man ought, instead
of blaming those who accept his pretensions on too
slight grounds, instead of encouraging full
inquiry and giving frank explanations, he resents
doubt, shuns everything that will test him, is very
obscure as to his own pretensions, (so as to need probing
and positive questions, whether he does or does
not profess to be Messiah,) and yet is delighted
at all easy belief. When asked for miracles,
he sighs and groans at the unreasonableness of it;
yet does not honestly and plainly renounce pretension
to miracle, as Mr. Martineau would, but leaves room
for credit to himself for as many miracles as the
credulous are willing to impute to him. It is
possible that here the narrative is unjust to his
memory. So far from being the picture of perfection,
it sometimes seems to me the picture of a conscious
and wilful impostor. His general character is
too high for this; and I therefore make deductions
from the account. Still, I do not see how the
present narrative could have grown up, if he had been
really simple and straight-forward, and not perverted
by his essentially false position. Enigma and
mist seem to be his element; and when I find his high
satisfaction at all personal recognition and bowing
before his individuality, I almost doubt whether, if
one wished to draw the character of a vain and vacillating
pretender, it would be possible to draw anything more
to the purpose than this. His general rule (before
a certain date) is, to be cautious in public, but bold
in private to the favoured few. I cannot think
that such a character, appearing now, would seem to
my friend a perfect model of a man.
No precept bears on its face clearer
marks of coming from the genuine Jesus, than that
of selling all and following him. This
was his original call to his disciples. It was
enunciated authoritatively on various occasions.
It is incorporated with precepts of perpetual obligation,
in such a way, that we cannot without the greatest
violence pretend that he did not intend it as a precept
to all his disciples. In Luke xi-40,
he addresses the disciples collectively against Avarice;
and a part of the discourse is: “Fear not,
little flock; for it is your Father’s good pleasure
to give you the kingdom. Sell that ye have, and
give alms: provide yourselves bags that wax
not old; a treasure in the heavens that faileth not,
&c.... Let your loins be girded about, and your
lights burning,” &c. To say that he was
not intending to teach a universal morality, is
to admit that his precepts are a trap; for they then
mix up and confound mere contingent duties with universal
sacred obligations, enunciating all in the same breath,
and with the same solemnity. I cannot think that
Jesus intended any separation. In fact, when a
rich young man asked of him what he should do, that
he might inherit eternal life, and pleaded that he
had kept the ten commandments, but felt that to be
insufficient, Jesus said unto him: “If
thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou hast,
and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure
in heaven:” so that the duty was not contingent
upon the peculiarity of a man possessing apostolic
gifts, but was with Jesus the normal path for all
who desired perfection. When the young man went
away sorrowing, Jesus moralized on it, saying:
“How hardly shall a rich man enter into the
kingdom of heaven:” which again shows,
that an abrupt renunciation of wealth was to be the
general and ordinary method of entering the kingdom.
Hereupon, when the disciples asked: “Lo!
we have forsaken all, and followed thee:
what shall we have therefore?” Jesus,
instead of rebuking their self-righteousness, promised
them as a reward, that they should sit upon twelve
thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel.
A precept thus systematically enforced, is illustrated
by the practice, not only of the twelve, but apparently
of the seventy, and what is stronger still, by the
practice of the five thousand disciples after the
celebrated days of the first Pentecost. There
was no longer a Jesus on earth to itinerate with,
yet the disciples in the fervour of first love obeyed
his precept: the rich sold their possessions,
and laid the price at the apostles’ feet.
The mischiefs inherent in such a precept
rapidly showed themselves, and good sense corrected
the error. But this very fact proves most emphatically
that the precept was pre-apostolic, and came from the
genuine Jesus; otherwise it could never have found
its way into the gospels. It is undeniable, that
the first disciples, by whose tradition alone we have
any record of what Jesus taught, understood him to
deliver this precept to all who desired to enter
into the kingdom of heaven, all who desired
to be perfect: why then are we to refuse belief,
and remould the precepts of Jesus till they please
our own morality? This is not the way to learn
historical fact.
That to inculcate religious beggary
as the only form and mode of spiritual perfection,
is fanatical and mischievous, even the church of Rome
will admit. Protestants universally reject it
as a deplorable absurdity; not merely wealthy
bishops, squires and merchants, but the poorest curate
also. A man could not preach such doctrine in
a Protestant pulpit without incurring deep reprobation
and contempt; but when preached by Jesus, it is extolled
as divine wisdom, and disobeyed.
Now I cannot look on this as a pure
intellectual error, consistent with moral perfection.
A deep mistake as to the nature of such perfection
seems to me inherent in the precept itself; a mistake
which indicates a moral unsoundness. The conduct
of Jesus to the rich young man appears to me a melancholy
exhibition of perverse doctrine, under an ostentation
of superior wisdom. The young man asked for bread
and Jesus gave him a stone. Justly he went away
sorrowful, at receiving a reply which his conscience
rejected as false and foolish. But this is not
all Jesus was necessarily on trial, when any one, however
sincere, came to ask questions so deeply probing the
quality of his wisdom as this: “How may
I be perfect?” and to be on trial was always
disagreeable to him. He first gave the reply,
“Keep the commandments;” and if the young
man had been satisfied, and had gone away, it appears
that Jesus would have been glad to be rid of him:
for his tone is magisterial, decisive and final.
This, I confess, suggests to me, that the aim of Jesus
was not so much to enlighten the young man,
as to stop his mouth, and keep up his own ostentation
of omniscience. Had he desired to enlighten him,
surely no mere dry dogmatic command was needed, but
an intelligent guidance of a willing and trusting soul.
I do not pretend to certain knowledge in these matters.
Even when we hear the tones of voice and watch the
features, we often mistake. We have no such means
here of checking the narrative. But the best
general result which I can draw from the imperfect
materials, is what I have said.
After the merit of “selling
all and following Jesus,” a second merit, not
small, was, to receive those whom he sent. In
Matt. x., we read that he sends out his twelve disciples,
(also seventy in Luke,) men at that time in a very
low state of religions development, men
who did not themselves know what the Kingdom of Heaven
meant, to deliver in every village and
town a mere formula of words: “Repent ye:
for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand.”
They were ordered to go without money, scrip or cloak,
but to live on religious alms; and it is added, that
if any house or city does not receive them, it shall
be more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrha in the day
of judgment than for it. He adds, :
“He that receiveth you, receiveth me,
and he that receiveth me, receiveth HIM that
sent me.” I quite admit, that in
all probability it was (on the whole) the more pious
part of Israel which was likely to receive these ignorant
missionaries; but inasmuch as they had no claims whatever,
intrinsic or extrinsic, to reverence, it appears to
me a very extravagant and fanatical sentiment thus
emphatically to couple the favour or wrath of God with
their reception or rejection.
A third, yet greater merit in the
eyes of Jesus, was, to acknowledge him as the Messiah
predicted by the prophets, which he was not, according
to my friend. According to Matthew (xv,
Jesus put leading questions to the disciples in order
to elicit a confession of his Messiahship, and emphatically
blessed Simon for making the avowal which he desired;
but instantly forbade them to tell the great secret
to any one. Unless this is to be discarded as
fiction, Jesus, although to his disciples in secret
he confidently assumed Messianic pretensions, had
a just inward misgiving, which accounts both for his
elation at Simon’s avowal, and for his prohibition
to publish it.
In admitting that Jesus was not the
Messiah of the prophets, my friend says, that if Jesus
were less than Messiah, we can reverence him
no longer; but that he was more than Messiah.
This is to me unintelligible. The Messiah whom
he claimed to be, was not only the son of David, celebrated
in the prophets, but emphatically the Son of Man of
Daniel vii., who shall come in the clouds of heaven,
to take dominion, glory and kingdom, that all people,
nations and languages shall serve him, an
everlasting kingdom which shall not pass away.
How Jesus himself interprets his supremacy, as Son
of Man, in Matt. x., xi., xxiii., xxv., and elsewhere,
I have already observed. To claim such a character,
seems to me like plunging from a pinnacle of the temple.
If miraculous power holds him up and makes good his
daring, he is more than man; but if otherwise, to have
failed will break all his bones. I can no longer
give the same human reverence as before to one who
has been seduced into vanity so egregious; and I feel
assured a priori that such presumption must
have entangled him into evasions and insincerities,
which naturally end in crookedness of conscience
and real imposture, however noble a man’s commencement,
and however unshrinking his sacrifices of goods and
ease and life.
The time arrived at last, when Jesus
felt that he must publicly assert Messiahship; and
this was certain to bring things to an issue.
I suppose him to have hoped that he was Messiah, until
hope and the encouragement given him by Peter and
others grew into a persuasion strong enough to act
upon, but not always strong enough to still misgivings.
I say, I suppose this; but I build nothing on my supposition.
I however see, that when he had resolved to claim
Messiahship publicly, one of two results was inevitable,
if that claim was ill-founded: viz.,
either he must have become an impostor, in order to
screen his weakness; or, he must have retracted his
pretensions amid much humiliation, and have retired
into privacy to learn sober wisdom. From these
alternatives there was escape only by death,
and upon death Jesus purposely rushed.
All Christendom has always believed
that the death of Jesus was voluntarily incurred;
and unless no man ever became a wilful martyr, I cannot
conceive why we are to doubt the fact concerning Jesus.
When he resolved to go up to Jerusalem, he was warned
by his disciples of the danger; but so far was he
from being blind to it, that he distinctly announced
to them that he knew he should suffer in Jerusalem
the shameful death of a malefactor. On his arrival
in the suburbs, his first act was, ostentatiously
to ride into the city on an ass’s colt in the
midst of the acclamations of the multitude, in
order to exhibit himself as having a just right to
the throne of David. Thus he gave a handle to
imputations of intended treason. He next
entered the temple courts, where doves and lambs were
sold for sacrifice, and (I must say it
to my friend’s amusement, and in defiance of
his kind but keen ridicule,) committed a breach of
the peace by flogging with a whip those who trafficked
in the area. By such conduct he undoubtedly made
himself liable to legal punishment, and probably might
have been publicly scourged for it, had the rulers
chosen to moderate their vengeance. But he “meant
to be prosecuted for treason, not for felony,”
to use the words of a modern offender. He therefore
commenced the most exasperating attacks on all the
powerful, calling them hypocrites and whited sepulchres
and vipers’ brood; and denouncing upon them
the “condemnation of hell.” He was
successful. He had both enraged the rulers up
to the point of thirsting for his life, and given
colour to the charge of political rebellion. He
resolved to die; and he died. Had his enemies
contemptuously let him live, he would have been forced
to act the part of Jewish Messiah, or renounce Messiahship.
If any one holds Jesus to be not amenable
to the laws of human morality, I am not now reasoning
with such a one. But if any one claims for him
a human perfection, then I say that his conduct on
this occasion was neither laudable nor justifiable;
far otherwise. There are cases in which life
may be thrown away for a great cause; as when a leader
in battle rushes upon certain death, in order to animate
his own men; but the case before us has no similarity
to that. If our accounts are not wholly false,
Jesus knowingly and purposely exasperated the rulers
into a great crime, the crime of taking
his life from personal resentment. His inflammatory
addresses to the multitude have been defended as follows:
“The prophetic Spirit is sometimes
oblivious of the rules of the drawing-room; and inspired
Conscience, like the inspiring God, seeing a hypocrite,
will take the liberty to say so, and act accordingly.
Are the superficial amenities, the soothing fictions,
the smotherings of the burning heart,... really paramount
in this world, and never to give way? and when a soul
of power, unable to refrain, rubs off, though
it be with rasping words, all the varnish from rottenness
and lies, is he to be tried in our courts of compliment
for a misdemeanor? Is there never a higher duty
than that of either pitying or converting guilty men, the
duty of publicly exposing them? of awakening the popular
conscience, and sweeping away the conventional timidities,
for a severe return to truth and reality? No rule
of morals can be recognized as just, which prohibits
conformity of human speech to fact; and insists on
terms of civility being kept with all manner of iniquity.”
I certainly have not appealed to any
conventional morality of drawing-room compliment,
but to the highest and purest principles which I know;
and I lament to find my judgment so extremely in opposition.
To me it seems that inability to refrain shows
weakness, not power, of soul, and that nothing
is easier than to give vent to violent invective against
bad rulers. The last sentence quoted, seems to
say, that the speaking of Truth is never to be condemned:
but I cannot agree to this. When Truth will only
exasperate, and cannot do good, silence is imperative.
A man who reproaches an armed tyrant in words too
plain, does but excite him to murder; and the shocking
thing is, that this seems to have been the express
object of Jesus. No good result could be reasonably
expected. Publicly to call men in authority by
names of intense insult, the writer of the above distinctly
sees will never convert them; but he thinks it was
adapted to awaken the popular conscience. Alas!
it needs no divine prophet to inflame a multitude
against the avarice, hypocrisy, and oppression of rulers,
nor any deep inspiration of conscience in the multitude
to be wide awake on that point themselves A Publius
Clodius or a Cleon will do that work as efficiently
as a Jesus; nor does it appear that the poor are made
better by hearing invectives against the rich
and powerful. If Jesus had been aiming, in a
good cause, to excite rebellion, the mode of address
which he assumed seems highly appropriate; and in such
a calamitous necessity, to risk exciting murderous
enmity would be the act of a hero: but as the
account stands, it seems to me the deed of a fanatic.
And it is to me manifest that he overdid his attack,
and failed to commend it to the conscience of his
hearers. For up to this point the multitude was
in his favour. He was notoriously so acceptable
to the many, as to alarm the rulers; indeed the belief
of his popularity had shielded him from prosecution.
But after this fierce address he has no more popular
support. At his public trial the vast majority
judge him to deserve punishment, and prefer to ask
free forgiveness for Barabbas, a bandit who was in
prison for murder. We moderns, nursed in an arbitrary
belief concerning these events, drink in with our
first milk the assumption that Jesus alone was guiltless,
and all the other actors in this sad affair inexcusably
guilty. Let no one imagine that I defend for
a moment the cruel punishment which raw resentment
inflicted on him. But though the rulers felt the
rage of Vengeance, the people, who had suffered no
personal wrong, were moved only by ill-measured Indignation.
The multitude love to hear the powerful exposed and
reproached up to a certain limit; but if reproach
go clearly beyond all that they feel to be deserved,
a violent sentiment reacts on the head of the reviler:
and though popular indignation (even when free from
the element of selfishness) ill fixes the due measure
of Punishment, I have a strong belief that it is righteous,
when it pronounces the verdict Guilty.
Does my friend deny that the death
of Jesus was wilfully incurred? The “orthodox”
not merely admit, but maintain it. Their creed
justifies it by the doctrine, that his death was a
“sacrifice” so pleasing to God, as to
expiate the sins of the world. This honestly meets
the objections to self-destruction; for how better
could life be used, than by laying it down for such
a prize? But besides all other difficulties in
the very idea of atonement, the orthodox creed startles
us by the incredible conception, that a voluntary sacrifice
of life should be unacceptable to God, unless offered
by ferocious and impious hands. If Jesus had
“authority from the Father to lay down his life,”
was he unable to stab himself in the desert, or on
the sacred altar of the Temple, without involving
guilt to any human being? Did He, who is at once
“High Priest” and Victim, when “offering
up himself” and “presenting his own blood
unto God,” need any justification for using
the sacrificial knife? The orthodox view more
clearly and unshrinkingly avows, that Jesus deliberately
goaded the wicked rulers into the deeper wickedness
of murdering him; but on my friend’s view, that
Jesus was no sacrifice, but only a Model man,
his death is an unrelieved calamity. Nothing but
a long and complete life could possibly test the fact
of his perfection; and the longer he lived, the better
for the world.
In entire consistency with his previous
determination to die, Jesus, when arraigned, refused
to rebut accusation, and behaved as one pleading Guilty.
He was accused of saying that if they destroyed the
temple, he would rebuild it in three days; but how
this was to the purpose, the evangelists who name
it do not make clear. The fourth however (without
intending so to do) explains it; and I therefore am
disposed to believe his statement, though I put no
faith in his long discourses. It appears (John
i-20) that Jesus after scourging the people out
of the temple-court, was asked for a sign to justify
his assuming so very unusual authority: on which
he replied: “Destroy this temple, and in
three days I will raise it up.” Such a reply
was regarded as a manifest evasion; since he was sure
that they would not pull the temple down in order
to try whether he could raise it up miraculously.
Now if Jesus really meant what the fourth gospel says
he meant; if he “spoke of the
temple of his body;” how was any
one to guess that? It cannot be denied, that
such a reply, prima facie, suggested, that
he was a wilful impostor: was it not then his
obvious duty, when this accusation was brought against
him, to explain that his words had been mystical and
had been misunderstood? The form of the imputation
in Mark xi, would make it possible to imagine, if
the three days were left out, and if his words
were not said in reply to the demand of a sign, that
Jesus had merely avowed that though the outward Jewish
temple were to be destroyed, he would erect a church
of worshippers as a spiritual temple. If so, “John”
has grossly misrepresented him, and then obtruded
a very far-fetched explanation. But whatever
was the meaning of Jesus, if it was honest, I think
he was bound to explain it; and not leave a suspicion
of imposture to rankle in men’s minds. Finally,
if the whole were fiction, and he never uttered such
words, then it was his duty to deny them, and not
remain dumb like a sheep before its shearers.
After he had confirmed by his silence
the belief that he had used a dishonest evasion indicative
of consciousness that he was no real Messiah, he suddenly
burst out with a full reply to the High Priest’s
question; and avowed that he was the Messiah,
the Son of God; and that they should hereafter see
him sitting on the right-hand of power, and coming
in the clouds of heaven, of course to enter
into judgment on them all. I am the less surprized
that this precipitated his condemnation, since he
himself seems to have designed precisely that result.
The exasperation which he had succeeded in kindling
led to his cruel death; and when men’s minds
had cooled, natural horror possessed them for such
a retribution on such a man. His words
had been met with deeds: the provocation
he had given was unfelt to those beyond the limits
of Jerusalem; and to the Jews who assembled from distant
parts at the feast of Pentecost he was nothing but
the image of a sainted martyr.
I have given more than enough indications
of points in which the conduct of Jesus does not seem
to me to have been that of a perfect man: how
any one can think him a Universal Model, is to me still
less intelligible. I might say much more on this
subject. But I will merely add, that when my
friend gives the weight of his noble testimony to
the Perfection of Jesus, I think it is due to himself
and to us that he should make clear what he means
by this word “Jesus.” He ought to
publish (I say it in deep seriousness, not
sarcastically) an expurgated gospel; for
in truth I do not know how much of what I have now
adduced from the gospel as fact, he will admit
to be fact. I neglect, he tells me, “a
higher moral criticism,” which, if I rightly
understand, would explode, as evidently unworthy of
Jesus, many of the representations pervading the gospels:
as, that Jesus claimed to be an oracular teacher,
and attached spiritual life or death to belief or
disbelief in this claim. My friend says, it is
beyond all serious question what Jesus was:
but his disbelief of the narrative seems to be so
much wider than mine, as to leave me more uncertain
than ever about it. If he will strike out of
the gospels all that he disbelieves, and so enable
me to understand what is the Jesus whom he
reveres, I have so deep a sense of his moral and critical
powers, that I am fully prepared to expect that he
may remove many of my prejudices and relieve my objections:
but I cannot honestly say that I see the least probability
of his altering my conviction, that in consistency
of goodness Jesus fell far below vast numbers of his
unhonoured disciples.