I - WHAT IS CHRISTIANITY
This question refers to a matter of
fact. I do not ask whether the Christian religion
is true, but only, What is the Christian religion?
What is that religion which has existed for eighteen
centuries; which is professed by Christendom; and
which has been more precious than life itself to millions
who have died in its faith, and is so still to millions
who possess it as their peace and joy?
But how are we to obtain a satisfactory
reply to this question? Are we to examine the
opinions of all the various “churches,”
“sects,” or “bodies,” professing
Christianity, in order to determine what it is they
profess? If we adopted such a process of investigation
as this, I believe we would reach, by a longer road,
the very same point which may be reached by a shorter
and more satisfactory process.
For I suppose it will be admitted
that the Christian religion is what Jesus Christ and
His apostles taught, and that we may rely upon the
information conveyed to us in the New Testament as
to the sum and substance of that teaching.
I do not even insist, as essential
to my argument, upon the inspiration of Scripture,
according to any theory whatever of that doctrine;
but assume only that we have in the New Testament a
true account of the teaching of Jesus Christ and His
apostles, and that we are able, therefore, to ascertain
from its pages what their Christianity was as an
historical fact, with as much certainty, surely,
as we can learn from the Koran what Mohammedanism was
as taught by Mohammed, or from any work of philosophy
what were the opinions of its author.
Now, if we read the New Testament
with ordinary attention, we must, I think, be struck
by one feature which is repeated in almost every page,
and is manifestly the all-pervading spirit and life
of its teaching, that is, the peculiar
place which Christ occupies in relation to all other
persons mentioned there. This person, Jesus Christ,
whoever He was, stands out prominently before every
other teacher of Christian truth. The
apostles speak of Him, point to Him, plead
for Him, labour for Him. He is not the greatest
Teacher merely among themselves, but the only
Teacher, and they but His scholars, who glory in having
nothing of their own to impart, and in being ministers,
“stewards,” only of what they have received
from Him their Master. The subject of all their
preaching is this Person not a system of
morality, or doctrines, or truths, apart from, but
embodied in Him who was the Truth and the
Life Jesus Christ. The text of all
their teaching is, “God forbid that we should
know anything among you save Jesus Christ.”
In order to see this, take up any epistle, and mark
how often the name of Jesus Christ appears as the ever-present
thought, the centre of every idea.
Again, consider how this Person is
inseparably connected with every motive, every duty,
every joy and hope of the Christian as he is described
in the New Testament. Christian love is there,
not love merely in the abstract, (if such is in any
case possible,) but love to Jesus Christ, and to all
men because “in Christ” The grand question
proposed is, “Lovest thou me?” Christian
obedience is not obedience merely to a code of moral
precepts, but to Jesus Christ and “His
commandments.” Christian faith is not faith
in “mysteries,” or things unseen, or truths
revealed, though such faith may be Christian, but
its essence is faith in Jesus Christ the living Person;
the supreme command being, “Believe in the Lord
Jesus Christ.” The Christian’s hope
is “hope in Christ;” his joy, “joy
in Christ;” his peace, “peace in Christ;”
his labour, “labour in Christ;” his strength,
“strength in Christ;” his life, “life
in Christ;” his death, “death in Christ;”
his immortality, “rising in Christ;” his
salvation, “salvation through Christ;”
and his heaven, “to be with Christ!” On
the other hand, all that is evil and disastrous to
the soul is summed up in being “without Christ.”
To reject Christ, not to believe in Christ, to be enemies
of Christ, to despise Christ, to be ignorant of Christ,
to lose Christ, to be commanded at the last to depart
from Christ these are the characteristics
of the wicked and lost: for “there is no
other name given among men whereby man can be saved
than the name of Jesus Christ.”
You will observe that I am not at
present discussing what Christ has done for us, but
what, as a matter of fact, Jesus Christ claimed from
us and from all men, and recognised to be the religion
which He came to establish upon earth. I repeat
it, therefore, that whether these claims were founded
on fact or fiction, whether the religion which He
taught was true or false, in accordance with, or opposed
to, the will of God, that nevertheless its sum and
substance is supreme love to Jesus Christ.
Now, if this, or anything even approaching
to this, is true, my reader will, I am sure, acknowledge
that it is not possible to separate Christ from the
Christianity of the New Testament. The person
and the “religion” become, in fact, identical so
far at least that both must be received or rejected.
That a code of morals may be extracted from the New
Testament, and Jesus himself, as its centre, be put
aside, is quite possible; or that the character of
Jesus may be recognised as a perfect example of what
He taught, a living embodiment of His “beautiful
precepts,” is also possible, without recognising
His claim to the supreme love and unlimited obedience
of every human being; but the question still remains,
whether this “philosophic” or “rational”
system this Christianity is really
the Christianity taught by Christ, or by Peter, Paul,
and John? I do not argue as to which “religion,”
“system,” or “Christianity”
is the best, but ask only a question of fact, Which
do you candidly believe to be the Christianity of
the New Testament? If you hesitate ere you reply
to this question of historical fact, open again the
New Testament, with a manly resolution to examine
it, and obtain information, and ask its pages, What
is Christianity? Read even such passages as the
following: John x., xiv., and xv.; Acts.
first four chapters; the Epistles to the Ephesians
and Philippians portions of Scripture which
may be read almost in an hour or two. You do not
require to master the whole world of truth which is
there revealed, but only to notice the Sun
of that world; and say, is it not faith in Jesus, love
to Jesus, obedience to Jesus as to no one else in
the universe except to God Almighty?
I at once frankly express my earnest
conviction that this, if true, involves the truth
of what are recognised to be the other “peculiar”
doctrines or facts of Christianity such
as the divine, as well as holy and perfect character
of the Person so loved; His atoning work,
as the grandest expression of His love to us, and that
which most of all kindles love in us to Him; the
teaching of the Holy Spirit, through whom alone we,
who are spiritually blind, can so perceive the spiritual
character and glory of Jesus as to admire and love
Him; and prayer, by which we can hold actual,
personal intercourse with, and thus come to know and
love Jesus more and more from experience: these,
I say, and other doctrines appear to me to be involved
in the very idea that Christianity is supreme love
to Jesus Christ. But I shall not consider any
of them except one, the first and all-important, the
very pillar and ground of the truth viz.,
the divinity of Christ’s Person. Let us
therefore inquire
II - WHO WAS JESUS CHRIST?
A more important question cannot be
proposed for our consideration! Who is this,
I ask with absorbing interest, whom I am commanded
to honour as I honour the living God? Who is this
who claims my unreserved faith, my unlimited obedience,
my devoted love? Who is this who promises to
pardon my sins through faith in His blood; to purify
and perfect my nature through faith in His power?
Who is this in whom I am to abide in life; into whose
hands I am to commit my spirit, and the spirits of
all who are dear to me, in the hour of death; whose
voice is to call me forth from the grave when He comes
again, and who is finally to judge me, and to determine
my eternal condition?
That Jesus Christ does make
those claims upon us, and those promises to us, is
certain; and it is equally certain that they have been,
and are, joyfully acquiesced in by the Christian Church.
The question, then, which I have proposed for your
consideration, is confessedly one of equal importance
with the truth of Christianity. We cannot, with
sincerity and intelligence, profess a willingness to
examine into the nature of the Christian religion,
much less profess faith in it, and yet reject the
consideration of the question regarding the Person
of Jesus Christ as being unimportant or unnecessary.
But before proceeding further in this
inquiry, let me remind you, and be myself reminded,
of the moral importance of truthfulness.
I do not allude to the truthfulness which despises
all hypocrisy in word, and seeks to maintain
with sacred care an exact harmony between what is
believed in the heart, and confessed with the lip;
or which boasts, perhaps, of the honesty that never
conceals a creed, however offensive its doctrines
may be to others. Let us not undervalue this kind
of honesty when real. But, alas! how often is
it only apparent, while the real feeling is selfish
vanity craving notoriety, or moral indifference which
is insensible to the pain of either the existence
or confession of unbelief. And thus where that
truthfulness of character exists, which cannot give
to others a false impression of what is really believed,
how often is there wanting the kind of truthfulness,
so much rarer and more difficult to attain, so much
nobler and more important to possess, which seeks to
harmonise not only profession with belief, but belief
with truth itself. For it is in the innermost
sanctuary of the spirit, into which no human eye can
penetrate, and where truth, as a holy messenger sent
from God, presents herself, seeking for admission
to dwell there, and take possession of the soul’s
temple for ever, it is there that
the reality of a man’s truthfulness, sincerity,
and honesty must be tried and decided upon by the
all-seeing Judge, who can alone search the heart.
How do we deal there with what claims to be truth?
With what spirit do we listen to her voice? With
what care do we examine her credentials? These
are questions settled in the secret of our own personal
experience; and just as the process of investigation
is conducted before the eye of conscience, can it
be determined whether or not we are really honest.
But as sure as there is in us a genuine truthfulness
of spirit, it will, by a divine instinct, recognise
truth when revealed. Like a string rightly tuned
by God, the truthful soul will strike an harmonious
chord with the note of truth wherever it sounds.
The “single” eye will perceive the light
from whatever quarter it shines. When, therefore,
I ask my readers to consider, with sincerity and honesty,
the teaching of the Scriptures regarding the Person
of Jesus Christ, I crave from them that kind
of honesty which is evidenced by the whole tone and
spirit with which they deal with what professes
to come from God, and what, therefore, claims their
faith because it is true, and their love because it
is good.
I. Consider this question in the
light of His own teaching. By this I mean, read
the Gospels, and from all Jesus said regarding Himself,
say what impression did He intend to convey as to His
own person. Remember I am not asserting the truth
of His claims, but proposing merely to inquire into
what His claims as a matter of fact were, in so far
as we may fairly gather these from His own words.
Nor do I dispute the possibility of giving a different
meaning to His words, for I know, and most gladly
acquiesce in the righteousness of the fact, that revelation
is not demonstration, which necessarily overcomes even
the truth-hater, but such evidence as by its nature
may satisfy the truth-seeker. The criticism which
is essential for our inquiry is that which will receive,
and not give a meaning. With such a principle,
let the readers peruse any one Gospel especially
the Gospel of St John and in the presence
of God say, Was it the intention of Jesus himself
to teach that He was human only, or that He was divine
also?
Now, to illustrate what I mean, and
to aid the reader to follow out this first branch
of Scripture evidence for himself, let us look, for
example, at the Sermon on the Mount. This wonderful
portion of our Lord’s teaching is most frequently
referred to by those who profess to admire the precepts
of the gospel, but not its “doctrines,”
and to accept of Jesus as a teacher of morality, though
rejecting Himself as divine. Yet is it possible
to hear that sermon even without perceiving a consciousness
on the part of the speaker of an authority, a power,
a dignity, which, belonged to no mere creature?
This is not so much brought forward in distinct doctrinal
statements, but is assumed by Him, as that
which gave to fact and doctrine all the additional
authority which could be afforded by the lips of one
who had come from God. Consider such words, for
instance, as the following: “Not every
one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into
the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will
of my Father which is in heaven. Many will say
to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied
in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils?
and in thy name done many wonderful works? And
then will I profess unto them, I never knew you:
depart from me, ye that work iniquity.”
Marvellous words indeed! Who is this, we naturally
ask after hearing them, who at the general judgment
is to be addressed by “many?” How should
He be thought of at all amidst the awful solemnities
of that day, and be singled out and appealed to as
one of such authority and power? Who is this that
is addressed as “Lord, Lord?” What “name”
is this in which many prophesied, and by which many
were able to cast out devils, and to do marvellous
works? Who is this that utters the sentence, “Depart
from me?” and who is He that such a sentence
should be an object of dread, yea, the very climax
of human woe? He who uttered these words was
a poor man indeed, a Jewish artisan, at that moment
seated on a grassy hill surrounded by many as poor
and unknown as Himself! But did He wish to give
the impression that He was nothing more? “The
people were astonished at His doctrine, for He taught
as one having authority, and not as the scribes.”
No wonder! For what scribe what teacher what
apostle what mere man who ever lived had
authority to utter such words as those we have just
read! (Read also in connexion with this, Matt. xx-46.)
Almost every chapter in the Gospels
contains similar assumptions, on the part of Jesus,
of a dignity which was divine. Think of the following
assertions from the Gospel of John, every portion of
which is irradiated by the glory of His person: “The
Father loveth the Son, and hath given all things
into his hand. He that believeth on the Son
hath everlasting life: and he that believeth
not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath
of God abideth on him.” “For as the
Father raiseth up the dead, and quickeneth them; even
so the Son quickeneth whom he will. For
the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all
judgment unto the Son: that all men should
honour the Son, even as they honour the Father.
He that honoureth not the Son honoureth not the Father
which hath sent him. Verily, verily, I say unto
you, He that heareth my word, and believeth on him
that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not
come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto
life. Verily, verily, I say unto you, The hour
is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the
voice of the Son of God; and they that hear shall
live.” “Philip saith unto him,
Lord, shew us the Father, and it sufficeth us.
Jesus saith unto him, Have I been so long time with
you, and yet hast thou not known me, Philip? he that
hath seen me hath seen the Father; and how sayest
thou then, Shew us the Father? Believest thou
not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me?
the words that I speak unto you I speak not of myself:
but the Father that dwelleth in me, he doeth the works.”
“Howbeit, when he, the Spirit of truth, is come,
he will guide you into all truth: for he shall
not speak of himself; but whatsoever he shall hear,
that shall he speak: and he will shew you things
to come. He shall glorify me; for he shall
receive of mine, and shall shew it unto you. All
things that the Father hath are mine; therefore
said I, that he shall take of mine, and shall shew
it unto you.” “These words spake
Jesus, and lifted up his eyes to heaven, and said,
Father, the hour is come; glorify thy Son, that thy
Son also may glorify thee: as thou hast given
him power over all flesh, that he should give eternal
life to as many as thou hast given him. And this
is life eternal, that they might know thee the only
true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast
sent.”
Again I ask, What impression regarding
His own dignity were such words as these intended
to convey Consider them, and give an answer to God.
2. Consider Christ’s Person
as it was seen by His enemies and friends. Now,
I bid you observe how both received from His words
the very impression which I assume He intended to
convey by them.
His enemies did so, and alleged
that He claimed to be Divine in the strictest sense
of that word; accordingly they attempted to stone
Him, and in the end put Him to death on the very ground
that He was a blasphemer. “Then
said the Jews unto him, Thou art not yet fifty years
old, and hast thou seen Abraham? Jesus said unto
them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Before Abraham
was, I AM.” “I and my Father are
one. Then the Jews took up stones again to stone
him. Jesus answered them. Many good works
have I shewed you from my Father; for which of those
works do ye stone me? The Jews answered him, saying,
For a good work we stone thee not, but for blasphemy;
and because that thou, being a man, makest thyself
God.” “If I do not the works
of my Father, believe me not. But if I do, though
ye believe not me, believe the works; that ye may
know and believe that the Father is in me, and I in
him. Therefore they sought again to take him:
but he escaped out of their hand.” “The
Jews answered him, We have a law, and by our law he
ought to die, because he made himself the Son of
God.” “And the high priest arose,
and said unto him, Answerest thou nothing? what is
it which these witness against thee? But Jesus
held his peace. And the high priest answered
and said unto him, I adjure thee by the living God,
that thou tell us whether thou be the Christ, the
Son of God. Jesus saith unto him, Thou hast said:
nevertheless, I say unto you, Hereafter shall ye see
the Son of man sitting on the right hand of power,
and coming in the clouds of heaven. Then the high
priest rent his clothes, saying. He hath spoken
blasphemy; what further need have we of witnesses?
behold, now ye have heard his blasphemy. What
think ye? They answered and said, He is guilty
of death. Then did they spit in his face, and
buffeted him; and others smote him with the palms
of their hands.”
Nor did the friends of Jesus
endeavour to undeceive His accusers. They did
not say, “You have misunderstood His meaning!
He is not guilty of such blasphemy! He is a man
like us, and does not claim to be one with God, as
you understand Him to do.” Instead of this,
they too recognised His claims as divine, and worshipped,
loved, served, and preached Him accordingly.
I will return to this part of the subject afterwards.
I remind only the reader of it in passing.
But before the force of such teaching
as this of our Lord’s can in any degree be appreciated,
two things should be borne in mind: one is, the
previous training of the Jewish nation with reference
to the being and character of God; and the other is,
the moral character of Jesus.
As to the first of those points, remember
only how, from the very beginning, God had revealed
Himself that men might know the One
living and true God; and worship and serve Him alone
with heart, soul, and strength. This was the
lesson of all lessons. This was the mighty theme
of all God’s teaching and training of His people,
from Adam to Christ, by patriarchs, kings, and prophets;
by national blessings and national judgments; by captivities
and restorations. On the other hand, the sin
of all sins was idolatry; rot the bowing down to stocks
or stones merely, but the giving, in any degree, that
glory to another which belonged exclusively to the
One living and true God. Had not their whole
history been determined by their adherence to God,
or their falling away to idolatry? Enter, then,
into the Jewish mind with reference to this training,
think how hallowed God’s name was above every
other name how enshrined it was in the very
holy of holies of the national faith, and how it had
become so only after a discipline of much suffering,
prolonged through many centuries, until at last idolatry
had been banished on the return from Babylon; think!
of this while you read those utterances I have quoted
of a Jew to Jews. Do you wonder that they called
Him a blasphemer? for so, indeed, He certainly was
unless He was Divine.
But could such a one have been a blasphemer?
Was it morally possible that He could have uttered
what He did about Himself, unless it was true?
To establish His high claims, it might be sufficient
to appeal to His miracles, and assert that no such
works of power and love could have been done but by
one who verily had God with him; as He himself said, “Believe
me for the very works’ sake. If I do not
the works of my Father, believe me not.”
Or I might appeal to the witness God gave to His Son
at His baptism, on the Mount of Transfiguration, and,
above all, when He raised Him from the dead, and thereby
declared “Him to be the Son of God with power.”
But, putting aside all this evidence, I ask you to
contemplate the moral character of Jesus, and
say, Is it not as impossible that such a person could
have spoken untruly or blasphemously regarding God,
as that God himself can be aught else than true and
holy? Do not let us evade this awful question
of Christ’s character He was an impostor
unless he was Divine! Either Christ never uttered
those things regarding Himself which are here recorded,
and so the history which we have assumed as true is
false in fact; or, having uttered them, He spoke falsehood,
and was a blasphemer, or spoke the truth, and was
Divine. To deny the Divinity of His Person is
to deny the truth of His character.
If any man replies that those sayings
of Christ may be interpreted differently, then
I ask, What impression did Christ intend to
give? If He was a mere creature, how could He
have used language to which it was possible
to give such an interpretation as would imply Divinity?
Only imagine any other man on earth daring so to speak
that his language could, with difficulty be interpreted
as not necessarily implying his assumption of Divine
attributes! But Jesus certainly did so speak,
and did give this impression to friend and foe; and
He has left the same impression, in the form of a
living faith, more indelibly on the mind of the Church
than if it were engraven with a pen of iron on the
rock for ever. If this impression is blasphemy.
He himself, and none else, is to blame for having
given it to the world.
3. Consider Christ’s Person
as it was seen by the apostles. What did
they believe regarding Him? Yea or nay,
did they recognise Him as Divine?
While quoting from their writings,
I beg my readers to keep in mind the previous education
of these remarkable men, in what may be termed the
grand fundamental principle of the Mosaic legislation, viz.,
the worship of the one living and true God.
But, remembering this, let us hear
some of the things said by the apostles about Jesus
of Nazareth.
We shall begin with Paul.
His education was, if I may so speak, intensely Jewish.
He was “a Hebrew of the Hebrews.”
“After the strictest sect of his religion, he
lived a Pharisee.” So devoted was he to
“the religion of his fathers,” so entirely
one in his views of Christianity with the priesthood
and men of authority, both civil and ecclesiastical,
in Judea, that he thus describes his feelings with
reference to Jesus:
“I verily thought with myself,
that I ought to do many things contrary to the name
of Jesus of Nazareth. Which thing I also did in
Jerusalem: and many of the saints did I shut
up in prison, having received authority from the chief
priests; and when they were put to death, I gave my
voice against them. And I punished them oft in
every synagogue, and compelled them to blaspheme;
and, being exceedingly mad against them, I persecuted
them even unto strange cities,” (Acts xxv-11.)
Paul had never seen Jesus while He
lived on earth; yet suddenly, and to the utter astonishment
of friends and foes, he becomes a believer in His
name, and ever after, for thirty years, until his death,
preaches that name as the only one given whereby men
can be saved. Now, what did Paul say of the dignity
of this Person? A full reply to this question
can be given only by reading his epistles, and there
seeing how saturated they are with the Divine Presence
of Jesus in every thought, every doctrine, every command,
and every hope; and how His name occupies a place
which that of no mere creature could occupy without
manifest blasphemy; and how his own past, present,
and future were seen by him in the light of Christ,
without whom he would have been most miserable.
But a very few passages, out of many, may be selected
from two or three of his shortest letters, to illustrate
his teaching. In writing to the Philippians,
he says:
“Who, being in the form of God,
thought it not robbery to be equal with God; but made
himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form
of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men:
and being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself,
and became obedient unto death, even the death of
the cross. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted
him, and given him a name which is above every name:
that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of
things in heaven, and things in earth, and things
under the earth; and that every tongue should confess
that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the
Father,” (Phil. i-11.)
To the Colossians he writes:
“Giving thanks unto the Father,
which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance
of the saints in light: who hath, delivered us
from the power of darkness, and hath translated us
into the kingdom of his dear Son; in whom we have
redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness
of sins: who is the image of the invisible God,
the first-born of every creature: for by him
were all things created that are in heaven, and
that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether
they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities,
or powers; all things were created by him, and for
him: and he is before all things, and by
him all things consist: and he is the head
of the body, the church; who is the beginning, the
first-born from the dead; that in all things he might
have the pre-eminence: for it pleased the Father,
that in him should all fulness dwell: and (having
made peace through the blood of his cross) by him to
reconcile all things unto himself; by him, I say,
whether they be things in earth, or things in heaven.
And you, that were sometime alienated, and enemies
in your minds by wicked works, yet now hath he reconciled
in the body of his flesh through death, to present
you holy, and unblameable, and unreproveable in his
sight,” (Col. -22.)
Once more, when addressing Hebrews, he says:
“God, who at sundry times, and
in divers manners, spake in time past unto the fathers
by the prophets, hath in these last days spoken unto
us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things,
by whom also he made the worlds; who, being
the brightness of his glory, and the express image
of his person, and upholding all things by the word
of his power, when he had by himself purged our
sins, sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on
high; being made so much better than the angels, as
he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name
than they,” (Heb. -4.)
Could Paul, I ask, have written in
such language as this, or anything approaching to
this, unless he believed Christ to have been
divine, in the fullest sense of that word? But
believing this with all his heart, his whole life
and preaching were consistent with such a belief.
He preached Jesus as the Person whom all men were to
love and obey as God, confide and rejoice in as in
God, and to whom they were to commit themselves, both
soul and body, for time and for eternity, as to God.
What he wished others to do, he himself did. For
what was the source and strength of his life?
“The life I live in the flesh, I live by faith
in the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for
me.” “I live; yet not I, Christ lives
in me.” “I can do all things through
Christ that strengtheneth me.” What was
the one object of his holy ambition? “That
I may win Christ.” What was his heaven?
“To be with Christ.” And after thirty
years passed in His service, and after having endured
such sufferings as never fell to the lot of one man,
so far from uttering the language of disappointment
or regret, as of one whose early convictions had not
stood the test of experience, but had failed to sustain
him when most needed, he thus writes, with calm confidence
and perfect peace, in his old age, and from a prison,
to his dear friend and follower Timothy:
“For the which cause I also
suffer these things: nevertheless I am not ashamed;
for I know whom I have believed, and am persuaded that
he is able to keep that which I have committed unto
him against that day.” “Thou therefore,
my son, be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus.
And the things that thou hast heard of me among many
witnesses, the same commit thou to faithful men, who
shall be able to teach others also. Thou therefore
endure hardness, as a good soldier of Jesus Christ.”
“But watch thou in all things, endure afflictions,
do the work of an evangelist, make full proof of thy
ministry. For I am now ready to be offered, and
the time of my departure is at hand. I have fought
a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept
the faith: henceforth there is laid up for me
a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous
Judge, shall give me at that day; and not to me only,
but unto all them also that love his appearing.”
“At my first answer no man stood with me, but
all men forsook me: I pray God that it may not
be laid to their charge. Notwithstanding the Lord
stood with me, and strengthened me; that by me the
preaching might be fully known, and that all the Gentiles
might hear: and I was delivered out of the mouth
of the lion. And the Lord shall deliver me from
every evil work, and will preserve me unto his heavenly
kingdom: to whom be glory for ever and ever.
Amen,” (2 Tim. , i-3, i-8, 16-18.)
Was that man an idolater and blasphemer, the
dupe of his own fancy, deceived in his
faith and hopes, or was he the ignorant
deceiver of others?
Moreover, let it be remembered that
with this mighty truth, as with a hammer, Paul went
forth to destroy the idolâtries of the world,
and gave them such blows, that in Europe they finally
tottered and fell. But did he then only substitute
one idolatry for another? did he preach
to Greece and Rome love and obedience to a man, a better
man, possibly, than any of the persons whom they worshipped,
but still a mere creature like themselves? Hear
Paul’s memorable and glorious words to the Athenians,
and believe this if you can;
“Then Paul stood in the midst
of Mars-hill, and said, Ye men of Athens, I perceive
that in all things ye are too superstitious. For
as I passed by, and beheld your devotions, I found
an altar with this inscription, TO THE UNKNOWN GOD.
Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, him declare
I unto you. God, that made the world, and all
things therein, seeing that he is Lord of heaven and
earth, dwelleth not in temples made with hands; neither
is worshipped with men’s hands, as though he
needed anything, seeing he giveth to all life, and
breath, and all things; and hath made of one blood
all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of
the earth, and hath determined the times before appointed,
and the bounds of their habitation; that they should
seek the Lord, if haply they might feel after him,
and find him, though he be not far from every one
of us: for in him we live, and move, and have
our being; as certain also of your own poets have said,
For we are also his offspring. Forasmuch then
as we are the offspring of God, we ought not to think
that the Godhead is like unto gold, or silver, or
stone, graven by art and man’s device. And
the times of this ignorance God winked at; but now
commandeth all men everywhere to repent: because
he hath appointed a day, in the which he will judge
the world in righteousness by that man whom he hath
ordained; whereof he hath given assurance unto all
men, in that he hath raised him from the dead,”
(Acts xvi-31.)
If from Paul we turn to the other
apostles, we shall recognise in them the same convictions
regarding the person of Jesus. Let us hear, for
example, some of the declarations of the apostle John:
“In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
The same was in the beginning with God. All things
were made by him; and without him was not anything
made that was made. In him was life; and the
life was the light of men. And the light shineth
in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not.
There was a man sent from God, whose name was John.
The same came for a witness, to bear witness of the
Light, that all men through him might believe.
He was not that Light, but was sent to bear witness
of that Light. That was the true Light, which
lighteth every man that cometh into the world.
He was in the world, and the world was made by
him, and the world knew him not. He came unto
his own, and his own received him not. But
as many as received him, to them gave he power
to become the sons of God, even to them that believe
on his name: which were born, not of blood, nor
of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man,
but of God. And the Word was made flesh,
and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the
glory as of the only-begotten of the Father,) full
of grace and truth,” (John -14.)
“But these are written, that
ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son
of God; and that believing ye might have life through
his name,” (John x.)
“And we know that the Son of
God is come, and hath given us an understanding, that
we may know him that is true; and we are in him that
is true, even in his Son Jesus Christ. This is
the true God, and eternal life,” (1 John .)
“Jesus Christ, who is the faithful
Witness, and the first-begotten of the dead, and the
Prince of the kings of the earth. Unto him that
loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood,
and hath made us kings and priests unto God and his
Father; to him be glory and dominion for ever and
ever. Amen. Behold, he cometh with clouds;
and every eye shall see him, and they also which pierced
him: and all kindreds of the earth shall wail
because of him. Even so, Amen. I am Alpha
and Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the
Lord, which is, and which was, and which is to come,
the Almighty.” “I was in the Spirit
on the Lord’s day, and heard behind me a great
voice, as of a trumpet, saying, I am Alpha and Omega,
the first and the last.” “And I turned
to see the voice that spake with me. And, being
turned, I saw seven golden candlesticks; and in the
midst of the seven candlesticks one like unto the
Son of man, clothed with a garment down to the foot,
and girt about the paps with a golden girdle.
His head and his hairs were white like wool, as white
as snow; and his eyes were as a flame of fire; and
his feet like unto fine brass, as if they burned in
a furnace; and his voice as the sound of many waters.
And he had in his right hand seven stars; and out
of his mouth went a sharp two-edged sword; and his
countenance was as the sun shineth in his strength.
And when I saw him, I fell at his feet as dead.
And he laid his right hand upon me, saying unto me,
Fear not; I am the first and the last:
I am he that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I
am alive for evermore, Amen; and have the keys
of hell and of death,” (Rev. -8, 10,
12-18.)
Could John have written such things
of a mere man? Could a pious Jew have done so
without conscious blasphemy? It is in vain to
reply that I have quoted much of this from a vision.
But would he have dared to record such a vision, unless
he believed Jesus to have been Divine?
I am compelled, therefore, to admit
that the apostles believed Jesus of Nazareth
to have been a Divine Person. I am not asserting,
at present, that what they believed was true in fact,
but only that they in fact believed this to be true.
And here I might inquire, whether
there was anything in their personal knowledge of
Christ which could have suggested such a thought to
those men. We have seen that the grand lesson
of their education as Jews was, “Hear, O Israel:
the Lord our God is one Lord; and thou shalt love
the Lord thy God with all thine heart, with
all thy soul, and with all thy might.”
Whatever other faith or worship did not harmonise
with this was deadly idolatry. It is true that,
with the exception of Paul, all the apostles had seen
Jesus in the flesh, and John specially pleads for
His humanity, and presses it home with every form of
expression. “That,” says he, “which
we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which
we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, of
the Word of life.” But if we lay aside all
supernatural and miraculous evidences of our Lord’s
person, what was there in His life which could have
produced this impression, or awakened this strange
conviction of His divinity? Not surely His lowly
birth, nor the long years in which He was known only
as the carpenter’s son; not the sorrow and grief
with which He was familiar, or the real though sinless
infirmities to which He was subject; not the reception
He met with from His countrymen, or the death by which
His short earthly career was ended! What was
there in an earthly life so intensely human, to convince
such true, thoughtful, godly men as the apostles that
this man was one with the Holy One of Israel, the Almighty
Creator of the heavens and the earth? Yet such
was the conviction of John, who leant upon
His bosom at the Last Supper, watched Him in Gethsemane,
beheld Him in the judgment-hall, and stood by Him at
the cross! Such was the faith of Paul
also who never saw Him in the flesh, or ever heard
His voice while He tabernacled among men. If,
however, the alleged supernatural facts in the Bible
are true, including the gift of the Spirit
who was to “glorify” Jesus, we
can easily account for those convictions, but not
otherwise.
And let me here notice in passing,
how beautifully harmonious the facts of this Person’s
life were as a man, yet also as “Emmanuel, God
with us!” These, when “called to remembrance,”
were such as must have confirmed and established the
faith of the apostles. If there were evidences
of a humility belonging to Him as the Son of man, there
were equal evidences of a dignity which belonged to
Him as the Son of God. He was born of the Virgin
Mary, yet by Divine power. “The Holy Ghost,”
said the angel Gabriel to His mother, “shall
come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall
overshadow thee: therefore also that holy thing
which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son
of God.” He was brought forth in a stable,
and laid in a manger, but wise men from the East,
guided by a star, came to worship Him, and to present
Him with kingly offerings, while the hosts of heaven
announced His birth with songs of rejoicing.
He was baptized of John, yet a voice from heaven said,
“This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.”
During His life, while He submitted to every trial
and temptation to which, humanity was liable, “that
in all things He might be like His brethren,”
yet never was evidence wanting of a dignity and glory
which were divine. He was hungry, but fed thousands;
wearied and asleep amidst the storm, but He rebuked
the winds and waves, so that there was a great calm;
He was tempted of the devil for forty days, but Satan
did homage to His dignity, by offering Him as a bribe
the kingdoms of the world, while His grandeur was
revealed in the command, “Get thee behind me,
Satan.” He was so poor that pious women
ministered to Him of their substance, and so sorrowful
that He often wept; yet He dried the tears of thousands,
healed all who came to Him of every disease, and by
a word of power raised the dead, from their bed, from
their bier, and even when corruption had begun to do
its loathsome work. He had His days of darkness,
when He could say, “Now is my soul troubled;”
yet a voice from heaven even then witnessed to His
glory. He washed the feet of His disciples, yet
it was at the very moment when, “knowing that
God had given all things into his hands, that he came
from God, and went to God.” He died and
was buried, but though, during all the hours which
marked that saddest of all tragedies, there were signs
of human woe and weakness, as if “Himself He
could not save,” yet what signs of dignity and
superhuman majesty! For He was addressed on the
cross as a King by a dying criminal, and as a King
He promised to save him; while the darkened sky, the
rending rocks, and all the august circumstances which
attended His humiliation, proclaimed, with the centurion,
“Truly this was the Son of God!” He lay
in the grave, and His body received the tears and
affectionate ministrations of attached friends; but
an angel descended and rolled away the stone; the
Roman guard became as dead men; “the Lord was
risen indeed!” and He appeared to His disciples,
and so overcame the unbelief of Thomas by His very
presence, bearing the marks of His human sufferings,
that the doubter fell down and “worshipped Him,”
saying, “My Lord, and my God!” Jesus remained
on earth for forty days, and we still “behold
the man.” He conversed familiarly
with His apostles, ate and drank with them, and instructed
them in the things pertaining to His kingdom:
but He ascended to heaven before their eyes, while
angels announced His second coming; and soon the descent
of the Holy Ghost, with the great ingathering to the
Church which followed, testified to the truth of the
apostolic preaching, that Jesus was the Son of
God, and that all power was given to Him in heaven
and on earth!
Now, in all this eventful history,
there was that very combination of earth and heaven,
of the human and superhuman, which received an interpretation
from the fact only of Christ’s divine and human
nature, and which, along with Christ’s own words,
and the teaching of His Spirit, made the apostles
accept the doctrine with profound conviction and deep
joy; although, without some such overwhelming evidence,
the very thought must have been to them a blasphemous
idolatry. They believed, because they had sufficient
grounds, from facts, for their belief. We cannot,
therefore, think that those who rejected the claims
of Jesus, and executed Him as a blasphemer, were right,
and that the apostles, who acknowledged Him as one
with God, were wrong, or that their faith will ever
be put to shame!
We have thus considered the Person
of Jesus in the light of His own teaching, as that
too was understood at the time, both by enemies and
friends, and also in the light of the faith and teaching
of His apostles.
4. But there is yet another aspect
in which we may view this question viz.,
the faith and views of the Christian Church.
As to the faith of the Church,
using that word as expressing its creed, it
is historically certain that since the days of the
apostles till the present time, this doctrine has formed
a sine qua non of the creed of the whole Church,
whether called Popish, Protestant, Greek, Armenian,
Nestorian, &c. of every branch, in short,
with the exception of the Unitarians. Amidst all
differences, the millions of professing Christians
have agreed from age to age in this article.
No theological strifes or angry passions, no dissents
or reformations, have disturbed this truth as the
foundation-stone of the Temple. Now, if Christ
is not a divine person, it follows that the
Christian Church is one huge institution of idolatry.
We do not, observe, attempt as Christians to conceal
our faith in Christ’s divinity, or to modify
it so as to escape, if possible, such an imputation.
We necessarily accept this conclusion, unless our faith
is grounded on fact. We boldly declare
that we believe in Jesus of Nazareth; love Him, trust
Him, obey Him, as we do God Almighty, and with
the same degree of faith and reverence. In the
one name of the Father, Son, and Spirit, we have been
baptized, and that name we honour as One, ascribing
equal glory to each Person in the Godhead. Such
a creed as this may startle some and offend others,
but it is nevertheless the creed which is and has
been the faith of universal Christendom, which millions
with ourselves believe unhesitatingly, and confess
as boldly as they do their faith in the being of God.
Now what we assert is, that if Jesus was a mere man,
or was not “God manifest in the flesh,”
we and all Christians so believing are idolaters
in the strictest sense of that word. Our churches
are idol temples where a dead man is worshipped; our
ministers idol priests, who ever preach and commemorate
this man, pray to him, sing praises to him, and consecrate
generation after generation to his service; our people
commit their souls and bodies to the keeping of this
man for time and eternity, and all their hopes are
inseparably connected with him as their Lord; while
amidst this universal defection of the human race,
this wide-spread idolatry which has taken possession
of the most cultivated and intellectual nations, and
threatens to overrun the world and absorb all other
idolâtries into itself, there appears but a trifling
number who maintain the pure light of theism, and preserve
the truth of God unsullied for the coming, and it is
to be hoped, therefore, for better, ages of the world.
And who are these? Jews, Deists, and Unitarians.
On these depend the world’s hopes of its ever
becoming regenerated by a theology of truth regarding
God. Now, does it seem probable, we ask, under
the government of God, that these have discovered
the truth on such a fundamental fact in religion, while
universal Christendom for eighteen centuries has believed
a lie? and such a lie! As a question
of probability, what weight can we attach to this
testimony, balanced not against numbers merely, but
numbers along with the intellect, culture, and character
of those who have believed in, derived their soul’s
good from, and perilled their soul’s existence
upon, Christ’s divinity?
Consider also, as I have suggested,
the effect produced by such a faith when real
upon the religious ideas regarding God of all
who really hold it. On the supposition, for example,
that the Christian’s faith in Jesus is vain that
he is worshipping, loving, serving a creature, or
a mere creation of his own mind, instead of the only
living and true God, how can we account
for the actual results of a faith so false and blasphemous
upon his ideas regarding God?
It is not denied that a vast body
of men and women in every age have had sincere faith
in Jesus as God, and loved Him with their whole soul.
Now, what effect has such faith upon their views of
God, and their feelings towards the Supreme Creator
and Upholder of all things whom “pure Theists”
profess alone to worship? Has this faith in Jesus
as divine had the effect of producing false impressions
of God on the Christian’s heart; of exciting
low and degrading views of His being and attributes,
lowering as it were the Majesty of the heavens from
His throne, bringing Him to the level of our every-day
humanity, and presenting Him to the mind and imagination
in an aspect which inspires no reverence? Or
has it not had the very opposite effect, and that,
too, just in proportion as the worshipper has apprehended
the oneness, in His divine nature, of the Son with
the Father? Has not God, then, appeared more
glorious and majestic than ever; His throne more elevated
above every other throne; His glory more visible in
heaven and earth? Can any Jew, we ask, however
devout, appreciate more fully than a Christian the
Old Testament descriptions of the unity and perfections
of Jehovah, or prostrate himself with a more simple,
undivided, and confiding heart before the God of Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob? Can the synagogue sing David’s
psalms with more truth than the church? or does Unitarianism
withdraw any veil which conceals the perfections of
God as Creator, Ruler, or Father, from the eyes of
him who has intense and undying faith in Jesus as
the Eternal Son? Oh! where on earth can we find
more exalted and pure thoughts of the one living and
true God, as revealed in nature and in the Old Testament,
profounder admiration of His character, or deeper reverence
for His will, than among Christians who love and honour
the Son even as they love and honour the Father?
But how is this to be accounted for if they believe
a lie? How has an idolatry, a baseless and profane
hero-worship, had this remarkable moral power of producing
such true and spiritual views of God, as all men must
admit to be most worthy? and producing, too, we dare
to add, such strong faith and affectionate reverence
towards this God, as exist in no other human bosoms?
Is it possible that the true God can be thus apprehended
and loved through a medium so false as idolatry?
On the supposition, however, but on no other, that
Jesus is really one with God, the knowledge and love
of the Son must necessarily lead to this very knowledge
and love of the Father. “He that seeth
me, seeth the Father also.” “If ye
had known me, ye should have known my Father also.”
“Ye believe in God, believe also in me.”
5. Consider, again, the Person
of Christ, not only in the light of Christian character
generally, but with the addition of Christian knowledge
as to its cause. It will surely be admitted
that, to whatever extent the term Christian has been
misapplied as indicating character, and in however
many cases it has been unworthily or only formally
assumed, yet it includes within its widest embrace
the best men and women this earth possesses, or has
ever possessed. There is a certain kind
of character which all men whose moral sense is not
blunted recognise as the culminating point and perfection
of humanity. They may not themselves attempt
to realise it, or they may deem it unattainable, but
nevertheless the idea of what constitutes a good or
perfect man is no sooner presented to their minds than
conscience accepts it as that which ought to
be. Now, it is admitted even by the atheist that
such an idea is embodied in the historical character
of Jesus Christ, and in the life, consequently, of
every man just in proportion as he possesses His Spirit,
obeys His precepts, and walks in His steps. But
there are, and have been in every age, persons who
have done this, if not in a perfect, yet in a more
perfect degree than by any others among mankind.
Or supposing it were admitted, for the sake of argument,
that, so far as we had the means of judging, there
has occasionally appeared, without faith in Christ,
a certain product of character, apparently as pure,
lofty, self-denying, loving, and devoted to God as
any which ever professed to owe its origin to Jesus
Christ; yet, where has there been on earth such a body
of living persons as those Christians who, within
the bosom of the universal Church, during eighteen
centuries, have manifested that kind of character
which all men profess to admire and reverence?
In vain one tries to conceive the flowers of moral
beauty and glory that have sprung up within the garden
of Christendom! Being rooted in the earth, they
may have been soiled, indeed, by its dust, but they
yet expanded in loveliness to the sky, and sent forth
a fragrance to the air, peculiar to the plants raised
by the Great Husbandman. Number, if you can,
the saints of the Christian Church; the young and old,
the poor and rich, who in every age and clime have
been truthful, simple, sincere, patient, forgiving,
and compassionate; who have enjoyed an inward life
of peace with God, maintained an outward conduct, and
possessed a reality of abiding love to their Father
in heaven and to their brethren on earth peculiar
to themselves. Their lives have been a blessing
to the world, and a happiness to their own hearts;
their deathbed has been freed from the fears of a dark
future, and brightened by the pure prospect of continued
life and joy. The Christian Church, and the Christian
Church alone, contains such characters; and
these are the lights of our homes, the salt of the
earth, and the only security of the world’s progress.
Now, to what is this great result
owing? How is this product of character, which
is affecting the world’s history, and gradually
leavening the whole lump of humanity, to be accounted
for? What power has originated it, or by what
has it been sustained? Who are more entitled
to give a reply to such questions than Christians themselves?
They alone can know by what motives, they have been
actuated, by what strength supported, and by what
hopes animated. Ask them, then, and what will
be their reply? Each and all will but echo the
words of Paul, as expressing the secret of their life:
“I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in
me; and the life I live in the flesh I live through
faith in the Son of God, who loved me, and gave
himself for me.” “The love of
Christ constraineth us,” “I thank Christ
Jesus, our Lord, who hath enabled me.”
“The Lord stood with me, and strengthened
me.” “The Lord shall deliver me
from every evil work, and preserve me unto his heavenly
kingdom, to whom be glory for ever and ever!”
“I can do all things through Christ, which
strengtheneth me.” This is the experience
of the living Church of Christ, of all lands, and
of all time, the creed of each genuine believer;
of the early martyr and mediaeval saint; of the pious
Protestant and Papist; of the cultivated Christian
philosopher and the half-taught Christian negro; of
the young man who has overcome the wicked one, and
of the old patriarch who departs in peace, because
his eyes have seen salvation; of the Christian Greenlander
who died yesterday, and of the sweet Christian girl
who died to-day, leaving the bosom of her mother for
the bosom of her God; of each and all the ten thousand
times ten thousand who have so lived and died, with
one conviction of truth the strongest in their minds;
that whatever strength, peace, or good they possess
as true life, they owe all to the One source
of life, the Lord Jesus Christ!
What are we to conclude from these unparalleled facts,
which can no more be denied than the realities of human
history or of human experience? Have all Christians
been deceived? Have they been believing a lie,
and has this great life of life in them been sustained
by a delusion? Is there no such person as Jesus
Christ, the Lord of life, the living Saviour of sinners?
Is this not a fact but a fiction? Can it be that
the moral government of God exists, and yet that it
admits of such a moral anomaly as this, the
regeneration of human character by a falsehood!
Impossible! I say it with deepest reverence, as
sure as there is a God of truth, impossible!
The Christian Church has not been deceived.
Unbelievers in Jesus have not had the light
of truth given them, while those who have loved and
served Him have been permitted to walk in the darkness
of intellectual untruth and in the vain belief of
an idol! Jesus is Divine as well as human.
“He was, and is, and liveth for evermore!”
III - WHAT CAN WE BELIEVE IF WE DO NOT THUS BELIEVE IN JESUS?
If all this evidence is insufficient
to prove the Divine nature of Jesus Christ, it may
be well to consider on what religious fact or truth
we can fall back, as being based upon surer evidence,
and affording, therefore, a surer ground of faith
and hope.
1. On what part of Christ’s
“work” on earth can we fall back?
We can no more recognise God the Father as truly revealing
Himself in Jesus as his co-eternal Son; and the whole
light and life of such a revelation in Christ, as
hitherto seen and received by the apostles and the
Christian Church, is for ever extinguished and destroyed.
We can no more believe Jesus as our Prophet,
when we do not accept the very truths to which He
gave most prominence: nor can we trust Him as
our King, when we believe Him to have been a
mere man only, who neither possesses nor could wield
power adequate to govern the world: nor can we
trust Him as our Priest, for in Him is no longer
manifested the love of God in sending His own Son to
be a propitiation for the sins of the world.
And who, we may add, will believe in a Holy Spirit
as a Divine Person, whose very work is represented
by Jesus to be that of convincing the world of sin
“because it believes not in Him,”
as “glorifying Him,” and taking of His
things to shew them to the spirits of men?
2. Can we, then, accept of Christ
as a perfect example? How is this possible?
For remember, it was the example of one who is assumed
to be a man like ourselves, but yet a man who never,
by one act of contrition or confession, acknowledged
the existence of personal sin or defect of any kind;
a man rarely endowed, and yet who never once expressed
gratitude to God for His rich and varied gifts; a man
who prayed indeed to God, yet as one who was His equal,
and who in His last hours uttered such words as these “All
mine are thine, and thine are mine! Father, I
will that they also whom thou hast given me, may
be with me where I am, that they may behold
my glory!” Can we, sinners, follow
this example, as that of “our model man, in
everything?” Dare we closely follow a life
like this, and then end it by voluntarily giving ourselves
up as a ransom “for the remission of the sins
of many?”
3. Can we even retain the
character of Jesus? The atheist admits that Jesus
was the greatest man who ever lived on earth.
A worshipper of heroes says of Him in his Hero
Worship, “The greatest of all
heroes is one whom I do not name here.”
The character of this wonderful Being has indeed been
generally recognised as a bright spot amidst the world’s
darkness; as the only perfect model of goodness ever
seen on earth yea, as moral beauty itself!
But unless the history we possess of Jesus is untrue,
and He was, therefore, no historical but a mere ideal
person, or if He was a real person, as
represented in the gospel, yet not divine, we
cannot defend His character without losing our own.
For we have seen how He certainly represented Himself
as one with God, as one who alone knew God
and truly revealed Him, as one who demanded
the same honour and love from man as were due to God, who
required men to be willing to part with their dearest
friends, even life itself, rather than with Him, who
asserted His right to assign to mankind their eternal
destinies according to the relationship in which each
man stood to Him, who, when standing before
an earthly judge, crowned with thorns, insulted by
the rabble, with every sign of weakness, and as if
literally forsaken by God and man, did not abate one
jot or tittle of His claims, but asserted them in
all their magnitude, announcing His return to the
world in glory as its mighty Judge; and much more to
the same effect. Now, can any man, we ask, of
common honesty defend such a character as this from
the charge of wilful imposition and daring blasphemy,
unless what He asserted was true? With reference
to all the good words or deeds which His professed
friends may claim for Him, yet so long as He falsely
claims to be divine, we are constrained to reject
Him, as the Jews did, and to say with them, “For
a good work we stone thee not, but because thou,
being a man, makest thyself God!” It is
not possible, therefore, to fall back on Christ’s
character, if we reject Christ’s divinity; for
His character was manifest untruth, and His claims
an unprincipled deception!
4. Can we preserve the character
of the apostles? That, too, has hitherto been
considered worthy of our respect and regard. Never
did men leave such a record of moral teaching, and
such an impress of a holy life behind them, a life
so pure, wise, loving, so suited, in every respect,
to bless mankind, and to make a heaven below in proportion
as it is received. In these men we can detect
no trace of avarice, ambition, or selfish aims of
any kind. They lived, laboured, and died, that
the world should become better and happier, and they
have so far succeeded that civilisation can never more
be separated from their names. But what was the
substance of their teaching, and the one grand object
of their existence? I again reply, without fear
of contradiction, it was to persuade mankind to trust
and love Jesus Christ as God! The first Christian
teacher who died a martyr’s death resigned his
spirit into the hands of this Jesus, as his Lord in
glory; and the last and oldest apostle who first knew
Him as his friend, represented Him as the Alpha and
the Omega, the King of kings and Lord of lords.
But if He was not this, how can the character of those
teachers be defended? As Jews they could not be
ignorant of the being and attributes of God, nor as
men of the earthly life and history of Jesus; yet
they professed to preach Jesus as divine, and to
work miracles in His name! They could not possibly
have been themselves deceived, and must therefore,
if their faith was vain, have attempted to deceive
others. Common sense rejects every other explanation.
Anyhow, they were the successful heralds of an idolatry
which, we may boldly affirm, will never leave the world,
and of a blasphemy whose praises will never be silent
on earth. Their character must perish with that
of their Master!
5. What, then, have we left us?
The morality of the New Testament? No! for
all that is peculiar to its morality are the
duties which spring out of the assumed relationship
of Jesus to mankind. The gospel morality of supreme
love to Jesus becomes immorality, if Jesus is
not one with God. Prayer to Christ, personal communion
with Christ, personal attachment to Christ, hymns
of praise to Christ, abiding through faith in Christ,
advancing the kingdom of Christ, labouring for Christ
and keeping His commandments in one
word, that whole life of the Christian towards God
and man, every portion of which is permeated by Christ
as the sunlight fills the atmosphere, can never be
separated from the morality of the New Testament.
Nor can we any longer rely upon Old
Testament facts, or on anything there revealed regarding
God, as distinct from what could have been discovered
without such a revelation, if our faith has been shaken
in the facts and the characters of the New Testament.
He who can reject the Christ of the New Testament,
must necessarily reject the God of the Old; and he
who cannot rely on the apostles, cannot possibly rely
upon the prophets. All must be given up, and the
Bible become a mere curious record of falsehood.
6. Is this all? Enough one
would think! But can we even fall back on
God? What evidence has any man of the existence
of a living personal God, stronger than what he possesses
of a living personal Saviour? Can any
revelation of God during the past, and recorded
in history, be received as worthy of credit, if this
alleged history of Jesus is rejected as unworthy?
If the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ is
not the only living and true God, where is the true
God to be found? If Jesus neither knew Him truly,
nor truly revealed Him, who can do either? And
when, moreover, we have thus lost faith in the character
of Jesus and of His apostles, from what better evidence
of moral character or moral design on earth can we
henceforth reason upwards as to the moral character
of a Divine Being?
In what position do we thus find ourselves?
The Church of Christ must be given up as a great falsehood,
a huge idolatry, a society of weak, deluded, or bad
men. The character of its early founders, and
the Person to whom it owes its name, must, for the
same reason, be abandoned. The Old Testament
can form but a feeble barrier to the flood which has
thus swept away the New, with all which has arisen
out of the assumed truth of its history. And
thus each man, cut off from the past, is left to discover
a God for himself, from evidence which, to satisfy
him, must necessarily be more overwhelming than that
which he rejects, and on which the faith of the Christian
Church has rested for eighteen centuries. Can
any man be satisfied with such a basis of religion
as this? Having rejected God as revealed in Jesus,
can he peril his soul in peace on the God discovered
by himself? Having fled from Christianity as
a religion whose foundations are insecure, can he
repose with confidence in the building which he himself
has reared? Or, if he moves at all, must he not
gradually slide into universal scepticism, and conclude
that, since he cannot believe in Jesus, he can believe
in no one else, that if deceived by Him
he may be deceived by all, that if there
is no such Person as the Divine Son, there is no such
Person as the Divine Father, that if he
must be without Christ, he must necessarily be without
God!
He may, indeed, in such a case, profess
to believe in a God; but is He the living and
true God, or one who is but the product of his own
mind, the shadow cast by his own human spirit?
Oh! hear the words of Him who is truth itself:
“Ye believe in God, believe also in me;”
“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
whom the Son will reveal him;” “Come unto
me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I
will give you rest!” May the Lord’s last
prayer be answered in us: “Father, glorify
thy Son, that thy Son also may glorify thee:
as thou hast given him power over all flesh, that he
may give eternal life to as many as thou hast given
him. And this is life eternal, that they might
know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom
thou hast sent.”
IV - WHAT IF CHRISTIANITY IS NOT TRUE?
Now to prove the Christian religion
untrue, or to prove that the evidences on which it
rests are insufficient, is a more difficult task than
some of its opponents appear to imagine, if we may
judge from the boastful language in which they record
their supposed achievements.
Let it never be forgotten, that the
Christian religion is founded upon certain alleged
historical facts that must be disposed of before
it falls. The holy temple of a loving soul filled
with the glory of Christ is spiritual, but it is nevertheless
based upon facts as on foundation-stones, the chief
corner-stone being Jesus Christ the personal Saviour,
“who was dead and is alive, and liveth for evermore!”
Without these facts Christianity could not exist.
The duty, for example, of supremely loving and devotedly
serving Jesus Christ, implies the truth of other facts,
such as the fulfilment of prophecies, miracles, the
life and character of Jesus, His atoning death, resurrection,
&c., all of which establish His claims to our faith.
But in addition to these, and as their evidence also
and result, there is the experience of the whole living
Church, derived from faith in Jesus as the resurrection
and the life.
But before Christianity can be destroyed,
it is absolutely necessary to destroy the evidences
of those historical facts on which it rests.
This, as I have said, is no easy task. There are
many high walls, many encircling lines of defence
around the old fortress, each and all of which must
be taken, ere the citadel itself can be reached and
laid in ruins. Now this has never yet been done.
The enemy has made many attacks during the last eighteen
centuries, and on several occasions the last grand
assault which was to decide the long campaign has been
threatened. Every method has been adopted which
critical skill could apply, which the most subtle
genius could invent, and the most untiring perseverance
execute; but, in spite of all, “the strong city,”
with “salvation for walls and bulwarks,”
still remains strong as ever. For, to drop all
metaphor, in whatever way we may account for it, the
fact is undeniable, that Christianity, in the form
of supreme love to Jesus Christ as the Son of God,
not only survives, but in no age of the world’s
past history has it been so strongly rooted in the
convictions and affections of so many men, nor has
it ever been given such promise of filling the whole
earth.
Let us suppose, however, for the sake
of argument, that by some process hitherto undiscovered,
Christianity, as the religion of supreme love to this
living Person, Jesus Christ, is at last proved to
be a fiction; that the millennium of infidelity has
arrived; that the religion taught by Christ and His
apostles has become as dead to the world as that of
Buddh or Confucius is now to the mind of Europe; that
our Christian churches, like the heathen temples of
Greece or Rome, remain but as monuments of a superstition
long ago exploded by the light of science and philosophy;
that all those supernatural Christian facts and truths,
which like a mighty firmament of stars, now cluster
around the name of Jesus, have departed as lights from
the visible universe; that Christian truth is as silent
before the world as Christ himself was when He stood
before Herod, and answered him nothing; until even
the wailing cry has ceased of the last desponding and
disconsolate believer on earth, “They have taken
away my Lord, and I know not where to find him!”
Well, then, the work is done! The energetic teachers
of the propaganda of unbelief have accomplished their
long-cherished purpose, and the professors of an earnest
and devoted faith in Christ have perished, leaving
no memorial behind them except their “curious
books,” or their hoary tombstones, which record
their old faith in Him as the resurrection and the
life.
When such a crisis as this has at
last arrived, the world will surely pause, and count
the fruits of victory. Wise men will then doubtless
consider with an earnest spirit what has been gained
to humanity by this tremendous revolution in all those
opinions and ideas cherished during so many ages;
and the well-wishers of mankind will examine the spoils
which the conquerors have ready for enriching the poor
and needy as the result of this triumph over a religion
that was clung to by the best and noblest men with
a tenacity overcome only when earth was old, and time
was well-nigh ending. But may we not now anticipate
such a solemn review, by asking those who are wishful
to destroy Christianity, what they intend to put in
its place when their object is accomplished.
If they have anything else to give us, let us know
what it is, that we may see and judge if it is better
than the old religion; if it is better suited to meet
the wants of man in every period and condition of
his varied life; if it is likely to do better work
on earth, and produce better fruit; if its truth rests
on better evidence, and if, in short, it is such a
gift from heaven that angels with songs of joy might
announce this new gospel of peace on earth, and this
new message of good-will to man. Strange to say,
such questions, though often asked, have hitherto
remained unanswered. If there be a something
better in store for us than what we profess, the blissful
secret has not yet been revealed. Infidelity,
often so loud in attacking Christianity, is silent
as a god of iron or brass when we ask at its shrine.
If I give up faith in Christ, what wouldest thou have
me be and do, and how live and rejoice as an immortal
being?
What, then, I again ask, would be
lost and gained on both sides after the war, in the
event of Christianity being destroyed? We Christians
know full well what we would gain and lose; we
know that we would gain nothing, and lose everything!
We would lose all which we most love in the universe
of God, all which makes us rejoice in existence, all
which enables us to look at the past, present, and
future with perfect peace; and of all men we would
be most miserable! It is true that in regard
to many an object of affection, it may be said
“Better to have loved
and lost, than never to have loved at all!”
But not so in regard to our love of
Jesus Christ. Better never to have seen that
glory filling the heavens and earth, and making life
a constant thanksgiving and praise, than, after having
seen it, to be persuaded by any witchery that it was
all a dream a fiction of the imagination a
ghostly superstition which it is wisdom
to banish from the memory. For once we have lost
Jesus Christ as our ever-living, ever-present, all-sufficient
Friend and Saviour, what are we to do? Can we
contentedly fall back upon our own being, or upon any
other person, and live on “without Christ in
the world!” Or are we in those circumstances
to be told that we may still have comfort in “religion
without the supernatural,” and rejoice in “the
eternal and essential verities of morality!”
Only think of it, Christians! The living man,
the light and hope of the family, is murdered; but
a disciple of pure science and calm philosophy enters
it, and tells its agonised members that it is folly
and ignorance to indulge in such grief, for science
has analysed their friend, and preserved in a series
of neat phials, which they may easily carry about
with them, all his constituent elements, his “essentials,”
his carbon, his silica, this and that gas everything,
in short, which made up the substance of him whom
they were accustomed to call their beloved; therefore
they may “comfort one another with these words!”
And thus would the enemy of Christianity presume to
comfort us with his “essentials,” when
our living Lord is gone! Comfort indeed!
“Comfort? comfort scorn’d
by devils! this is truth the poet sings,
That a sorrow’s crown of sorrow
is remembering happier things!”
But what can the unbeliever himself
expect to gain by its destruction? “I have
nothing to do with consequences,” may be his
reply, “but with truth only; let every lie be
tested and exposed, whatever may be the real or imaginary
gain or loss to myself or others.” Brave
words! with which we have the deepest sympathy; for
if they are the utterance of a truly sincere heart,
they evidence belief, and not unbelief; they assume
that there is an order and government in the universe,
which is on the side of truth, and that we may therefore,
at all hazards, discover what is true, and cling to
it in the full assurance of faith, that
ultimately the right and true are in harmony with all
that is worth loving and worth living for. Amen!
we say from our heart. At the same time, it is
well to look at some of the consequences which the
destruction of Christianity would involve even to
him who destroys it.
It is obvious, for example, that should
it cease to exist to us as a reality, other realities
would remain irrespective of our belief. Existence
would remain, and it may be one as eternal as
the life of God; sorrow and suffering would remain,
to gnaw the heart, darken the world, and cast deep
shadows over a life which must end with that dread
event, death, and the passing away of ourselves and
of all we have from the memories of mankind as if
we had never been and whither I Worst of
all, sin would remain dark, mysterious,
and terrible sin! And “obstinate questionings”
would remain to disturb and perplex the mind in moments
of earnest and silent thought. Men would still
ask, What if we are responsible to God for this whole
inner and outer life of ours, with its beliefs, purposes,
and actions? What if sin and its consequences
continue beyond the grave, with no remedy there unless
found here? What if there is no possible happiness
but in fellowship of spirit and character with God;
and what if this is morally impossible for us to attain
without a Saviour and Sanctifier What, in short, if
all the evils which Christianity professes to deliver
us from remain as facts in our history, just as diseases
remain though the aid of the physician, who reveals
their nature, and who offers to cure them, is rejected?
or, as a vessel remains a wreck in the midst of the
breakers after the life-boat which comes to save the
crew is dismissed? or, as the lion remains after the
telescope is flung aside which revealed his coming,
and revealed also the only place of safety from his
attack? For it is obvious that Christianity does
not create the evils and dangers from which it offers
to deliver us, and that these must remain as facts
should it be proved a fiction. So far, then,
the infidel has gained nothing by the overthrow of
our religion. “Except truth!” does
he exclaim? Yet, I again repeat it, truth in
its negative form only, as destroying supposed falsehoods,
but not in its positive form as establishing something
to rest upon.
Is there any other conceivable gain,
then, which would accrue to the unbeliever by his
supposed success? Does he wish, for example, to
relieve oppressed souls of some great burden which
crushes them? But what alleged truths or doctrine
of Christianity, if blotted out to-morrow from the
circle of belief, would ease a single soul, while
it would unquestionably be an irreparable loss to millions?
Would a God be more acceptable, and appear with greater
moral beauty, who was different from the God and Father
of our Lord Jesus Christ? Would He be more attractive
to our hearts if He did not forgive our sins fully
and freely, or if forgiveness was not offered through
such Divine self-sacrifice? Would it be a relief
to our moral being to be freed from the privilege
or duty of supremely loving Jesus Christ? Would
it lighten our hearts to be freed from the burden
of having communion with Him in prayer? Would
we have more security for light, life, strength, holiness,
peace, or comfort, if there was no such Person revealed
as the Spirit of God, who freely imparts His aid to
all? Would it be glad tidings to hear that men
were not to be born again, nor to repent, nor to deny
themselves, nor to do God’s will, but their
own? What is there which a good man would gain
by the destruction of the Christian religion!
I have one question more to suggest
with reference to the duty of an unbeliever towards
us as Christians, and it is this, Why should he disturb
our faith, or, as he might term it, our superstition?
If he retorts by asking why we should disturb his
unbelief, our answer is ready because we
wish with our whole soul to share with him the blessings
which God our common Father has for him as well as
for us; because we truly lament the loss to our brother
who refuses the eternal good which he may now enjoy
with the whole family of God; because we love our
God, and his God and Saviour, and desire our brother
to know and to love them too; because it is so unjust,
so selfish, so hateful, not to love and obey such
a glorious Person as Jesus Christ, who knows us, loves
us, and has died to gain our hearts! These are
some of the reasons, rudely and roughly stated, why
we desire, with all our heart, that every man should
believe in Jesus Christ. But if any man, for
any reason which may be beyond our understanding or
sympathy, desires to destroy this faith in all that
is most precious to us, then I ask, not in Christ’s
name, for it is unnecessary to appeal to
Him, but in the name of common sense and
common philanthropy, why he should not only labour
to do this, but to do it without apparently any apprehension
of the untold misery which he must occasion if he
succeeds in his attempt? Do not tell us, with
a boast, that “the truth must be spoken, come
what may!” Be it so; but surely the kind
of truth which must be spoken must ever regulate
the manner in which it is spoken? Again, I bid
you picture to yourselves a person entering a family
whose members were rejoicing in the thought of a father’s
return, and announcing the intelligence of that father’s
death, with a smile of pity or a sneer of contempt
at their ignorant happiness! Imagine such a one
professing to be actuated by a mere love of truth!
Oh! if the terrible duty has been laid upon any one
with a human heart, of announcing to others intelligence
which, if true, must leave a blank to them in the
world that can never be filled up, what tender sympathy,
what genuine sorrow becomes him who breaks the heavy
tidings! And such ought to be the feelings
of every man who, from whatever cause, feels called
upon to announce that the Christian religion is false.
If he must make known that terrible fact to
believers in Jesus; if he must tell them that
the supposed Source of all their life and joy has
no existence, and that their faith in Him is vain,
let this be done with the solemnity and the sorrow
which a true brotherly sympathy would necessarily
dictate. If the missionaries of Christianity
are warranted in preaching their gospel with joy, the
missionaries of an infidelity which professes only
to destroy and not to build up, should go forth on
their dreadful vocation with the feeling of martyrs,
and with no other notes of triumph than sounds of
lamentation and woe! For if Christianity is false,
we are “yet in our sins, all who have fallen
asleep in Christ have perished, and we are of all
men most miserable!”