CHAPTER II. SHOULD REPLY BE MADE?
"If the foundations be destroyed,
what can the righteous do?” Psa. x.
"Prove all things; hold fast that
which is good.” 1 Thess. .
"Buy the truth and sell it not.” Prov.
xxii.
"Beloved, when I gave all diligence
to write unto you of the common salvation, it was
needful for me to write unto you and exhort you that
you should earnestly contend for the faith that was
once delivered unto the saints.” Jude 3.
"Therefore, brethren, stand fast,
and hold the traditions which ye have been taught,
whether by word or our epistle.” 2 Thess. i.
"I am set for the defense of the
gospel.” Paul, Phil. .
It is a question among earnest Christian
men, who are busily engaged in the work of the Master,
as to whether we should turn aside long enough to
make reply to the destructive critics. It is affirmed
that, as the Word of God has already passed through
all the attacks that have been made upon it, it will
defend itself in the future as in the past that
our duty is to preach the gospel. Certainly the
victories of the gospel are a noble defense of its
truth and power to save. There should be no respite
from this work. But there are vast multitudes
of people that permit the critics to do their thinking
for them. They are not well informed concerning
the Scriptures, and consequently are not prepared to
repel the attacks of skepticism, nor to reply to the
specious arguments or positive assumptions of the
critics. These multitudes are in danger of casting
aside the Word of God, and missing the offer of eternal
life.
The fact of the increased activity
of the enemies of the truth must be known to Christian
people. Their organized and persistent use of
the press has gained for them a wide hearing.
Shall the Christian people deny themselves this instrumentality
of getting a hearing for God and his truth before
the world? Would not silence be construed by the
world as meaning that the cause dear to the heart
of God’s people is indefensible?
It should be known to all lovers of
the truth that the skepticism widely sown by the destructive
critics has entered the Protestant Church and many
of our institutions of learning.
“Read the utterances of representative
men and teachers in her communion, who deny the Incarnation,
repudiate vicarious sacrifice, make light of the story
of the resurrection, and refine the risen Son of God
into nothing more than the spirit and essence of truth;
or, at most, the disembodied ghost of a man who called
himself a Messiah, mistaken in his claims, but authoritative
in his morals.” (Rev. I.M. Holdeman.)
The author of this statement refers
also to the fact that there are “modern professors
of theology who convict the very prophets whom they
hold up as exemplars of righteousness, of absolute
literary fraud, and deliberate piracy.”
They “demonstrate with cool precision that the
higher critics of to-day are better informed concerning
the mistakes of Moses than was he who claimed that
Moses wrote of him, and prove to their own satisfaction
and the belief of many followers that Jesus Christ,
our Lord, was limited in intelligence, and would, if
he were here to-day, deny some of the statements he
once so unqualifiedly made.”
We may not shut our eyes to the fact
that many of our colleges are more or less infected
with this rationalistic criticism. Some of our
theological professors have substituted the theory
of evolution for the Scriptural doctrine of creation
by the Word of God. Our young men preparing for
the work of the ministry are under the influence and
instruction of some of these teachers here in our own
country.
It is a matter for thanksgiving that
we have literary and theological institutions into
which the destructive critics have never entered institutions
that stand for the Word of God as given by the Holy
Spirit, and believed in by God’s servants in
the past and to-day.
We do well to recognize the further
fact concerning the effort to eliminate the supernatural
from the Bible, that the work of the rationalists
has permeated the literature of the day. In this
age of reading fiction, that form of literature has
become a convenient vehicle for taking everything
out of the hands of Providence. It has become
easy to leave God out of his universe and supplant
him with the heroic in man. Hence, the literary
appetite, ever craving the human instead of the divine,
turns away from the truth that confronts the conscience
of the reader with God and his claims.
For the defense of truth we have the
example of prophets, apostles, and Christ himself.
Much of the work of the prophets of the Old Testament
was devoted to the exposure of the “New Thought”
of their times. Moses dealt thoroughly with the
new theology that asserted: “These be thy
gods, O Israel, which brought thee up out of the land
of Egypt.” The heresy was ended as suddenly
as it was introduced.
The Epistle to the Galatians was Paul’s
reply to the Judiazing teachers who would substitute
cérémonials for the doctrine of justification
by faith. His Epistle to the Ephesians was a
constructive work, in answer to Jewish prejudice and
teaching, in which he set forth the unity of Jews
and Gentiles in one Church, which is the body of Christ.
In his Epistle to the Corinthians he answered their
false views of marriage. He shamed their partisan
spirit, in which some claimed to be of Paul, some
of Apollos, some of Christ. He labored most
earnestly to convince them of their false views concerning
the resurrection, and dealt faithfully with the errorists
concerning the inquiry that was coming to the Church
through their magnifying and perverting the use of
the gift of tongues. He showed them a more excellent
way.
There should be no turning aside from
preaching a full and free gospel, nor should there
be any halting in its defense, or against the effort
to eliminate the supernatural from the Word of God.
The critical work that logically leaves us a Savior
ignorant of the Scriptures, or, if knowing them, afraid
to meet Jewish prejudice by correcting their mistakes,
should be kindly, candidly, and manfully met by those
to whom the truth has given life.