Christ said to his apostles:
"Ye shall be witnesses unto me,
both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in Samaria,
and unto the uttermost parts of the earth.”
Acts .
"I speak the truth in Christ and
lie not.” Paul in 1 Tim. i.
"Jesus Christ, who is the faithful
witness and the first begotten of the dead, and the
Prince of the kings of the earth.” The Apostle
John in Rev. .
"We know that thou art a teacher
come from God, for no man can do these miracles that
thou doest, except God be with him,” Nicodemus,
in John ii.
"If I say the truth, why do ye
not believe me?” Christ, in John vii.
"I am the way, the truth and the
life.” Christ, in John xi.
The opinions and testimony of the
apostles are certainly worth something. They
had three years of instruction under our Lord, and
the promise from him that the Holy Spirit should guide
them into all truth. (John xv.)
A study of the writers of the New
Testament proves that they are in absolute harmony
with the writers of the Old Testament as to the Mosaic
authorship of the five books of the Pentateuch.
Luke i informs us that the mother of Jesus, “when
the days of her purification were accomplished according
to the law of Moses,” brought the child
“to present him to the Lord.” This
was done, according to Leviticus xi-6, and accredits
that book to Moses, and not to some imaginary author.
The Apostle John informs us that “the
law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by
Jesus Christ” (John i, 17). If he has misled
us in reference to Moses and the law, can we trust
him in reference to grace and truth by Jesus Christ?
When Peter made his address to the
people who were surprised at the healing of the cripple,
he said: “Moses truly said unto the
fathers, A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up
unto you of your brethren,” (See Acts ii.)
This saying of Moses is recorded in
Deut xvii, the contents of which book are
introduced to us in these words; “These be the
words which Moses spake unto all Israel on this side
Jordan in the wilderness, in the plain over against
the Red Sea” (Deut. , referring to
the whole books spoken by Moses, the learned man,
mighty in words and deeds, but not recorded, the critics
say, until after the exile, about a thousand years!
This you are asked to believe on the basis of the
professed or assumed acumen of the critics!
Further, in his great speech before
the Sanhedrim at his martyrdom, Stephen quotes Moses
as having received full and complete directions from
God concerning the tabernacle. (Acts vi.) In the
twenty-fifth chapter of Exodus, the book in which
Moses was commanded to write and did write, these
directions are recorded. We accept Stephen’s
testimony, added to that of Exod. xxv., rather than
the testimony of the critics.
When Paul was writing to the Corinthians
of the blindness of the Jews (2 Cor. ii
he said: “Even unto this day, when Moses
is read, the veil is upon their hearts.”
Moses must have written something
if he was read. What has become of his writings?
Is it not the Pentateuch which the Scriptures everywhere
call the writings of Moses? Undoubtedly, yes.
In Paul’s missionary sermon
at Antioch in Pisidia, he declared to his audience
that through Christ “all that believe are justified
from all things, from which ye could not be justified
by the law of Moses” (Acts xii.
Why does Paul refer to the ceremonial
of the Jewish ritual as the law of Moses? It
must be answered that Paul was a Jew. He was familiar
with the Jewish scriptures. He had read the following
passages and believed them, and was grounded in the
truth which they declare, that “by the hand of
Moses” they were given to the people.
To satisfy the reader that they were
“given by the hand of Moses” the following
Scriptures are furnished:
1. “Aaron and his sons
did all things which were commanded by the hand
of Moses.” (Lev. vii.)
2. “That ye may teach the
children of Israel all the statutes which the Lord
hath spoken unto them by the hand of Moses.”
(Lev. .)
3. “These are the statutes
and judgments and laws which the Lord made between
him and the children of Israel in Mount Sinai, by
the hand of Moses.” (Lev. xxv.)
4. “These were they that
were numbered of the families of the Kohathites, all
that might do service in the tabernacle of the congregation,
which Moses and Aaron did number, according to the
commandment of the Lord by the hand of Moses.”
(Num. i.)
5. “These ... whom Moses
and Aaron numbered, according to the word of the Lord
by the hand of Moses.” (Num. i.)
6. “According to the commandment
of the Lord they were numbered by the hand of Moses.”
(Num. i.)
7. “They kept the charge
of the Lord, at the commandment of the Lord, by
the hand of Moses.” (Num. i.)
8. “And they first took
their journey according to the commandment of the
Lord by the hand of Moses.” (Num.
.)
9. “Even all that the Lord
hath commanded you by the hand of Moses, from
the day that the Lord commanded Moses.” (Num.
x.)
10. “That no stranger,
which is not of the seed of Aaron, come near to offer
incense before the Lord, that he be not as Kora and
his company, as the Lord said to him by the hand
of Moses.” (Num. xv.)
11. “And he laid his hands
upon him, and gave him a charge, as the Lord commanded
by the hand of Moses.” (Num. xxvi.)
12. “These are the commandments
and the judgments which the Lord commanded by the
hand of Moses.” (Num. xxxv.)
13. “By lot was their inheritance,
as the Lord commanded by the hand of Moses.”
(Joshua xi.)
14. “Speak unto the children
of Israel, saying, Appoint out for you cities of refuge,
whereof I spake unto you by the hand of Moses.”
(Joshua x.)
15. “The Lord commanded
by the hand of Moses to give us cities to dwell
in, with the suburbs thereof for our cattle.”
(Joshua xx.)
16. “And the children of
Israel gave by lot unto the Levites these cities with
their suburbs, as the Lord commanded by the hand
of Moses.” (Joshua xx.)
17. “And the children of
Reuben, and the children of Gad, and the half tribe
of Manasseh returned, ... according to the word of
the Lord by the hand of Moses.” (Joshua
xxi.)
18. “And they were to prove
Israel by them, to know whether they would hearken
unto the commandments of the Lord, which he commanded
their fathers by the hand of Moses.”
(Judges ii.)
19. “Thou didst separate
them from among all the people of the earth, to be
thine inheritance, as thou spakest by the hand of
Moses, thy servant.” (1 Kings vii.)
20. “There hath not failed
one word of all his good promise, which he promised
by the hand of Moses his servant.” (1
Kings vii.)
21. “So that they will
take heed to do all that I have commanded them, according
to the whole law and the statutes and the ordinances
by the hand of Moses.” (2 Chron. xxxii.)
22. “To kill the passover,
and sanctify yourselves, and prepare your brethren,
that they may do according to the word of the Lord,
by the hand of Moses.” (2 Chron. xxx.)
23. “Thou ... madest known
unto them thy holy Sabbath, and commandedst unto them
precepts, statutes and laws, by the hand of Moses
thy servant.” (Neh. i.)
24. “Thou leddest thy people
like a flock by the hand of Moses and Aaron.”
(Psa. lxxvi.)
Paul was familiar with these statements
of the Jewish Scriptures. He believed them. (2
Cor. i.) He believed that God gave “the
whole law and the statutes and the ordinances by
the hand of Moses” (2 Chron. xxxii,
who was learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians,
and was mighty in words and deeds. (Acts vi.)
Hence he called the Scriptures “The Law of Moses.”
Some of the critics will concede that
many things were done by Moses, but not recorded until
after the exile. Think of it! The laws, statutes,
and ordinances which were vital to the life of the
Jewish nation, which had been given at Sinai, and
were announced with the sanctions of life or death,
were not recorded by God’s appointed leader,
whom he had trained in all the learning of the times,
but were left for almost a thousand years to uncertain
tradition!
Paul had not forgotten the above statements
concerning Moses’ personal connection with the
giving of the law. Before Felix he was arraigned,
and testified “what the prophets and Moses did
say.” (Acts xxv.)
To the Jews at Rome “he expounded
and testified the kingdom of God, persuading them
concerning Jesus, both out of the laws of Moses and
out of the prophets.” (Acts xxvii.)
In his Epistle to the Roman Christians
he says (quoting from Lev. xvii: “For
Moses writeth that the man that doeth the righteousness
which is of the law shall live thereby.” (Rom.
, R.V.)
To the Corinthian Christians he says:
“It is written in the law of Moses.
Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox when he treadeth
out the corn.” (1 Cor. i.) Here again
he quotes from Deut. xx, and repeats the
quotation in 1 Tim. . But the critics deny
that it was written until after the exile, at least
nine hundred or one thousand years later.
The Apostle James adds his testimony
to that of Paul, while addressing the assembly of
the apostles at Jerusalem, saying: “For
Moses of old time hath in every city them that preach
him, being read in the synagogues every Sabbath.”
(Acts x.)
We have learned in these quotations
from Matthew, Luke, John, Stephen, Peter, and Paul,
their repeated testimony, their unvarying faith that
Moses both spoke and wrote the scriptures contained
in the Pentateuch. We have seen that their faith
was founded on twenty-four inspired declarations that
these five books were given “by the hand of
Moses.” These statements are found
in the books themselves, from Leviticus to the Psalms.
If inspired testimony is worth anything, the case is
closed, and the critics’ case goes out of court,
more than disproved.
WAS CHRIST MISTAKEN?
The reader will be interested to know
what Christ has to say of the critics’ denial
of the Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch. For
he who “spake as never man spake,” he
of whom the Father said, “This is my beloved
Son, in whom I am well pleased, hear ye him,”
this same Jesus had some very positive opinions on
the subject before us. He has spoken clearly
and definitely. We may not turn away from his
testimony.
1. After healing the leper, our
Lord said to him: “Go thy way, show thyself
to the priest, and offer the gift that Moses commanded
for a testimony unto them.” (See Matt. vii, Mark , Luke .)
Our Savior here quotes from Lev. xi-8. Moses had been commanded to write the words
that God had given him. (Exod. xxxi.) “And
Moses wrote all the words of the Lord” (Exod.
xxi, hence our Lord quotes the passage in Leviticus
from Moses.
2. The Pharisees, always captious
and controversial, sought to entangle the Savior in
a discussion on the subject of divorce. Replying,
“He saith unto them, Moses, because of the hardness
of your hearts, suffered you to put away your wives.”
(Matt. xi.) Our Lord here quotes from the Mosaic
law (Deut. xxiv. I-4), recognizing Moses
as the author of the same.
3. He rebuked the scribes and
Pharisees also for turning from the word of God to
the traditions of men. “For Moses said,
Honor thy father and thy mother.” (Mark vi.) This quotation is from Exod. x, and Deut.
. They had made the command of Moses of no
effect, had violated the law which Christ taught had
been given by Moses.
4. The Sadducees came to him
with their controversy concerning the resurrection.
They presented to him an unanswerable argument, as
they supposed, against the doctrine, questioning as
to whose wife she should be in the resurrection, who
has had seven husbands in this life. Christ replied
(Mark xi, 27): “As touching the dead,
that they rise; have ye not read in the book of
Moses how in the bush God spake unto him, saying,
I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and
the God of Jacob? He is not the God of the dead,
but the God of the living.”
This quotation by our Lord is from
Exod. ii, and he calls the book from which it
is made “the book of Moses.” Did Christ
know whether it was the book of Moses or of some unknown
author who had so artfully palmed it off under false
colors as to deceive the entire Jewish nation?
Or, as certain of the critics teach,
did Christ know that the pretense that it was the
book of Moses was a fraud, but, in view of public
opinion, was unwilling to expose the deception?
To ask these questions is to uncover the animus of
the critical assumptions which logically attack the
character of Christ himself.
Christ knew who was the author of
the book, and knowing, he affirmed that it was “The
Book of Moses.”
5. In our Lord’s parable
of the rich man and Lazarus, Dives is represented
as pleading that some one be sent from the dead to
warn his brothers, lest they also come into this place
of torment. The reply to his request was:
“They have Moses and the prophets.... If
they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will
they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead.”
(Luke xv, 30.) “Moses and the prophets”
was the name for the Jewish Bible. If Moses did
not write the Pentateuch, the name of their Bible
was false, and the Savior indorsed a falsehood.
We believe “the faithful and true Witness,”
and reject the critics who dishonor his character.
6. After Christ’s resurrection
he walked and communed with the two disciples on the
way to Emmaus. He instructed them concerning the
Messiah’s death, and, “beginning at Moses”
(Luke xxi, informed them that it was God’s
plan, foretold in the Old Testament. He appeared
to his apostles and declared to them that “all
things must be fulfilled which are written in the
law of Moses and the prophets.” (Luke xxi.) The critics deny Moses’ authorship, but
Christ affirms it, using the language that means the
Pentateuch. We believe him.
7. In our Lord’s conversation
with Nicodemus he recognizes Moses in connection with
the book of Numbers. He refers to the historical
incident, if our critical friends will leave us any
Biblical history, in Numbers xx, 9. He says:
“As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness,
even so must the Son of man be lifted up,” (John
ii.)
Recurring to the passage in Numbers,
we learn that, in the dire distress of the people
for their sins, God commanded Moses to make a brazen
serpent, and lift it up before the people, that they
might look and live.
Certain of the critical school consent
that Moses, was connected with the event, but did
not record it. Indeed! And what proof that
he failed to make the record? It was personal
to himself. It was symbolically prophetic of
the crucifixion of Christ, as our Savior used it, an
event toward which all prophecy moved. And we
have already learned that nine times it has been stated
in the book of Numbers that the acts, precepts, and
statutes of this book were done and given by “the
hand of Moses.”
8. To the Jews, seeking to murder
their Messiah, he said; “Do not think that I
will accuse you to the Father; there is one that accuseth
you, even Moses, in whom ye trust. For had ye
believed Moses ye would have believed me, for he
wrote of me.” (See John , 46.)
When and where did he write of Christ?
He wrote of him in the five books which are ascribed
to Moses by all the Old Testament Scriptures, and by
Christ and his apostles. He wrote of him in Gen.
ii, when God promised that “the seed of
the woman shall bruise the serpent’s head.”
He wrote of Christ in Gen. xi, when God promised
Abraham: “In thee shall all families of
the earth be blessed.” He wrote of the Messiah
when he recorded Jacob’s prophecy in Gen. xli: “The scepter shall not depart from
Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet until Shiloh
come.” Moses wrote of Christ, when under
divine direction he instituted the passover, as recorded
in the twelfth chapter of Exodus.
He wrote of Christ in the Levitical
ritual, when under God’s instruction he set
up the system of types, for the tabernacle and the
temple service, which taught the fundamentals of the
New Testament gospel redemption by the
blood.
The whole tabernacle and its furniture
was necessary to complete the symbolism that should
represent the Messiah. The altar, the laver, the
shew bread, the golden candlestick, the mercy seat,
and the officiating high priest. For “Moses
was admonished of God when he was about to make the
tabernacle,” and received positive direction
as to how he should construct it, that redemption
should echo from every part of the service. Beautiful
and glorious was the service that proclaimed “Christ
and him crucified.” Christ’s testimony
here is twofold: That “Moses wrote,”
and that he “wrote of me,” of Christ, the
witness of these things.
9. It was at the feast of tabernacles,
in the year 29 A.D., that the Jews attacked the Savior
in a fierce controversy, because he healed on the
Sabbath day. He was teaching in the temple when
they charged him with violating the Sabbath.
To that charge he replied: “Did
not Moses give you the law? Yet none of you
keepeth the law.” (See John vi.) He affirms
in most positive terms, that can not be twisted into
the shadow of a negation, that Moses gave them the
law. The interrogative form of his statement is
rhetorically the strongest possible affirmation.
10. Once more, in the twenty-third
verse of the same chapter, Christ refers to the fact
that their children received circumcision on the Sabbath
day, that “the law of Moses be not broken.”
The sum of Christ’s testimony
to the Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch is before
us. Ten times our Lord asserts in the passages
quoted that the law given in the Pentateuch was the
“law of Moses.” He affirms that in
that law “he wrote of me.” From Genesis
to Revelation there is continued affirmation by prophets,
apostles, and by Christ, who can not lie, that the
five books of the Pentateuch are the books of Moses,
under the guiding hand of the Spirit of God.
A recent writer, who has gone over
the testimony of the Bible itself against the critics,
says: “We find in them (the writers of the
Old Testament) more than eight hundred quotations
from, or references to, the first five books of the
Bible, and not a hint is given that Moses is not their
author,” but he is everywhere recognized as the
author, under God.
Witnesses multiply with every restudy
of the book, proving the Mosaic authorship of the
first five books of The Book. “What
shall we say, then, to these things? If God be
for us, who can be against us?”