"Among you also there shall be
false teachers, who shall privily bring in destructive
hérésies, denying even the Master that bought them,
bringing upon themselves swift destruction.”
(R.V.) 2 Peter i.
"O Timothy, keep that which is
committed to thy trust, avoiding profane and vain
babblings, and oppositions of science falsely so called,
which some professing have erred concerning the faith.”
1 Tim. v, 21.
"Take heed unto thyself, and unto
the doctrine; continue in them.” 1 Tim. i.
"We have also a more sure word
of prophecy, whereunto ye do well that ye take heed,
as unto a light that shineth in a dark place until
the day dawn, and the day star arise in your hearts.”
2 Peter .
The destructive critics have pushed
their work far into the field of both prophecy and
exposition. They have relegated to the domain
of mythology the clear and unequivocal historical
statements of Scripture. Where the intrusion
of their mythological theory was too large a demand
to make on our credulity, they have attempted a radical
exegesis in proof of their assumptions.
They claim to have discovered that
the Church in all the past has misconceived the first
prophetic promise given to man. That promise was
given to our first parents immediately after the fall.
God said to the serpent (Gen. ii: “I
will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between
thy seed and her seed. It shall bruise thy head
and thou shalt bruise his heel.”
Our critics have two objections to
the interpretation that has always been given and
maintained by Christian scholars and by the Church
as a whole. First, that “the seed of the
woman” does not refer to the Messiah, but to
the human race, which is to bruise the serpent’s
head. Second, that the serpent engaged in seducing
Eve, and here placed under the curse, does not refer
to Satan.
In replying to the objection that
the Messiah is not referred to in the passage, let
it be said that the pronoun is a pronoun referring
to a person. It is so translated in the Revised
Version. “He shall bruise thy head and
thou shalt bruise his heel.” It is not the
human race, but he, an individual person. This
person was not to be the seed of the man, but of the
woman.
The announcing angel said to Mary,
“The Holy Spirit 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.” (Luke .) The
child to be born was to be literally and truly “the
seed of the woman,” and that was the Messiah,
the only person of the entire human race of whom that
could be said.
We are not left, however, to an exegetical
statement alone, although that is absolutely unequivocal.
The promise was repeated to Abraham, to Isaac, to
Jacob, and to David. The seed of the woman was
to be the Messiah, the Christ, triumphing over the
power of Satan. The race has not triumphed over
Satan, but has been a failure.
The Holy Spirit has settled the question
in Paul’s Epistle to the Galatians, ii:
“Now to Abraham and his seed were the promises
made. He saith not, and to seeds, as of many
(or, the human race), but as of one, and to thy
seed which is Christ.” On the human
side, our Savior was of the line of Abraham, and David,
but was singularly and literally “the seed
of the woman,” being the Son of God.
He called himself the Son of man only
in the sense that he was born of her who was of the
race of man. He ever claimed God as his Father,
and in a different sense from that in which men can
claim God as Father. His claim to be the Son
of God was the claim to be equal with God, which no
created being dare make.
The Holy Spirit further declares,
in Hebrews i; “For as much then as the
children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also
himself likewise took part of the same, that through
death (his death on the cross) he might destroy him
(Satan) that had the power of death” “bruise
the serpent’s head.” It was Satan
that inflicted death. He was the first higher
critic who changed and denied the word of God, saying
to the woman, “Ye shall not die.”
Through his denial of the word of God, he deceived
the woman and brought spiritual death on the race.
This was the work of Satan, according to the New Testament
teaching. He is the same that God calls the serpent
in the third chapter of Genesis. For the Holy
Spirit informs us, in 2 Cor. x, that “the
serpent beguiled Eve,” and states definitely
who the serpent is “that old serpent
called the devil and Satan, who deceiveth the whole
world.” (Rev. xi.)
Having God’s testimony that
the serpent and the devil are one and the same, we
are prepared for the mark which our Lord puts on him,
“A murderer from the beginning ... and no truth
in him.” He had always sought to pervert
and discredit the word of God. He suggested to
Eve that she did not understand God’s command;
she had taken it too literally, which is a popular
form of attacking the Bible today. “Yea,
hath God said ye shall not eat of every tree of the
garden?” Are you not mistaken? And when
he had injected the doubt into the mind of Eve, had
gained an advantage, he seized it and boldly denied
the word of God, “Ye shall not die.”
He is an artful critic and successfully did his deadly
work.
Hence, the first great promise which
God gave to the fallen pair, and through them to the
race, set the seed of the woman, the Messiah, in conflict
with “that old serpent called the devil and Satan.”
That promise is now in process of fulfillment, and
must reach its final consummation when John’s
apocalyptic vision is fulfilled, “And the devil
that deceived them (the nations) shall be cast into
the lake of fire and brimstone, where the beast and
the false prophet are, and shall be tormented day
and night, forever and ever.”