There can be, of course, no real conflict between
the Bible and any true discovery of science. Such conflicts as have been
supposed to exist arose from hasty and incorrect conclusions, whose chief value
in the eyes of many lay in the fact that they contradicted the Bible. As
science has been compelled, however reluctantly, to correct her blunders, or to
acknowledge that supposedly demonstrated truths were at best but unproved
conjectures, the "conflicts” have died out; so that, at the present time, the assured
teachings of "science” afford no weapons against the statements of the Bible.
On the contrary, the investigations of men, in fields of geology, physics, and
paleontology, have brought into view much information recorded ages ago in the
Bible, information which, at the time the latter was written, was not in the
knowledge of man. As has been already said, there is not a single assertion of
the Bible that is in conflict with any demonstrated fact of science. All the
investigations, of all the searchers, in all the various fields of search, have
not availed to produce evidence sufficient in character and amount to convict
Scripture of a single false statement. But it is time to bring to a close our
remarks under this heading, though they might be greatly extended.
We have called attention to the strange fact that,
of all the millions of books that have existed, the Bible is the only one that
has excited deep and persistent hatred, the only Book which men have sought to
get rid of, and that by every conceivable means. We have further called
attention to the still stranger fact that, in this attempt to destroy the
Bible, the powers of state, of religion, and of learning, have all been
enlisted, and that, nevertheless, the number of copies of the Bible goes on
steadily increasing. How can these facts be explained except by the statement
that "the Word of God is LIVING,” and that the source of its life is beyond the
reach of man — in the very Being of the Living God?
7. THE BIBLE IS A DISCERNER OF HEARTS
The power of discernment belongs only to an
intelligent living being; and the power of discernment possessed by man does
not go beneath the surface of things. Yet the passage in Hebrews, already
quoted (4:12), asserts that the Word of God is a "discerner of the thoughts and
intents of the heart.”
This is a very remarkable statement, yet it is
true, and millions of men have felt and recognized the searching and discerning
power of the Word of God. We go to it not so much to learn the thoughts of
other men, as to learn our own thoughts. We go to other books to find what was
in the hearts and minds of their authors; but we go to this Book to find what
is in our own hearts and minds. To one who reads it with ever so little
spiritual intelligence, there comes a perception of the fact that this Book
understands and knows all about him. It lays bare the deepest secrets of his
heart, and brings to the surface of his consciousness, out of the unfathomable
depths and unexplorable recesses of his own being, "thoughts and intents” whose
existence was unsuspected. It reveals man to himself in a way difficult to
describe, and absolutely peculiar to itself. It is a faithful mirror which
reflects us exactly as we are. It detects our motives, discerns our needs; and
having truthfully discovered to us our true selves, it counsels, reproves,
exhorts, guides, refreshes, strengthens, and illuminates.
It has been pointed out that the Greek word
rendered "discerner” in Hebrews 4:12, means literally "critic” (kritikos), and
that this is its only occurrence in Scripture. How very significant is it that
the designation "higher critics” has been assumed by that little coterie of men
who claim to be able, by their own powers of literary discernment, to assign
the dates of production of books and parts of books of Scripture, to detect
spurious passages, alleged interpolations, and the like, and to split up books
into fragments, assigning bits to one imaginary author and other bits to
another; whereas as a matter of fact, it is the Bible itself that is the
"Critic” of men. This is in keeping with the subversive principles of this
present evil age, wherein man is seeking to put himself in the place of God.
This is "man’s day.” Man is now the critic of everything, and particularly of
God’s Word.
Of that he is a "higher critic.” There is, however,
no external evidence to support the higher critical views as to the late origin
of the Pentateuch, Daniel, the latter part of Isaiah, etc.; per contra every
pertinent discovery in the ruins of ancient cities corroborates the
statements-of Scripture. These theories rest entirely upon the alleged
intuitive perceptions of sinful men, compassed about by infirmity, who claim to
be able to pass infallibly upon the style and contents of each book of the
Bible, to decide when it was written, by whom it could not have been written,
and even to divide it up into various portions, assigning each to a different
"source.”
But high scholarship is not incompatible with
belief in the full inspiration and accuracy of Scripture. Dean Burgon, one of
the famous scholars of Oxford,
says:
"I must be content with repudiating, in the most
unqualified way, the notion that a mistake of any kind whatever is consistent
with the texture of a narrative inspired by the Holy Spirit of God. "The Bible
is none other but the Word of God, not some part of it more and some part of it
less so, but all alike the utterance of Him that sitteth upon the throne,
absolute, fault- less, unerring, supreme — "The witness of God which He hath
testified of His Son.’” The time is at hand when the haughtiness of man shall
be brought low, and the Lord alone shall be exalted in that day. Then the Word
of God shall judge the critics.
Meanwhile, the living Word shall continue to be the
discerning companion of all who resort to it for the help which is not to be
had elsewhere in this world of the dying. In going to the Bible we never think
of ourselves as going back to a book of the distant past, to a thing of
antiquity; but we go to it as to a book of the present — a living book. And so
indeed it is, living in the power of an endless life, and able to build us up
and to give us an inheritance among all them that are sanctified. (Acts 20:32).
8. THE TRANSLATABILITY OF SCRIPTURE
The Word of God manifests itself as a living Word
in the very unique property it has of adapting itself and its message to all
peoples, and of speaking in all languages, tongues and dialects. The extreme
mobility and adaptability of Scripture, as manifested in this way, is
comparable only to the power which a living being has of making himself at home
in different countries from that in which he was born.
We have here again a characteristic which
distinguishes the Bible from allother
books, as any one may, with a little attention, clearly perceive. It is a
universal rule that a book does not thrive except in the language in which it
was written. Men’s books will not always bear translation; and the greater the
literary value of a book the more it is likely to suffer loss in being translated
from one language into another. Change of locality is, to the great majority of
books, absolutely destructive.
But to this rule the Bible is a marvelous
exception. It seems to run freely into the mould of every language, to adapt
itself perfectly thereto, and to speak with equal directness, clearness and
authority to all peoples and tribes and nations, in their mother tongue. It
does not occur to us that, in reading our common English Bible, we are reading
a translation of an Oriental book; and indeed, when an example of the purest
and best English is desired, men go with one accord to the Bible.
Considered merely as a poem, there is nothing more
exquisite in the English language than the Twenty-third Psalm; and it has been
stated that in other languages besides English this Shepherd Psalm is a model
of poetical excellence. It never occurs to one reading it that he is reading a
translation from another and very different language.
Is not this indeed a very extraordinary fact, and
the more so when we consider that the Bible, though a unit, is at the same time
highly composite? It comprises specimens of every kind of literature,
historical, poetical, biographical, didactic, prophetic, epistolary, etc.
Moreover, it is not the production of a single human being, clothed in a
uniform literary style of dress. On the contrary, its several parts were penned
by men in widely varying stations in life, from herdsmen and unlearned
fishermen, to kings and statesmen; and its styles are as divergent as its
writers.
Nor was it the product of one era or period, which
would tend to impart some common characteristics, and to prevent wide
divergences. As much as fifteen hundred years elapsed between the writing of
its first and its last pages. Yet all parts and styles alike accommodate
themselves to the change of language far more readily and perfectly than any
human being is able to do when acquiring another tongue.
The property we are now considering is the more
remarkable when we consider also the nation from which this unique volume has
come. The Jews were anything but a literary people. They were not at all
remarkable for culture, learning, art, or philosophy; and they were quite cut
off by their peculiar customs, traditions, and religious institutions, from the
progressive nations around them. There is no other Jewish literature that is
worth talking about. Yet, from such a people has come a volume whose sixty-six
books, now that we have them all together, evidently constitute one complete
structure, unitary in design, yet which was fifteen centuries in attaining its
completed state. This book; after the Jewish people were disintegrated and
scattered, — even as that very book had distinctly foretold, — and had become
the most despised and persecuted people on earth, has entered into the place of
supremacy in every nation which has attained to any degree of civilization, and
has held that place without a rival for eighteen centuries, during which period
of time every human institution has been overturned, not once only, but again
and again. Why is it that the universal Book did not have its origin in the
literature of Greece, or of
ancient Rome,
or in the Elizabethan epoch of English literature? Why is it that nations which
have been famed for their culture and literary genius have produced nothing
comparable to the Bible? What collection of sixty-six books from the writings
of about thirty authors of any nation could be made that would present any of
the characteristics we have been noticing? Yet, it is certain that, it the
Bible had a natural, instead of a supernatural origin, it would be far
surpassed by the literary product of the literary nations of the earth.
This property of adaptability to all languages and
peoples will impress us still more if we compare it in this respect with other
Oriental books. The mere fact that it is an Oriental book makes its career
among the Occidental nations still more miraculous. All attempts to domesticate
other Oriental books, particularly sacred books, have been complete failures. Other
Oriental books are sought by scholars only, or by others who have a special
interest for inquiring into their contents.
Already the Bible, or portions of it, has been
translated into upwards of four hundred languages and dialects; so that it is
revealing the grace of God in the gift of His Son, to practically every nation,
kindred, tongue and tribe, throughout the world, and is speaking to all peoples
in their own native tongues.
Like a living person, the Bible has made its way
into all lands, has adapted itself to all environments, entered into relations
of the most intimate kind with all peoples, and has exerted upon them all its
own unique influence. It makes no difference what the people are to whom it
goes, how radically different all their customs and institutions from those of
that very peculiar people Israel;
the Bible makes itself perfectly at home, and takes its own place without
delay. Can this, or anything remotely approaching it, be said of any other
book? And if not, are we not compelled, if we would have an explanation of this
extraordinary difference, to fall back upon the statement that the "Word of God
is living”? No other explanation will account for any of the facts we have been
considering. This explanation accounts for them all. The fact we are here
considering, that is to say, the career of the Bible among the peoples of the
earth, is, indeed, a stupendous and continuing miracle. Why has this particular
Book gone to the ends of the earth, and assumed everywhere, and maintained against
all opposition, the place of supremacy? What has given to this collection of
writings, coming from an insignificant, peculiar, narrow-minded and isolated
people, its universal character? Why is it that all other books, or collections
of books, including the productions of the mightiest intellects and embodying
the most superb and lofty specimens of human thought, wisdom, learning and
experience, have been narrowly circumscribed in their area of influence, both
as to time and space? Why has this particular Book continued ever widening its
sphere of influence as the centuries pass, while every other book, after its
first vogue, steadily contracts and dwindles? Why does this Book increase while
all others decrease?
There is no natural explanation for these remarkable
facts. In this day, when a natural explanation is sought for all things, the
wise men can advance no theory to account for these facts. We sometimes hear,
from the enemies of the truth, the admission that the Bible is inspired, but
coupled with the statement that other books are equally inspired. For example,
a prominent preacher in New York city
recently said in an article published in a popular magazine, "God spake to
Abraham, and to Samuel and to Isaiah. He has spoken to Henry Ward Beecher, to Tennyson,
and to Ruskin.” But neither this prominent preacher, nor any other man who is
trying in like manner to put the Word of God on the same level as other books,
is able to tell us why the writings of these other "inspired” men do not afford
some indications of their divine origin similar to those characteristics of the
Bible to which we are now calling attention.
The Apostle Paul in the last of his writings (2
Timothy 2:8,9) said, "Remember that Jesus Christ of the seed of David was
raised from the dead according to my gospel; wherein I suffer as an evil-doer
even unto bonds; but the word of God is not bound.” In these words we have thee
sufficient and the only explanation of the extraordinary and unique career of
the Bible. The human custodian of the Word of God may be bound, and may be
treated as a malefactor for merely being the bearer of the message; but the
living Word of the living God is not, and cannot be, bound. Jehovah Himself has
said, "So shall My Word be that goeth forth out of My mouth. It shall not
return unto Me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, and it shall
prosper in the thing whereto I sent it” (Isaiah 55:11).
But there is more to be noted under this heading.
The Bible is the universal Book also in that it not only speaks to all peoples
in their own mother tongue, but it addresses itself to all classes of society.
Missionaries from every part of the world have reported how the most depraved,
ignorant and vicious people will listen at once to the words of Scripture as to
no other book, and will recognize them as "good words.” Like God Himself His
Word is no respecter of persons. Indeed, its sternest denunciations are
addressed to persons of rank and of social, ecclesiastical, or political
prominence. Its best promises are for the meek and lowly. It has a message for
all men, and to the highest as well as the lowest it speaks "with authority,”
never exhorting from the standpoint merely of superior human wisdom and
intelligence, but always as delivering the message of God. The Bible adapts
itself thus to successive generations of men, exhibiting to each individual
human being an intimate knowledge of his characteristics, trials and needs. It
seems to be waiting for an opportunity to become acquainted with each child of
Adam, to direct the steps of his life-journey through this great and terrible
wilderness, to warn him of dangers and pitfalls, and to be the man of his
counsel to every one who wills not to reject its offer of fellowship. Does not
this warrant us in saying that "the Word of God is LIVING”?
9. THE WORD EXHIBITS THE CHARACTERISTIC OF
GROWTH
Growth is one of the characteristics of a living
being. The Word of God lodges and grows in human hearts, for there is its real
lodgment, rather than in the printed page. The Psalmist says, "Thy Word have I
hid in my heart” (Psalm 119:11).
The book of Deuteronomy has much to say about the
Word of God. In chapter thirty it declares (verse 14) that "The Word is very
nigh unto thee, in thy mouth and in thy heart.” This is repeated in Romans
10:8, with the addition, "that is, the word of faith which we preach.” In 1
Thessalonians 2:13 Paul says to the Thessalonians, "When ye received the Word
of God which ye heard of us, ye received it not as the word of men, but as it
is in truth, the Word of God, which effectually worketh also in you that
believe.” The believing heart is its lodgment, and there it works to effect
some definite results.
In Colossians 3:16 we have the admonition, "Let the
word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom.” It is in the believing heart
that the Word dwells richly.
The Lord Jesus, in explaining the parable of the
sower, said, "The seed is the Word of God” (Luke 8:11); and again, "The sower
soweth the Word” (Mark 4:14). (A seed, of course, is worthless except it have
life in it). And He further explained that the seed which fell on good ground
"are they which, in an honest and good heart, having heard the Word keep it,
and bring forth fruit with patience” (Luke 8:15).
To the unbelieving Jews the Lord said, "And ye have
not His Word abiding in you; for whom He hath sent, Him ye believe not” (John
5:38).
In Colossians 1:5,6, Paul speaks of the "Word of
the truth of the Gospel, which is come unto you, as it is in all the world, and
bringeth forth fruit.”
In these passages we have presented to us the
thought of the Word as a living seed or germ, first finding lodgment in the
heart of man, and then abiding and growing there. The growth of the Word of God
is specifically mentioned in several striking passages in the Acts of the
Apostles. Acts 6:7: "And the Word of God increased; and the number of the
disciples multiplied in Jerusalem
greatly.” Here we are told specifically that the Word of God increased. We
learn from this that the mere multiplication of copies of the Scriptures is in
itself of no importance. It is of no avail to have the Book in the house, and
on the shelf or table, if it be not taken into the heart. But when so received
into the heart, the Word of God grows and increases. It is assimilated into the
life of him who receives it, and henceforth is a part of himself.
It is important to note what stimulated this
recorded increase of the Word of God. The Apostles, who were its custodians or
depositories, had found themselves taken up with ministering to the material
wants of the flock, and they brought this matter before the body of disciples
saying, "It is not reason that we should leave the Word of God and serve
tables,” and they asked that suitable men be appointed for that service while
they should give themselves continually "to prayer and the ministry of the
Word.”
The growth of the Word then, accompanied by a great
multiplication of the number of disciples, was the result of faithful ministry
of the Word — a ministry which was sustained by prayer. This method of
promoting the growth of the Word of God is highly important. Every believer,
having the Word in his heart and in his mouth, may be and should be the means
of its propagation; and the extent to which the Word has been spread abroad in
this inconspicuous way will not be known until the time when all things shall
be manifested. There are great multitudes who would never get the Word from the
printed page, or from the spoken sermon or address. Hence the importance of
these epistles of Christ written not with ink, but with the SPIRIT of the
living God, not in tablets of stone, but in the fleshy tablets of the heart. 2
Corinthians 3:3). Such epistles are read by many who never read the printed
page; and the eternal destiny of many souls may depend upon the distinctness
and legibility of that writing. May our lives, as believers, be so transparent
that the Word written in our hearts may be distinctly seen; and thus, as sons
of God we shall shine "as lights in the world holding forth the Word of life”
(Philippians 2:15,16).
The second passage which speaks expressly of the
growth of the Word of God is Acts 12:21-24. In this chapter are narrated the
last episodes in the life of Herod Antipas. In the first part of the chapter we
read how he killed James, the brother of John, with the sword, and finding this
course to be popular with the Jews, he apprehended Peter also, and put him in
custody, intending after the passover to make this leader of the Apostles the
object of a public demonstration, which doubtless would have strengthened Herod
still further in the regard of the people. But Peter was delivered from prison
by an angel of the Lord who was sent for that purpose.
The closing verses of the chapter tell of a
disagreement between Herod and the citizens of Tyre
and Sidon, some
undescribed incident having occurred which caused the former to be highly
displeased with the latter. But they, having gained the favor of King Herod’s
chamberlain, one Blastus, made overtures of peace and sent a delegation to the
king. The reception of this embassy was made an occasion of much pomp and
circumstance. Herod put on his royal apparel, sat upon his throne, received the
delegation, "and made an oration unto them.” This oration was received with
extravagant demonstrations. "The people gave a shout, saying, It is the voice
of a god, and not of a man.” Herod accepted this tribute, and no doubt was
highly pleased therewith. But it is a dangerous thing for mortal and sinful
man, however high his station, to accept glory which belongs to God alone. For
immediately the angel of the Lord smote him, because he gave not God the glory;
and he was eaten of worms and gave up the ghost. "But the word of God grew and
multiplied.”
There is a tremendous lesson here for the many who,
in these closing days of the age, are participating in the various movements
which, however diverse in appearance, have all the common object of putting man
in the place of God, and the word of man in the place of the Word of God. Herod
was not stricken down for persecuting the Church, for imprisoning Peter, or for
putting James to death, nor yet for his previous murder of John the Baptist. He
was smitten for permitting his word to be acclaimed as the Word of God, Herod
had often heard the Word of the Lord, for he had listened attentively to the
preaching of the Baptist. He had heard of the ministry and miracles of the Lord
Jesus, and had even seen Him on that dark betrayal night. He was, therefore,
not smitten for something done in ignorance.
The angel of Jehovah had two ministries in that
chapter. One was to deliver Peter, who, according to the word of his Lord, was
to serve Him to old age (John 21:18). The other was to declare, by smiting the
King, the difference between the Word of God and that of the most important man
of the country.
Doubtless that was a great oration which Herod
delivered on that day. It contained most probably striking utterances, pregnant
with wisdom and garbed in the attractions of human eloquence. It was, moreover,
the King on his throne who spoke, and we know how the throngs gather to listen
on such occasions.
On the other hand, and in striking contrast, the
Word of God was in the charge of "unlearned and ignorant men,” a despised and
persecuted company, whose Leader had but just suffered the ignominious death of
a malefactor. What then has become of the words of King Herod? All have utterly
perished, centuries ago, from the memory of men. He himself was eaten of worms,
"But the Word of God grew and multiplied,” and has continued so to do from that
time to the present.
Not very long ago, at the convening of the American
Congress, a message from the President was addressed to that body. Much comment
was made on that message because of its great length. Some industrious person counted
the words, and found them to be upwards of thirty thousand. They were serious
words, too, and weighty, as human utterances go. They dealt with the most
important affairs and interests of the nation that regards itself as the
greatest on earth. But they were not "the words of eternal life.” And for all
that the occasion was so recent, and the subject matter so important, it is
doubtful if any person can now recall a single sentence of that great message.
Few, indeed, would care to do so, or would receive the slightest benefit there
from, if they could.
The words of kings, and emperors, and presidents,
are dying words. From the moment of their utterance they begin to perish; but
"the Word of God is living.” Being the utterance of the living God that Word
can never pass away.
The last of the three passages which speaks of the
growth of the Word of God is in Acts 19; and again the context adds greatly to
the impressiveness of the lesson taught by the passage.
The scene of the first of the three incidents was
in Jerusalem, of the second in Caesarea, just
west of Galilee, and of the third in Ephesus,
a Gentile city. Thus there is special mention made of the growth of the Word of
God in Judea, in Palestine outside of Judea, and in the Gentile regions beyond. This would seem
to signify that the Word of God was not to be limited to territorial boundary,
but was to spread and grow in every part of the earth. The Apostle Paul had
spent two years in Ephesus, preaching to such
purpose that "all they which dwelt in Asia
heard the Word of the Lord Jesus, both Jews and Greeks.” And God, moreover,
"wrought special miracles by the hands of Paul” (Acts 19:10,11).
One result of this ministry was that "many of them
which used curious arts brought their books together, and burned them before
all men; and they counted the price of them and found it fifty thousand pieces
of silver. So mightily grew the word of God and prevailed” (verses 19,20). This
is, indeed, a very notable event — a grand demonstration of the power and sufficiency
of the Word of God. These books, intrinsically worth so great a sum as fifty
thousand pieces of silver, became worse than worthless in the hands of their
owners after the latter had received the Word of God. The books thus destroyed
had been held in the highest estimation, because they were the manuals of
necromancy, or occult arts. They instructed their readers in just such things
as are coming into great favor in the present day. But when their owners
"believed,” they could no longer practice the "curious arts,” or even retain
the books that described them.
It is very easy to destroy the books of men. Great
and mighty as are the powers of darkness which were back of the books burned at
Ephesus, those
evil powers are not comparable to that which has directed the career of the
Word of God. Many have been the attempts to consume it in the flames, but in
vain; for the Word of God is living.
This scene at Ephesus
has been re-enacted in many a human life. When in quest of help, enlightenment,
wisdom, guidance, and knowledge of the unseen, men turn to books; and though
disappointed again and again, the inquiring mind, which has felt the need of a
source of light external to itself, and has realized that there must be such a
source somewhere, never shakes off the habit of seeking it in books. There
appears to be a deep-seated consciousness that the desired help is to be found
in some book. But men cannot impart to the books written by them what is not in
themselves; and so they who gather many books gain little to compensate for
their cost and labor. Conjectures and human opinions, philosophies and vain
deceits, with all the obscurities and contradictions contained in them, do but
leave the mind in perplexity and bewilderment concerning every matter of real
importance. And, after all, if one cannot have certainties, but must put up
with mere opinions, why should he not prefer his own to another man’s, seeing
that all are at the best but mere guesses, whereof one is as likely to be true
as another? The "wise men” can tell us nothing, for "lo, they have rejected the
Word of the Lord; and what wisdom is in them?” (Jeremiah 8:9). But when, to one
who has undergone this weariness of a vain quest for something sure and
satisfying in the books of men, the Word of God comes with the convincing power
which it alone possesses, and with the restful assurance which it alone can
impart, the books of men become worthless — mere rubbish, fit only to be food
for flames. Conjectures are now exchanged for certainties, and profitless
speculations for knowledge certified by the sure testimony of Him who knoweth
and understandeth all things.
The writer lately heard a servant of Christ relate
an incident in his own life which aptly illustrates what we have been saying.
Speaking on the injunction of Ephesians 6:10, "Be strong in the Lord,” he said,
"I well remember a section in my book-case long ago which contained a highly
prized set of Emerson’s works. One essay in particular I read and re-read, and
had marked favorite passages in it, The burden of it was, ‘Young man, be
strong.’ This phrase occurred again and again, and it thrilled and excited me.
But it pointed me to no source of strength, for the writer knew of none. He
never once said, ‘Be strong in the Lord;’ and the time came when, realizing the
cruel mockery of the words, and the emptiness of this entire system of
philosophy, I put the set of well-printed and choicely bound volumes into the
flames.” He discovered in the Bible the Source of all strength, and the Book
displaced the entire set of man’s philosophies and empty deceits. "So mightily
grew the Word of God and prevailed.” Happy is the man who has "received the
Word of God” (Acts 8:14; 11:1, etc.), who has made room for it in his life, and
in whose heart and mind it has grown and prevailed.
10. A LIFE-GIVING WORD
We come now to something higher and deeper. The
great mystery of a living thing is the power it possesses of propagating its
kind. To trace the stream of life to its source is confessedly impossible to
man, nor does any philosophic theory account for that stream. The attempt made
in recent years to explain life as a mere property of atoms of non-living
matter grouped in certain complex combinations, has been confessedly a failure.
Professor Huxley, probably the ablest defender of this theory, and who at one
time predicted that "protoplasm” (as he named the physical basis of life) might
one day be produced in the laboratory, was constrained to admit, before his
death, that there was no known link between the living and the non-living.
In the era of great scientific activity which
marked the last half of the nineteenth century, many and persistent efforts
were made to bring about spontaneous generation; that is to say, to demonstrate
that life could be caused by human manipulation to spring up out of non-living
matter, and apart from antecedent life. Great was the desire of unbelieving men
of science to find a support for this theory, for if established it would
flatly contradict the first chapter of the Bible, and thus discredit the
statements of the latter upon a subject of the highest importance. In that
chapter the first law of biology is enunciated in the words "after his kind;”
and this law is applied both to the vegetable kingdom and to the animal — to
grass, and herb, and fruit tree, to fowl and fishes, and creeping things, to
wild beast and tame beast. Each was commanded to bring forth "after his kind;”
and it is needless to say that each has strictly obeyed that Divine command.
The inspired account of Creation does not describe the method whereby God
brought into existence the several species of living creatures, and gave to
each the distinct characteristics which were to be its perpetual and unvarying
endowment. This matter, therefore, belongs to the realm of speculation, into
which it is unprofitable to enter. What concerns us is the fact, distinctly
stated, and manifestly deemed by the Spirit of God to be of great importance
for our instruction in the truth, that God, in creating the numerous species of
living creatures, vegetable and animal, put a permanent difference between
them, rigidly confining each species to the reproduction of its own kind.
So important was this law in the mind of the
Creator, and so careful was He to impress it upon the mind of man, that the
formula is stated nine times in the first chapter of Genesis. There is an
emphasis in this which has great significance in view of the theory of organic
evolution, which, but a few years ago, was advanced as a "scientific”
explanation of the origin of species of living beings, and was accepted as such
by nearly all the wise and learned of this world.
After many years’ investigation of the philosophy
of evolution, an investigation carried on in full sympathy with the widest
application of that captivating theory, I have yet to see proof of a single
fact showing, or tending to show, the operation of the so-called "law” or
"principle” of evolution in the world of Nature. No instance has ever been
found of a living thing of one species coming from ancestors of another
species; and there is not the slightest ground for the belief that such a thing
ever happened. On the other hand, every one of the countless billions of
reproductions of living creatures — the grass, the herb yielding seed, and the
fruit tree yielding fruit — which occur every year, are in accordance with the
divine command recorded in the first chapter of Genesis. Oak trees have never
betrayed the slightest tendency to produce any fruit but acorns, nor acorns to
produce any trees but oaks. The theory of organic evolution, promulgated by
Darwin and Wallace, has nothing to commend it except that it offers an
alternative to the acceptance of the account of the origin of species given in
the Bible.
The attempts made by the empiricists of the last
century to bring about, or to demonstrate the possibility of, spontaneous
generation of living organisms by human manipulation apart from pre-existing
organisms of the same species, were at first thought to have been successful.
Infusions of hay were prepared which, after being tightly sealed in suitable
flasks, were heated to a temperature sufficiently high (as was supposed) to
destroy all life within the flasks. These were then set aside for awhile, and
kept under observation; and in the course of time they were found to contain
minute living organisms. These "results of science” were heralded far and wide,
and great: was the rejoicing occasioned thereby.
But other men of science, among whom the most
prominent was Liebig; went over the ground again, repeating the experiments
more carefully; and their results showed that, in the earlier experiments,
either the flasks had not been tightly sealed, or else the heat to which they
were exposed had not been sufficiently great to destroy all the living organisms
therein. So conclusive were these later experiments that the theory of
spontaneous generation (or "abiogenesis”) has had no standing whatever from
that time to the present. The following quotations will accurately inform the
reader as to the best scientific opinion on this subject.
Lord Kelvin who, until his recent death, held the
leading place among scientific men, used this positive language: "Inanimate
matter cannot become living except under the influence of matter already
living. This is a fact in science which seems to me as well ascertained as the
law of gravitation.” Again he said: "I am ready to accept as an article of
faith in science, valid for all time and in all space, that life is produced by
life and only by life.” Professor Huxley, the advocate of the theory of "animal
automatism,” who at one time contended earnestly that vitality was merely a
property of "protoplasm,” (that is to say, the property of a particular
chemical compound of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen) left this record
before his death: "The present state of knowledge furnishes us with no link
between the living and the not-living.” Professor Tyndall says: "Every attempt
made in our day to generate life independent of antecedent life has utterly
broken down.”
Such has indeed been, and such must ever he, the
result of all human attempts to start the flow of a stream of life, or to
divert one which God has started, so as to change the form of manifestation
which the Author and Giver of life has given to each species of living
creatures. We wish the reader to understand that we rest nothing Whatever upon
the outcome of the foregoing scientific controversy, nor upon the above quoted
(or any other) statements of human opinion however high their source. Faith has
no foundation other than the Word of God. Men of science may be right or wrong
in their deductions from the fragmentary information possessed by them.
Generally they are wrong, as is clearly enough shown by the fact that a large
part of the work of each generation of men of science consists in overturning
or modifying the theories of their predecessors. The foregoing is given as an
illustration of the utter futility of setting up the deductions of the human
reason against the assertions of the Word of God, and as a caution to the
reader, if he be a child of God through faith in Jesus Christ, not to give the
slightest credence to any statements made in the name of "science” or
"scholarship” which call into question what is written in the inspired
Scriptures.
We may ask then, Is the Word of God a living Word
in this particular sense? Does it have the mysterious power of imparting life;
and if so, is the life it imparts of the same sort as its own? Does it
reproduce "after its kind”?
This brings up the great subject of spiritual
conception and generation, concerning which the Scripture gives not a little
information. Into this highly interesting but difficult subject we will not now
enter. Even the beginning and maintenance of physical life in plants and
animals (including man) are great and inscrutable mysteries. This is true in
all stages of the process, particularly in the initial stage of germination,
which is the beginning of a new individual existence by the quickening of a
seed derived from a previously existing individual of the same species. How
much more mysterious, then, must be the process of spiritual generation! The
Lord Jesus, in His conversation with the learned and intellectual Pharisee,
Nicodemus, indicated that the subject was a very mysterious one, by the words,
"The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but
canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is
born [or begotten] of the Spirit.”
Therefore, even after we have learned all that is
given us to know concerning the beginning of physical life in the naturally
begotten, and of spiritual life in the supernaturally begotten, the subject
remains as mysterious as ever, since the Author of life has reserved it among
the "secret things” which "belong unto the Lord our God” (Deuteronomy 29:29).
But the fact of natural generation cannot be
questioned, though the process be involved in unfathomable mystery. The fact of
spiritual generation is equally sure to all who believe the Word of God. The
Bible plainly declares it, and those who believe on the Christ of God know also
by experience the beginning of a new kind of life in their own souls.
For present purposes it is sufficient to point out
that spiritual generation is analogous (as might be expected) to natural
generation, being effected by means of a seed, which, having been deposited in
a prepared place, is quickened by the Spirit of God, and becomes itself
"spirit,” — that is to say a new nature which is spiritual in its character;
for "that which is born [or begotten] of the Spirit is spirit” (John 3:6). The
fact of spiritual conception, and the nature of the seed whereby it is
effected, are plainly declared in 1 Peter 1:23: "Being born [or having been
begotten] again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by THE WORD OF GOD WHICH LIVETH and
abideth for ever.”
There is an immense amount of truth of the highest
importance contained in this passage; but the statement which especially
concerns us is that the seed of the new birth is from the living Word ("the
Word which LIVETH”). This statement plainly teaches that the Word of God
possesses the highest endowment of a living being, namely, that of imparting
life. And with this agrees the teaching of the Lord Jesus in the parable of the
sower, in the explanation of which He said, "The seed is the Word of God” (Luke
8:11).
In consequence of the transgression and fall of the
first man, who was the original depository Of the life of humanity (Genesis
2:7), the life in him, being "corruptible,” became vitiated. Hence, by
inexorable law, the seed of his generations also became corrupted. It follows
that all men in their natural generation are begotten of corruptible (and
corrupted) seed; and have received (and hence must impart to their succeeding generations)
a corrupted life. What, therefore, was needed, in order to bring into existence
a human family answering to God’s purpose in the creation of man (Genesis
1:26), was a new and incorruptible seed. This has been supplied in the Word of
God. All who believe that Word are begotten again (or from above); not this
time of corruptible seed, "but of incorruptible, by the Word of God which
liveth.” It is a living Word.
It is to be noted that this Scripture testifies
that the seed of the living Word is not merely uncorrupted, but is
"incorruptible.” It partakes, therefore, of the nature of the "uncorruptible
God” (Romans 1:23). This is the guarantee to us that the Word of God is not
subject to the corrupting influences of the corrupted and decaying world into
which it is come. It is the only thing which has not succumbed to the forces of
decay and death which reign universally in the earth. Indeed, it has not been
affected in the slightest degree by those forces. This has been pointed out at
length in the foregoing pages; but the grand truth comes to us with peculiar
force in connection with the passage in 1 Peter. We need not be at all
concerned as to whether the truth of God, embodied by Him in His word, has been
corrupted, for it is incorruptible. And by that Word they who believe are
begotten again through the operation of the Holy Spirit. To them "the Spirit is
life” (Romans 8:10).
The same truth is declared in James 1:18, in the
words, "Of His own will begat He us with the Word of Truth.” Such is the spiritual
conception of the "sons of God.” These are born, or begotten. In no other way
is a "son” brought into existence save by being begotten of a father. The sons
of God must be begotten of God. The Apostle John tells us that they are
begotten, "not of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man” (John 1:13).
The Apostle James tells us that "of His own will” they are begotten. Therefore,
though the process be inscrutably mysterious, there can be no doubt as to the
fact. When the Word of God is truly "heard” and thereby received into a
prepared heart, that word becomes truly a seed, spiritual and incorruptible in
nature, which, when quickened by the Spirit of God, becomes the life-germ of a
new creature — a son of God.
The same truth is very clearly taught in our Lord’s
explanation of His parable of the sower, to which reference has already been
made. Inasmuch as we have His own interpretation of this parable, we need be in
no uncertainty as to its meaning. He says, "Those by the wayside are they that
hear; then cometh the Devil and taketh away the Word out of their hearts, lest
they should believe and he saved” (Luke 8:12). And again: "But that on the good
ground are they which, in an honest and good heart, having heard the Word keep
it and bring forth fruit with patience.”
The method of spiritual conception set forth in
these Scriptures, which is effected in a manner quite analogous to natural
conception, furnishes the explanation of the connection between "believing” and
"life” referred to in many passages of Scripture. One of the most familiar of
these is John 5:24 where the Lord Jesus states in the simplest language that
the man who hears His Word and believes on Him who sent Him has everlasting
life, and is passed out of death into life. Such a man receives the seed in his
heart, and the seed is there quickened into life.
Indeed, the great purpose of the Written Word is to
impart life — even eternal (that is to say divine) life — to those who are dead
through trespasses and sins. The Gospel of John, which is devoted largely to
the great subject of eternal life, and from which a large part of our
information concerning it is derived, was "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 20:31).
The same truth is declared in the familiar passage
in Romans 10:9, which sets forth very definitely the special truth which
constitutes the substance and marrow of God’s revelation in His Word, and which
He calls upon men to believe and obey through the preaching of the Gospel,
namely that Jesus Christ, who died for sinners, has been raised from the dead,
and that He is Lord of all, to the glory of God the Father.
The main point to be apprehended in this connection
is that a certain state of preparedness of heart is necessary in order that the
"good seed” of the Word may germinate and grow there. Such a prepared heart is
described in Scripture as a believing heart. That prepared state is manifested
when a man believes God, as Abraham did (Romans 4:17); or, in other words, when
a man is ready to receive the Word of God as the Word of God, as the
Thessalonians did (1 Thessalonians 2:13).
When a man has been brought, by the operation of
the Spirit of God, who is the "Spirit of LIFE in Christ Jesus” (Romans 8:2,10),
into this state of preparation, then the Word of God, being received into the
heart, acts as a seed falling into good soil. Though it be (as we might say)
but the tiniest portion of God’s truth as revealed in His Word which is thus
received by faith, yet it Suffices through His power as the means whereby He
may quicken a dead soul. For surely the life of the Word is in every part
thereof.
Such is the power of the living truth to impart life;
and herein lies the difference between the truth which God has revealed in His
Word, and truth which may be found elsewhere. For there is much truth which is
not living truth. The multiplication table is truth; but it is not living
truth. It has no quickening power. The theorems of geometry are truth; but they
are not living truth. Never yet has any man been heard to testify that he had
been the wretched and hopeless slave of sin, and had continued in spiritual
darkness, fast bound in misery and vice until his eyes were opened by the great
truth that two and two make four, or that three angles of a triangle are equal
to two right angles; and that thereby his life had been transformed, his soul
delivered from bondage, and his heart filled with joy and peace in believing.
On the other hand, in the case Of a true conversion, it may have been but the
shortest and simplest statement of "the Word of the truth of the Gospel”
(Colossians 1:5) that was heard and believed, such as that "Christ died for the
ungodly” (Romans 5:6), yet it suffices, through the mighty power of Him who
raised up Christ from among the dead, to quicken together with Christ a soul
that previously was dead in trespasses and sins (Ephesians 1:20; 2:5). Thus the
Word of truth becomes, in some inscrutable way, the vehicle for imparting that
life of which the risen Christ, the Incarnate Word, is the only Source. Eternal
life for the individual soul begins through believing "the testimony of God” (1
Corinthians 1:2), and the testimony of God which He has in grace given to
perishing sinners that they may believe and be saved, is "concerning His Son”
(Romans 1:3; 1 John 5:10).