Chapter 6.
Christ and Criticism
by
Sir Robert Anderson,
KCB., LLD.,
Author of "The Bible and Modern Criticism," etc., etc.,
In
his "Founders of Old Testament Criticism" Professor Cheyne of
In the view of his successors, however,
Eichhorn's hypothesis was open to the fatal objection that it was altogether
inadequate. So the next generation of critics adopted the more drastic theory
that the Mosaic books were "mosaic" in the sense that they were
literary forgeries of a late date, composed of materials supplied by ancient
documents and the myths and legends of the Hebrew race. And though this theory
has been modified from time to time during the last century, it remains
substantially the "critical" view of the Pentateuch. But it is open
to two main objections, either of which would be fatal. It is inconsistent with
the evidence. And it directly challenges the authority of the Lord Jesus Christ
as a teacher; for one of the few undisputed facts in this controversy is that
our Lord accredited the books of Moses as having divine authority.
THE TRUE AND THE COUNTERFEIT
It may be well to deal first with the
least important of these objections. And here we must distinguish between the
true Higher Criticism and its counterfeit. The rationalistic "Higher
Criticism," when putting the Pentateuch upon its trial, began with the
verdict and then cast about to find the evidence; whereas, true criticism
enters upon its inquiries with an open mind and pursues them without prejudice.
The difference may be aptly illustrated by the position assumed by a typical
French judge and by an ideal English judge in a criminal trial. The one aims at
convicting the accused, the other at elucidating the truth. "The proper
function of the Higher Criticism is to determine the origin, date, and literary
structure of an ancient writing." This is Professor Driver's description
of true criticism. But the aim of the counterfeit is to disprove the
genuineness of the ancient writings. The justice of this statement is
established by the fact that Hebraists and theologians of the highest eminence,
whose investigation of the Pentateuch problem has convinced them of the
genuineness of the books, are not recognized at all.
In
THE PHILOLOGICAL INQUIRY
If, as its apostles sometimes urge, the
Higher Criticism is a purely philological inquiry, two obvious conclusions
follow. The first is that its verdict must be in favor of the Mosaic books; for
each of the books contains peculiar words suited to the time and circumstances
to which it is traditionally assigned. This is admitted, and the critics
attribute the presence of such words to the jesuitical skill of the priestly
forgers. But this only lends weight to the further conclusion that Higher
Criticism is wholly incompetent to deal with the main issue on which it claims
to adjudicate. For the genuineness of the Pentateuch must be decided on the
same principles on which the genuineness of ancient documents is dealt with in
our courts of justice. And the language of the documents is only one part of
the needed evidence, and not the most important part. And fitness for dealing
with evidence depends upon qualities to which Hebraists, as such, have no
special claim. Indeed, their writings afford signal proofs of their unfitness
for inquiries which they insist on regarding as their special preserve.
Take, for example, Professor Driver's
grave assertion that the presence of two Greek words in Daniel (they are the
names of musical instruments) demand a date for the book subsequent to
the Greek conquest. It has been established by Professor Sayce and others that the
intercourse between
HISTORICAL BLUNDER
Here is another typical item in the
Critics' indictment of Daniel. The book opens by recording Nebuchadnezzar's
siege of
CRITICAL PROFANITY
But to return to Moses. According to
"the critical hypothesis," the books of the Pentateuch are literary
forgeries of the Exilic Era, the work of the
But no; facts prove that this judgment is
unjust. For men of unfeigned piety and deep reverence for divine things can be
so blinded by the superstitions of "religion" that the imprimatur
of the church enables them to regard these discredited books as Holy Scripture.
As critics they brand the Pentateuch as a tissue of myth and legend and fraud,
but as religionists they assure us that this "implies no denial of its
inspiration or disparagement of its contents.("The Higher Criticism: Three
Papers," by Professors Driver and Kirkpatrick)
ERRORS REFUTED BY FACTS
In controversy it is of the greatest
importance to allow opponents to state their position in their own words; and
here is Professor Driver's statement of the case against the Books of Moses:
"We can only argue on grounds of
probability derived from our view of the progress of the art of writing, or of
literary composition, or of the rise and growth of the prophetic tone and
feeling in ancient Israel, or of the period at which the traditions contained
in the narratives might have taken shape, or of the probability that they would
have been written down before the impetus given to culture by the monarchy had
taken effect, and similar considerations, for estimating most of which, though
plausible arguments on one side or the other may be advanced, a standard on
which we can confidently rely scarcely admits of being fixed."
("Introduction," 6th ed., page 123.)
This modest reference to "literary
composition" and "the art of writing" is characteristic. It is
intended to gloss over the abandonment of one of the chief points in the
original attack. Had "Driver's Introduction" appeared twenty years
earlier, the assumption that such a literature as the Pentateuch could belong
to the age of Moses would doubtless have been branded as an anachronism. For
one of the main grounds on which the books were assigned to the latter days of
the monarchy was that the Hebrews of six centuries earlier were an illiterate
people. And after that error had been refuted by archaeological discoveries, it
was still maintained that a code of laws so advanced, and so elaborate, as that
of Moses could not have originated in such an age. This figment, however, was
in its turn exploded, when the spade of the explorer brought to light the now
famous Code of Khammurabi, the Amraphel of Genesis, who was king of
Instead, however, of donning the white
sheet when confronted by this new witness, the critics, with great effrontery,
pointed to the newly-found Code as the original of the laws of Sinai. Such a
conclusion is natural on the part of men who treat the Pentateuch as merely
human. But the critics cannot have it both ways. The Moses who copied
Khammurabi must have been the real Moses of the Exodus, and not the mythical
Moses of the Exile, who wrote long centuries after Khammurabi had been
forgotten!
AN INCREDIBLE THEORY
The evidence of the Khammurabi Code
refutes an important count in the critics' indictment of the Pentateuch; but we
can call another witness whose testimony demolishes their whole case. The
Pentateuch, as we all know, and the Pentateuch alone, constitutes the Bible of
the Samaritans. Who, then, were the Samaritans? And how and when did they
obtain the Pentateuch? Here again the critics shall speak for themselves. Among
the distinguished men who have championed their crusade in
"They (the Samaritans) regard
themselves as Israelites, descendants of the ten tribes, and claim to possess
the orthodox religion of Moses * * * The priestly law, which is throughout
based on the practice of the priests in
Now mark what this implies. We know
something of racial bitterness. We know more, unfortunately, of the fierce
bitterness of religious strife. And both these elements combined to alienate
the Samaritans from the Jews. But more than this, in the post-exilic period
distrust and dislike were turned to intense hatred--"abhorrence" is
Robertson Smith's word--by the sternness and contempt with which the Jews spurned
their proffered help in the work of reconstruction at Jerusalem, and refused to
acknowledge them in any way. And yet we are asked to believe that, at this very
time and in these very circumstances, the Samaritans, while hating the Jews
much as Orangemen hate the Jesuits, and the whole Jewish cult as schismatical,
not only accepted these Jewish books relating to that cult as the "service
books" of their own ritual, but adopted them as their "Bible,"
to the exclusion even of the writings of their own Israelite prophets, and the
venerated and sacred books which record the history of their kings. In the
whole range of controversy, religious or secular, was there ever propounded a
theory more utterly incredible and preposterous!
ANOTHER PREPOSTEROUS POSITION
No less preposterous are the grounds on
which this conclusion is commended to us. Here is a statement of them, quoted
from the standard textbook of the cult, Hasting's "Bible Dictionary":
"There is at least one valid ground
for the conclusion that the Pentateuch was first accepted by the Samaritans
after the Exile. Why was their request to be allowed to take part in the
building of the second temple refused by the heads of the
Here are two "decisive reasons"
for holding that "the Pentateuch was first accepted by the Samaritans
after the Exile." First, because "very probably" it was because
they had not those forged books that the Jews spurned their help; and so they
went home and adopted the forged books as their Bible! And, secondly, because
criticism has proved that the books were not in existence till then. To characterize
the writings of these scholars as they deserve is not a grateful task but the
time has come to throw off reserve, when such drivel as this is gravely put
forward to induce us to tear from our Bible the Holy Scriptures on which our
Divine Lord based His claims to Messiahship.
THE IDEA OF SACRIFICE A REVELATION
The refutation of the Higher Criticism
does not prove that the Pentateuch is inspired of God. The writer who would set
himself to establish such a thesis as that within the limits of a Review
Article might well be admired for his enthusiasm and daring, but certainly not
for his modesty or discretion. Neither does it decide questions which lie
within the legitimate province of the true Higher Criticism, as ex. gr.,
the authorship of Genesis. It is incredible that for the thousands of years
that elapsed before the days of Moses, God left His people on earth without a
revelation: It is plain, moreover, that many of the ordinances divinely
entrusted to Moses were but a renewal of an earlier revelation. The religion of
If some demented creature conceived the
idea that killing a beast before his enemy's door would propitiate him, his
neighbours would no doubt have suppressed him. And if he evolved the belief
that his god would be appeased by such an offensive practice, he must have
supposed his god to be as mad as himself. The fact that sacrifice prevailed
among all races can be explained only by a primeval revelation. And the Bible
student will recognize that God thus sought to impress on men that death was
the penalty of sin, and to lead them to look forward to a great blood shedding
that would bring life and blessing to mankind. But
INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE
At this stage, however, what concerns us
is not the divine authority of the books, but the human error and folly of the
critical attack upon them. The only historical basis of that attack is the fact
that in the revival under Josiah, "the book of the law" was found in
the temple by Hilkiah, the high priest, to whom the young king entrusted the
duty of cleansing and renovating the long neglected shrine. A most natural
discovery it was, seeing that Moses had in express terms commanded that it
should be kept there (2 Kings 22:8; Deut. 31 :26). But according to the
critics, the whole business was a detestable trick of the priests. For they it
was who forged the books and invented the command, and then hid the product of
their infamous work where they knew it would be found.
And apart from this, the only foundation
for "the assured results of modern criticism," as they themselves
acknowledge, consists of "grounds of probability" and "plausible
arguments"! In no civilized country would an habitual criminal be
convicted of petty larceny on such evidence as this; and yet it is on these
grounds that we are called upon to give up the sacred books which our Divine
Lord accredited as "the Word of God" and made the basis of His
doctrinal teaching.
CHRIST OR CRITICISM?
And this brings us to the second, and
incomparably the graver, objection to "the assured results of modern
criticism." That the Lord Jesus Christ identified Himself with the Hebrew
Scriptures, and in a very special way with the Book of Moses, no one disputes.
And this being so, we must make choice between Christ and Criticism. For if
"the critical hypothesis" of the Pentateuch be sustained, the
conclusion is seemingly inevitable, either that He was not divine, or that the
records of His teaching are untrustworthy.
Which alternative shall we adopt? If the
second, then every claim to inspiration must be abandoned, and agnosticism must
supplant faith in the case of every fearless thinker. Inspiration is far too
great a question for incidental treatment here; but two remarks with respect to
it may not be inopportune. Behind the frauds of Spiritualism there lies the
fact, attested by men of high character, some of whom are eminent as scientists
and scholars, that definite communications are received in precise words from
the world of spirits. (The fact
that, as the Christian believes, these spirits are demons who impersonate the
dead, does not affect the argument) And this
being so, to deny that the Spirit of God could thus communicate truth to men,
or, in other words, to reject verbal inspiration on a priori grounds,
betrays the stupidity of systematized unbelief. And, secondly, it is amazing
that any one who regards the coming of Christ as God's supreme revelation of
Himself can imagine that (to put it on no higher ground than
"Providence") the Divine Spirit could fail to ensure that mankind
should have a trustworthy and true record of His mission and His teaching.
A MORE HOPELESS DILEMMA
But if the Gospel narrative be authentic,
we are driven back upon the alternative that He of whom they speak could not be
divine. "Not so," the critics protest, "for did He not Himself
confess His ignorance? And is not this explained by the Apostle's statement
that in His humiliation He emptied Himself of His Deity?" And the inference
drawn from this (to quote the standard text-book of the cult) is that the Lord
of Glory "held the current Jewish notions respecting the divine authority
and revelation of the Old Testament." But even if this conclusion--as
portentous as it is profane--could be established, instead of affording an
escape from the dilemma in which the Higher Criticism involves its votaries, it
would only serve to make that dilemma more hopeless and more terrible. For what
chiefly concerns us is not that, ex. hyp., the Lord's doctrinal teaching
was false, but that in unequivocal terms, and with extreme solemnity, He
declared again and again that His teaching was not His own but His Father's,
and that the very words in which He conveyed it were God-given.
A few years ago the devout were distressed
by the proceedings of a certain
And will it be believed that the only
scriptural basis offered us for this astounding position is a verse in one of the
Gospels and a word in one of the Epistles! Passing strange it is that men who
handle Holy Scripture with such freedom when it conflicts with their
"assured results" should attach such enormous importance to an
isolated verse or a single word, when it can be misused to support them. The
verse is Mark 13:32, where the Lord says, with reference to His coming again:
"Of that day and hour knoweth no one; no, not the angels which are in
heaven, neither the Son, but the Father." But this follows immediately upon
the words: "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but My words shall not pass
away."
THE WORDS OF GOD
The Lord's words were not
"inspired"; they were the words of God in a still higher sense.
"The people were astonished at His teaching," we are told, "for
He taught them as one having exousia." The word occurs again in
Acts 1 :7, where He says that times and seasons "the Father hath put in
His own exousia." And this is explained by Phil. 2:6, 7: "He
counted it not a prize (or a thing to be grasped) to be on an equality with
God, but emptied Himself"--the word on which the kenosis
theory of the critics depends. And He not only stripped Himself of His glory as
God; He gave up His liberty as a man. For He never spoke His own words, but
only the words which the Father gave Him to speak. And this was the limitation
of His "authority"; so that, beyond what the Father gave Him to
speak, He knew nothing and was silent.
But when He spoke, "He taught them as
one who had authority, and not as their scribes." From their scribes. they
were used to receive definite teaching, but it was teaching based on "the
law and the prophets." But here was One who stood apart and taught them
from a wholly different plane. "For," He declared, "I spake not
-from Myself; but the Father which sent Me, He bath given Me a commandment what
I should say and what I should speak. * * * The things, therefore, which I
speak, even as the Father bath said unto Me, so I speak" ( John 12 :49,
50, R. V. ) .
And let us not forget that it was not
merely the substance of His teaching that was divine, but the very language in
which it was conveyed. So that in His prayer on the night of the betrayal He
could say, not only "I have given them Thy word," but "I have
given them the words which Thou gavest Me." (*Both the logoj and the rhmata John 17:5, 14;
as again in Chap. 14:10; 24.) His words, therefore,
about Moses and the Hebrew Scriptures were not, as the critics, with such
daring and seeming profanity, maintain, the lucubration’s of a superstitious
and ignorant Jew; they were the words of God, and conveyed truth that was
divine and eternal.
When in the dark days of the Exile, God needed
a prophet who would speak only as He gave him words, He struck Ezekiel dumb.
Two judgments already rested on that people the seventy years' Servitude to
In this connection, moreover, two facts
which are strangely overlooked claim prominent notice. The first is that in
Mark 13 the antithesis is not at all between man and God, but between the Son
of God and the Father. And the second is that He had been re-invested with all
that, according to Phil. 2, He laid aside in coming into the world. "All
things have been delivered unto Me of My Father," He declared; and this at
a time when the proofs that "He was despised and rejected of men"
were pressing on Him. His reassuming the glory awaited His return to heaven,
but here on earth the all things were already His (Matt. 11:27).
AFTER THE KENOSIS
The foregoing is surely an adequate reply
to the kenosis figment of the critics; but if any should still doubt or
cavil, there is another answer which is complete and crushing. Whatever may
have been the limitations under which He rested during His ministry on earth,
He was released from them when He rose from the dead. And it was in His
post-resurrection teaching that He gave the fullest and clearest testimony to
the Hebrew Scriptures. Then it was that, "beginning at Moses, and
all the prophets, He expounded unto them in all the Scriptures the things
concerning Himself." And again, confirming all His previous teaching about
those Scriptures, "He said unto them, These are the words which I spake
unto you while I was yet with you, that all things must be fulfilled which were
written in the law of Moses, and in the prophets, and in the psalms, concerning
Me."
And the record adds: "Then opened He
their mind that they might understand the Scriptures." And the rest of the
New Testament is the fruit of that ministry, enlarged and unfolded by the Holy
Spirit given to lead them into all truth. And in every part of the New
Testament the Divine authority of the Hebrew Scriptures, and especially of the
Books of Moses, is either taught or assumed.
THE VITAL ISSUE
Certain it is, then, that the vital issue
in this controversy is not the value of the Pentateuch, but the Deity of
Christ. And yet the present article does not pretend to deal with the truth of
the Deity. Its humble aim is not even to establish the authority of the
Scriptures, but merely to discredit the critical. attack upon them by exposing
its real character and its utter feebleness. The writer's method, therefore,
has been mainly destructive criticism, the critics' favourite weapon being thus
turned against themselves.
A DEMAND FOR CORRECT STATEMENT
One cannot but feel distress at having to
accord such treatment to certain distinguished men whose reverence for divine
things is beyond reproach. A like distress is felt at times by those who have
experience in dealing with sedition, or in suppressing riots. But when men who
are entitled to consideration and respect thrust themselves into "the line
of fire," they must take the consequences. These distinguished men will
not fail to receive to the full the deference to which they are entitled, if
only they will dissociate themselves from the dishonest claptrap of this
crusade ("the assured results of modern criticism"; "all
scholars are with us"; and so on--bluster and falsehood by which the weak
and ignorant are browbeaten or deceived) and acknowledge that their
"assured results" are mere hypotheses, repudiated by Hebraists and
theologians as competent and eminent as themselves.
THINGS TO FEAR
The effects of this "Higher
Criticism" are extremely grave. For it has dethroned the Bible in the
home, and the good, old practice of "family worship" is rapidly dying
out. And great national interests also are involved. For who can doubt that the
prosperity and power of the Protestant nations of the world are due to the
influence of the Bible upon character and conduct? Races of men who for
generations have been taught to think for themselves in matters of the highest
moment will naturally excel in every sphere of effort or of enterprise. And
more than this, no one who is trained in the fear of God will fail in his duty
to his neighbour, but will prove himself a good citizen. But the dethronement
of the Bible leads practically to the dethronement of God; and in
CHRIST SUPREME
If a personal word may be pardoned in
conclusion, the writer would appeal to every book he has written in proof that
he is no champion of a rigid, traditional "orthodoxy." With a single
limitation, he would advocate full and free criticism of Holy Scripture. And
that one limitation is that the words of the Lord Jesus Christ shall be deemed
a bar to criticism and "an end of controversy" on every subject
expressly dealt with in His teaching. "The Son of God is come"; and
by Him came both grace and TRUTH. And from His hand it is that we have received
the Scriptures of the Old Testament.