|
|
|
Testimony of the
Evangelists Examined by the Rules of Evidence Administered in Courts of Justice.
by Professor Simon Greenleaf (1783-1853)
In examining the evidence of the Christian religion, it is essential to the
discovery of truth that we bring to the investigation a mind freed, as far as
possible, from existing prejudice, and open to conviction. There should be a
readiness, on our part, to investigate with candor to follow the truth wherever
it may lead us, and to submit, without reserve or objection, to all the
teachings of this religion, if it be found to be of divine origin. "There
is no other entrance," says Lord Bacon, "to the kingdom of man, which
is founded in the sciences, than to the kingdom of heaven, into which no one can
enter but in the character of a little child." The docility which true
philosophy requires of her disciples is not a spirit of servility, or the
surrender of the reason and judgment to whatsoever the teacher may inculcate;
but it is a mind free from all pride of opinion, not hostile to the truth sought
for, willing to pursue the inquiry, and impartiality to weigh the arguments and
evidence, and to acquiesce in the judgment of right reason. The investigation,
moreover, should be pursued with the serious earnestness which becomes the
greatness of the subject--a subject fraught with such momentous consequences to
man. It should be pursued as in the presence of God, and under the solemn
sanctions created by a lively sense of his omniscience, and of our
accountability to him for the right use of the faculties which he has bestowed.
In requiring this candor and simplicity of mind in those who would
investigate the truth of our religion, Christianity demands nothing more than is
readily conceded to every branch of human science. All these have their data,
and their axioms; and Christianity, too, has her first principles, the admission
of which is essential to any real progress in knowledge.
"Christianity," says Bishop Wilson, "inscribes on the portal of
her dominion 'Whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of God as a little child,
shall in nowise enter therein.' Christianity does not profess to convince the
perverse and headstrong, to bring irresistible evidence to the daring and
profane, to vanquish the proud scorner, and afford evidences from which the
careless and perverse cannot possibly escape. This might go to destroy man's
responsibility. All that Christianity professes, is to propose such evidences as
may satisfy the meek, the tractable, the candid, the serious inquirer."
The present design, however, is not to enter upon any general examination of
the evidences upon any general examination of the evidences of Christianity, but
to confine the inquiry to the testimony of the Four Evangelists, bringing their
narratives to the tests to which other evidence is subjected in human tribunals.
The foundation of our religion is a basis of fact--the fact of the birth,
ministry, miracles, death, resurrection by the Evangelists as having actually
occurred, within their own personal knowledge. Our religion, then, rests on the
credit due to these witnesses. Are they worthy of implicit belief, in the
matters which they relate? This is the question, in all human tribunals, in
regard to persons testifying before them; and we propose to test the veracity of
these witnesses, by the same rules and means which are there employed. The
importance of the facts testified, and their relations to the affairs of the
soul, and the life to come, can make no difference in the principles or the mode
of weighing the evidence. It is still the evidence of matters of fact, capable
of being seen and known and related, as well by one man as by another. And if
the testimony of the Evangelist, supposing it to be relevant and material to the
issue in a question of property or of personal right, between man and man, in a
court of justice, ought to be believed and have weight; then, upon the like
principles, it ought to receive our entire credit here. But if, on the other
hand, we should be justified in rejecting it, if there testified on oath, then,
supposing our rules of evidence to be sound, we may be excused if we hesitate
elsewhere to give it credence.
The proof that God has revealed himself to man by special and express
communications, and that Christianity constitutes that revelation, is no part of
these inquiries. This has already been shown, in the most satisfactory manner by
others, who have written expressly upon this subject. Referring therefore to
their writings for the arguments and proofs, the fact will here be assumed as
true. That man is a religious being, is universally conceded, for it has been
seen to be universally true. He is everywhere a worshiper. In every age and
country, and in every stage, from the highest intellectual culture to the
darkest stupidity, he bows with homage to a superior Being. Be it the
rude-carved idol of his own fabrication, or the unseen divinity that stirs
within him, it is still the object of his adoration. This trait in the character
of man is so uniform, that it may safely be assumed, either as one of the
original attributes of his nature, or as necessarily resulting from the action
of one or more of those attributes.
The object of man's worship, whatever it be, will naturally be his standard
of perfection. He clothes it with every attribute, belonging, in his view, to a
perfect character; and this character he himself endeavors to attain. He may
not, directly and consciously, aim to acquire every virtue of his deity, and to
avoid the opposite vices; but still this will be the inevitable consequence of
sincere and constant worship. as in human society men become assimilated, both
in manners and moral principles, to their chosen associates, so in the worship
of whatever deity men adore, they "form to him the relish of their
souls." To suppose, then, that God made man capable of religion, and
requiring it in order to the development of the highest part of his nature,
without communicating with him, as a father, in those revelations which alone
could perfect that nature, would be a reproach upon God, and a contradiction.
How it came to pass that man, originally taught, as we doubt not he was, to
know and to worship the true Jehovah, is found, at so early a period of his
history, a worshiper of baser objects, it is foreign to our present purpose to
inquire. But the fact is lamentably true, that he soon became an idolater, a
worshiper of moral abominations. The Scythians and Northmen adored the
impersonations of heroic valor and of bloodthirsty and cruel revenge. The
mythology of Greece and of Rome, though it exhibited a few examples of virtue
and goodness, abounded in others of gross licentiousness and vice. The gods of
Egypt were reptiles, and beasts and birds. The religion of Central and Eastern
Asia was polluted with lust and cruelty, and smeared with blood, rioting, in
deadly triumph, over all the tender affections of the human heart and all the
convictions of the human understanding. Western and Southern Africa and
Polynesia are, to this day, the abodes of frightful idolatry, cannibalism, and
cruelty; and the aborigines of both the Americas are examples of the depths of
superstition to which the human mind may be debased. In every quarter of the
world, however, there is a striking uniformity seen in all the features of
paganism. The ruling is lewd and cruel. Whatever of purity the earlier forms of
paganism may have possessed, it is evident from history that it was of brief
duration. Every form, which history has preserved, grew rapidly and steadily
worse and more corrupt, until the entire heathen world, before the coming of
Christ, was infected with that loathsome leprosy by St. Paul, in the beginning
of his Epistle to the Romans.
So general and decided was this proclivity to the worship of strange gods,
that, at the time of the deluge, only one family remained faithful to Jehovah;
and this was a family which had been favored with his special revelation. Indeed
it is evident that nothing but a revelation from God could raise men from the
degradation of pagan idolatry, because nothing else has ever had that effect. If
man could achieve his own freedom from this bondage, he would long since have
been free. But instead of this, the increase of light and civilization and
refinement in the pagan world has but multiplied the objects of his worship,
added voluptuous refinements to its ritual, and thus increased the number and
weight of his chains. In this respect there is no difference in their moral
condition, between the barbarous Scythian and the learned Egyptian or Roman of
ancient times, nor between the ignorant African and the polished Hindu of our
own day. The only method, which has been successfully employed to deliver man
from the idolatry, is that of presenting to the eye of his soul an object of
worship perfectly holy and pure, directly opposite, in moral character, to the
gods he had formerly adored. He could not transfer to his deities a better
character than he himself possessed. He must forever remain enslaved to his
idols, unless a new and pure object of worship were revealed to him, with a
display of superior power sufficient to overcome his former faith and present
fears, to detach his affections from grosser objects, and to fix them upon that
which alone is worthy. This is precisely what God, as stated in the Holy
Scriptures, has done. He rescued one family from idolatry in the Old World, y
the revelation of himself to Noah; he called a distinct branch of this family to
the knowledge of himself, in the person of Abraham and his sons; he extended
this favor to a whole nation, through the ministry of Moses; but it was through
that of Jesus Christ alone that it was communicated to the whole world. In
Egypt, by the destruction of all of the Israelites that he alone was the
self-existent Almighty. At the Red Sea, he emphatically showed his people. At
Sinai, he revealed himself as the righteous Governor, who required implicit
obedience from men, and taught them, by the strongly-marked distinctions of the
ceremonial law, that he was a holy Being, of purer eyes than to behold evil, and
that could not look upon iniquity. The demerit of sin was inculcated by the
solemn infliction of death upon every animal, offered as a propitiatory
sacrifice. And when, by this system of instruction, he had prepared a people to
receive the perfect revelation of the character of God, of the nature of his
worship and of the way of restoration to his image and favor, this also was
expressly revealed by the mission of his Son.
That the books of the Old Testament, as we now have them, are genuine; that
they existed in the time of our Saviour, and were commonly received and referred
to among the Jews, as the sacred books of their religion; and that the text of
the Four Evangelists has been handed down to us in the state in which it was
originally written, that is, without having been materially corrupted or
falsified, either by heretics or Christians; are facts which we are entitled to
assume as true, until the contrary is shown.
The genuineness of these writings really admits of as little doubt, and is
susceptible of as ready proof, as that of any ancient writings whatever. The
rule of municipal law on this subject is familiar, and applies with equal force
to all ancient writings, whether documentary or otherwise; and as it comes first
in order, in the prosecution of these inquiries, it may, for the sake of mere
convenience, be designated as our first rule.
Every document, apparently ancient, coming from the proper repository or
custody, and bearing on its face no evident marks of forger, the law presumes to
be genuine, and devolves on the opposing party the burden of proving it to be
otherwise.
An ancient document, offered in evidence in our courts, is said to come from
the proper repository, when it is found in the place where, and under the care
of persons with whom, such writings might naturally and reasonably be expected
to be found; for it is this custody which gives authenticity to documents found
within it. If they come from such a place, and bear no evident marks of forgery,
the law presumes that they are genuine, and they are permitted to be read in
evidence, unless the opposing party is able successfully to impeach them. the
burden of showing them to be false and unworthy of credit, is devolved on the
party who makes that objection. The presumption of law is the judgment of
charity. It presumes every many is innocent until he is proved guilty; that
everything has been done fairly and legally, until it is proved to have been
otherwise; and that every document, found in its proper repository, and not
bearing marks of forgery, is genuine. Now this is precisely the case with the
Sacred Writings. They have been used in the church from time immemorial, and
thus are found in the place where alone they ought to be looked for. they come
to us, and challenge our reception of them as genuine writings, precisely as Doomsday
Book, the Ancient Statues of Wales, or any other of the ancient documents which
have recently been published under the British Record Commission, are received.
They are found in familiar use in all the churches of Christendom, as the sacred
books to which all denominations of Christians refer, as the standard of their
faith. There is no pretense that they were engraven on plates of gold and
discovered in a cave, nor that they were brought from heaven by angels; but they
are received as the plain narratives and writings of the men whose names they
respectively bear, made public at the time they were written; and though there
are some slight discrepancies among the copies subsequently made, there is no
pretense that the originals are lost, and that copies alone are now produced,
the principles of the municipal law here also afford a satisfactory answer. For
the multiplication of copies was a public fact, in the faithfulness of which all
the Christian community had an interest; and it is a rule of law, that,--
In matters of public and general interest, all persons must be presumed to be
conversant, on the principle that individuals are presumed to be conversant with
their own affairs.
Therefore it is that, in such matters, the prevailing current of assertion is
resorted to as evidence, for it is to this that every member of the community is
supposed to be privy. The persons, moreover, who multiplied these copies may be
regarded, in some manner, as agents of Christian public, for whose use and
benefit the copies were made; and on the ground of the credit due to such
agents, and of the public nature of the facts themselves, the copies thus made
are entitled to an extraordinary degree of confidence, and, as in the case of
official registers and other public books, it is not necessary that they should
be confirmed and sanctioned by the ordinary tests of truth. If any ancient
document concerning our public rights were lost copies which had been received
in evidence in any of our courts of justice, without the slightest hesitation.
the entire text of the Corpus Juris Civilis is received as authority in all the
courts of continental Europe, upon much weaker evidence of its genuineness; for
the integrity of the Sacred Text has been preserved by the jealousy of opposing
sects, beyond any moral possibility of corruption; while that of the Roman Civil
Law has been preserved by tacit consent, without the interest of any opposing
school, to watch over and preserve it from alteration.
These copies of the Holy Scriptures having thus been in familiar use in the
churches, from the time when the text was committed to writing; having been
watched with vigilance by so many sects, opposed to each other in doctrine, yet
all appealing to these Scriptures for the correctness of their faith; and having
in all ages, down to this day, been respected as the authoritative source of all
ecclesiastical power and government, and submitted to, and acted under in regard
to so many claims of right, on the one hand, and so many obligations of duty, on
the other; it is quite erroneous to suppose that the Christian is bound to offer
any further proof of their genuineness or authenticity. It is for the objector
to show them spurious; for on him, by the plainest rules of law, lies the burden
of proof. If it were the case of a claim to a franchise, and a copy of an
ancient deed or character were produced in support of the title, under parallel
circumstances on which to presume its venture to deny either its admissibility
in evidence, or the satisfactory character of the proof. In a recent case in the
House of Lords, precisely such a document, being an old manuscript copy,
purporting to have been extracted from ancient Journals of the House, which were
lost, and to have been made by an officer whose duty it was to prepare lists of
the Peers, was held admissible in a claim of peerage.
Supposing, therefore, that it is not irrational, nor inconsistent with sound
philosophy, to believe that God has made a special and express revelation of his
character and will to man, and that the sacred books of our religion are
genuine, as we now have them; we proceed to examine and compare the testimony of
the Four Evangelists, as witnesses to the life and doctrines of Jesus Christ; in
order to determine the degree of credit, to which, by the rules of evidence
plied in human tribunals, they are justly entitled. Our attention will naturally
be first directed to the witnesses themselves, to see who and what manner of men
they were; and we shall take them in the order of their writings; stating the
prominent traits only in their lives and characters, as they are handed down to
us by credible historians.
Matthew, called Levi, was a Jew of Galilee, but of what city is uncertain. He
held the place of publican, or tax-gatherer, under the Roman government, and his
office seems to have consisted in collecting the taxes within his district, as
well as the duties and customs levied on goods and persons, passing in and out
of his district and province, across the lake of Genesareth. While engaged in
this business, at the office or usual place of collection, he was required by
Jesus to follow him, as one of his disciples; a command which he immediately
obeyed. Soon afterwards, he appears to have given a great entertainment to his
fellow-publicans and friends, at which Jesus was present; intending probably
both to celebrate his own change of profession, and to give them an opportunity
to profit by the teaching of his new Master. He was constituted one of the
twelve apostles, and constantly attended the person of Jesus as a faithful
follower, until the crucifixion; and after the ascension of his Master he
preached the gospel for some time, with other apostles, in Judea, and afterwards
in Ethiopia, where he died.
He is generally allowed to have written first, of all the evangelists; but
whether in the Hebrew or the Greek language, or in both, the learned are not
agreed, nor is it material to our purpose to inquire; the genuineness of our
present Greek gospel being sustained by satisfactory evidence. The precise time
when he wrote is also uncertain, the several dates given to it among learned
men, varying from A.D. 37 to A.D. 64. The earlier date, however, is argued with
greater force, from the improbability that the Christians would be left for
several years without a general and authentic history of our Saviour's ministry;
from the evident allusions which it contains to a state of persecution in the
church at the time it was written; from the titles of sanctity ascribed to
Jerusalem, and a higher veneration testified for the temple than the comparative
gentleness with which Herod's character and conduct are dealt with, that bad
prince probably being still in power; and from the frequent mention of Pilate,
as still governor of Judea.
That Matthew was himself a native Jew, familiar with the opinions,
ceremonies, and customs of his countrymen; that he was conversant with the
Sacred Writings, and habituated to their idiom; a man of plain sense, but of
little learning, except what he derived from the Scriptures of the Old
Testament; that he wrote seriously and from conviction, and had, on most
occasions, been present, and attended closely, to the transactions which he
relates, and relates, too, without any view of applause to himself; are facts
which we may consider established by internal evidence, as strong as the nature
of the case will admit. It is deemed equally well proved, both by internal
evidence and the aid of history, that he wrote for the use of his countrymen the
Jews. Every circumstance is noticed which might conciliate their belief, and
every unnecessary expression is avoided which might obstruct it. They looked for
the Messiah, of the lineage of David, and born in Bethlehem, in the
circumstances of whose life the prophecies should find fulfillment, a matter, in
their estimation, of peculiar value: and to all these this evangelist has
directed their especial attention.
Allusion has been already made to his employment as a collector of taxes and
customs: but the subject is too important to be passed over without further
notice. The tribute imposed by the Romans upon countries conquered by their arms
was enormous. In the time of Pompey, the sums annually exacted by their Asiatic
provinces, of which Judea was one, amounted to about four millions and a a half
of sterling, or about twenty-two millions of dollars. These exactions were made
in the usual forms of direct and indirect taxation; the rate of the customs on
merchandise varying from an eight to a fortieth part of the value of the
commodity; and the tariff including all the principal articles of the commerce
of the East, much of which, as is well known, still found its way to Italy
through Palestine, as well as by the way of Damascus and of Egypt. The direct
taxes consisted of a capitation-tax, and a land-tax, assessed upon a valuation
or census, periodically taken under the oath of the individual, with heavy penal
sanctions. It is natural to suppose that these taxes were not voluntarily paid,
especially since they were imposed by the conqueror upon a conquered people, and
by a heathen too, upon the people of the house of Israel. The increase of taxes
has generally been found to multiply discontents, evasions and frauds on the one
hand, and, on the other, to increase vigilance, suspicion, close scrutiny, and
severity of exaction. The penal code, as revised by Theododius, will give us
some notion of the difficulties must have been increased by the fact that, at
this period, a considerable portion of the commerce of that part of the world
was carried on by the Greeks, whose ingenuity and want of faith were proverbial.
It was to such an employment and under such circumstances, that Matthew was
educated; an employment which must have made him acquainted with the Greek
language, and extensively conversant with the public affairs and the men of
business of his time; thus entitling him to our confidence, as an experienced
and intelligent observer of that day were, as in truth they appear to have been,
as much disposed as those of the present time, to evade the payment of public
taxes and duties, and to elude, by all possible means, the vigilance of the
revenue officers, Matthew must have been familiar with a great variety of forms
of fraud, imposture, cunning, and deception, and must have become habitually
distrustful, scrutinizing, and cautious; and, of course, much less likely to
have been deceived in regard to may of the facts in our Lord's ministry,
extraordinary as they were, which fell under his observation. This circumstance
shows both the sincerity and the wisdom of Jesus, in selecting him for an eye-
witness of his conduct, and adds great weight to the value of the testimony of
this evangelist.
Mark was the son of a pious sister of Barnabas, named Mary, who dwelt at
Jerusalem, and at whose house the early Christians often assembled. His Hebrew
name was John; the surname of Mark having been adopted, as is supposed, when he
left Judea to preach the gospel in foreign countries; a practice not unusual
among the Jews of that age, who frequently, upon such occasions, assumed a name
more familiar than their own to the people whom they visited. He is supposed to
have been converted to the Christian faith by the ministry of Peter. He traveled
from Jerusalem to Antioch with Paul and Barnabas, and afterwards accompanied
them elsewhere. When they landed at Perga in Pamphylia, he left them and
returned to Jerusalem; for which reason, when he afterwards would have gone with
them, Paul refused to take him. Upon this, a difference of opinion arose between
the two apostles, and they separated, Barnabas taking Mark with him to Cyprus.
Subsequently he accompanied Timothy to Rome, at the express desire of Paul. From
this city he probably went into the Asia, where he found Peter, with whom he
returned to Rome, in which city he is supposed to have written and published his
Gospel. Such is the outline of his history, as it is furnished by the New
Testament. the early historians add, that after this he went into Egypt and
planted a church in Alexandria, where he died.
It is agreed that Mark wrote his Gospel for the use of Gentile converts; and
opinion deriving great force from the explanations introduced into it, which
would have been useless to a Jew, and that it was composed for those at Rome, is
believed, not only from the numerous Latinisms it contains, but from the
unanimous testimony of ancient writer, and from the internal evidence afforded
by the Gospel itself.
Some have entertained the opinion that Mark compiled his account from that of
Matthew, of this notion has been refuted by Knoppe, and others, and is now
generally regarded as untenable. For Mark frequently deviates from Matthew in
the order of time, in his arrangement of facts; and he adds many things not
related by the other evangelists; neither of which a mere epitomizer would
probably have done. He also omits several things related by Matthew, and
imperfectly describes others, especially the transactions of Christ with the
apostles after the resurrection; giving no account whatever of his appearance in
Galilee; omissions irreconcilable with any previous knowledge of the Gospel
according to Matthew. To these proofs we may add, that in several places there
are discrepancies between the accounts of Matthew and Mark, no, indeed,
irreconcilable, but sufficient to destroy the probability that the latter copied
from the former. The striking coincidences between them, in style, words, and
things, in other places, may be accounted for by considering Peter, who is
supposed to have dictated this Gospel to Mark, was quite as intimately
acquainted as Matthew with the miracles and discourses of our Lord; which,
therefore, he would naturally recite in his preaching; and that the same things might
very naturally be related in the same manner, by men who sought not after
excellency of speech. Peter's agency in the narrative of Mark is asserted by all
ancient writers, and is confirmed by the fact, that his humility is conspicuous
in every part of it, where anything is or might be related of him; his
weaknesses and fall being fully exposed, while things which might redound to his
honor, are either omitted or but slightly mentioned; that scarcely any
transaction of Jesus is related, at which Peter was not present, and that all
are related with that circumstantial minuteness which belongs to the testimony
of an eye-witness. We may, therefore, regard the Gospel of Mark as an original
composition, written at the dictation of Peter, and consequently as another
original narrative of the life, miracles, and doctrine of our Lord.
Luke, according to Eusebius, was a native of Antioch, by profession a
physician, and for a considerable period a companion of the apostle Paul. From
the casual notices of him in the Scriptures, and from the early Christian
writers, it has been collected, that his parents were Gentiles, but that he in
his youth embraced Judaism, from which he was converted to Christianity. The
first mention of him is that he was with Paul at Troas, whence he appears to
have attended him to Jerusalem; continued with him in all his troubles in Judea;
and sailed with him when he was sent a prisoner from Ceasarea to Rome, where he
remained with him during his two years confinement. As none of the ancient
fathers have mentioned his having suffered martyrdom, it is generally supposed
that he died a natural death.
That he wrote his Gospel for the benefit of the Gentile converts is affirmed
by the unanimous voice of Christian antiquity; and it may also be inferred from
its dedication to a Gentile. He is particularly careful to specify various
circumstances conducive to the information of strangers, but not so to the Jews;
he gives the lineage of Jesus upwards, after the manner of the Gentiles, instead
of downwards, as Matthew had done; tracing it up to Adam, and thus showing that
Jesus was the promised seed of the woman; and he marks the eras of his birth,
and of the ministry of John, by the reigns of the Roman emperors. He also has
introduced several things, not mentioned by the other evangelists, but highly
encouraging to the gentiles to turn to God in the hope of pardon and acceptance;
of which description are the parables of the publican and pharisee, in the
temple; the lost piece of silver; and the prodigal son; and the fact of Christ's
visit to Zaccheus the publican, and the pardon of the penitent thief.
That Luke was a physician, appears not only from the testimony of Paul, but
from the internal marks in his Gospel, showing that he was both an acute
observer, and had given particular and even professional attention to all our
Saviour's miracles of healing. Thus, the man whom Matthew and Mark describe
simply as a leper, Luke describes as full of leprosy; he, whom they mention as
had having a withered hand, Luke says had his right hand withered; and of the
maid, of whom the others say that Jesus took her spirit came to her again. He
alone, with professional accuracy of observation, says that virtue went out of
Jesus, and healed the sick; he alone states the fact that the sleep of the
disciples in Gethsemane was induced by extreme sorrow; and mentions the blood-
like sweat of Jesus, as occasioned by the intensity of his agony; and he alone
relates the miraculous healing of Malchus's ear. That he was also a man of a
liberal education, the comparative elegance of his writings sufficiently shows.
The design of Luke's Gospel was to supersede the defective and inaccurate
narratives then in circulation, and to deliver to Theophilus, to whom it is
addressed, a full and authentic account of the life, doctrines, miracles, death
and resurrection of our Saviour. Who Theophilus was, the learned are not
perfectly agreed; but the most probable opinion is that of Dr. Lardner, now
generally adopted, that, as Luke wrote his Gospel in Greece, Theophilus was a
man of rank in that country. Either the relations subsisting between him and
Luke, or the dignity and power of his rank, or both, induced the evangelist, who
himself also "had perfect understanding of all things from the first,"
to devote the utmost care to the drawing up of a complete and authentic
narrative of these great events. He does not affirm himself to have been an
eye-witness; though his personal knowledge of some of the transactions may well
be inferred from the "perfect understanding" which he says he
possessed. Some of the learned seem to have drawn this inference as to them all,
and to have placed him in the class of original witnesses; but this opinion,
though maintained on strong and plausible grounds, is not generally adopted. If,
then, he did not write from his own personal knowledge, the question is, what is
the legal character of his testimony?
If it were "the result of inquiries, made under competent public
authority, concerning matters in which the public are concerned," it would
possess every legal attribute of an inquisition, and, as such, would be legally
admissible in evidence, in a court of justice. To entitle such results, however,
to our full confidence, it is not necessary that they should be obtained under a
legal commission; it is sufficient if the inquiry is gravely undertaken and
pursued, by a person of competent intelligence, sagacity and integrity. The
request of a person in authority, or a desire to serve the public, are, to all
moral intents, as sufficient a motive as a legal commission. Thus, we know that
when complaint is made to the head of a department, of official misconduct or
abuse, existing in some remote quarter, nothing is more common than to send some
confidential person to the spot, to ascertain the facts and report them to the
department; and this report is confidently adopted as the basis of its
discretionary action, in the correction of that abuse, or the removal of the
offender. Indeed, the result of any grave inquiry is equally certain to receive
our confidence, though it may have been voluntarily undertaken, if the party
making it had access to the means of complete and satisfactory information upon
the subject. If, therefore, Luke's Gospel were to be regarded only as the work
of a contemporary historian, it would be entitled to our confidence. But it is
more than this. It is the result of careful science, intelligence and education,
concerning subjects which he was perfectly competent to peculiarly skilled, they
being cases of the cure of maladies; subjects, too, of which he already had the
perfect knowledge of a contemporary, and perhaps an eye-witness, but beyond
doubt, familiar with the parties concerned in the transactions, and belonging to
the community in which the events transpired, which were in the mouths of all;
and the narrative, moreover, drawn up for the especial use, and probably at the
request, of a man of distinction, whom it would not be for the interest nor
safety of the writer to deceive or mislead. Such a document certainly possesses
all the moral attributes of an inquest of office, or of any other official
investigation of facts; and as such is entitled, in foro conscientiae, to be
adduced of the matters it contains.
John, the last of the evangelists, was the son of Zebedee, a fisherman of the
town of Bethsaida, on the sea of Galilee. His father appears to have been a
respectable man in his calling, owning his vessel and having hired servants. His
mother, too, was among those who followed Jesus, and "ministered unto
him:" and to John himself, Jesus when on the cross, confided the care and
support of his own mother. This disciple also seems to have been favorably known
to the high priest, and to have influence in his family; by means of which he
had the privilege of being present in his palace at the examination of his
Master, and of introducing also Peter, his friend. He was the youngest of the
apostles; was eminently the object of the Lord's regard and confidence; was on
various occasions admitted to free and intimate intercourse with him; and is
described as "the disciple whom Jesus loved." Hence he was present at
several scenes, to which most of the others were not admitted. He alone, in
company with Peter and James, was present at the resurrection of Jairus's
daughter, at the transfiguration on the mount, and at the agony of our Saviour
in the garden of Gethsemane. He was the only apostle who followed Jesus to the
cross, he was the first of them at the sepulcher, and he was present at the
several appearances of our Lord after his resurrection. These circumstances,
together with his intimate friendship with the mother of Jesus, especially
qualify him to give a circumstantial and authentic account of the life of his
Master. After the ascension of Christ, and the effusion of the Holy Spirit on
the day of Pentecost, John became one of the chief apostles of the circumcision,
exercising his ministry in and near Jerusalem. From ecclesiastical history we
learn that, after the death of Mary the mother of Jesus, he proceeded to Asia
Minor, where he founded and presided over seven churches, in as many cities, but
resided chiefly at Ephesus. Thence he was banished, in Domitian's reign, to the
isle of Patmos, where he wrote his Revelation. On the ascension of Nerva he was
freed from exile, and returned to Ephesus, where he wrote his Gospel and
Epistles, and died at the age of one hundred years, about A.D. 100, in the third
year of the emperor Trajan.
The learned are not agreed as to the time when the Gospel of John was
written; some dating it as early as the year 68, others as late as the year 98;
but it is generally conceded to have been written after all the others. That is
could not have been the work of Some Platonic Christian of a subsequent age, as
some have without evidence asserted, is manifest from references to it by some
of the early fathers, and from the concurring testimony of many other writers of
the ancient Christian church.
That is was written either with especial reference to the Gentiles, or at a
period when very many of them had become converts to Christianity, is inferred
from the various explanations it contains, beyond the other Gospels, which could
have been necessary only to persons unacquainted with Jewish names and customs.
And that it was written after all the others, and to supply their omissions, is
concluded, not only from the uniform tradition and belief in the church, but
from his studied omission of most of the transactions noticed by the others, and
from his care to mention several incidents which were known to him, is too
evident to admit of doubt; while his omission to repeat what they had already
stated, or, where he does mention the same things, his relating them in a brief
and cursory manner, affords incidental but strong testimony that he regarded
their accounts as faithful and true.
Such are the brief histories of men, whose narratives we are to examine and
compare; conducting the examination and weighing the testimony by the same rules
and principles which govern our tribunals of justice in similar cases. These
tribunals are in such cases governed by the following fundamental rule;--
In trials of fact, by oral testimony, the proper inquiry is not whether is it
possible that the testimony may be false, but whether there is sufficient
probability that it is true.
It should be observed that the subject of inquiry is a matter of fact, and
not of abstract mathematical truth. the latter alone is susceptible of that high
degree of proof, usually termed demonstration, which excludes the possibility of
error, and which therefore may reasonably be required in support of every
mathematical deduction. But the proof of matters of fact rests upon moral
evidence alone; by which is meant not merely that species of evidence which we
do not obtain either from our own senses, from intuition, or from demonstration.
In the ordinary affairs of life we do not require nor expect demonstrative
evidence, because it is inconsistent with the nature of matters of fact, and to
insist on its production would be unreasonable and absurd. And it makes no
difference, whether the facts to be proved related to this life or to the next,
the nature of the evidence required being in both cases the same. The error of
the sceptic consists in pretending or supposing that there is a difference in
the nature of the things to be proved; and in demanding demonstrative evidence
concerning things which are not susceptible of any other than moral evidence
alone, and of which the utmost that can be said is, that there is no reasonable
doubt about their truth.
In proceeding to weigh the evidence of any proposition of fact, the previous
question to be determined is, when may it be said to be proved? The answer to
this question is furnished by another rule of municipal law, which may be thus
stated:
A proposition of fact is proved, when its truth is established by competent
and satisfactory evidence.
By competent evidence, is meant such as the nature of the thing to be proved
requires; and by satisfactory evidence, is meant that amount of proof, which
ordinarily satisfies an unprejudiced mind, beyond any reasonable doubt. The
circumstances which will amount of this degree of proof can never be previously
defined; the only legal test to which they can be subjected is, their
sufficiency to satisfy the mind and concretion, and so to convince him, that he
would of the highest concern and importance to his own interest. If, therefore,
the subject is a problem in mathematics, its truth is to be shown by the
certainty of demonstrative evidence. But if it is a question of fact in human
affairs, nothing more than moral evidence can be required, for this is the best
evidence which, from the nature of the case, is attainable. Now as the facts,
stated in Scripture History, are not of the former kind, but are cognizable by
the senses, they may be said to be proved when they are established by that kind
and degree of evidence which, as we have just observed, would, in the affairs of
human life, satisfy the mind and conscience of a common man. When we have this
degree of evidence, it is unreasonable to require more. A juror would violate
his oath, if he should refuse to acquit or condemn a person charged with an
offense, where this measure of proof was adduced.
Proceeding further, to inquire whether the facts related by the Four
Evangelists are proved by competent and satisfactory evidence, we are led,
first, to consider on which side lies the burden of establishing the credibility
of the witnesses. On this point the municipal law furnishes a rule, which is of
constant application in all trials by jury, and is indeed the dictate of that
charity which thinketh no evil.
In the absence of circumstances which generate suspicion, every witness is to
be presumed credible, until the contrary is shown; the burden of impeaching his
credibility lying on the objector.
This rule serves to show the injustice with which the writers of the Gospels
have ever been treated by infidels; and injustice silently acquiesced in even by
Christians; in requiring the Christian affirmatively, and by positive evidence,
aliunde, to establish the credibility of his witnesses above all others, before
their testimony is entitled to be considered, and in permitting the testimony of
a single profane writer, alone and uncorroborated, to outweigh that of any
single Christian. This is not the course in courts of chancery, where the
testimony of a single witness is never permitted to outweigh the oath even of
the defendant himself, interested as he is in the cause; but, on the contrary,
if the plaintiff, after having required the oath of his adversary, cannot
overthrow it by something more than the oath of one witness, however credible,
it must stand as evidence against him. But the Christian writer seems, by the
usual course of the argument, to have been deprived of the common presumption of
charity in his favor; and reversing the ordinary rule of administering justice
in human tribunals, his testimony is unjustly presumed to be false, until it is
proved to be true. This treatment, moreover, has been applied to them all in a
body; and, without due regard to the fact, that, being independent historians,
writing at different periods, they are entitled to the support of each other:
they have been treated, in the argument, almost as if the New Testament were the
entire production, at once, of a body of men, conspiring by a joint fabrication,
to impose a false religion upon the world. It is time that this injustice should
cease; that the testimony of the evangelists should be admitted to be true,
until it can be disproved by those who would impugn it; that the silence of one
sacred writer on any point, should no more detract from his own veracity or that
of the other historians, than the like circumstance is permitted to do among
profane writers; and that the Four Evangelists should be admitted in
corroboration of each other, as readily as Josephus and Tacitus, or Polybius and
Livy.
But if the burden of establishing the credibility of the evangelists were
devolved on those who affirm the truth of their narratives, it is still capable
of a ready moral demonstration, still capable of a ready moral demonstration,
when we consider the nature and character of the testimony, and the essential
marks of difference between true narratives of facts and the creations of
falsehoods. It is universally admitted that the credit to be given to witnesses
depends chiefly on their ability to discern and comprehend what was before them,
their opportunities for observation, the degree of accuracy with which they are
accustomed to mark passing events, and their integrity in relating them. The
rule of municipal law on this subject embraces all these particulars, and is
thus stated by a legal text- writer of the highest repute.
The credit due to the testimony of witnesses depends upon, firstly, their
honesty; secondly, their ability; thirdly, their number and the consistency of
their testimony; fourthly, the conformity of their testimony with experience;
and fifthly, the coincidence of their testimony with collateral circumstances.
Let the evangelists be tried by these tests.
And first, as to their honesty. Here they are entitled to the benefit of the
general course of human experience, that men ordinarily speak the truth, when
they have no prevailing motive or inducement to the contrary. This presumption,
to which we have before alluded, is applied in courts of justice, even to
witnesses whose integrity is not wholly free from suspicion; much more is it
applicable to the evangelists, whose testimony went against all their worldly
interests. The great truths which the apostles declared, were that Christ had
risen from the dead, and that only through repentance from sin, and faith in
him, could men hope for salvation. This doctrine they asserted with one voice,
everywhere, not only under the greatest discouragements, but in the face of the
most appalling terrors that can be presented to the mind of man. Their master
had recently perished as a malefactor, by the sentence of a public tribunal. His
religion sought to overthrow the religions of the whole world. The laws of every
country were against the teaching of his disciples. The interests and passions
of all the rulers and great men in the world were against them. The fashion of
the world was against them. Propagating this new faith, even in the most
inoffensive and peaceful manner, they could expect nothing but contempt,
opposition, revilings, bitter persecutions, stripes imprisonments, torments and
cruel deaths. Yet this faith they zealously did propogate; and all these
miseries they endured undismayed, nay, rejoicing. As one after another was put
to a miserable death, the survivors only prosecuted their work with increased
vigor and resolution. The annals of military warfare afford scarcely an example
of the like heroic constancy, patience and unflinching courage. They had every
possible motive to review carefully the grounds of their faith, and the
evidences of the great facts and truths which they asserted; and these motives
were pressed upon their attention with the most melancholy and terrific
frequency. It was therefore impossible that they could have persisted in
affirming the truths they have narrated, had not Jesus actually rose from the
dead, and had they not known this fact as certainly as they knew any other fact.
If it were morally possible for them to have been deceived in this matter, every
human motive operated to lead them to discover and avow their error. To have
persisted in so gross a falsehood, after it was known to them, was not only to
encounter, for life, all the evils which man could inflict, from without, but to
endure also the pangs of inward and conscious guilt; with no hope of future
peace, no testimony of a good conscience, no expectation of honor or esteem
among men, no hope of happiness in this life, or in the world to come.
Such conduct in the apostles would moreover have been utterly irreconcilable
with the fact, that they possessed the ordinary constitution of our common
nature. Yet their lives do show them to have been men like all others of our
race; swayed by the same motives, animated by the same hopes, affected by the
same joys, subdued by the same sorrows, agitated by the same fears, and subject
to the same passions, temptations and infirmities, as ourselves. And their
writings show them to have been men of vigorous understandings. If then their testimony
was not true, there was no possible motive for this fabrication.
It would also have been irreconcilable with the fact that they were good men.
But it is impossible to read their writings, and not feel that we are conversing
with men eminently holy, and of tender consciences, with men acting under an
abiding sense of the presence and omniscience of God, and of their
accountability to him, living in his fear, and walking in his ways. Now, though,
in a single instance, a good man may fall, when under strong temptations, yet he
is not found persisting, for years, in deliberated falsehood, asserted with the
most solemn appeals to God, without the slightest temptation or motive, and
against all the opposing interests which reign in the human breast. If, on the
contrary, they are supposed to have been bad men, it is incredible that such men
should have chosen this form of imposture; enjoining, as it does, unfeigned
repentance, the utter forsaking and abhorrence of all falsehood and of every
other sin, the practice of daily self-denial, self-abasement and self-sacrifice,
the crucifixion of the flesh with all its earthly appetites and desires,
indifference to the honors, and hearty contempt of the vanities of the world;
and inculcating perfect purity of heart and life, and intercourse of the soul
with heaven. It is incredible, that bad men should invent falsehoods, to promote
the religion of the God of truth. The supposition is suicidal. If they did
believe in a future state of retribution, a heaven and a hell hereafter, they
took the most certain course, if false witnesses, to secure the latter for their
portion. And if, still being bad men, they did not believe in future punishment,
how came they to invent which was to destroy all their prospects of worldly
honor and happiness, and to insure their misery in this life? From these
absurdities there is no escape, but in the perfect conviction and admission that
they were good men, testifying to that which they had carefully observed and
considered, and well knew to be true.
In the second place, as their ability. The text writer before cited observes,
that the ability of a witness to speak the truth, depends on the opportunities
which he has had for observing the fact, the accuracy of his powers of
discerning, and the faithfulness of his memory in retaining the facts, once
observed and known. Of the latter trait, in these witnesses, we of course know
nothing; nor have we any traditional information in regard to the accuracy of
their powers of discerning. But we may well suppose that in these respects they
were like the generality of their countrymen, until the contrary is shown by an
objector. it is always to be presumed that men are honest, and of sound mind,
and of the average and ordinary degree of intelligence. This is not the judgment
of mere charity; it is also the uniform presumption of the law of the land; a
presumption which is always allowed freely and fully to operate, until the fact
is shown to be otherwise, by the party who denies the applicability of this
presumption to the particular case in question. Whenever an objection is raised
in opposition to ordinary presumptions of law, or to the ordinary experience of
mankind, the burden of proof is devolved on the objector, by the common and
ordinary rules of evidence, and of practice in courts. No lawyer is permitted to
argue in disparagement of the intelligence or integrity of a witness, against
whom the case itself afforded no particle of testimony. This is self afforded in
particle of testimony. This is sufficient for our purpose, in regard to these
witnesses. But more than this is evident, from the minuteness of their
narratives, and from their history. Matthew was trained, by his calling, to
habits of severe investigation and suspicious scrutiny; and Luke's profession
demanded an exactness of observation equally close and searching. The other two
evangelists, it has been well remarked, were as much too unlearned to forge the
story of their Master's Life, as these were too learned and acute to be deceived
by any imposture.
In the third place, as to their number and the consistency of their
testimony. The character of their narratives is like that of all other true
witnesses, containing, as Dr. Paley observes, substantial truth, under
circumstantial variety. There is enough of discrepancy to show that there could
have been no previous concert among them; and at the same time such substantial
agreement as to show that they all were independent narrators of the same great
transaction, as the events actually occurred. That they conspired to impose
falsehood upon the world is, moreover, utterly inconsistent with the supposition
that they were honest men; a fact, to the proofs of which we have already
adverted. But if they were bad men, still the idea of any conspiracy among them
is negatived, not only by the discrepancies alluded to, but by many other
circumstances which will be mentioned hereafter; from all which, it is manifest
that if they concerted a false story, they sought to its accomplishment by a
mode quite the opposite to that which all others are found to pursue, to attain
the same end. On this point the profound remark of an eminent writer is to our
purpose; that "in a number of concurrent testimonies, where there has been
no previous concert, there is a probability distinct from that which may be
termed the sum of the probabilities resulting from the testimonies of the
witnesses; a probability which would remain, even though the witnesses were of
such a character as to merit no faith at all. This probability arises from the
concurrence itself. That such a concurrence should spring from chance, is as one
to infinite; that is, in other words, morally impossible. If therefore concert
be excluded, there remains no cause but the reality of the fact.
The discrepancies between the narratives of the several evangelists, when
carefully examined, will not be found sufficient to invalidate their testimony.
Many seeming contradictions will prove, upon closer scrutiny, to be in
substantial agreement; and it may be confidently asserted that there are none
that will not yield, under fair and just criticism. If these different accounts
of the same transactions were in strict verbal conformity with each other, the
argument against their credibility would be much stronger. All that is asked for
these witnesses is, that their testimony may be regarded as we regard the
testimony of men in the ordinary affairs of life. This they are justly entitled
to; and this no honorable adversary can refuse. We might, indeed, take higher
ground than this, and confidently claim for them the severest scrutiny; but our
present purpose is merely to try their veracity by the ordinary tests of truth,
admitted in human tribunals.
If the evidence of the evangelists is to rejected because of a few
discrepancies among them, we shall be obliged to discard that of many of the
contemporaneous histories on which we are accustomed to rely. Dr. Paley has
noticed the contradiction between Lord Clarendon and Burnett and others in
regard to Lord Strafford's execution; the former stating that he was condemned
to be hanged, which was done on the same day; and the latter all relating that
on a Saturday he was sentenced to the block, and was beheaded on the following
Monday. Another striking instance of discrepancy has since occurred, in the
narratives of the different members of the royal family of France, of their
flight from Paris to Varennes, in 1792. These narratives, ten in number, and by
eye-witnesses and personal actors in the transactions they relate, contradict
each other, some on trivial and some on more essential points, but in every case
in a wonderful and inexplicable manner. Yet these contradictions do not, in the
general public estimation, detract from the integrity of the narrators, nor from
the credibility of their relations. In the points in which they agree, and which
constitute the great body of their narratives, their testimony is of course not
doubted; where they differ, we reconcile them as well as we may; and where this
cannot be done at all, we follow that light which seems to us the clearest. Upon
the principles of the sceptic, we should be bound utterly to disbelieve them
all. On the contrary, we apply to such cases the rules which, in daily
experience, our judges instruct juries to apply, in weighing and reconciling the
testimony of different witnesses; and which the courts themselves observe, in
comparing and reconciling different and sometimes discordant reports of the same
decisions. This remark applies especially to some alleged discrepancies in the
reports which the several evangelists have been of the same discourses of our
Lord.
In the fourth place, as to the conformity of their testimony with experience.
The title of the evangelists to full credit for veracity would be readily
conceded by the objector, if the facts they relate were such as ordinarily occur
in human experience, and on this circumstance an argument is founded against
their credibility. Miracles, say the objectors, are impossible; and therefore
the evangelists were either deceivers or deceived; and in either case their
narratives against the possibility of miracles, was founded on the broad and
bold assumption that all things are governed by immutable laws, or fixed modes
of motion and relation, termed the laws of nature, by which God himself is of
necessity bound. This erroneous assumption is the tortoise, on which stands the
elephant which upholds his system of atheism. He does not inform us who made
these immutable laws, nor whence they derive their binding force and
irresistible operation. The argument supposes that the creator of all things
first made a code of laws, and then put it out of his own power to change them.
the scheme of Mr. Hume is but another form of the same error. He deduces the
existence of such immutable laws from the uniform course of human experience.
This, he affirms, is our only guide in reasoning concerning matters of fact; and
whatever is contrary to human experience, he pronounces incredible. Without
stopping to examine the correctness of this doctrine, as a fundamental principle
in the law of evidence, it is sufficient in this place to remark, that it
contains this fallacy: it excludes all knowledge derived by inference or
deduction from facts, confining us to what we derive from experience alone, and
thus depriving us of any knowledge, or even rational belief, or the existence or
character of God. Nay more, it goes to prove that successive generations of men
can make no advancement in knowledge, but each must begin de novo, and be
limited to the results of his own experience. But if we may infer, from what we
see and know, that there is a Supreme Being, by whom this world was created, we
may certainly, and with equal reason, believe him capable of works which we have
never yet known him to perform. We may fairly conclude that the power which was
originally put forth to create the world is still constantly and without ceasing
exerted to sustain it; and that the experienced connection between cause and
effect is but the uniform and constantly active operation of the finger of God.
Whether this uniformity of operation extends to things beyond the limits of our
observation, is a point we cannot certainly know. Its existence in all things
that ordinarily concern us may be supposed to be ordained as conducive to our
happiness; and if the belief in a revelation of peace and mercy from god is
conducive to the happiness of man, it is not irrational to suppose that he would
depart from his ordinary course of action, in order to give it such attestations
as should tend to secure that belief. "A miracle is improbable, when we can
perceive no sufficient cause, in reference to his creatures, why the Deity
should not vary his modes of operation; it ceases to be so, when such cause is
assigned."
But the full discussion of the subject of miracles forms no part of the
present design. Their credibility has been fully established, and the objections
of sceptics most satisfactorily met and overthrown, by the ablest writers of our
own day, whos works are easily accessible. Thus much, however, may here be
remarked; that in almost every miracle related by the evangelists, the facts,
separately taken, were plain, intelligible, transpiring in public, and about
which no person of ordinary observation would be like to mistake. Persons blind
or cripple, who applied to Jesus for relief, were known to have been crippled or
blind for many years; they came to be cured; he spake to them; they went away
whole. Lazarus had been dead and buried four days; Jesus called him to come
forth from the grave; he immediately came forth, and was seen alive for a long
time afterwards. In every case of healing, the previous condition of the
sufferer was known to all witnessed the act of Jesus in touching him, and heard
his words. All these, separately considered, were facts, plain and simple in
their nature, easily seen and fully comprehended by persons of common capacity
and observation. If they were separately testified to, by different witnesses of
ordinary intelligence and integrity, in any court of justice, the jury would be
bound to believe them; and a verdict, rendered contrary to the uncontradicted
testimony of credible witnesses to any of these plain facts, separately taken,
would be liable to be set aside, as a verdict against evidence. If one credible
witness testified to the fact, that Bartimeus was blind, according to the
uniform course of administering justice, this fact would be taken as
satisfactorily proved. So also, if his subsequent restoration to sight were the
sole fact in question, this also would be deemed established, by the like
evidence. Nor would the rule of evidence be at all different, if the fact to be
proved were the declaration of Jesus, immediately preceding his restoration to
sight, that his faith had made him whole. In each of these cases, each isolated
fact was capable of being accurately observed, and certainly known; and the
evidence demands our assent, precisely as the like evidence upon any other
indifferent subject. The connection of the word or the act of Jesus with the
restoration of the blind, lame and dead, to sight, and health, and life, as
cause and effect, is a conclusion which our reason is compelled to admit, from
the uniformity of their concurrence, in such a multitude of instances, as well
as from the universal conviction of all, whether friends or foes, who beheld the
miracles which he wrought. Indeed, if the truth of one of the miracles is
satisfactorily established, our belief cannot reasonably be withheld from them
all. This is the issue proposed by Dr. Paley, in regard to the evidence of the
death of Jesus upon the cross, and his subsequent resurrection, the truth of
which he has established in an argument incapable of refutation.
In the fifth place, as to the coincidence of their testimony with collateral
and contemporaneous facts and circumstances. After a witness is dead, and his
moral character is forgotten, we can ascertain it only by a close inspection of
his narrative, comparing its details with each other, and with contemporary
accounts and collateral facts. This test is much more accurate than may at first
be supposed. Every event which actually transpires, has its appropriate
circumstances, of which the affairs of men consist; it owes its origin to the
events which have preceded it, is intimately connected with all and often with
those of remote regions, and in its turn gives birth to numberless others which
succeed. In all this almost inconceivable contexture, and seeming discord, there
is perfect harmony; and while the fact, which really happened, tallies exactly
with every other contemporaneous incident, related to it in the remotest degree,
it is not possible for the wit of man with the actual occurrences of the same
time and place, may not be shown to be false. Hence it is, that a false witness
will not willingly detail any circumstances, in which his testimony will be open
to contradiction, nor multiply them where there is danger of his being detected
by a comparison of them with other accounts, equally circumstantial. He will
rather deal in general statements and broad assertions; and if he finds it
necessary for his purpose to employ names and particular circumstances in his
story, he will endeavor to invent such as shall be out of the reach of all
opposing proof; and he will be the most forward and minute in details, where he
knows that any danger of contradiction is least to be apprehended. Therefore it
is, that variety and minuteness of detail are usually regarded as certain tests
of sincerity, if the story, in the circumstances related, is of a nature capable
of easy refutation if it were false.
The difference, in the detail of circumstances, between artful or false
witnesses and those who testify the truth, is worthy of especial observation.
The former are often copious and even profuse in their statements, as far as
these may have been previously fabricated, and in relation to the principal
matter; but beyond this, all will be reserved and meager, from the fear of
detection. Every lawyer knows how lightly the evidence of a non-mi-recordo
witness is esteemed. the testimony of false witnesses will not be uniform in its
texture, but will not be uniform in its texture, but will be unequal, unnatural,
and inconsistent. On the contrary, in the testimony of true witnesses there is a
visible and striking naturalness of manner, and an unaffected readiness and
copiousness in the detail of circumstances, as well in one part of the narrative
as another, and evidently without the least regard either to the facility or
difficulty of verification or detection. It is easier, therefore, to make out
the proof of any fact, if proof it may be called, by suborning one or more false
witnesses, to testify directly to the matter in question, than to procure an
equal number to testify falsely to such collateral and separate circumstances as
will, without greater danger of detection, lead to the same false result. the
increased number of witnesses to circumstances, and the increased number of the
circumstances themselves, all tend to increase the probability of detection if
the witnesses are false, because thereby the points are multiplied in which
their statements may be compared with each other, as well as with the truth
itself, and in the same proportion is increased the danger of variance and
inconsistency. Thus the force of circumstantial evidence is found to depend on
the number of particulars involved in the narrative; the difficulty of
fabricating them all, if false, and the great facility of detection; the nature
of the circumstances to be compared, and from which the intricacy of the
comparison; the number of the intermediate steps in the process of deduction;
and the circuitry of the investigation. the more largely the narrative partakes
of these characters, the further it will be found removed from all suspicion of
contrivance or design, and the more profoundly the mind will repose on the
conviction of its truth.
The narratives of the sacred writers, both Jewish and Christian, abound in
examples of this kind of evidence, the value of which is hardly capable of being
properly estimated. It does not, as has been already remarked, amount to
mathematical demonstration; nor is this degree of proof justly demandable in any
question of moral conduct. In all human transactions, the highest degree of
assurance to which we can arrive, short of the evidence of our own senses, is
that of probability. The most that can be asserted is, that the narrative is
more likely to be true than false; and it may be in the highest degree more
likely, but still be short of absolute mathematical certainty. Yet this very
probability may be so great as to satisfy the mind of the most cautious, and
enforce the assent of the most reluctant and unbelieving. If it is such as
usually satisfies reasonable men, in matters of ordinary transaction, it is all
which the greatest skeptic has a right to require; for it is by such evidence
alone that our rights are determined, in the civil tribunals; and on no other
evidence do they proceed, even in capital cases. Thus where a house had been
feloniously broken open with a knife, the blade of which was broken and left in
the window, and the mutilated knife itself, the parts perfectly agreeing, was
found in the pocket of the accused, who gave no satisfactory explanation of the
fact, no reasonable doubt remained of his participation in the crime. And where
a murder had been committed by shooting with a pistol, and the prisoner was
connected with the transaction by proof that the wadding of the pistol was part
of a letter addressed to him, the remainder of which was found upon his person,
no juror's conscience could have reproached him for assenting to the verdict of
condemnation. Yet the evidence, in both cases, is but the evidence of
circumstances; amounting, it is true, to the highest degree of probability, but
yet not utterly inconsistent with the innocence of the accused. The evidence
which we have of the great facts of the Bible history belongs to this class,
that is, it is moral evidence; sufficient to satisfy any rational mind, by
carrying it to the highest degree of moral certainty. IF such evidence will
justify the taking away of human life or liberty, in the one case, surely it
ought to be deemed sufficient to determine our faith in the other.
All Christianity asks of men on this subject, is that they would be
consistent with themselves; that they would treat the evidence of other things;;
and that they would try and judge its actors and witnesses, as they deal with
their fellow men, when testifying to human affairs and actions, in human
tribunals. Let the the witnesses be compared with themselves, with each other,
and with surrounding facts and circumstances; and let their testimony be sifted,
as if were given in a court of justice, on the side of the adverse party, the
witness being subjected to a rigorous cross-examination. The result, it is
confidently believed, will be an undoubting conviction of their integrity,
ability, and truth. In the course of such an examination, the undesigned
coincidences will multiply upon us at every step in the witnesses and of the
reality of the occurrences which they relate will increase, until it acquires,
for all practical purposes, the value and force of demonstration.
It should be remembered, that very little of the literature of their times
and country has come down to us; and that the collateral sources and means of
corroborating and explaining their writings are proportionally limited. The
contemporary writings and works of art which have reached us, have invariably
been found to confirm their accounts, to reconcile what was apparently
contradictory, and supply what seemed defective or imperfect. We ought therefore
to conclude, that if we had more of the same light, all other similar
difficulties and imperfections would vanish. Indeed they have been gradually
vanishing, and rapidly too, before the light of modern research, conducted by
men of science in our own times. And it is worthy of remark, that of all the
investigations and discoveries of travelers and men of letters, since the
overthrow of the Roman empire, not a vestige of antiquity has been found,
impeaching, in the slightest degree, the credibility of the sacred writers; but,
on the contrary, every result has tended to confirm it.
The essential marks of difference between true narratives of facts and the
creations of fiction, have already been adverted to. It may here be added that
these attributes of truth are strikingly apparent throughout the gospel
histories, and that the absence of all the others is equally remarkable. The
writers allude, for example, to the existing manners and customs, and to the
circumstances of the times and of their country, with the utmost minuteness of
reference. And these references are never formally made, nor with preface and
explanation, never multiplied and heaped on each other, nor brought together, as
though introduced by design; but they are scattered broad-cast and singly over
every part of the story, and so connect themselves with every incident related,
as to render the detection of falsehood inevitable. This minuteness, too, is not
peculiar to any one of the historians, but is common to them all. Though they
wrote at different periods and without mutual concert, they all alike refer
incidentally to the same state of affairs, and to the same contemporary
collateral circumstances. Their testimony, in this view, stands on the same
ground with that of four witnesses, separately examined before different
commissioners, upon the same interrogatories, and all adverting incidentally to
the same circumstances as surrounding and accompanying the principal
transaction, to which alone their attention is directed. And it is worthy of
observation that these circumstances were at that time of a peculiar character.
Hardly a state or kingdom in the world ever experienced so many vicissitudes in
its government and political relations, as did Judea, during the period of the
gospel history. It was successively under the government of Herod the Great, of
Archelaus, and of a Roman magistrate; it was a kingdom, a tetrarchate, and a
province; and its affairs, its laws, and the administration of justice, were all
involved in the confusion and uncertainty naturally to be expected from recent
conquest. It would be difficult to select any place or period in the history of
nations, for the time and scene of a fictitious history or imposture, which
would combine so many difficulties for the fabricator to surmount, so many
contemporary writers to confront with him, and so many facilities for the
detection of falsehood.
"Had the evangelists been false historians," says Dr. Chalmers,
"they would not have committed themselves upon so many particulars. They
would not have furnished the vigilant inquirers of that period with such an
effectual instrument for bringing them into discredit with the people; nor
foolishly supplied, in every page of their narrative, so many materials for a
cross-examination, which would infallibly have disgraced them. Now, we of this
age can institute the same cross-examination. We can compare the evangelical
writers with contemporary authors, and verify a number of circumstances in the
history, and government, and peculiar economy of the Jewish people. We therefore
have it in our power to institute a cross-examination upon the writers of the
New Testament; and the freedom and frequency of their allusions to these
circumstances supply us with ample materials for it. The fact, that they are
borne out in their minute and incidental allusions by the testimony of other
historians, gives a strong weight of what has been called circumstantial
evidence in their favor. As a specimen of the argument, let us confine our
observations to the history of our Saviour's trial, and execution, and burial.
They brought him to Pontius Pilate> We know both from Tacitus and Josephus,
that he was at that time governor of Judea.
A sentence from him was necessary before they could proceed to the execution
of Jesus; and we know that the power of life and death was usually vested in the
Roman governor. Our Saviour was treated with derision; and this we know to have
been a customary practice at that time, previous to the execution of criminals,
and during the time of it. Pilate scourged Jesus before he gave him up to be
crucified. We know from ancient authors, that this was a very usual practice
among Romans. The accounts of an execution generally run in this form: he was
stripped, whipped, and beheaded or executed. According to the evangelists, his
accusation was written on the top of the cross; and we learn from Suetonius and
others, that the crime of the person to be executed was affixed to the
instrument of his punishment. According to the evangelists, this accusation was
written in three different languages; and we know from Josephus that it was
quite common in Jerusalem to have all public advertisements written in this
manner. According to the evangelists, Jesus had to bear his cross; and we know
from other sources of information, that this was the constant practice of those
times. According to the evangelists, the body of Jesus was given up to be buried
at the request of friends. We know that, unless the criminal was infamous, this
was the law or the custom with all Roman governors."
There is also a striking naturalness in the characters exhibited in the
sacred historians, rarely if ever found in works of fiction, and probably
nowhere else to be collected in a similar manner from fragmentary and incidental
allusions and expressions, in the writings of different persons. Take for
example, that of Peter, as it may be gathered from the evangelists, and it will
be hardly possible to conceive that four persons, writing at different times,
could have concurred in the delineation of such a character, if it were not
real; a character too, we must observe, which is nowhere expressly drawn, but is
shown only here and there, casually, in the subordinate parts of the main
narrative. Thus and zealous man; sudden and impulsive, yet humble and ready to
retract; honest and direct in his purposes; ardently loving his master, yet
deficient in fortitude and firmness in his cause. When Jesus put any question to
the apostles, it was Peter who was foremost to reply, and if they would inquire
of Jesus, it was Peter who was readiest to speak. He had the impetuous courage
to cut off the ear of the High Priest's servant, who came to arrest his master;
and the weakness to dissemble before the Jews, in the matter of eating with
Gentile converts. It was he who ran with John to the sepulcher, on the first
intelligence of the resurrection of Jesus, and with characteristic zeal rushed
in, while John paused without the door. He had the ardor to desire and the faith
to attempt to walk on the water, at the command of his Lord; but as soon as he
saw the wind boisterous, he was afraid. He was the first to propose the election
of another apostle in the place of Judas, and he it was who courageously
defended them all, on the day of Pentecost, when the multitude charged them with
being filled with new wine. He was forward to acknowledge Jesus to be the
Messiah; yet having afterwards endangered his own life by wounding the servant
of the Most High Priest, he suddenly consulted his own safety by denying the
same Master, for whom, but a few hours before, he had declared himself ready to
die. We may safely affirm that the annals of fiction afford no example of a
similar but no uncommon character, thus incidentally delineated.
There are other internal marks of truth in the narratives of the evangelists,
which, however, need here be only alluded to, as they have been treaded with
great fullness and force by able writers, whose works are familiar to all. Among
these may be mentioned the nakedness of the narratives; the absence of all
parade by the writers about their own integrity, of all anxiety to be believed,
or to impress others with a good opinion of themselves or their cause, of all
marks of wonder, or of desire to excite astonishment at the greatness of the
events they record, and of all appearance of design to exalt their Master. On
the contrary, there is apparently the most perfect indifference on their part,
whether they are believed or not; or rather, the evident consciousness that they
are recording events well known to all, in their own country and times, and
undoubtedly to be believed, like any other matter of public history, by readers
in all other countries and ages. It is worthy, too, of especial observation,
that thought the evangelists record unparalleled sufferings and cruel death of
their beloved Lord, and this too, by hands and with the consenting voices of
those on whom he had convered the greatest benefits, and their own persecutions
and dangers, yet they have bestowed no epithets of harshness or even of just
censure on the authors of all this wickedness, but have everywhere left the
plain and unencumbered narrative to speak for itself, and the reader to
pronounce his own sentence of condemnation; like true witnesses, who have
nothing to gain or to lose by the event of the cause, they state the facts, and
leave them to their fate. Their simplicity and artlessness, also, should not
pass unnoticed, in readily stating even those things most disparaging to their
dullness of apprehension of this teachings, their strifes for pre-eminence,
their inclination to call fire from heaven upon their enemies, their desertion
of their Lord in his hour of extreme peril; these and many other incidents
tending directly to their own dishonor, are nevertheless set down with all the
directness and sincerity of truth, as by men writing under the deepest sense of
responsibility to God. Some of the more prominent instances of this class of
proofs will be noticed hereafter, in their proper places, in the narratives
themselves.
Lastly, the great character they have portrayed is perfect. It is the
character of a sinless Being; of one supremely wise and supremely good. It
exhibits no error, no sinister intention, no imprudence, no ignorance, no evil
passion, no impatience; in a word, no fault; but all is perfect uprightness,
innocence, wisdom, goodness and truth. The mind of man has never conceived the
idea of such a character, even for his gods; nor has history or poetry shadowed
it forth. The doctrines and precepts of Jesus are in strict accordance with the
attributes of God, agreeably to the most exalted idea which we can form of them,
either from reason or from revelation. They are strikingly adapted to the
capacity of mankind, and yet are delivered with a simplicity and majesty wholly
divine. He spake as never man spake. He spake with authority; yet addressed
himself to the reason and the understanding of men; and he spake with wisdom,
which men could neither gainsay nor resist. In his private life, he exhibits a
character not merely of strict justice, but of flowing benignity. He is
temperate, without austerity; his meekness and humility are signal; his patience
is invincible; truth and sincerity illustrate his whole conduct; every one of
his virtues is regulated by consummate prudence; and he both wins the love of
his friends, and extorts the wonder and admiration of his enemies. He is
represented in very variety of situation in life, from the height of worldly
grandeur, amid the acclamations of an admiring multitude, to the deepest abyss
of human degradation and woe, apparaently deserted of God and man. Yet
everywhere he is the same; displaying a character of unearthly perfection,
symmetrical in all its proportions, and encircled with splendor more than human.
Either the men of Galilee were men of superlative wisdom, and extensive
knowledge and experience, and of deeper skill in the arts of deception, than any
and all others, before or after them, or they have truly stated the astonishing
things which they saw and heard.
The narratives of the evangelists are now submitted to the reader's perusal
and examination, upon the principles and by the rules already stated. For this
purpose, and for the sake of more ready and close comparison, they are arranged
in juxtaposition, after the general order of the latest and most approved
harmonies. The question is not upon the strict propriety of the arrangement, but
upon the veracity of the witnesses and the credibility of their narratives. With
the relative merits of modern harmonists, and with points of controversy among
theologians the writer has no concern. His business is that of a lawyer
examining the testimony of witnesses by the rules of his profession, in order to
ascertain whether, if they had thus testified on oath, in a court of justice,
they would be entitled to credit and whether their narratives, as we now have
them, would be received as ancient documents, coming from the proper custody. If
so, then it is believed that every honest and impartial man will act
consistently with that result, by receiving their testimony in all the extent of
its import. To write out a full commentary or argument upon the text would be a
useless addition to the bulk of the volume; but a few notes have been added for
illustration of the narratives, and for the clearing up of apparent
discrepancies, as being all that members of the legal profession would desire.
|
|
Christmas Function
2008
6
December

Dr
Tom
Altobelli
at the
Davidsons Artarmon Sydney
Members
$50
Students $20
download
flyer
rsvp 0247511055 |
|