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Tous les autres exemplaires originaux sont film6s en commandant par la premidre page qui comporte une empreinte d'impression ou d'illustration et en terminant par la dernidre page qui comporte une telle empreinte. Un des symboles suivants apparaitra sur la dernidre image de cheque microfiche, selon le cas: le symbols — ► signifie "A SUIVRE ". le symbols V signifie "FIN". Les cartes, planches, tableaux, etc.. peuvent dtre film6s d des taux de reduction diff^rents. Lorsque le document est trop grand pour dtre reproduit en un seul cliche, il est filmi A partir de Tangle sup6rieur gauche, de gauche d droite, et de haut en bas, en prenant le nombre d'images ndcessaire. Les diagrammes suivants illustrent la mdthode. 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 THE BOCTEINE OF THE TRINITY UNDERLTINO THE REVELATION OF REDEMPTION. 3Y 1«K * REV. GEOEGE |ATTEESOK, PASTOR or TH, PW8BVTBIIAH CONGRECAtlOM, G»«NH,LI.. PICTOU. N S. • AUTHO« OF • MKHOn OF JAMKS M'grEGOR, D.D./ 'lIVBS OF Jc Trinitate, i. 3. \ O INTRODUCTORY. But, at the same time, they in a large number of places, besides the Father, represent the Lord Jesus Christ as God, by ascribing to Him divine names, divine titles, divine attributes, and divine works, and by rendering to Him divine worship. So in like manner do they represent the Holy Ghost as a divine person. And then, while thus each indi- vidually is God, the three are combined in a manner implying equality, as in the baptismal formula and the apostolic benediction. The evidence we regard as overwhelming in amount, and irrefragable in character. And yet to it may be added much evidence of an incidental nature — less direct, but scarcely less convincing. Liddon, in his Bampton Lectures on the Divinity of our Lord, remarks regarding the writings of Paul: * It would be a considerable error to recognise the doctrine of our Lord's divinity only in those passages of St. Paul's writings which distinctly assert it. The indirect evidence of the apostle's hold upon the doctrine, is much wider and deeper than to admit of its being exhibited in a given number of isolated texts ; since the doctrine colours, underlies, interpenetrates the most characteristic features of his thought and teaching. The proof of this might be extended almost indefinitely.' Accordingly, the writer has built up one of the most solid defences INTRODUCTORY. ' "t Of the truth of our Lord's divinity in our language not merely by adducing direct proofs of the doc-' trine, but by showing how it is interwoven with the whole texture of the sacred writings. In thus establishing the divinity of the Son, the main posi- tion in regard to the doctrine of the Trinity is gamed. SimUar testimony as to the Holy Ghost might be adduced ; and we have only, as before to combine these two facts with what the Scriptures teach regarding the unity of God, to arrive at the full idea of the Trinity. But a close examination of the word of God wiU not only enable us by this process to arrive at the doctrme of the Tri-personaHty of God, but also afford us a large amount of incidental evidence of the same kind directly in favour of the doctrine, and enable us to estabHsh it by the shorter process of showmg how it is assumed in the exhibitions which Scnpture has given of the plan of mercy for fallen man. This redemption is the central subject of re- velation ; and just as it is unfolded, so, we believe tJiere wiU be found taken for granted the distinct personaUty of the three members of the Godhead and their concurrent yet distinctive action in thj economy of man's salvation. This is the point to which our inquiries wiU be directed in the present treatise. 8 INTBODUCTORY. Taking a general view of the word of God, we may observe on the face of it, that it may be divided into three parts, distinct in their character, and having a relation to each of the three persons in the Godhead respectively, in the order of their sub- sistence and operation. Even from a cursory view of the Old Testament, every intelligent reader must have been struck with the fact that its leading prin- ciple throughout is the unity of God. ' Hear, Israel, Jehovah our God, one Jehovah,' was pro- claimed to God's chosen as a sort of oracular an- nouncement 6f the essential basis of their religious faith and national poHty. Their separation from the other nations of the earth was in order to their being a standing protest against the various systems of polytheism prevalent around. Their legislation, for the proclamation of which the 'Almighty bowed the heavens and came down,' had as a first design to guard that fundamental law of their civil and ecclesi- astical constitution, ' Thou shalt have no other gods before me.' The providential dealings of God with them as a nation through long ages, and with other nations in relation to them, as related in their sacred records, all bore upon the one object of proclaiming Him as the Most High, who ruleth among the chH- dren of men, and who will not give His glory to another. All their sacred writings are redolent of INTRODUCTORT. a the same truth. In them God is eveiywhere seen proclaiming, in word and deed, against the gods many of the heathen :' I am the lord, and there is none else ; there is no God beside me ; • and against every form of dualism, which would recognise two independent principles of good and evil: ' I am the Lord, and there is none else. I form the light and create darkness ; I make peace and create evU • I the Lord do all these things.' To exhibit His in- comparable excellences they regard as their app«,- pnate fmiction and their especial glory, so that their pervading spirit may be expressed in the words of the Psabnist, 'Who in the heaven can be compared unto the Lord ? who among the sons of the mighty can be likened unto the Lorf ? ' If they speak of the naturalworld,-and nowhere have we such magni- ficent descriptions of the glories of the heavens and the earth,_it is only as the handiwork of God, and as telhng of His perfections. Even when they speak of a coming redemption, it is as God's great work m wluch He is to be glorified. If they speak of a commg DeKverer distinct from the Father, it is as His nghteous servant-His agent in accomplishing the work. So that, on eveiy subject and in every variety of form, their teaching concentmtes upon the honour of the one living and true God ; while In- spiration reaches an elevation, beyond which human la INTRODUCTORY. thought and human language can never soar, in the utterances of prophets and of the sweet singers of Israel, as they describe His undivided supremacy in heaven and earth, His infinite perfections, and His unrivaQed glories. But what is aU this but the manifestation of the Father in His office, as repre- senting God absolutely, and upholding the honours of Deity ? So that the whole teaching of the Old Testament centres in the principle of the apostle, that ' there is but one God, the Father, of whom' are all things, and we in Him' (1 Cor. viii. 6). It is scarcely necessary to point out that the second portion of revelation, which includes the Gospels, is the manifestation of the Son in His special department of the work of our redemption. This forms the whole subject of these deUghtful portions of the word of God. They commence with His incarnation, and, after exhibiting His divine life and teaching, close with His death, resurrection, and ascension; so that, in a pecuKar sense. He is their Alpha and their Omega, their beginning and their ending. But equaUy apparent is the fact, that the re- maining portion of the word of God is speciaQy the manifestation of the Holy Ghost. It commences with an account of the outpouring of His influ- ences, by which the new creation was established. INTKODUCTOEY. jj and a history of His early working in the progress and extension of the Church then founded The Epistles which foUow, were not only written under His inspiration, but are all related to that work which He was carrying on in the world, and con- tain His instructions for the guidance, to the latest ages of that holy society which He had founde-l • while the closing book of the canon exhibits, in mystenous symbols, the vicissitudes of His Church on aU her voyages over the stormy sea of time tiU she reaches the eternal haven. If in these writings .e have the Son's work in all its bearings more fuUy unfolded than in the previous portions of Eevelation, it is still by the Spirit that this is done as part of His distinctive work, according to the s^g of our Saviour, 'He shaU testify of me' He shaU glorify me ; for He shaU receive of mine and shall show it unto you.' * From this brief review it wiU be seen that the whole word of God naturaUy divides into three parts, clustering round the three persons in the Godhead respectively; and thus the doctrine of the Trinity actuaUy underlies the whole revelation of trods purpose of grace to man. But on examining each of these portions sepa- rately, not only does it exhibit the special glories of one of the persons in the Trinity, but it presents 1? INTRODUCTORY. Him m His relation to the others, both essentially and economically ; and it wiU now be our object takmg up each of these in order, to show that just as they unfold the plan of redemption, the working of a Triune God wiU be found at its foundation. In prosecuting our inquiries, we shaU limit our- selves to the consideration of passages in which the three Divine Persons are mentioned in connec- tion with the formation and execution of the scheme of human salvation. It will be understood that in so doing, we leave out of view aU that might' be deduced from representations given of the nature and work of any of the persons of the Godhead singly, or even of two of them in connection, not because we regard these as unimportant, but because It is necessary, in present circumstances, to confine ourselves to a single view of the subject. The order we shaU pursue wiU be the historical, con- sidering the sacred writings mainly according to the time of their production. Before entering upon our inquiry, it may be proper to make an explanation, to guard against misappre- hension. We ShaU have occasion to speak of the proper work of each of the three persons of the God- head m our salvation ; but we must beware of any such Idea, as that any act of the Godhead should be the act of one without the concurrence of the others INTRODUCTORY. 13 Sometimes there is an indistinct notion on the part of Christians, as if the Father did some works the Son did some, and the Spirit did others, each work- ing separately from the others ; and language has been used by evangelical writers on the subject, which is incautious and dangerous. The tendency of such a view is inevitably to Tritheism. All sound divines hold that, as the nature of the God- head is one and undivided, so aU the works of the Trinity are undivided, and that in eveiy divine act all three co-operate, according to the old Latin maxim, Opna Trinitatis ad extra mnt indimsa The works of the Trinity, external to themselves are undivided. We notice this to guard against wrong mipressions ; but it still remains true that in aU divine operations, while all three concur, distiiict places of working are assigned to each. PART I. THE OLD TESTAMENT; OB, THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. ' To us there is but one Ood,jnr. Fathkr, cfu,fum are all things and we in Him. '~1 Cob. viii. 6. CHAPTER I. EARLY INDICATIONS OP A TKINITY. QN entering upon our examination of tlie Old ZTlJtr^r^ '""^ "' ''"'' dispensation was to establish among men the doctrine of one hving and t™e God, in opposition to aU the foZ of polythe^m pi^valent among the nations, or^n other worfs, to reveal the Father ; and, theref^,.. hat any aUusions m its records to any distinction „f personality in the Godhead should'he^ ^^ ^ compared with later revelations, indistinct, ronj what we would have a right to expect, O^e of £ Fathers weU remarlro n,»t , , eii remarks, that a gradual revealing of God wa^ necessary in consequence of human fn^tv just as the gradual progress of the light of Zl ness of night, and unaccustomed to the light of the -n, would be blinded by the sudden outL hi „ 1- noontide power." Moreover, the redemprion B ;8 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. afterward to be achieved, was only dimly revealed, through obscure prophecies and veiled symbols, to the faith and hope of the expecting Church. This was the case more especially in the earlier periods of that economy. The revelation of the worldng of a Triu'ie God in the arrangements of mercy for man's salvation must have been proportionally ob- scure. But on closer examination we believe that it will be manifest, that in the very earliest communica- tions of God's will, there were clear indications of a plurality o^ persons in the one divine essence, and less distinct indications of a Trinity; that as the light of revelation advanced toward the perfect day, the intimations of tri-personality became more dis- tinct ; and that when it reached what may be re- garded as its noonday brightness under that dispen- sation, in the writings of the prophets from the reign of Uzziah to the close of the Hebrew canon in the days of Malachi, the three divine persons are prominently exhibited, and that in connection with the approaching redemption, in a manner which almost anticipates the clearness of New Testament revelation. debet . . . periculosa enim sunt quae magna sunt, si repentina sunt. Nam etiam lux solis subita post tenebras splendore nimio insuetis oculis non ostendet diem, sed potius faciet csEcitatem. — Novatiak De Trin, c. xxvi. , quoted by Liddon. EARLY INDICATIONS OP A TBINITY. 19 Looking, then, at this revelation in its earUer penods, we find at the outset the singular circum- stance of the title of God in the original being plural, but joined with a singular verb. This is the case in the ver; first verse of Genesis, • In the beginning God iElohvm in the pluml) created the heavens and the earth.' 'Language,' says Liddon, It would seem, thus submits to a violent anomaly that she may the better hint at the mystery of several powers or persons, who not merely act to- gether, but who constitute a single agent. Ihe Hebrew language could have described God by sin- gular fo„„3, such as El, Eloah. and no question would have been raised as to the strictly monothe- istic force of those words. The Hebrew language might have "amplified" the idea of God thus con- veyed, by less dangerous processes than the emplov- ment of a plural form. Would it not have done so unless the plural form had been really necessary, in order to hint at the complex mysteiy of God's inner hte untU that mystery should be more clearly un- veiled by the explicit revelations of a later day ?' ' ' yhe singular term EioA U, sometimes used to denote Ood l,nf rs. ta=ci.. 1, 6; lS;c. XX,. 6, xxii. 7, 8. (In Dent. xix. 17, in . 20 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. All attempts to explain this away, as the plural of majesty, are refuted by the language of other pas- sages, which clearly imply a plurality of persons. Thus in Gen. L 26 it is said, 'And God said. Let us make man in our image, after our likeness.' Here the persons are plural, but the likeness is one, point- ing to personal distinctions in one undivided essence. Again, it is said in reference to the building of the tower of Babel (ch. xi. 7), 'Jehovah said. Go to, let us go down ; ' and still more exj^ressively it is said of man, after he had fallen (ch. iii. 22), 'The Lord God said. The man is become as one of us;' in all of which passages the language implies distinction of persons and equality of rank between the speaker and those addressed. Some writers, however, consider that we have in the account of the creation, in the first chapter of Genesis, still more distinct references to a Trinity. First we have God creating the heavens and the earth; secondly, we have His Spirit moving upon the waters ; and thirdly, in the language, ' God said,' parallel case, the parties a;e represented as ' standing before Je- hovah.') In addition, some have contended that it means angels or other superhuman creatures, as in such passages as Ps. xcvii. 7 cxxxviii. 1. But this is strenuously denied by Gesenius and other emment Hebrew scholars. At all events it remains certain, and the fact we deem of importance, that in no instance is the plural form used with a singular verb, except in reference to the one Supreme Being. IMLY INDICATIONS OF A TRINITY. 21 appUed to each step of the process, compared with the statements of the New Testament, that al] was created by the Son, who is described as the A^„, <,, Word, these writers suppose that there is an allu- «on to the personal Worf of God. The language of fte Psalmist (Ps. xxxiii. 6) on this subject, 'By the Wori of the I.„l were the heavens made and aU the host of them by the breath,' or Spirit, 'of His mouth, seems to suggest the same idea. Alexander on this passage weU remarks, that there is in the verse an obvious allusion to the history of the crea- tion m Genesis, and that the woris convey the idea of the ease with which God can create a world. Z the same time, he adds, it is not a mere fortuitous coincidence that these two worfs are used in Scrip- thTJoitr" ''' '^'"' '""' ^"^ ^-- ^» Very early we find God represented in a manner mdxcatmg that the distinction was threefold. Thus the dying patriarch Jacob, speaking under the influ ays (Gen. xlviu. 15, 16), 'God, before whom my fathers Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob did walk, the God which fed me,' or shepherded me, 'all my life W unto his day the Angel which redeemed me f™m remarks . This tnple reference to God, in which the \ ;22 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. angel, who is placed on an equality with Ha-elohim, cannot possibly be a created angel, but must be the angel of God,' i.e. God manifested in the form of the angel of Jehovah, or * the angel of His face ' (Isa. Ixiii. 9), contains a foreshadowing of the Trinity, though only God and the angel are distinguished, not three persons of the divine nature. The God before whom Abraham and Isaac walked had proved Himself to Jacob to be the ' God which fed ' and ' the angel which redeemed,' i.e. according to the more fully developed revelation of the New Testament, 0eo9 and o \o7o?. Shepherd and Eedeemer. By the singular ^li; (bless), the triple mention of God is resolved into the unity of the divine nature. ' Non dicit benedicant, pluraliter, nee repetit, sed conjungit in uno opere benedicendi tres personas, Deum patrum, Deum pastorem et Angelum. Sunt igitur hi tres unus Deus et unus benedictor Idem opus facit Angelus quod pastor et Deus Patrum.' — Luther. ' He does not say. Let them bless, in the plural, nor Joes he repeat (viz. the act of blessing to each), but he joins in one act of blessing three persons, the God of his fathers, God the Shepherd, and the angel. These three therefore are one God, and one blesser. The angel does the same work as the Shepherd and the God of his fathers.' That a distinction of persons between God and t' EARLY INDICATIONS OF A TRINITY. 23 the angel is implied in this passage is generaUy admitted. It is also plain, that by their being umted as one in blessing, the unity of the divine nature is represented. But we cannot help thinking that the words shadow forth the threefold distinction of persons in the Godhead, and their special opera- tions for man's salvation. It is acknowledged by aU that the phrase, ' The God before whom my fathers Abraham and Isaac did walk,' describes the Father as has been said, ' who is the Author of salvation' the Judge, who dispenses justice and mercy, the' Father, before whom the adopted and regenerate child walks.'^ That by the angel is meant the second person in the Trinity, we shaU have occasion to show presently. The description of Him, as hav- ing redeemed the patriarch from aU evil, accords with the Son's work, as unfolded afterward. Whether the remaining plirase, 'The God who fed me all my hfe long unto this day,' refers to the Spirit, is not so clear. The Spirit, we know, did work in the early Church. 'God,' says Nehemiah, 'gave His good Spirit unto them;' and the nature of His work ap- pears in the prayer of the Psalmist, ' Uphold me with Thy free Spirit.' ' Thy Spirit is good, lead me to the land of uprightness.' This seems to accord with the description given in this clause, which wiU ' Murphy on Genesis. \ 24 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. describe Him who is 'the upholder of life, the quickener and sanctifier, the potential agent, who works both to will and to do in the soul.'^ If this be correct, the passage will shadow forth, it may be dimly, the gracious working of a three-one God. But the threefold distinction is still more clearly manifested in the priestly blessing (Num. vi. 23-27). The priest was here commanded to pronounce the name of God thrice. Even the Jewish rabbins re- marked this threefold repetition of the divine name, and they read it in Hebrew each time with a different accent, regarding it as involving a mystery in the divine nature. This threefold blessing is represented as putting His narae upon the people of Israel, Had there been no design of teaching some other important truth, we are safe in saying, that it would have been more in accordance with the purpose of that dispensation, of estabHshing a pure monotheism among a people needing to learn it themselves, in order to make it known to a worid in which it had been nearly lost, to have pronounced the name but once. But this is not aU. In examining the three parts of the blessing particularly, we can scarcely fail to see, that they express the work of the three persons of the Trinity in the order of their subsistence, and ^ Murphy on Genesis. EARLY INDICATJONS OF A TKINITT. 25 of thoir operation for man's salvation. 1. ' Jehovah bless thee and keep thee.' referring to God generaUv as the source of aU good, and the proteetor from aU evU; as our Saviour prays, ' Holy Father, keep through Thme own name those whom Thou hast given me ' I pray that Thou shouldest keep them from the evd. 2. 'Jehovah make His face shine on thee and gve thee peace,' expressive of God as manifesting His favour as reconcUed through Christ. 3. ' Jehovah Wt up H,s countenance and give thee peace,' ex- pressive of God, as He inwardly unites Himself with His own, fiUing them with peace and joy by the apphcation of salvation by the Spirit. In fajt, we have only to read the words in connection with the apostoho benediction, placing the different parts in the same order, to see their entire accordance • ' The ove of God, the grace of our tod Jesus Christ, and ae commumon of the Holy Ghost, be with you all ' In truth, this seems to be the original, and the model IZT "'"'' '°™^ '' ''-''^ ^" ^^^ ^ew ut,onfh"''''i'r- '^^' '^^°" ^'"'" P"' "y ~- upon them, and I will bless them.' By His name is me^ His revealed nature; and this promise, con- nected with the preceding words, teaches that in thus receiving of the gracious manifestation of the three. His people shall be completely blessed with i! 26 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. the whole fulness of the divine being, revealed as Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. v , The revelations of God's will in the earlier periods of the Old Covenant were usually made by theo- phanies, that is, divine appearances, either in hodHy form or immediate vision. By these God made known His nature and purposes. When God ap- peared to our first parents, or at first to Abraham, it is not stated in what form He revealed Himself. But the attentive reader of the Old Testament can- not but have observed, how generally subsequent appearances of God were in and by the person known as the Maleach Jehovah, the Angel of the Lord, or, as some would render it, the Angel of Jehovah. He is called Jehovah and God, and divine works of judgment and mercy are attributed to Him, and yet at other times He is represented as distinct from Him. Thus He speaks sometimes in His own name and sometimes for the Supreme (Gen. xviii. 1-18). When Jehovah appeared to Abraham, ' lo, three men stood by him ' (Gen. xviii. 1-3). One is the spokesman, to whom Abraham addresses himself, who is called Jehovah (vers. 13, 17), and who promises that Sarah s^ ^11 have a son, and that in Abraham's seed all the families of the earth shall be blessed, with whom Abraham inter- cedes for Sodom, who executes judgment upon that EARLY INDICATIONS OF A TRINITY. 27 guilty city, and who yet is in the act aistinguished from Jehovah (ch. xix. 24): 'Jeliovah rained fire and brimstone from Jehovah out of heaven.' He appeared to Hagar, and speaks as the agent of God, saying, ' The Lord hath heard thine affliction ;' and yet He promises as in His own name, saying, ' I will multiply thy seed exceedingly ;' and in re- turn she called the name of the Lord that spake with her, 'Thou God seest me' (Gen. xvi. 10- 13). He appeared to Jacob in a dream, and an- nounced Himself as ' the God of Bethel, where thou anointedst the piUar, and where thou vowedst a vow unto me;' so that He was the Lord, who stood above the ladder and said, 'I am the Lord God of Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac' (Gen. xxxi. 11, 13, with xxviii. 13). With Him Jacob WTestled all night, and he said, 'I have seen God face to face.' In the desert of Midian, He appeared to Moses ' in a flame of fire out of the midst of the bush.' The bush was miracu- lously unconsumed. ' Jehovah saw that He turned aside to see.' 'God caUed unto Moses out of the bush.' The speaker announces Himself as 'The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.' ' Moses hid his face; for he was afraid to look upon God;' but receives further communications of God's will from Him who was in the bush, who claims the 28 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. perogatives of the Most High, even to being the great I Am (Ex. iii. 1-16). When the cliil- dren of Israel came out of Egypt, He was their leader, and tliey were commanded to obey Him, and not provoke Him, because Jeliovah's ' name was in Him' (Ex. xxiii. 21). He is expressly called the Angel of God's presence (Ex. xxxiii. 14, with Isa. Ixiii. 9). A number of otlier passages of the same kind might be adduced,^ but these are suffi- cient to show that God revealed Himself to the early Church through one who, though distinct in person- aUty from the Father, was yet entitled to receive the incommunicable name, and was possessed of divine attributes— who, in short, was divine. The more closely such passages are examined, and compared with later revelations, the more reason we will find to be convinced of the truth of the old doctrine, that in the Angel of the Lord was represented to the Old Testament Church the second person of the Trinity, the only medium of divine manifestation to man. At the same time the early Scriptures present to us the Spirit, in terms implying His divinity. He it was who first brooded over the face of the deep (Gen. i. 2) ; who is the author of life (Job xxvii. 3, ^See, for example, Gen. xxii. 11, 12 ; Josh. v. 14, with vi 2 • Jiidg. n. 1-5, vi. 11-22, xiii. 6-22. EARLY INDICATIONS OP A TRINITY. 29 xxxiii. 4, xxvi. 13; Pa. civ. 30), and of the special mental gifts bestowed upon men (Gen. xli. 38 ; Ex. xxxi. 3, xxxv. 31), and particularly of those qualifications by which men were fitted for high services before God (Num. xi. 26, 29 ; Judg. iii. 10 vi. 34. xi. 29, xiii. 25, xiv. 6). He it is who' strives with the wickedness of men (Gen. vi. 3), and who was given to instruct and guide God's people (Neh. ix. 20 ; Isa. Ixiii. 14). Whether these early writers understood the per- sonality of the Spirit, we cannot positively assert, but their language implies the idea ; and it is plain that in these revelations of Him, particularly by the Angel of the Lord, God was partially revealing His triune nature, and pr-^paring for a clearer exhibition of the truth in after ages. The age of David and Solomon makes an im- portant advance in the revelation of redemption The glories of the kingdom of Israel gave a new colouring and form to the prophecies and expecta- tions regarding the coming Deliverer. Instead of the seed of the woman, or the seed of Abraham or the Prophet like unto Moses, the Church was now taught to look for Him as a glorious, yea, a divine King. In the Messianic Psalms we have Him represented as distinct from God, and yet His Son essentiaUy and truly God, while the Spirit is re- I'iji 30 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. ferred to, though less distinctly. The most pro- minent of these we now proceed to notice. In the 2d Psalm, the nations are represented in rebeUion against the Lord and His anointed Son. The Son is exalted as King, but He is so conjoined with the Father that the revolt is against them both. God, however, maintains Him in His au- thority, so that all must submit to Him or perish ; all heathendom is to be included in His inherit- ance, and all who trust in Him are blessed. But • we have specially to notice His being exhibited as God's Son, and that, as we believe, essentially (ver. 7) : ' Jehovah hath said unto me, Thou art my Son ; this day have I begotten Thee.' Upon this verse' Alexander remarks: 'No explanation of the terms will meet the requisitions of the context, except one, which supposes the relation here described as mani- fest in time to rest en one essential and eternal. This alone accounts for the identification of the persons as possessing a common interest, and reign- ing with and in each other. This profound sense of the passage is no more excluded by the phrase this day, implying something recent, than the universality of Christ's dominion is excluded by the local re- ference to Zion. The point of time, Hke the point of space, is the finite centre of an infinite circle. Besides, the mere form of the declaration is a part EARLY INDICATIONS OF A TRINITY. 31 of the dramatic scenery or costume with which the truth is here invested. ... The essential meaning of the phrase, "I have begotten Thee" is smiply this, I am Thy Father. The antithes/s is perfectly identical with that in 2 Sam. vii. 14 « I will be his father, and he shaU be my son." Had the same form of expression been used here " This day am I Thy Father," no reader would have under- stood "this day" as Hmiting the mutual relation of the parties, however it might limit, to a certain point of time, the formal recognition of it.' But the title 'Anointed,' or Messiah, points out the gifts of the Spirit. Under the Old Testament anomtmg with oil was used in the case of setting apart prophets, priests, and kings (1 Kings xix. 16^ Lev. viii. 12 ; 1 Kings i. 31) ; and was not only a sign of consecration to office, but was a symbol of those spiritual influences by which the recipient was qualified and designated for his work. This is evident from 1 Sam. x. 1-6 and xvi. 13, where, in the case of both Saul and David, the connection of . the communication of the Spirit with the anointing with the oil, shows that the one was a type and pledge of the other. The same view is given in the J^ew Testament (Acts iv. 27, x. 38 ; 2 Cor i 21 • 1 John ii. 20, 27). " ' We have thus presented to us here the Divine 32 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. Father and the Divine Son expUcitly, but the third person of the Trinity by impUcation. We have a similar view of the Saviour in the 45th Psalm. There the Messiah is represented as a divine King, of more than human beauty, whose lips overflow with grace. He is directly addressed as God, and as seated on an everlasting throne (ver. 6) : 'Thy throne, God, is for ever and ever: a sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of Thy king- dom.' We have then God, as His Father, anointing Him with the oil of joy (ver. 7) : ' Thou lovest right- eousness and hatest wickedness ; therefore God, Thy God, hath mnointed Thee with the oil of gladness above Thy fellows.' From what has just been said regardmg anointing with oU, as an emblem of the gifts of the Spirit, it is evident that His work upon the Mediator is here referred to, though He is not named. The joy and gladness may be, first, the spiritual comforts of the Eedeemer's soul; but as the joy set before Him was the seeing of the travaU of His soul in the salvation of sinners, as in Isaiah Ixi. 1-3, His anointing is with special reference to His comforting the mourning chHdren of men ; and as the verses immediately foUowing describe the source of His joy, in nations brought to Him represented as kings' daughters, we take the words' as pointing out the time of His dispensing the Jut the third EABLY INDICATIONS OP A TWmTY. 33 Spmt received from the Father, begun on the day of Pentecost. This we regard as indeed • the day of His espousals, the day of the gladness of His heart' (Song 111, 11). We have a very similar representation in Psalm ixxxix. 20, 21 ; but we do not deem it necessary to dwell upon it. ^ In the 72d Psalm, Solomon, at the height of his gW, pictures a super-human King, receiving His authority from the Father. His dominion is to be co-extensive with the world, and enduring as all time. He is immortal; omniscient, for He can hear every human ciy; and omnipotent, for He can reheve all human wants. Through Him the richest blessings are to be abundantly diffused among men Bn from the imagery of Scripture, we are con-inced aat the description points to the agency of the Holy Spirit ■ He shaU come down like rain upon he mown grass; as showers that water the earth' (ver 6). Water, and particularly as coming down m showei^, is a Scripture emblem of the Spirit I will pour water upon him that is thirsty, and floods upon tlie diy ground: I will pour my Spirit upon thy seed, and my blessing upon thine off- spring' (Isa xUv. 3). Thus in these Psalms we see not only the first and second persons of the Trinity distinctly brought w I s f i i 34 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. before us, but we have, in their types and figures, reference also to the third. Some writers have regarded the threefold rhythm sometimes employed in the Psalter in the praise of God, as indicative of the trinity of persons in the Godhead. We do find instances in which the ordi- nary parallelism of Hebrew poetry is sacrificed in this way, and it may be with the design of express- ing the inner mysteries of the divine nature. A few examples may be given. ' sing unto Jehovah, a new song ; Sing unto Jkhovah, all tlio earth. Sing unto jTehovah, bless His name* (Ps cvi. 1, 2). * Give unto Jehovah, ye kindreds of the people, Give unto Jehovah, glory and strength ; Give unto Jehovah, the glory due unto His name. Bring an offering, and come into His courts' (Ps. xcvi. 7, 8). * Let Israel now say, that His mercy endureth for ever ; Let the house of Aaron now say, that His mercy endureth for ever ; Let them now that fear the Lord say, that His mercy endureth for ever' (Ps. cxviii. 2-4). ' All nations compassed me about : But in the name of Jehovah will I destroy them. They compassed me about ; yea, they compassed me about : But in the name of Jehovah I will destroy them. They compassed me about like bees ; They are quenched as the fire of thorns : For in the name of Jehovah will I destroy them' (Ps. cxviii. 10-12). * The right hand of Jehovah doeth valiantly ; The right hand of Jehovah is exalted ; The right hand of Jehovah is exalted' (Ps. cxviii. 15, 16). EARLY INDICATIONS OP A TRINITY. 3g To u8 it appears, however, that the instances of this land are not so numerous as to warmnt us to ay much stress upon then.. But we think ihat the Isahnist, m the introductoiy words of his last 2'^::^^ ^"' '"« -'^^ ^» *^"% of • The Spirit of Jkhovah spako by me, And His word was in my tongue. The God of Israel said, The Rock of Israel spako to me ' (2 Sam. xxiii. 2, 8). (Ps. xcvi. 7, 8). lem' (Ps. cxviii. CHAPTEE II. THE COMPLETl. ^v ELATION OF THE OLD COVENANT. I AVT^ have already observed, that as the revela- ▼ ▼ tion of God's wiU under the Old Testament reached its culmination in the prophecies of the later ages of the Jewish kingdom, — that as then the redemption to be achieved was as much more clearly unfolded, and the Redeemer as vividly depicted, as they could be before the event, — the intima- tions of the doctrine of the Trinity appear pro- portionally distinct, and approach ahnost to the clearness of the New Testament. We therefore now proceed to consider some of those passages in the later writings of the Old Testament canon, which to us seem most clearly to indicate the Trinity working out man's salvation. Here, of course, our attention is first called to the prophecies of Isaiah, the richness and clearness of whose exhibitions of gospel truth have caused him to be named the Evangelical Prophet. In the forefront of them stands the vision in which he .D COVENANT. as the revela- 31d Testament hecies of the at as then the 1 more clearly idly depicted, —the intima- appear pro- Imost to the We therefore lose passages ament canon, indicate the rst called to and clearness have caused >het. In the in which he THE COMPLETED REVELATION. 37 was invested with his office (ch. vi. 1-3): 'I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne high and lifted up and His train liUed the temple. Above it stood the' seraphims. ... And one cried to another, and said, Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts • the whole earth is full of His glory.' In this Trishagion as It IS commonly called, or ascription of holiness three times, most writers Iiave found an aUusion to the Trinity. Thus Jerome says, 'that they show the mystery of the Trinity in one Godhead, and declare not the Jewish temple as previously, but the whole earth to be full of His glory.' ^ Then the difference of number between the verb and the pro- noun in the words (ver. 8), ' Whom shaU / send and who will go for us ?' can only be explained by reference to the doctrine of a Trinity; or, at least, the language implies a plurality of persons in the Godhead. But, looking to the Kew Testament we are not left in any uncertainty on the subject. While the prophet was deeply humbled, seeing the King, the Lord of hosts, the Evangelist John repre- sents the whole as a vision of Christ. 'These things said Esaias when he saw Christ's glory' (John xii. 41). And yet the words spoken to the 38 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. prophet on the occasion are by Paul ascribed to the Holy Ghost (Acts xxviii. 25, 26) : ' WeU spake the Holy Ghost by Esaias the prophet unto our fathers, saying, Go unto this people,' etc. We would next point out the doctrine of the Trinity, as implied in the prophet's description of the person of the coming Eedeemer. He distinctly de- clares Him to be God (Isa. vii. 14, ix. 6) ; while, with the other prophets, he frequently describes Him in terms which imply His divinity ; and the Holy Ghost is represented in a similar manner. But the passages to which we wish to advert at present, are those in which' the three persons are exhibited as meeting in Him who was to be the anointed Saviour, Thus in Isaiah xlii. 1 it is said, 'Behold my servant, whom I uphold ; mine elect, in whom my soul delighte th : I will put my Spirit upon him ; he shall bring lorth judgment to the Gentiles.' We need not spend time in proving that this pas^mge refers to the Messiah. The frequent quotation of it in the New Testament with this application is sufficient to establish the point. We have it thus applied in the words of the Father Himself at the baptism of Christ, and at His transfiguration, the word Son being substituted for servant. The title Servant of God is given /ear' i^oxvv, by pre-eminence; and the title Son, substituted for it in the New THE COMPLETED REVELATION. 39 Testament, stiU more strongly expresses His personal dignity. Upon this Alexander well remarks : ' The connecting Unk between the Servant of Isaiah and the Son of Matthew is afforded by the irai^ of the Septuagint, whicli includes both ideas.' He adds that '{v'm) Son is neither a translation of the Hebrew ehed, nor a perversion of its meaning, but a clearer designation of the subject of the prophecy.' This person thus described is next represented as receiving the Spirit in aU its fulness, and under His influence, and through a course of meekness and lowHness, estabUshing righteousness upon the earth, and bringing the whole GentUe world into subjec- tion. ' I wiU put my Spirit upon him, and he shaU bring forth judgment to the GentHes. ... He shaU not fail nor be discouraged, tiU he have set judgment on the earth : and the isles shaU wait for his law.' We have the same ideas in somewhat different language in Isaiah Ixi. 1 ; ' The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me ; because the Lord hath anointed me to preach good tidings unto the meek: He hath sent me to bind up the broken-hearted, to proclaim Hberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are bound,' etc. As in chapter xlii. 1 Jehovah had said, 'I have put my Spirit upon him' so here he says of himself, ' The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me.' But in the next clause he repre- 40 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. t sonts his influences as bestowed by God : • Because the Lord hatli anointed me.' Anointing with oil, as we have already seen, was not only a sign of consecration to office, but was a symbol of those spiritual influences by which the recipient was both qualified and designated for his work. Thus we have the Son, who assumes the offices of prophet, priest, and king for His people ; the Spirit, through whose influence He was fitted for His work; and the Father, by whom the Spirit is bestowed. Then follows a glowing description of the changes to be eff'ected in human society as the result of His misJon. i The representation of Isaiah xi. 1, 2 is very similar: ' There shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a Branch shall grow out of his roots: and the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord.' This sevenfold description of the Spirit in His influences seems to correspond with the title given to Him in the New Testament as the seven Spirits of God (Rev. i. 4). As we have here first the Spirit of Jehovah generally, and then His gifts arranged in three pairs, the description seems also to correspond with the shaft of the seven-lighted candlestick, and the three pairs of branches from it. THE CO^fPLETED REVELATION. 41 For 'the seven lamps of fire burning before the throne are the seven Spirits of God ' (Eev. iv. 6). The attributes here ascribed to the Spirit are' not personal qualities, but the effects of His working. He is not here described as Himself wise, but as the author of wisdom. The language describes such a fulness of His gifts— such wisdom, theoretical and practical, such capacity to plan and power to exe- cute, and such piety toward God, as was only realized in the Lord Jesus Christ, 'whose wisdom' as Alexander remarks, ' displayed itself in early life and is expressly ascribed to a special divine in- fluence ; who proved Himself a discemer of the thoughts and intents of the heart; whose ministry was not only characterized by fortitude and bold- ness, but attested by miracles and mighty deeds • whose knowledge of divine things far surpassed that of all other men ; and who was Himself a Hving model of aU piety.' In the verses foUowing (3-5) 18 described the result upon the Messiah in an in- faUible capacity of judging. But then follows the issue to the world, in such an outflowing of the influences of the Spirit from Him, as will totaUy change its moral character, causing the wolf to dweU With the lamb, the leopard to He down with the kid and the whole earth to be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea ;— in which 42 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. description may be also included that transformation of the natural world, by which even the physical creation shall be delivered from ' corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God ' (Rom viii 21). Thus in each of these three passages we have the three divine persons brought before us, and in the same relations : the Father, who sends the Deliverer, and who imparts the Spirit in the fulness of His gifts ; the Spirit, who qualifies the Mediator for His work ; and the Son, who assumes that office, who re- ceives the Spirit, and that without measure. And in each M^e have the glorious result of His mission in the salvation of the world. This last fact alone would be sufficient to prove the divinity of the Deliverer, because the pouring out of the Spirit upon Him without measure, so that He could thus baptize with the Holy Ghost, and so that, in conse- quence of the outflowing from Him of His fulness of spiritual gifts, a fallen world should be regenerated, implies a capacity without human or created limits ; whHe the prophet had further described Him as bom of a virgin, and as thus Emmanuel, God with us, the mighty God, and the everlasting Father, or Father of eternity. Thts we have a Trinity impHed in the description of the person of the incarnate Mediator. But this will fall again under our notice when we THE COMPLETED REVELATION. 43 come to consider the teaching of the New Testament on the subject. To us it appears, though but little attention has been given to the subject, that the practice so com- mon in the prophecies of Isaiah, of speaking of God under a triple title, has its foundation in the in- ternal distinction in the Godhead of three persons and their respective offices in redemption. Let us' notice a few examples ; — Isa. xl. 28. 'God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth. ' 14. 'The Lord and thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel. ' 1. ' The Lord, He that created thee, that formed thee, O Israel.' * 3. 'The Lord thy God, the Holy One of Israel thy Saviour. ' 1- It ! I?® ^''^^' y''"'' Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel. ' xlui. 15. The Lord, your Holy One, the Creator of Israel your King. ' ' >. 'The Lord, the King of Israel, and his Redeemer, the Lord of hosts. ' 24. 'The Lord, thy Redeemer, and He that formed thee from the womb. ' 11. ' The Lord, the Holy One of Israel and his Maker ' 4. ' Our Redeemer, the Lord of Hosts is His name, the Holy One of Israel. ' xlviii. 17. 'The Lord, thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel.' >> xli. xliii. xliii. xliii. xliii. xliv. xliv. xlv. xlvii. >» n xlix. xlix. Hv. 26. 6. ' The Lord, the Redeemer of Israel, and his Holy One. ' ■' ' I the Lord am thy Saviour ^d thy Redeemer, the mighty One of Jacob.' * ' Thy Maker is thy husband, the Lord of hosts is His name, and thy Redeemer the Holy One of Israel ' 44 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. Isa. Ix. 17. 'I the Lord am thy Saviour, and thy Redeemer, the mighty One of Jacob. ' These and such triplets applied to the Supreme, as He appears for the deliverance of His chosen people, we think do hint at the Trinity, afterwards more clearly revealed. We cannot but notice how frequently we have ' Redeemer ' or Ood as a second title. It suggested to the Israelite the ideas of a near kinsman, and a deliverer by the payment of a ransom. But this at once brings before us the second person of the Trinity, though the Old Testa- ment saints, may have understood it only as an additional title of the qpe God, and may not have understood the distinction of persons implied. That the title is sometimes exchanged for another, such as Creator, does not contradict this view. It only teaches the additional fact that He who is the Redeemer is also the Creator. We cannot but observe, too, how well the title, ' the Holy One,' so often given as a third, corresponds with the usual name in the New Testament of the third person of the Trinity, the Holy Ghost, or, as it is in some instances expressed in the original, ' the Spiiit, the Holy One' (Eph. i. 13; 1 Thess. iv. 8), or simply the Holy One ^ John ii. 20). That this is ex- changed for such a title as 'the mighty One of Jacob,' is in accordance with the New Testament THE COMPLETED KEVEIATION. 45 representations of Him as the power of God in working, especially in His moral and spiritual king- dom (Luke xxiv. 49 ; Acts i. 8 ; Luke i. 35; Mark ix. 1 ; 1 Thess. i. 5 ; 1 Cor. ii. 4, 5). That the order differs, is only what we see in the New Testament, where the Son is sometimes put before the Father, as in the apostolic benediction, 2 Cor. xiii. 14; or the Spirit before the Son, as in Rev. i. 4, 5. "We shall now consider some passages referring to the redemption itself by the mission of the Son, which show the doctrin-e of the Trinity underlying their teaching. The first of these we shall notice is Isa. xlviii. 16 : ' From the l^pie that it was, there am I : and now the Lord God, and His Spirit, hath sent me.' Here we have the three persons in the God- head particularly mentioned, though the exact mean- ing of part of the words is disputed. The order of the words as they stand in the original is, 'The Lord God hath sent me and His Spirit.' The ac- cordance of the first clause, in which the Father is represented as sending the Son, and the Son as sent by Him, with many passages of the Old and New Testaments, is so obvious as to require no elucida- tion ; but it is doubtful whether the Spirit is added as connected with the subject orlhe object of the verb, — that is, whether He is to be joined with the Father in sending, or with the Son as sent. The \ 46 THE EEVEU.TION OF THE FATHER. 'i onginal wiU bear either interpretation, and the Septuagint presents the aame obscurity. The Eng- lish and the Vulgate remove the ambiguity by changing the order of the words. Interpreters are about eqnaUy divided on the subject. Calvin and a number of German writers follow the arrangement of our version ; while Vitringa, Henderson, Delitzsch and others, prefer the opposite view. In either case 'the Spirit' must be regarded as not holding its regular position in the sentence, but as introduced by a sort of afterthought, and it might be joined with either the Father or the Son ; so that we must judge of the meaning on othe^ grounds than the gramma- tical construction. We pirfer the interpretation which regards the Spirit as sent with the Son It is certainly unusual, and we think unparalleled, to find the Spirit joined with the Father in the actual sendmg of the Son. Even when the Spirit is joined with the Father in reference to the Son's work the Spmt IS not exhibited as sending the Son, but as Himself sent or given by the Father, in order to quaUfy Him for His work. Further, as in the pas- sage the speaker is represented in His mediatorial •^pacity as carmng out the scheme of redemption It seems to us»ore in accordance with the other portions of the word of God to regard the worfs as teaching, that it is by the agency of the Spirit, sent THE COMPLETED REVELATION. 47 forth by the Father, that His successes are achieve^ Perhaps as Alexander suggests, the ambiguity was intended to suggest either meaning But whichever way the words be read, the pas- sage wdl apply to our present puq,ose. Accorig to both mterpretations, we have here the three per sons xn the Godhead: One who speaks of himself in language sunaar to that in which the personified Wisdom of God speaks in P^v. viii., and who intro- duces the others 'From the time of its being,' or that aU these things happened,' I was there but »<», at the turning point of salvation, the time of actual accomplishment of redemption, 'the Lorf God hath sent me and Hif Spirit.' There is here aie Father sending the Son, the Son sent, and the Spirit the agent, either in qualifying the Son, or in carrying out His .ademption by its appHcation to the hearts of men. In Isaiah lix. 19-21 we have another clear prophecy of the redemption for God's Church in which the three are represented a« concurring in'the work-in the first clause of ve.e 19 is dLribS hefutniB extension of the Church: 'SoshaUthey f^r the name of the Lord from the west, and His glory from the rising of the suf Aild if " result to the agency of the Spirit : ' When the enemy 48 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. comes in like a flood, the Spirit of the Lord shall lift up a standard against him.' ^ At all events the two following verses, the last of the chapter, exhibit the three as engaged in those great transactions which are to issue in the millennial glory of the Church, as described in the following chapter. First, we have in verse 20 the goel, our kinsman Eedeemer, coming for His Church, which had re- mained faithful, along with those who, converted from previous apostasy, shall be brought into union with her : ' And the Eedeemer shall come for Zion, and for those, who turn from transgression in Jacob, saith the Lord.' TheiL we have, secondly, God the Father manifesting His grace in entering into cove- nant with them, expressed in the same terms as are employed in reference to His engagement with Abraham (ver. 21) : ' As for me, this is my covenant with them, saith the Lord.' And thirdly, we have the Spirit, the great promise of the New Testament, descending and permanently abiding upon them, ex- erting His influence by means of the truth, which they are the instruments of proclaiming, and giving effect to it, so as to make them the light of the world ^The clause, as ^ffexander remarks, 'has been a famous subject of depute among interpreters, who differ more or less in reference to every word, as well as to the general meaning of the whole ; ' and therefore we have not pressed it. THE COMPLETED KEVELATION. 49 and the reclaimed of nations : ' My Spirit that is upon thee, and my words which I have put in thy mouth' (not merely in thine ear to receive, but in thy mouth to proclaim), 'shaU not depart out of thy mouth, nor out of the mouth of thy seed, nor out of the mouth of thy seed's seed, saith the Lord, from henceforth and for ever.' We have already referred to the person so often mentioned in the Old Testament as the angel of the Lord, or the angel Jehovah, showing that in him was represented to the Church, under that dispensa- tion, the second person of the Trinity, through whom God held gracious communications with men. The two passages we are now to consider will further illustrate this. In both, — the first describing the typical redemption from Egypt, and the second, the antitype, or the redemption of men from the guilt and bondage of sin, — this angel is set between the Father and the Spirit in terms implying his divinity, and not only as concurring with them in the work' but as the actual Eedeemer. The first is Isa. Ixiii. 7-10. Here we have God, m His love and compassion, acting as their Saviour (vers. 7, 8) : ' I will mention the loving-kindnesses of the Lord, and the praises of the Ldfc, according to all that the Lord hath bestowed on us' (is this three- fold repetition of the name Jehovah of no account ?), D I 50 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. * and the great goodness toward the house of Israel, which He hath bestowed on them, according to His mercies, and according to the multitude of His loving- kindnesses. For He said, Surely (or only) they are my people, children that will not lie : so He was their Saviour.' But verse 9 shows the manner in which He was in actual reality their Saviour, viz. by the agency of the angel referred to : ' In all their afflictions He was afflicted, and the angel of His presence saved them: in His love and in His pity He redeemed them ; and \le bare them, and carried them all the days of old.' The title ' angel of His presence,' or ' angel of His face,' expresses not merely the angel who sees His face, but one who is His face, or in whom His face is represented. But this clearly points out Him who, in New Testament language, is described as ' the image of the invisible God ' (Col. i. 15) ; ' the brightness of His Father's glory, and the express image of His person ' (Heb. i. 3) ; ' the image of God ' (2 Cor. iv. 4) ; and ' in whom dwelt aU the fulness of the Godhead bodily ' (Col. ii. 9). In emphatic contrast with God's goodness, how- ever, Israel's conduct is set forth (ver. 10):' But they rebelled, Ind vexed His Holy Spirit : therefore He was turned to be their enemy, and fought against them.' The working of God's Spirit with Israel in THE COMPLETED KEVELATION. 51 their early history is plainly affirmed. ' God,' says Nehemiah (ch. ix. 20), 'gave His good Spirit' unto them.' 'As the beast goeth down into the valley,' says Isaiah ^ver. 14), ' so the Spirit of the Lord caused him to rest.' As the angel is a person, so must the Spirit be, as is plain from the word 'vexed,' which can only apply to a person feeling grief. (Eph. iv. 30.) Thus in the redemption of Israel, prefigurative of the greater redemption by God's Son, we have un- mistakeable indication of a Trinity, which is revealed more fuUy in its New Testament antitype. The verses immediately following, as they stand in our version, seem to contain a further recognition of the Trinity (vers. 11-14): 'Wliere is He that brought them up out of the sea with the shepherd of the flock ? where is He that put His Holy Spirit within him ? ' We cannot but observe the resem- blance of the first part of the verse to Heb. xiii. 20 ; ' The God of peace, that brought again from the dead the great Shepherd of the sheep ; ' and if there be the same appHcation here, we have the Father and the Son, and in addition, in the last clause, God working by His Spirit. But as the meanmg of the verse is disputed, and even the true reading of the original is unsettled, we do not press ft. The other passage is in the prophecies of Zechariah (ch. ii. iii. and iv.). In these we have three visions, not 52 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHER. only in immediate succession, but closely connected. Let us notice them in their order, and observe whether we do not find the three persons of the God- head, each in His appropriate office for the Church. In the second chapter, — after the vision of a man with a measuring line going forth to measure Jerusalem, indicating the great Head of the Church as enlarging and exactly defining her future boundaries, in con- sequence of her area being too limited, — the angel interpreter announces to the prophet God's rich promises of good in store for her. These promises involve, first, her great extension. ' Jerusalem shall be inhabited as towns without waUs,' or shall inhabit the open country, 'for the multitude of men and cattle therein ' (ver. 4). It shall no longer be en- circled by close walls, but shall extend into the plains beyond, fiUing them with open towns and vil- lages, in consequence of the abundance with which God has blessed her. The narrow walls of Judaic forms shall be thrown down, and the blessings of salvation extended beyond the boundaries of the Jewish people. Secondly, her perfect safety, not- withstanding the absence of such outward protection, thiough the power of God, who wiU also fill her with His glory. ' For I, saith the Lord, will be unto her a wall of fire round about, and will be the glory in the midst of her ' (ver. 5). Thirdly, the subjuga- THE COMPLETED REVELATION. 63 tion of her enemies. ' After the glory hath He sent me unto the nations which spoiled you ; for he that toucheth you toucheth the apple of His eye. For, behold, I will shake mine hand upon them, and they shall be a spoil to their servants ' (vers. 8, 9). But especially God's coming to dwell in her by the special manifestations of power and grace. 'Sing and rejoice, O daughter of Zion: for, lo, I come, and I will dwell in the midst of thee, saith the Lord ' (ver. 10). And in connection with this the bringing in of the Gentiles. 'And many nations shall be joined to the Lord in that day, and shall be my people ; and I will dwell in the midst of thee' (ver. 11). But this exhibition of God the Father, as recon- ciled and dwelling in His Church, is immediately followed ^ in the third chapter by a vision, showing this as secured through the purging away of her sins by the interposition of the angel of the Lord, the same divine person already considered. Here Joshua the high priest, as the representative of Israel, ap- pears standing before the angel of the Lord, ' clad in filthy garments,' — emblem of the sinful condition of the people, — and Satan, ' the accuser of the brethren,' ' Hengstenberg well remarks : ' The future with vau cmversive connects this vision closely with the one which precedes it, and shows that it constitutes one link in the series of visions, which were all seen by the prophet in one night. '—CAmtoZ. iii. 317, Clark's Translation. i i: 64 THE llEVEIATION OF THE FATHER. stniuling at his rl{jfht hand, ol)j ment, and are not found in a number of versions, and are now regarded as uncalled for and unneces- sary. The original is simply, * The word which I covenanted with you,' etc. The construction is somewhat unusual ; but all the more recent autho- rities agree that 'the word' is to be taken in the nominative, and conjoined with the Spirit as also abiding with them. Now, it is certainly remark- able, that we have here the Word placed between iiUU! THE COMPLETED REVELATION. 59 the Father and the Spirit, and joined with them in one gracious promise of presence for good. We know, too, that the title is given in the New Testa- ment as a name of the second person of the Trinity. Moreover, by understanding the la^guage as re- ferring to the personal Word, the remaining part of that clause, 'which I covenanted with you when ye came out of Egypt,' would be brought into exact correspondence with other passages, in which He is described as the angel of the covenant, by whom God brought His people out of Egypt (Mai. iii. 1 ; Isa. Ixiii. 9 ; Exod. xxiii. 20, 32, 34). This view is also in accordance with the connection of this clause with the previous one, as dependent upon it : ' I am with thee, the Word,' etc. God was with them by the angel of His presence, whom we have seen to be the Son of God, and also by His Spirit working mightily among them, and so He continued. The language might not have suggested to the Old Testament saints the idea of the Word as a personal being. But yet we cannot help thinking that it was used designedly, and that to us it properly suggests Him who is the Word of the Lord. Taking the passage thus, it obscurely but really points to a Trinity. A number of other passages might be adduced, which teach at least a plurality of persons in the 60 THE REVELATION OF THE FATHEB. Godhead, and less distinctly the working of the three divine persons; but these are sufficient to show that, in reality, the doctrine was underlying God's revelation to man in the preparatory economy. FulJy to appreciute, however, the force of the teaching of the Old Testament on this subject, we "must keep in view, what has been abeady said regarding the dominant principle of that dispensa- tion, that ' There is one God, the Father.' Against all recognition of any other, the Mosaic legislation was directed at every point, and the history of the chosen people under that dispensation was a solemn testimony from God against all forms of worship to any other but the one living and true God. In every part of their sacred books is prominently presented the unapproachable majesty, and the in- communicable glory, of the one God ; and every form of address — tender entreaty and solemn denunciation, cutting irony and biting sarcasm, and even what they condescend to employ on no other subject, playful raillery — is employed to excite loathing for all other gods as abominations, or contempt for them as vanity. How, then, are we to explain these indications of a plurality of persons — of others beside the one God, assuming divine prerogatives, and receiving divine honours ? How was the Old Testament THE COMPLETED REVELATION. 61 loyal to its own ruling purpose, unless, in the unity of the divine essence, there were three personal distinctions ? If it were intended to teach a mono- theism without any such distinctions, does not the Koran answer the purpose better than it does ? Can we regard it as either consistent with itself, or worthy of divine wisdom, unless we understand it, — while fully unfolding its own special principle of revealing the Father, and maintaining His unrivalled honours, as representing the Godhead, — yet at the same time as containing the germs of a fuller reve- lation ; and unless we receive the inspired utterances of the sweet Psalmist of Israel, and the Evangelical Prophet, as, in their pregnant simplicity, containing deeper truths, which were to be fuUy expanded in the ter^ching of the great Apostle of the Gentiles, and of the beloved disciple, appropriately designated ' the divine T Father Almighty, to Thee be addressed, With Christ and the Spirit, one God ever blest, All glory and worship, from earth and from heaven, As was, and is now, and shall ever be given. PART II. THE GOSPELS; OB, THE REVELATION OF THE SON. ' To U8 there w one Lord Jems Clirist, by whom are all things, and we by Ilim.'—l Con. viii. 6. i I INTRODUCTORY. miTE New Testament, it is scarcely necessary to J- remark, contains the completed revelation of God's will. What was only dimly indicated in the institutions and prophecies of the preparatory dis- pensation, is there so clearly unfolded, that it may be truly said, ' The darkness is past, and the true light now shineth.' From an early period the New Testament was divided, according to its contents, into two parts, known as Gospel and Apostle, which, as formerly observed, represent respectively the special mani- festation of the second and third persons of the Godhead. Upon the consideration of the first of these we are now to enter. It consists of four narratives of the life of our Lord, each having its distinctive features, and presenting a special aspect of His person and work, but yet, after all, together fonning one history, in which these representations are blended into one harmonious image. But we have only to glance at the opening por- £ 66 THE REVELATION OF THE SON. i tions of each of the four, to soo that their avowed dosif^i was to exhibit the Tiianife''tatioii of the second person of the Trinity in tlie flesh. Matthew begins his Ciospel with the human genoabgy, and birth from R virgin, of Him wlio — he is careful to show from GUI Testament prophecy — is yet ' Emmanuel, God with us.' Mark connnences his Gospel by the simple announcement, ' The beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God;' while Luke's history begins with a more detailed account of His incarnation, which we shall consider more fully presently, but (Which, we remark here, represents Him as essentially the Son of God. But John rises still higher. His beginning was not at His human birth, or the commencement of His ministry, but before time. Then was the Word. He was with God, not merely along with God, irapk t^ ©ew, but 7r/3o? TOP Beov, holding pennanent and intimate intercommunion with Him, with face directed, as it were, to His face. But He is not represented as an independent being, existing externally to Him. The idea of such a being before creation would be entirely contrary to tbe unity of God. Hence He is absolute God. ' The Word was God.' But this Word, whose eternal existence, distinct personality, and absolute Godhead are here so explicitly deoiired, appears in human flesh, and in it makes the Father INTllODUOTOBY. 67 obvious to man, pouring the rays of His gloiy through tho voU of His earthly tabernacle. ' The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us ; and we beheld His ^dory, the glory as of tlie only begotten of the Fatlier.' But this Word is also the eternal, only begotten Son of God. ' No man hath seen God at any time : the only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared Him.'^ . Thus tho opening of each of the Gospels shows that the design of tho whole was to present before us the manifestation of the second person of the Trinity, and the most superficial view of them will show that their whole contents coincide with this idea. But our design leads us to consider rather the relation of the three persons, as unfolded by Him; and we trust to be able to show, looking at the four Gospels as a whole, and as forming one history, that the representation of the Saviour which they contain assumes the doctrine of the Trinity, and that His teaching and work, as there exhibited,' are based upon it. J o'r"T* ^f ^' remarking in passing, that the manner in which the Godhead and incarnation of Christ stand in the very forefront of all the Gospel narratives, shows how radically and inherently VICIOUS are all those attempts, such as Ecce Homo, to describe the ife and mission of the Son,-which ignore these truths and acknow- ledge only His humanity,-however eloquent they may be, or what- ever mixture of partial truth they may contain 68 THE REVELATION OF THE SON. Ill THE INCARNATION. At the very commenroTr-cnf of the Gospel history the germs of the doctrine which appear in the Old Testament are taken up, and begin to expand. The coming birth of the Saviour is announced as the in- carnation of a divine person, according to the terms of ancient prophecy (Matt. i. 23) : *A virgin shall conceive and bAng forth a son, and they shall call his name Emmanuel, which is, being interpreted, God with us.' But further, — as we have seen promi- nently brought forward in Old Testament predictions the concern of the divine Three in the person of the coming Eedeemer, — so, when he is actually produced, it is in a manner strikingly proclaiming the working of a Triune God. In these terms is his birth announced to the virgin mother (Luke i. 31-35) : ' Behold, thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt call his name Jesus. He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest. . . . The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore also that holy thing, that shall be born of thee, shall be called the Son of God.' I', i: THE INCARNATION. B9 In this passage we have God the Highest, whose son (in whatever sense we understand that expression) is to appear. We have then the Spirit, by whose agency the human nature of that son was to be pro- duced. The parallel phrase, ' power of God,' shows him to be divine, and is used to express God as working by the Spirit (Luke xxiv. 49). And then we have the son himself, who is conceived ol' the virgin. We cannot fully investigate the question as to why the title ' Son of God ' is given to the son of Mary. But two remarks may be made. First, the expression ' he shall be called,' is not synonymous with ' he shall be.' It properly means that he shall be revealed, manifested, or shown to be the Son of God. And secondly, the original being without the article — Son of God, not the Son of God — the title expresses relationship. The meaning of the whole, therefore, we take to be, that the pure humanity produced by the Holy Ghost, according to the Father's will, was a fit instrument for the exhibi- tion to man — the manifestation in flesh — of him who stands in relation actually to God as His son. We do not suppose that Mary understood that her pre- dicts d offspring was divine, though we believe that thib is taught in the words; and we can see that it might have been concealed from her in wisdom, otherwise she would not have been fitted to bring up 70 THE REVFXATION OF THE SON. |i the child. She knew enough to excite reverential respect, but not enough to interfere with her receiv- ing his filial submission. But with the fuller light whicli we now have, there can be no ditticulty in recognising him, as hero set forth, as the Eternal Son of God (Matt, xxvii. 43 ; Hob. i. 2, 5, 8 ; John x. 36). in other passages the incarnation is ascribed to each of the three persons in the Godhead respectively. It is ascribed to the Father: * A body hast Thou pre- pared me ;' to the Son : * Forasmuch as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, He also took part of the same ;' dnd to the Holy Ghost : ' That which is conceived in lior is of the Holy Ghost.* But from the above examination of the passage before us, we see that in it the whole three divine persons are brought together in the production of the human nature of Christ, and its mysterious union with the divine in His incarnation. THE MINISTRY OF THE FORERUNNER. Thirty years later our Lord entered upon His public ministry ; and, as in prophecy He had been represented as qualified for His work by the agency of the Spirit, given by the Father, this was fully realized on His receiving baptism at the hands of THE MINISTRY OF THE FORERUNNER. 71 John the Baptist (Matt. iii. 16, 17): 'Jesus, when He was baptized, went up straightway out of the water : and, lo, the heavens wore opened unto Him, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove, and lighting upon Him : and, lo, a voice from heaven, saying, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.' (See also Mark i. 10, 11 ; Luke iii. 22.) Here, in accordance with the passages quoted from the Old Testament (Isa. xi. 2, xlii. 1, Ixi. '1 ; Ps. xlv. 6, 7), we have exhibited the three- fold personality in the divine essence : the Father audibly addressing the Son, and recognising Him as His Son in a sense altogether peculiar — His Son by nature; and the Spirit visibly descending on Him, as He commences the work of His Messianic office ; so that one of the Fathers well observes, 'I ad Jordanum, et videbis Trinitatem/ — Go to Jordan, and you will see Trinity. John speaks of the same event in i manner which shows that in it he recognised the three divine persons. 'John bare record, saying, I saw the Spirit descending from heaven like a dove, and it abode upon Him. And I knew Him not ; but He that sent me to baptize with water, the same said unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, and remaining on Him, the same is He which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost. And I saw, 72 THE REVELATION OF THE SON. ii! liii and bare record that this is the Son of God ' (John i. 32-34). This testimony of the Baptist brings out two particulars in addition to what we had in the accounts of the other Evangelists. First, v/e have the idea of the Spirit * abiding,' or remaining upon the Son, corresponding to the prophet's representa- tion of it as 'resting' upon Him (Isa. xi. 2); and, secondly, we have His being baptized of the Spirit represented as the basis of His baptizing others with the same influence, which could only be done by a divine person. Thus the three are here recognised in the same nlanner as by the other Evangelists, with only a fuUer exhibition of the divinity of the Son. Bvt in the closing notice which the Evangelist John has given of the Baptist's ministry, we have the completed testimony of the latter to the Son, in terms which, perhaps, still more clearly exhibit the three divine persons as conjoined in the mission of our Lord. * He that cometh from above is above all ; he that is of the earth is earthly, and speaketh of the earth : He that cometh from heaven is above all. And what He hath seen and heard, that He testifieth ; and no man receiveth His testimony. He that hath received His testimony hath set to his seal that God is true. For He whom God hath sent speaketh the words of God ; for God giveth not the THE MINISTRY OF THE FORERUNNER. 73 Spirit by measure unto Him. The Father loveth the Son, acd hath given all things into His hand. He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life ; and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him ' (John iii. 31-36). In this passage we have a very full exhibition of the offices and relations of each of the three persons of the Godhead. There is presented to us, first, the Father, who loveth the Son, who sends Him into the world, who imparts to Him the Spirit in all His fulness, and who hath given all things into His hands. There is, secondly, the Son, who came from heaven, and who is above all, in opposition even to the highest of human teachers, who are of the earth, and have only a temporary mission ; who testifies what He has seen and heard, and not merely, as the forerunner, what He had received by revelation ; who is sent of God and speaks His words, because He has received from Him the Spirit without mea- sure, which no mere created intelligence could do ; for they can only receive Him to the extent of their limited powers, but He into the infinite capacities of His divine nature ; who is loved of the Father, and has received all power from Him, so that through Him alone is salvation enjoyed by the children of men. And, thirdly, the Spirit given, and abiding with Him (giveth in the present tense), without 74 THE REVELATION OF THE SON. measure ; so that, under His influence, the incarnate Son becomes the full revealer of God, and com- pletely fitted for His Messianic work. How clearly, then, does a Trinity appear in the preparatory ministry of the forerunner ! But in the passages referred to, the three are presented to us especially in relation to the person of the Mediator. But onward we must trace the doctrine as bearing upon His work for man. OPENlilG OF OUR LORD's MINISTRY. Shortly after His baptism, our Lord entered upon His public ministry, by going up to Jerusalem, the seat of the Jewish theocracy, and there asserting His divine commission in the presence of the heads and representatives of the chosen nation, by purging the temple and reproving the wickedness of the rulers, who permitted His Father's house to be made a house of merchandise. When asked for a sign. He replied by a parable, indicating the future events of His life, and the ends to be accomplished by His mission. 'Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.' He, however, did work miracles, which were the means of inducing in some a belief that He was the Messiah ; but their faith OPENING OF OUE LORD'S MINISTRY. 75 resting merely on such exliibitions of His power, and not on any spiritual perception of their wants, or of His character as the Saviour, He did not commit Himself to them. (John ii. 24, 25.) But,^ during this visit to Jerusalem, there came to Him one in whom He saw the germ of faith, and a susceptibility of instruction ; and to whom, therefore, our Lord un- folded fully the nature of His work and kingdom. This was Nicodemus, a ruler of the Pharisees ; and our Lord's discourse with him, recorded in the third chapter of John's Gospel, stands in the fore- front of our Lord's teaching, and forms one of the clearest and most comprehensive exhibitions of the mysteries of His kingdom to be found in the whole New Testament, presenting the whole sum and substance of the doctrine of Him who came down from heaven. We shall, however, notice our Lord's statements on this occasion only as they bear on the doctrine of the Trinity ; and wo are mistaken if the doctrine of three divine persons severally working in our salvation, will not be found at the uasis of the whole discussion, determining its arrangement. Our Lord begins by announcing to Nicodemus the great change required in the heart of every man in ^ The particle Ss, which connects John iii. 1 with the last verse of the preceding chapter, is unnoticed by our translators. It expresses the contrast between Nicodemus and those previously mentioned, and might be rendered ' but. ' 76 THE REVELATION OF THE SON. i '■ 'order to admission to His kingdom; but this He is careful to point out as the work of the Spirit (John iii. 5, 6) : ' Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.' And, in reply to the astonished inquiry of His hearer at this demand, He exhibits, by a comparison of the wind, the free seK-determination of the Spirit, and His powerful yet mysterious operations on the heart of man. ' The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest t^e sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh or whither it goeth : so is every one that is born of the Spirit.' Thus, beginning with the work as in the heart of man. He exhibits just the work of the third person of the Trinity in our salvation. But to the inquiry of Nicodemus, ' How can these things be ? ' our Lord — after reproving his igno^-ance of divine trcth, while possessed of such high privi- leges — leads hm back from the work of the Spirit to that of the Son, by exhibiting His divinity, incar- nation, and atonement, as the basis of the work of the Spirit just described (ver. 13): 'No man hath ascended up to heaven, but He that came down from heaven, even the Son of man, which is in heaven.' These words plainly imply divinity. We might only OPENING OF OUR LORD'S MINISTRY. proof of this refer to Prov. 4.-8 in prooi 01 tills reier to rrov. xxx. -i, — a passage the close resemblance of which to the present we cannot but notice : ' Who hath ascended up into heaven or descended ? who hath gathered the wind in his fists ? who hath bound the waters in a gar- ment ? who nath established all the ends of the earth ? what is his name, and what is hiV, son's name, if thou canst tell ? ' Not only is He described as having come down from heaven — an expression used in the Old Testament for God alone, and in accord- ance with the description of His original dignity, as ' with God' ^ (John i. 1, 2), — ^but He is described as in heaven while here, and as again to ascend to the same state. As Hengstenberg remarks : ' All three designations imply the same dignity. Each of itself leads to the conception of full divinity, which makes itself known in the past, the present, and the future of the Son of God.' But while thus divine, and in a subsequent verse called the Son of God, He is next r" ascribed as the Son of man, and as in that nature making atonement (vers. 14, 15): 'And as Moses lifted up the ser- pent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up ; that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have eternal life.' Thus, in explanatiou to Nicodeinus of the work of the Spirit, ^ Tpos T«v e«»», not •yrapd. 78 THE KEVELATION OF THE SON. our Saviour begins to unfold heavenly things, by- exhibiting His own divinity and atonement in our nature, as the basis on which it rests. But from this account of the work of the second person of the Trinity in our salvation, the Saviour leads back to the Father, as the source and fountain of the whole (ver. 16) : ' For God (plainly the Father, as contrasted with the Son) so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever be- lieveth on Him should not perish, but have ever- lasting life.' The v7ords at the close of verses 15 and 3 6,' that Whosoever believeth on Him,' are the same verbatim in both ; but it will be seen that in the one case they are applied to the Son, as ex- pressing the object of His work, and in the other to the Father. Thus the whole passage presents not only three divine persons concurring in man's salvation, but in- dicates their official relation to each other in that work, and to those for whom they interposed. Be- ginning with the work of the Spirit upon the heart, the Saviour traces it back to the work of the Son in descending from heaven, assuming human nature, and dying as an atonement for sin; and then He traces the work of the Son back to the love of the Father as its original source. In this, then, the firet full announcement of the heavenly things which He N< ouE lord's pubuc ministry. 79 came down from heaven to reveal — the key-note of His whole teaching, unfolding the central mystery of His kingdom, and containing the very marrow of His glad tidings, — how plainly does the doctrine of the Trinity form the foundation of the w^hole structure ! OUR lord's public ministry. In now proceeding to consider the life and teach- ing of our Lord during His public ministry, we must observe that the first three Evangelists, exhibiting especially the human side of Christ, do not so pro- minently bring forward either His divinity or the relations, internal or official, of the three persons in the Trinity. But the Gospel by John was plainly intended, among other designs, to be supplementary to them, and especially to exhibit the person of Christ as God incarnate. ' These are written that ye might believe that Jesus is tlie Christ, the Son of God, and that believing ye might have life through His name' (ch. xx. 31). With this view, both in the description given of His works, and in the reports of His discourses, he portrays Him, not in any of His aspects as human, but as the manifestation of a divine person in human form, — in fact, as one in 80 THE REVELATION OF THE SON. nature with the Father, but at the same time occupy- ing a place of official subordination to Him. He does, indeed, abundantly teach His manhood, and exhibit it in aspects which, but for his gospel, would be comparatively in the shade. But yet almost every .step of his narrative indicates a special design to set forth Christ in His original divine personality, as the Eternal Word and the only begotten Son of God ; not merely in the sense of God having no other such Son, but in the sense of His being partaker of the divine essence, and thus distinct from all created existence (ch. v. 18, x. 30-36, etc.). Hence He is represented as having a perfect knowledge of the Father (ch. viii. 55, x. 15), as weU as knowing the hearts of men (ch. ii. 24, 25). His works are the works of God (ch. x. 37, xiv. 10). Wlioever had seen Him had seen the Father (ch. xiv. 9). Men are to honour Him as they honour the Father (ch. V. 23) ; and whosoever hates and rejects Him, hates and rejects the Father (ch. xv. 23, 24). But while thus one with the Father, He is, throughout the same discourses, represented as occupying a place of official subordination to Him in the economy of our redemption (ch. iii. 16, 17, v. 43, vi. 37-40, viii. 42, xii. 49). The synoptists, though in the main exhibiting Christ's humanity, yet present it as the humanity of Him who was really the Son of God 3cupy- e does, jxhibit lid be , every L to set ity, as f God; > other aker of created He is of the ing the are the rer had Men her (ch. n, hates it while out the place of r of our 40, viii. le main t as the of God OUR lord's public ministry. 81 (Matt. iii. 17, xi. 27, xvii. 5 ; Mark i. 1, 11, ix. 7, xii. 6, etc.), and agree with John in teaching His divinity. For example, no passage even in John's Gospel teaches this truth more strongly than the declaration of our Saviour, as given by the first and third Evangelists (Matt. xi. 27 ; Luke x. 22) : * :No man knoweth who the Son is but the Father, and who the Father is but the Son, and he to whom the Son will reveal Him.' But at the same time there are hints, in connec- tion with the working of the Father and the Son, of the agency of the Spirit ; — as when the miracles of our Lord are described as by the finger of God, and in the parallel passage as by the Spirit of God (Matt. xii. 28, with Luke xi. 20);— as when the Saviour promises the Spirit to them that ask Him (Luke xi. 20); — but especially when our Saviour promises living water, which, the Evangelist says, ' He spake of the Spirit, which was not yet given, for Jesus was not yet glorified' (John vii. 38, 39) ; and again, when warning those who blasphemed His miracles. He pointed them forward to the time when the dispensation of the Spirit, the last person of the Trinity, should begin, and when, if they should continue to resist, their destruction would be in- evitable (Matt. xii. 28-31 ; Luke xi. 13-20). Our Lord having during His ministry, especially 82 THE KEVELATION OF THE SON. as exhibited by John, represented His relations to the Father as essentiaUy one with Him, but in His mission to our world subordinate to Him, began, as He approached the termination of His work on earth, more fully to unfold the relation of the Spirit to the Father and the Son, both essential and economical. EspeciaUy in His fareweU discourses He exhibits the third person of the Trinity personally as pro- ceeding from the first and second ; and in His official character, as given by the Father and dispensed by the Son, as ^he result of His departure to the Father by His death and resurrection, and as carrying out the work of the Son by applying it to the minds and hearts of men. The passages on this subject are so clear and distinct that they belong rather to the direct evidence for the Trinity, and we need do little more than quote them. ' I will pray the Father, and He shall give you another Comforter, that He may abide with you for ever ; even the Spirit of truth ; whom the --orld can- not receive, because it seeth Him not, neither knoweth Him : but ye Imow Him ; for He dweUeth with you, and shaU be in you ' (John xiv. 16, 17). ' But the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my name, He shaU teach you aU things, and bring aU things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you' (ver. 26). ' But OUR lord's public ministry. 83 when the Comforter is come, whom I will send unto you from the Father, He shall testify of me ' (ch. XV. 26). ' It is expedient for you that I go away : for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come ; but if I depart, I will send Him unto you. And when He rome, He wiU reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment.' . . . 'I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot beax them now. Howbeit when He, the Spirit of truth, is come. He wiU guide you into aU truth : for He shaU not speak of Himself; but whatsoever He shaU hear, that shaU Pie speak; and He will show you things to come.' ... 'All tilings that the Father hath are mine : therefore said I, that He shaU take of mine, and shall show it unto you ' (ch. xvi. 7-15). We need not enter into any discussion as to the proper meaning of the term translated ' Comforter.' It is sufficient to notice the general teaching of all these passages. They represent the place of the three divine persons in the actual carrying out of the plan of mercy in the world. First, we have the Spirit as the great agent, leading men into all truth, testifying of the Son, receiving of the Son's and showing it unto men, convincing the world of sin, etc., dwelling in believers, and, through a preached gospel, producing moral changes, which are, in reality, greater works than the mjjacles of the IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) V /, /. C/a « 1.0 I.I i.25 ^1^ 1^ ■^ In 112 2 •63 I !.«« Ilia lU JA ill 16 V] <^ /i y 7 ^. y Photographic Sciences Corporation ^ m d\ i\ # ^\ "«?> V 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEPSTER,N.Y. 14580 (716) 872-4503 1^ ■p mm 84 THE REVELATION OF THE SOX Saviour. Secondly, we have all attributed to the Father as the original source. 'The Father wiU give ;' * Whom the Father wiQ send/ etc. And then, thirdly, we have the Son, as the great medium • through whom the Spirit's influences are obtained,' and who dispenses them as the agent of the Father. 'The Father will send in my name;' 'I wiU pray the Father, and He shall give ;' ' Whom I will send unto you from the Father.* Now, the order pursued in the Gospel history, as completed by John, in treating of the respective relations and offices in redemption of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost, is exactly that which would be adopted by a Trinitarian professor of systematic theology. Were he discussing the part of each of the three persons of the Trinity in our salvation, would he not first treat of the person and work of the Son in obtaining redemption ; and in considering this, would he not speak of the Father as the source of all — as sending the Son, and as He to whom the Son holds in redemption a position of official subordination ; of the Son, in His undertak- ing the work, becoming the servant of the Father, and laying down His life for the sheep ; and perhaps incidentally refer to the Spirit ? And then, would he not, as the second great division of his subject, treat fully of the application of the work by the AFTER THE RESURRECTION. , g5 Spirit, first, in His mission as given by tho Father, and dispensed by the Son ; and, secondly, in His' powerful agency, by which men are brought to the enjoyment of the redemption purchased? If so how entirely accordant is the evangeUcal scheme' with the representation given in the Gospel history of the perscm, life, and teaching of the Son of God ' AFTER THE RESURRECTION. Our Lord, after His resurrection, renewed the promise of the Spirit in similar terms, giving to each of the three the same position as in the words already quoted (Luke xxiv. 49) : ' Behold, I send the promise of the Father upon you : but tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem, untH ye be endued with power from on high/ This promise of the Father, both from the passages last quoted, and from Acts' 1. 4, 5, where it is exactly defined, is abundantly shown to be the influences of the Holy Ghost. As a prelude and earnest of this, our Lord, as His prac- tice was, gave the beginning and first-fruits on earth of what He was afterward fuUy to give from heaven (John XX. 21, 22) : 'Then said Jesus to them again. Peace be unto you : as my Father hath sent me' even so send I you. And when He had said this,' He breathed on them, and saith unto them, Eeceive' 86 THE REVELATION 07 THE SON. ye the Holy Ghost.' The Fatlier appears as supreme, and sending the Son. The Son is repre- sented as sending the apostles, in the same manner as the Father had sent Him, implying equal autho- rity ; but in addition, in the act of breathing upon them. He is exhibited as placing Himself in the same relation to the new spiritual world which Jehovah Elohim held in the formation of the material world, and the living creatures upon it, but especially as to the life of man. * By the word of the Lord were the heavens made, and aU the host of them by thb breath of His mouth ' (Ps. xxxiii. 6). 'The Spirit of the Lord hath made me, and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life' (Job xxxiii. 4). As, at first, Jehovah breathed into man's nostrils the breath of life, and formed him in the divine image ; so now Jesus, at the founding of the new spiritual world, breathes upon the apostles, as the representatives of the Church, thus exhibiting the infusion of the nc .ife in them by the Spirit, as well as in those who should afterward believe on Him through their word. By the first breathing, the first Adam became a living soul; but in the last, the second Adam appears as a quickening Spirit, the source of life to all the members of His body, a position implying fulness of divinity. This breathing in connection with the Greek title of the AFTER THE RESURRECTION. 87 Spirit (TTvevfia), as meaning breath, seems also to express the original relation of the Spirit to the Son as proceeding from Him. And thus we ha\e the three persons of the Trinity brought before us in this preliminary communication of the Spirit, in their essential divinity and official relations. Having thus qualified His apostles for their work or given them an earnest of all needed qualifications. He gave them His parting commission, constituting them His agents to reclaim an apostate world to its rightful Sovereign. But in this commission all the germs of the doctrine of the Trinity, which had previously only partiaUy ,:^)anded, burst into fuU efflorescence. AU the faith which, as reclaimed, men are called to profess, all the obligations which they are bou'id to assume, and all the privileges which they are permitted to enjoy, are ' summarily comprehended ' in their consecration to, and union with, the Triune God, as revealed in the gospel (Matt, xxviii. 19) :' Go ye therefore, and disciple aU nations, baptizing them into' (not 'in') 'the name' (not names, but in the singular, the name — the revealed relation) ' of the Father, and of the Son, AND OF the Holy Ghost.' To God the Father, God the Son, And God the Spirit, three in one, Be honour, praise, and glory given, • By all on earth, and all in heaven. ^^H 1 mm- ■l li 1 PART III. THE APOSTLES; OR, THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. M 'Alt these worheth that one and the self-same Spirit, dividing to every man severally as He mil.' —I Cor. xii. 11. n II CHAPTER I. THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES. TVTE now proceed to consider the third great ▼ ▼ division of the word of God, which con- tains the manifestation of the Holy Ghost. The remaining portions of the sacred volume represent the completion of redemption by His agency, com- menced on the day of Pentecost, and completed in final glory. Here our attention is first called to the second treatise of Luke, usually known as the Acts of the Apostles, which is a history of the fulfilment of the promise of the Spirit, first by His effusion upon the apostles, and then, secondly, thi-ough means of them, as thus qualified, by His working upon mankind in the order appointed by divine wisdom, upon the Jew first and afterwards upon the Gentiles, until the gospel had taken root in certain great centres of the old world, beginning at Jerusalem and ending at Eome. Now, in both these aspects of the Spirit's work, the writer recog- nises the three persons in the Godhead in the same II ■^■ip 92 THE REVELATION OP THE SPIRIT. manner as is done in the Gospel history. The beginning of the first chapter is linked to the con- clusion of his former treatise. At the conclusion of his Gospel it was said, * Behold, I send the pro- mise of my Father upon you: but tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem, until ye be endued with power from on high ' (Luke xxiv. 49). And he commences his second treatise with the same fact: 'Being assembled together with them. He commanded them that they should not depart from Jerusalem, but wait for the promise of the Father, which, saith He, ye have hetird of me. For John truly baptized with water; but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days hence* (Acts i. 4, 5). Thus, by the agency of the Spirit promised by the Father, and now to be actually given by Him, but dispensed through the Son, they were to be quali- fied as His agents for the establishment of His kingdom throughout the world. Accordingly, at His parting from them to return to the Father, v/hich was necessary in order to open the way for the effusion of the Spirit, He said (ver. 8), * Ye shall receive power, afte:' that the Holy Ghost is come upon you : and ye shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and in Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost parts of the earth.' Accordingly, on the day of Pentecost, when the THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES. 93 Spirit was poured out from on high with such glori- ous effects, the Apostle Peter fully explains the phenomenon, if we may be allowed the expression, by describing the action of the three persons in the Godhead in what had just transpired. First, he refers it all to God the Father as its original Source, now fulfilling His promise by the prophets : 'This is that which was spoken by the prophet Joel; And it shall come to pass in the last days, saith God, I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh ; and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams : and on my servants, and on my handmaidens, I will pour out of my Spirit; and they shall prophesy' (Acts ii. 16, 17). Secondly, he considers the ground of it, viz. the humiliation and death, and the consequent resurrec- tion and exaltation, of the Son, whose work, however, is still of the Father, who hath both delivered Him up to death, and raised Him again from the dead : 'Ye men of Israel, hear these words; Jesus of Nazareth, a man approved of God among you by miracles, and wonders, and signs, which God did by Him in the midst of you, as ye yourselves also know: Him being delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have crucified and slain: I 94 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. whom God hath raised up, having loosed the pains of death: because it was not possible that He should be holden of it' (vers. 22-24). And tlien, thirdly, as the result, ho describes the giving of the Spirit by the Father, and the effusion of His influences by the Son, as the actual cause of that remarkable manifestation of which they liad just been witnesses : ' Therefore being by the right hand of God exalted, and having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost, He (Christ) hath shed forth this, which ye now see and hear' (ver. 33). The same pouring out is here ascribed to Christ, wldch is in the 17th verse ascribed to God, and we have already remarked that such a power requires divinity for its exercise. It will thus be seen that the foundation of the infant Church was laid, and the work of evangelizing the world begun, in accordance with the promise of the Saviour, by the concurrence of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. The work as thus begun was, according to the order appointed by divine wisdom, at first carried on specially among the Jews, to whom the first offer of salvation was made; but when the next great step in carrying out the counsels of eternal love was to be taken, by the evangelization of the Gentiles, the commencement of the work was sig- THE ACTS OF THK APOSTLES. 95 nalized in a similar manner. God made choice among the apostlca tl: it the Gentiles by the mouth of Peter should hear the word of the gospel and believe (Acts xv. 7). Accordingly, at Cajsarea, he preached to Cornelius, and those in his house, Jesus Christ and Him crucified ; and it is to be noted that in doing so he teaches the agency of the Blessed Three in the person and qualifications of the God- man Mediator, in the same manner as we have seen done by prophets and evangelists : * God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and «/ith power (ch. x. 38). As the apostle went on to preach salvation through faith in Him, the Holy Ghost fell on those assembled, as originally upon the disciples on the day of Pentecost. Describ- ing the scene ^hat ensued, Peter acknowledges the agency of the whole three persons of the Godhead in terms similar to those in which he describes the first effusion : ' As I began to speak, the Holy Ghost fell on them, as on us at the beginning. Then remembered I the word of the Lord, how that He said, John indeed baptized with water ; but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost. Forasmuch then as God gave them the like gift as He did unto us, who believed on the Loed Jesus, what was I that I should withstand God V (ch. xi. 15-17.) Thus the work now begun, of evangelizing the 96 THE REVELATION CF THE SPIRIT. I Grentiles, as formerly in the case of the Jews, is recognifi'^d, as by the agency of the Holy Ghost, given by the Father, and by implication, if not directly expressed, through the medium of the Son. These events form the key-notes of the two great divisions of the book, which, ia simply i,he record of the primitive successful preaching of the gospel among Jews and Gentiles successively, as the result of the effusion of the Spirit upon both classes, in the manner described, as begun on these two occa- sions. The early Church, as thus planted among Jews and GenDiles, and whose progress from Jeru- salem to Eome is traced in this book, was the first- fruits of the harvest of the world; and thus the representation given of the foundation of the work, in its two great divisions, exhibits the whole process of gathering souls into the New Testament Church till the end of time, as by the concurrent action of the adorable Three, in the order and relation pre- dicted by our Saviour during His earthly ministry — the Spirit, as the grea+ agent in the work ; the Son, cs securing His inflr.ences by His death and resurrec- tion, and Lctually dispensing them ; and the Father, as the great source of all, who imparts th^^m as the reward of the work of the Son. CHAPTER II. THE lABLIER EPISTLES OF PAUL. ryjU Saviour taught His disciples the truth as Y they were able to bear it. But even up to the time of His departure to the Father, they were not prepared to receive the fuU revelation of God's wiU, which Ha designed to communicate. ' I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear iiem nov/.* Accordingly, the Spirit was pro- mised, and after His resurrection imparted, to guide ±lis disciples into aU truth. We must therefore look for the ripest fruits of inspiration m the writ- mgs of the apostles. Among these the Epistles of Paul occupy a prominent place, and deserve our first consideration. Before proceeding to consider the doctrine of the Trmity, as underlying Paul's teaching of salvation we must make two preliminary remarks. First We' must notice, as a pecuHarity of his style, the length to which he sometimes draws out his sentences In the f^olness of his heart, thought succeeds thought, G I THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. clause is added to clause, and one parenthesis fol- lows another, till the apostle pauses, as it were, to take breath. "When we examine such passages more closely, as Alford remarks, ' depths under depths disclose themselves, wonderful systems of parallel allusion, frequent and complicated underplots ; ' but, as he also adds, ' every word, the more we search, approves itself as set in its exact logical place ; we see every phrase contributing, by its- own organiza- tion and articulation, to the carrying out of the organic whole.' Yet, to ascertain the general design, the interpre|;er must often glance over a passage of considerable length, and, by seizing the salient points, endeavour to catch the leading thoughts ; and after that, the various subsidiary clauses, both as to the truths they teach, and their relation to each other and to the apostle's general argument, will remain as a rich field of inquiry. In the present investi- gation, as we will be endeavouring to unravel some- thing like what Alford calls ' an underplot,' we shall only be able to trace the general course of thought in the passages to be considered ; and in doing so, we hope to exhibit the working of a Triune God often appearing as a sort of undertone, which, amid the richness and harmony of the leading voices, is apt to be overlooked. The other general remark we have to make is, THE EAELIEK EPISTLES OP PAUL. 99 that whUe, in the writings of John, the usual titles of the Trinity are Father, Son, and Spirit ; in Paul's they are God, Lord, and Spirit. We do not say that this IS always the case, but it certainly is the prevailing usage of both writers. We presume to thmk that this simple fact has an important bearing on theological questions, which are agitated at the present day, and that it is not without design that John was raised up speciaUy to exhibit the paternal character and paternal relation of God, and that Paul should have been raised up to exhibit Him more in His rectoral relation to His creatures— as their Lawgiver and Euler. This is, however, beside our subject, and we merely wish to, notice here the general practice of the Apostle of the Gentiles. With him the title God IS used to denote the Father, or God absolutely It IS the equivalent of the Hebrew EloUm, and very often has connected with it such titles as 'the Father' or ' the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.' That he commonly used the title Lord, or Kyrios, again to denote the Son, is admitted by all commentators So generaUy is this the case, that we are never without good reason to ascribe it to any other • and as It is the title used in the Septuagint as the' equivalent of Jehovah, its use is a clear testimony to our Lord's divinity. We make the remark re- garding these titles now, that we may not have to M 100 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. discuss them in reference to each particular passage that may come under review. Keeping these remarks in view, we proceed to consider the Epistles of Paul in the order in which they were written. THE EPISTLES TO THE THESSALONIANS. ^ The earliest of Paul's epistles, the first to the" / Thessalonians, commences with thanksgiving for ; their faith, < hope, and love. * We give thanks to / God always for you all ; making mention of you in ' our prayers, remembering without ceasing your work of faith, and labour of love, and patience of hope' (vers. 2, 3). But he immediately connects their present privileges with the three persons of the Trinity, in their respective relations to the sinner's salvation, — first, as enjoyed in union with the Son : ' In our Lord Jesus Christ, in the sight of God the Father ; ' but, secondly, as originating in their elec- tion by the Father: * Knowing, brethren beloved, your election of God ; ' and then, thirdly, as manifested by the working of the Spirit : ' For our gospel came not unto you in word only, but also in power, and in the Holy Ghost, and in much assurance.' We may notice in this passage, what we shall see again, THE EPISTLES TO THE THESSALONIANS. 101 the mention of the three cardinal graces, faith, hope, and love, in connection with the mention of the three' adorable names. Here they are aU referred to the Son, as the object of them, but before God the Father with a view to Him, or with reference to His gloiy.' It is worthy of mention, that in the verses imme- diately following, in which the apostle enlarges on the fruits of the gospel among the Thessalonians, and, as a proof of their election, exhibits their character, he describes it in relation to the three persons of the Trinity (vers. 6-9) : 'And ye became foUowers of us, and of the Lord, having received the word in much affliction, with joy of the Holy Ghost ; so that ... in every place your faith to GoD-ward is spread abroad ; ... and how ye turned to God from idols, to serve the living and the true God, and to wait for His Son from heaven ;' showing by the relation to the Son, that it is the Father who is spoken of in the previous clause. The reference here to the Trinity is not so distjnct as in many other passages ; but the mention of the three per- sons successively is worthy of our attention. In the second epistle we have a simHar expression of thanksgiving (ch. ii. 13, 14) : 'We' (i.e. the mini- sters of the gospel) ' are boimd to give thanks alway to God for you, brethren beloved of the Lord,' in contrast with fuose under antichristian delusion ^ 11 Bi I 102 THE REVELATION OP THE SPIRIT. mentioned in the previous verses, * because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit, and behef of the truth : whereunto He called you by our gospel, to the obtaining of the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ.' In thus describing the grounds of his thanksgiving, the apostle mentions, first,. their election, ascribed to God ; — but it is the Father who sustains the honours of Deity, and in particular to Him is ascribed the sovereignty of election, however the other members of the Godhead may concur in it : ' Even so, Father, for so it seemed good in Thy sight ; ' — then, secondly, sanctification by the Holy Ghost : * Through ' or ' in sanctification of the Spirit,' the great agent in renew- ing the soul ; — and thirdly, their ultimate salvation : * To the obtaining of the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ.' The glory here is the glory which He originally possessed with the Father, ere ever the world was, and with which He is now glorified. In this passage the work of the Son as to our present salvation is not so distinctly mentioned as elsewhere, although allusion is made to it in the expression, * Belief of the truth ; ' yet the apostle, in his ascrip- tion of praise, embraces the three, by referring to the ultimate condition of God's children, as associated with Him in His glory (John xvii. 24 ; Rom. viii. IV). Thus we have election by the Father, sancti- THE EPISTLE8 TO THE THESSALONIANS. 103 fication by the Spirit, and glorification with the Son. Eeverting to the practical part of the first epistle, we may notice one or two passages in which the three are associated with Christian duty. In the fourth chapter the apostle exhorts his readers against certain gross sins as inconsistent with the purity of a Christian profession ; but the apostle's strong ground of appeal is the relation in which the three divine persons respectively stand to them in the work of their salvation (vers. 6-8) : ' Because that THE Lord is the avenger of all such, ap we have forewarned you, and testified.' Taking the term * Lord ' to denote Christ, as it usuaUy does in Paul's writings, the apostle's first appeal to them is on the ground of His appointment to judge and punish iniquity. But he adds as a second, their calling by the Father (ver. 7) : ' For God hath not caUed us unto uncleanness, but unto holiness.' Thus in sinning they despise God, who hath caUed them, and who, in the person of Christ, is the judge (ver. 8) : * He therefore that despiseth, despiseth not men, but God.' And then he adds, as a third consideration, by which their guilt was intensified, and which forms the climax of his appeal, ' Who also hath given unto us the Holy Spirit,' or, as the words stand in the original, ' His own Spirit, the Holy One,' expressing 104 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. with great emphasis and solemnity the character and work of Him whose attribute is holiness, and whose it is to sanctify all the servants of God. ' Observe that the whole passage agrees with and supports the , doctrine of the Trinity, — the Lord (Jesus), God (the Father who calleth, Eom. viii. 30), and the Holy Spirit, being each represented as acting distinctly, and collectively spoken of as God.' * The fifth chapter contains a number of exhorta- tions seemingly detached ; but yet a line of connec- tion may be traced, even where they seem most disconnected.' In examining these, it is interesting to observe that when he treats of religious worship, he exhibits it in relation to the three members of the Godhead (vers. 16-19): ' Eejoice evermore. Pray without ceasing. In everything give thanks : for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus.' The word ' this ' (tovto) in the last clause seems properly to refer to the whole exercises just mentioned, the rejoicing, praying, and giving thanks, which have God as their object, and which, he adds, are His appointment to His creatures, but 'in Christ,' the onlj; medium of manifestation on His part, and of acceptable approach on ours. This naturally leads to the actual source of these gifts, the enkindling flame of the third person of the Godhead; and ^ Webster and Wilkinson in loco. THE EPISTLE TO THE GALATIANS. 105 accordingly he adds (ver. 19): 'Quench not the Spirit/— check not nor restrain His influences, as He awakens those feelings of gratitude and earnest desire which find their natural expression in praise to God, the author of the gospel, and the source of all blessings ; but, according to God's will, as He is in Christ Jesus, give free vent to aU such feelings. The words thus seem closely connected with what precedes, as weU as with what follows ; so that we have the three divine persons associated in the apostle's mind with his spiritual exercises, as their Ob^jct, their medium, and their author. THE EPISTLE TO THE GALATIANS.^ The Epistle to the Galatians was occasioned by the successful efforts of certain Jewish teachers to subvert the faith of that Church, by persuaxling them that the observance of the Mosaic ritual was necessary to salvation. As they thus contradicted Paul's teaching, they laboured at the same time to undermine his apostolic authority, and succeeded in turning the affections of the people from him. In Tr.VfV'/*i." '^^"J^tter of discussion among scholars whether the Epistle to the Galatians was written before or after those to the Corinthians, but the prevailing opinion at the present day is that It was the first written. 106 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. writing to them, therefore, the apostle first vindicates his oflRce as an apostle. This he does in the form of an autobiographical narrative (ch. i. and ii.). Secondly, in opposition to false teachers, he estab- lishes the truth of the fundamental doctrines, that justification is by faith and not by the deeds of the law, and that, as a consequence, they alono who are of faith are the children of God, and inheritors of the promises made to Abraham (ch. iii. and iv.). And then, thirdly, ho concludes with practical ex- hortations and appeals (ch. v. and vi.). Turning to the second portion, which, as teaching the way of salvation, specially bears on our subject, a careful examination will show the doctrine of the Trinity at the basis of the apostle's argument. In showing that justification is by faith, he, in the be- ginning of the third chapter, rests his argument on one question, viz. in what manner had they received the Spirit ? * This only would I learn of you/ — it is sufficient to settle the question, — 'Eeceived ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith ? ' (ch. iii. 2.) Or, to put the question in another view, how had the Spirit been given or sup- plied ? * He therefore that ministereth to you ' (or is bestowing the Spirit upon you, viz. God), ' doeth He it by the workc of the law, or by the hearing of faith?' (ver. 5.) THE EPISTLE TO THE GALATIANS. 107 To this question the paragraph from the 6th to the 14th verse is an answer. The scope of the whole is to show that the bestowment of the Spirit by God, and the receiving of it by us, are the result of justification, and that justification is through faith and not through legal obedience ; and it may be re- garded as one of the most exactly logical in the whole of the apostle's writings. There are three stages in his argument. First, he shows that God justified Abraham by faith (ver. 6) : ' Even as Abraham be- lieved God, and it was counted to him for righteous- ness.' This, however, was as a type or example of the manner in which the saved of all ages and nations shaU enjoy the same blessing (vers. 7-9) : * Know ye therefore that they which are of faith, the same are the children of Abraham. And the' Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the heathen through faith, preached before the gospel unto Abraham, saying. In thee shaU aU nations be blessed,' etc. The second step in his argument is to show that the meritorious ground of this blessing is the work of Christ. This he does by showing, first negatively, that it cannot be our own obedience to the law, for, by its principles, we are under con- demnation (vers. 10-12); and then positively, by showing that it is through the Son enduring the curse for us (ver. 13) : ' Christ hath redeemed us from the 108 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. curse of the law, being made a curse for us : for it is wntten, Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree • that the blessing of Abraham/ a free justification, ' might come upon the Gentiles through faith.' And then the third step is, that, as the result of this, we . obtain the Spirit promised by the Father (ver. 14) : ' That we might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith.' It will thus be seen that we have here the w^.rk of the blessed Three set forth in order, in exact accordance with the evangeUcal scheme : God the Father justifying and bestowing the Spirit ; God the Son redeeming us from the curse of the law, and thus opening the way for the effusion of the Spirit; and God the Spirit promised by the Father, and, as the result of Christ's redeeming work, bestowed upon the children of men, and working out their salvation. FoUowing our redemption and justification comes, adoption, and this the apostle connects with the three persons of the Trinity (ch. iv. 4-6) : ' But when the fuhiess of the time was come, God sent forth His Son, made of a woman, made under the law to redeem them that were under the hw, that we might receive the adoption of sons. An.i becnise ye w sons, God hath sent forth the Sidkt ox liis Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father.' Here we have, first, God the Father, as is evident THE EPISIXK TO TAB OALATUNS. 109 from His being so addressed in veren R . a , J- His relation to the Son as seTZg H^foS' We have, secondly, the Son who is senf fojr ^guage implying that He was Jre^" /^ r (John iii, 16; 1 John iv 14^ V^{ ** ^"" ropresented as ' becoming 'huJ^Tl^j T '""' under the law, that He m,„rT, ^'"^ """*" Penalty by endurii J ffii ".Tk ™ '""^ ''^ - into the pHvilegL o^lTl:^"''^^:^ iMbment of the fiUal rektinn ^"""^ the completion of trfilZfr ""'""'^ ■°^°'^«» have, th.W. th £i sllTV "' '^"" ^« the same word, 'sent f«h J "" '^'~ enoe to the Spirit as L^T « '^ "^^ ^'* "^fe^- ;iityoftheor:r;rr^i';^-r- tnune operation-Father, Son, an 'spS^in " -djng, seeding, and enjoying m. adjl " ^ " 11>e conclusion of the whole is .tlT ""■ • So, then, thou art no more! "^ ^'''' ^ ' -d if . son, then an hX f 677' "T " "" = It must be observed that T L . ^'°''^ ^''™'' Codiees, instead^ eSa /""-"^^ ^""^ ^''«-" Christ,' read simply «I ei'''"'*''f ^"''''-ough - also the reading'^o Thf vLf ™"f '"^' '^ versions ■ and it i, ^ ' ^"^ '"^«'' anient ot^erm^eLn-tl^S^L^^^^J-^^ ac.opted, the apostle Will in thLJr^XtS ■PilliiP! 110 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. the whole of what in the separate parts he had ascribed to the thi-ee persons in the Trinity. As Windihchman, quoted by Alfo^'d, says, ' Jth Beov, through God, combines, on behaK of our race, the whole before-mentioned agency of the blessed Trinity. The Father has sent the Son and the spirit, ^,he Son has freed us fxom the law, the bpirit has completed our sonship; and thus the redeemed are heirs through the Triune God Himself, not through tiie law, nor through fleshly descent' THE FIRST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS. The Epistles to the Corinthians are mainly prac- tical. In them the apostle is not engaged in dis- cussing formally any of the fundamental doctrines of Christianity. He is entering into the active life of a local church, correcting its irregularities, and giving directions to its members in regard to several of their most important relations, ecclesiastical and social ; and, under the guidance of divine wisdom, is laying down principles of universal application, for the regulation of the practical working of the Church in all ages. Yet in these, throughout, the apostle exhibits the Son in a manner irreconcilable with His being a mere creature; and, in various THE mST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS. Ill passages, speaks of the Holy Ghost in terms which "apty His personality and divinity, and thus cleaxlv establisnes the doctrine of a Triune God. Sv our plan we notice only those passages in which thi three are mentioned in connection. ) At the beginning of the first epistle, in cons^A quence of objections that had aril among olel members of the church aga^st the aposL h ' defends his preaching both as to its matter and -anner; and it is interesting to observe how in a way that we might consider fortuitous, only Z we believe that there is nothing in the Wag „ —re of the worf of God but what was deTl^ •n order. Thus, at the beginning of the aeconrf (cn. u. 1-5) : And I, brethren, when I came to vn. dcclanng unto you the testimony of God. ^0,1 determined not to know anything among you save J«.s CHHIST, and Him crucified. . . ' Cd I ^e.h and my preaching was not with enticing Zll'^'fr"""'' '^•" '-^ d-onstration of THE SmiT and of power; that your faith might not stand m the wisdom of man but m ti Gfod.' Here we h»v. I ??:! ** P'"^^'' »*■ , -"^'^ ^« have, first, the great subject of the apostles preaching-, the testimony of God;' either \ ■I" ill! 112 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. /the testimony about God, or, as we think more likelj, / the testimony which God has given regarding HiJ I Son (1 John V. 9) ; in other words, the revelation of the plan of salvation through Him. Then, secondly, ^' we have the matter of his preaching—' Christ and ^. Him crucified'— connected with the previous verse by ^ for.' It is God's testimony, because this, and this alone, was the apostle's great theme. And then, thirdly, / we have the agent by which this truth is rendered effectual— the Spirit of God, so that its efficacy was of divine power : ' That your faith might not stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God.' I N'ow, this passage does not assert a Trinity, nor does it assert that each or either of the three persons is God. But it wiU be seen how entirely it accords with the evangelical scheme. Here are the three persons mentioned, and not only so, but referred to in terms which imply at least unrivaUed honour; Christ Himself the central subject, the apostle's whole' philosophy, and His whole gospel; and the Spirit securing His success, so that it is accomplished not by human power, but is actually a divine work. ■^ Having in his previous argument strongly repre- sented the vanity of human wisdom, it might have been objected that the gospel was opposed to science, and even to that wisdom which is so commended in the Old Testament. The apostle obviates this in THE FIEST mSTLE TO THE COEINTHIANS. 113 tte verges foUowing, by showing that the system which he preached was indeed the wisdom of Go^ and so regarded by those who were competent t' appreciate it rver 6V 'W-> , ""P^'^"' •» them fl,«f . • '^^ "^^""^ "mong mem tnat are nerfoof "d^j. -i. • . *=* ^1. , periect. J3ut it is interestinff to to the three persons in the Godhead. Firat the ^^h^r ha. appointed it for bringing us tej:^: sM an His sovereignty kept it long conceafed, while the wise of this world it is stiU unknown (ver r We speak the wisdom of Gon in a mystery, v n the Sel' i! ""' "' '""^ P™" "^ ">'^ --W knew.' Their Ignorance appears in their treatment of the substance of this divine revelation (ver. 8): Tor W they known it, they would not have irucified the I^ED OF GWHV,'_a title which we need not say implies His divinity Then «ff showing rt, • • - ' ' '^^^^^ * quotation showing their ignorance of His gl„,y, be, in the tnitb IS actually revealed to us the Snirif v Ws God in all the profound.t depS" f U^ being, counsel, and operation (ver 10) 'B.t r^ ath revealed them unto us bj His sIt ; "fr'b Spirit searcheth,' or explores, 'aU things, ;ea the deep things of God;' an expression, we n:ed 'ILeJ; / I II 114 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. remark, strongly expressive of His personality, as well as of His supreme divinity. The apostle then goes on to describe the condition of believers, as thus spiritually enlightened; and still again, in the course of his illustration, refers to the sacred Three. He acknowledges the Spirit as the great agent in producing this light, but as pro- ceeding from God, the source of all spiritual gifts (ver. 12) : 'Now we have received, not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit which is of God ; that we may know the things that are freely given us of God.' ^nd thus, in contrast with the natural man, they are capable of judging in spiritual things, and others are incapable of judging them, because they have the mind of Christ, the Jehovah of the Old Testament (ver. 16) : Tor who hath known the mind of the Lord, tliat he may instruct Him ? But we have the mind of Christ.' Could such references to the Three in their mutual relations, and in their respective working for man's salvation, come from any mind except one not only believing in the doctrine of the Trinity, but whose whole religious feelings and exercises were moulded by it? In the third chapter, referring to the divisions among them, under the names of certain teachers, he shows the real position of himself and other THE FIEST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS. US labourera in the Churc4, as buUders in fj,. ., 00. m. leads hi. t'o sJ'7Z '^.^271 «on to the three persons in the Godhead First the only foundation (ver IIV 'Fn. ..u ^' '^^'''* ^« only basis on which the Church stands Iffe showing the great i^sponsibility resting upon fhol who are employed as fellow-workers wVgo^ ^ fl.e erection of this buUding, „n account of its beii^J in^ It as a temple consecrated to God *hrn,ml. ♦., -habitation of the Spirit (ver. 16) K^t ^ at ye are the temple of God, and that the^.:; it the d f 1 "™ '-' P-'^S^ things.' In the sixth chapter there is a strong and beauti- ful appeal on behalf of Christian purity, and a careful examination wiU show this great doctrine underlying the whole of the apostle's argument. In verse 11 he says, 'Ye are washed, ye are sanctified, ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the m FIRST EPISTM TO THE COBINTHIANS. 117 Smii of our God.- For ou. present pu^ose it is not necessa^ to enter into a discussion Tt^ the P^ecse meaning of the terms translated 'wU iLitt '. T 7 T ""'' '^' general meaning i^ admitted to be, that we are freed Loth from guUt and pollution. The point which we have to notic IS, that here agam the three persons in the Trinity are represented as engaged in the production of 2 great change. It is through the m^um of the S 'n But the Father is referred to, not only as He is ^e author of justiiication, but di^ctly L these las words, bpint of mir Qml ■• +>.„♦ ;„ Pori o J i^ ... ' *' '*' our reconciled trod and Father, whose k tha «„;„•* j , TT.-m „ J- ' ^P™*' '"d wlio sends Hun according to His promise. The remaining part of the chapter is devoted to a warning agamst the abuse of the doctrine of Christian liberty, particularly by the perversion of the Cy to impure purposes. We need not g„ over thi apostle, statements in detail, but wiU selec tJe s^ent points of his reasoning, which wiU show t a his appeals are grounded on the relation in which Christians stand, even as to their bodies, to the -nembers of the Godhead respectively. fU „u bodies are for Christ, and for them i weU a's fo our souls He was constituted the Saviour (ver. 13) : 118 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. 'The body is for the Lord, and the Lord for the body.' By His blood they have been redeemed (ver. 20) : * Ye are bought with a price;' and they are now united to Him, as members of His body, and consequently are one in spirit with Him. How inconsistent with such a relation is all uncleanness (vers. 15-17) ! 'Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ? Shall I then take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot ? What ! know ye not that he which is joined to an harlot is one body ? For two, saith He, shall be one IJesh. But he that is joined to the Lord is one spirit.' But, secondly, they are the subjects of the indwelling of the Holy Ghost, whose presence consecrates them as a temple to the Lord ; and with this high and holy relation, such a vice is equally inconsistent (ver. 19): 'Know ye not that .your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost, which is in you ?' And then, thirdly, all this is from and to God the Father. He it is who wiU raise up the body (ver. 14) : ' God hath both raised up the Lord, and win also raise up us by His own power.' He it is that dispenses the Spirit (ver 19), 'which is in you, which ye have of God,' And as He has thus redeemed us by the blood of His Son, and taken possession of us by His Spirit, we are bound to hold ourselves devoted to His glory, with which all THE FIRST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS. 119 sensual indulgence is utterly irreconcilable (vers. 19, 20): 'The Holy Ghost in you, which ye have of God ; and ye are not your own, for ye are bought with a price : therefore glorify God in your bodies,' — and if the concluding clause be genuine, which is doubtful, it is added — ' in your spirits, which are God's.' What an ineffable grandeur is thus given to an appeal against the indulgence of sensual appetites, by the relation in which we are brought in redemp- tion to each of the three persons in the Godhead ; and how exalted is Christianity above every other system of religion, and the evangelical scheme above every pretended form of Christianity, as an agent for secur- ing holiness, by the awful sublimity of its motives, and the overpowering majesty of its appeals ! In the twelfth chapter the apostle discusses the spiritual gifts bestowed on the Church ; but he views them mainly as they are related to the three persons of the Godhead. Whatever variety might be among them, he asserts that, as gifts or graces, they were wrought by the one Spirit ; as ministrations or ser- vices, they were by the authority of the one Lord ; and as to their origin, they were all from the Father (vers. 4-6) : ' Now there are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit. And there are diversities of ad- ministrations, but the same Lord. And there are 120 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. diversities of operations, but it is the same God that worketh all in all' ' Thus we have; says Alford, ' God the Father, the first source of all spiritual influence in all ; God the Son, the ordainer in His Church of all mini- stries, by which this influence may be legitimately brought out for edification ; GoD the Holy Ghost, dweUingand working in the Church, and effectuating in each man such measures of His gifts as He sees fit.' ' Once,' says Wordsworth, ' are these three known thus solemnly to have met at the creation of the world ; onc^e again at the baptism, at the new creating it. And here now, the third time, at the baptism of the Church with the Holy Ghost. Where, as the manner is at all baptisms, each bestows a several gift or largess on the party baptized, that is, on the Church, for whom and for whose good the world itself was created, and the Holy Ghost visibly sent down.' This passage is frequently quoted as proof of the doctrine of the Trinity, and we need not dwell upon it, as it may be regarded as rather aflbrding direct testimony on the subject. But it has not been generally noticed, that in the remainin^ part of the chapter, in which the apostle discusses the whole question of spiritual gifts, he considers them in their relation to each of the three divine persons succes- THE FIRST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS. 1 2 1 sively, in the same order as above stated ; and more- over, that his arguments are simply an illustration and confirmation of the three propositions which he had just laid down. First he shows, in the para- graph from the 7th to the 11th verse, that 'there are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit.' He describes tlie various gifts bestowed upon the mem- bers of the Church (vers. 8-10) : 'To one is given by the Spirit the word of wisdom; to another the word of knowledge by the same Spirit,' etc. And then he adds (ver. 11), 'But aU these worketh that one and the self-same Spirit, dividing to every man severally as He will.' Then, secondly, he treats of their relation to the Son, showing, in the paragraph from the 12th to the 27th verse, that while ' there are diversities of mini- strations, it is the same Lord.' He is the head of the one body, of which aU believers are members (ver 12) : 'For as the body is one, and hath many mem- bers, and aU the members of that body, being many are one body ; so also is Christ.' And then he shows' that as m the natural body each member has its own' office, and that, with all the variety among them as to their uses and their importance, each one is neces- sary, each belongs to the body, and serves its pur- pose for the good of the whole ; so in the Church each member, however humble his position, has his' , 122 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. place in the body of Christ, is necessary to the sym- metry and proper working of the whole, and in his own place serves an important end for the welfare of the body, and thus ministers to Christ its head ; so that, as he says to them (ver. 27), 'they are the body of Christ, and members in particular.' And then, thirdly, he considers their relation to the Father, showing, from the 28 th to the 30 th verse, that ' there are diversities of operations, but it is the same God that worketh all in all.' All is by the sovereign appointment of the Father, who has appointed the^ various offices, through which these gifts are exercised. 'And God hath set some in the Church, first, apostles; secondarily, prophets; thirdly, teachers ; after that miracles,' etc. Thus the whole chapter contains a discussion of the relation of spiritual gifts to each of the three persons in the Trinity in order, as produced by the Spirit, ministered by the Son, and appointed by the Father. THE SECOND EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS. Turning to the second epistle, we notice, at chapter i. 21, 22, a beautiful passage, in which the doctrine • of the Trinity is implied. The subject is the estab- THE SECOND EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS. 123 lishment and confirmation of believers in the faith. In the verse immediately preceding, the apostle had represented Christ as the tnith and substance of the divine promises (ver. 20): 'AH the promises of God in Him are yea, and in Him Amen, unto the glory of God by us.' However numerous, or how- ever glorious, through Him they are rendered ab- solutely certain, and their fulfilment secured. But in the foUowing verses, he ascribes the work in us, by which we are established in the firm con- viction of the truth of God's promises and the assur- ance of our interest in them, to the blessed Three, each performing His appropriate work. ' Now He which stablisheth us with you in Christ, and hath anointed us, is God ; who hath also sealed us, and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts' Here, as usual, all is traced to God the Father as Its source : ' He which stabHsheth us with you is God.' But this is ' in Christ,' in reference to Him in imion with Him, in whom all the divine pro- mises are confirmed (ver. 20). And, lastly, the agent by whom this is effected is the Spirit: 'Who also' hath given to us the earnest of the Spirit.' His work is also described in the phrase ' anointed us,' as we know from other passages (Luke iv. 18 with Isa. Ixi. 1 ; Acts iv. 27, x. 38, etc.). It is by Him also that we are sealed (Eph. i. 13, 14, iv. 30). ^ 124 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. ■ Indeed, the concluding clause, 'hath given us the earnest of the Spirit,' is but exegetical or explana- tory of the sealing ; so that the confirmation of the believer is effected by the power of the whole blessed Three, working in the same order, and in the same relation as in the other parts of our salvation. It is worthy of notice, that in passages of less importance, and teaching no great doctrinal truth, the apostle sometimes introduces the three persons in the Godhead, as if his mind in all its movements was constantly recurring to the idea of a Triune God working in all |ihings. Thus, speaking of the success of his ministry among the Corinthians, he says (ch. iii. 3) : * Ye are manifestly declared to be the epistle of Christ, ministered by us, written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God ;' thus recog- nising Christ as the author of the change in them — a divine work wrought through the instrumentality of the apostle, and by the agency of the Spirit, who is of the Father, here styled the living God. In the following verses the apostle describes his qualifications as a minister of the gospel, but he refers them expressly to the first and second persons of the Godhead, and by implication to the third. Such was his confidence in the divinity and glory of his mission, and his efficiency for the apostle- ship, that he was not ashamed in the presence of THE SECOND EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS. 125 I God, much less before his opposers in Corinth; but this confidence was ' through Christ/ by whom he had been caHed, whom he served, and by whom were dispensed aU the needed qualifications for success (ver. 4): 'Such trust have we through Christ to God-ward/ But aU his sufficiency was derived from God the Father as its source (ver. 5) : ' Not that we are sufficient of ourselves, to think anything as of ourselves ; but our sufficiency is of God,' who, he adds (ver. 6), ' hath made us able ministers of the New Testament ; not of the letter but of the spirit: for the letter kiUeth, but the spirit giveth Hfe.' The primary reference of the word ' spirit ' here seems to be to the New Testament dispensation ; but it is to it as the dispensation of the Spirit, preached by men endowed with the 'Holy Ghost sent down from heaven' (1 Pet. i. 12),~especiaUy as, after the glorification of the Saviour, the Spirit was poured out in copious measure, rendering the gospel triumphantly suc- cessful; so that its ministers, unlike those of the Old Testament, had to do, not so much with the presenting an objective law, but with the working of a divine agent upon the hearts of men. Hence the apostle, in his reasoning onward, passes natu- raUy to the Spirit, as under the New Testament so gloriously diffusing Hfe and light. 126 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. We would not wish to press an argument from the mere fact of the three persons of the Godhead being placed in juxtaposition in any part of the apostle's writings. It must be admitted that pas- sages of this kind do not so distinctly indicate a Trinity, as those in which the three are introduced in the same sentence, or the same paragraph, in relation to one another, or as severally working out man's salvation. But even such a collocation, if we may use the term, of the three names is not without design. Passages of this kind are of interest, and we think hav^ some bearing upon our subject, though not so direct, nor so forcible as others, such as we have been considering. There is a beautiful passage of this kind in the fifth chapter. Speaking of the hopes of believers beyond the present life, and. their groaning under present burdens, with the earnest desire after future glory, he describes our relation to it by a reference to the concern which the three persons in the Godhead had in it. First, the Father has prepared us for it (ver. 5) : ' Now He that hath wrought us for the self-same thing is God.' To Him is to be traced the whole process of renovation, through which we obtain everlasting happiness. Secondly, the Spirit is the present pledge of it: 'Who also hath given unto us the earnest of the Spirit.' And, thirdly, the comple- , THE SECOND EPISTLE TO THE COEINTHIANS. 127 tion Of this happiness is in the enjoyment of the Son Himself (vers. 6, 8) : ' We are always confident knowing that, whHst we are at home in the body we are absent from the Lord : we are confident I say, and wiUing rather to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord.' It may not have' been mtended in this passage to express a relation among the members of the Godhead, as to the future glory of behevers. But it is interesting to observe how, m treating this subject, the apostle refers to the Three individually; and surely the mere coUoca- tion of them in this manner is not without design nor without importance. The whole epistle concludes with what is the most solemn, the most regular, and the most com- plete of all Paul's forms of benediction; and acpord- ingly universaUy selected as the one to be used by the Church in its worship. In this, commonly known as the ApostoHc Benediction, the distinct personahty and divinity of the Three are so clearly assumed, that the passage is commonly and justly quoted as affording direct evidence of the Trinity and therefore we need not dweU upon it. ' The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the LOVE of God, and the communion of the Holy Ghost, be with you all. Amen.' 128 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. THE EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. 'Hi ; On turning to what may be regarded as the greatest, and which is certainly the most systematic of all Paul's epistles, that to the Eomans, we observe in the introduction a passage, which at all events has an important bea,ring on the relation of the three persons in the Godhead (ch. i. 1-4^ ; ' Paul, called to be an apostle, separated unto the gospel of God, concerning His Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, which wp made of the seed of David accord- ing to the flesh, and declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the Spirit of Holiness, by the resurrection from the dead.' Here we have, first, God as the author of the gospel, — plainly the Father, as appears from the relation in which He stands to the Son ; secondly, the subject of it, ' Con- cerning His Son, Jesus Christ;' and then we have what at first sight appears to be, and what is re- garded by a number of interpreters as the third person of the Trinity, spoken of as the ' Spirit of Holiness.' The majority of interpreters, however, at least in modern times, understand this phrase as denoting His divine nature. Their reason for this is its seeming to stand in contrast with the flesh in the previous member of the sentence, both being THE EPISTLE TO THE BOMANS. 129 preceded by the preposition Kari, accorfing to It appear, natural to say that He is of the seed of David according to His human nature, and the Son of God according to His diyine. Were there any mstance :n which the word „.o^, t,,,„„, J Spmt undoubtedly signifies the divine nature, and were tbere simply the two clauses in contras , we should be prepared at once to adopt this into pre- tetion. But m the other passages (1 Tim. iii. H Heb. rx. U; 1 Pet. iii, ig) ^ ,,;,, ^,^ ' ^ supposed to denote Christ's divine nature, the xneaumg is at least questionable. Moreover kok- .ng cksely at the passage, we may observ'e that does not present a simple antithesis of the two clauses. The title, ■ Spirit of holiness,' is connectd with two other phrases, -in power,' and 'by the resurrection from the dead,' with which it must be explained. Now, though the words translated 'with power may mean powerfuUy, yet undoubtedly the prevaUing, if not the universal, use of the term is to express the efficiency of a living agent, and not Z gical force of evidence; and it is especiaUy used ^denote the working of the Holy Ghost'luke XXIV. 49 ; Acts I. 8 ; Mark ix. 1 ; 1 Cor. ii 4 5 etc.) Further, how Christ was declared to be' or' estabhshed a. the Son of God in His divine natu^I ' by His resurrection, is not clear; but when we re- T \ 130 THE EEVELATION OF THE SPIRIT, member the connection of His resurrection (in which term frequently His whole exaltation is implied) with the giving of the Spirit, and the powerful working which foUowed, we are inchned to adopt the interpretation of those who regard the passage .as expressing a - - ' ire between His eartlily or fleshly condition c ^lis present exaltation, and who understand the words as meaning that He was declared or proved to be the Son of God, by the powerful operation of the Spirit of holiness, after and through His resurrection from the dead. This is certainly in accordance with the teachings both of the Old and isfew Testaments regarding the exalta- tion of the Son, and its connection with the out- pouring of the Spirit. Undoubtedly, the extraordi- nary outpouring of the Spirit, in consequence of His resurrection and ascension, is among the highest and most glorious demonstrations that He was truly the Son of God. If this view were accepted, we would have in the passage a recognition of the three persons in the Trinity ; but as the stream of modern interpreters is against us, we do not press it. The body of the epistle, from ch. i. 16 to the end of ch. xi., may be regarded as a systematic treatise on the plan of salvation through the media- tion of Christ, and that in its application to Jews and Gentiles. The theme is in ch. i. 17, 'The 1 ■ 1 ■ ■ : '• ! \ 1 i i 1 ''iu: - — „. ...^ THE EPISTLE TO THE B0MAN8. 131 gospel is the power of God unto salvation „„.. cessivelv n ;>, «'=<'°rf>ngly exhibited suc- s^StL,tndT;ir '"' 'T''^''- '- XX, ttua lor glorification, while a subsirl,- ary d.c„s.on follow, showing the rektio. of Set blessmgs to Jew and GentUe. But we here find 2 doctrine of the Tpfnitv „ * ™® me ii-inity, not so much underlvi.,.. Thus, in the first portion, from ch i 17 «„ nearly the end of ch. iii., we have God the Father ^ s revealed from heaven against all unrighteousness and ungodlmess of men ;' but who has yet sent C S^ as a propitiation, through whose righteou n!^ H justrfies Jew and Gentile, as the equal FatW both Then, m the second section, from ch iii 5,0 Jesus Chri t. who is om^ propitiation ; who bv a work of „gh.eousness beyond any hum n or laid powe, restores the rightful relations of man t!td and through whom eternal life is freelv h,.t^ a upon the child^n of men. And th Jt h hTrd sectron, from the beginning of ch, vi. to thf Ld J ch. vm., we have the work of the Spirit in our dehverance f..m the dominion of sin, and o^r Z 132 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. troduction into a state of gracious service, ending in the complete renovation of our nature, and the full enjoyment of His glory hereafter. In this section the agency of the third person of the Trinity is exhibited, first in its relation to the work of the •second, and then, secondly, in its actual exercise upon the souls of men, so that we ' walk in the Spirit,' ' are led by the Spirit,' ' have the Spirit dwelHng in us,' etc.,~all ending in our final glorification. Let the reader glance over the portion of the epistle thus reviewed, embracing the body of the apostle's doctrinal statements, and endeavour to seize its saHent points, and we think that he cannot but observe the special offices of the three persons of the Godhead for man's salvation, set forth in the order of their subsistence and operation. Let him separate it into three sections according to the arrangement mentioned ; and, on considering them singly, we are mistaken if he wiU not find in each, with many comprehensive statements and far-reach- ing exhibitions of truth, a line of thought connecting the whole with one member of the Godhead in His relation to the others, and in His work for our redemption. It is further interesting to observe how each section rises at its close to exhibit the work of the one to whose honour it is devoted, in strains of elevated grandeur, such as are rarely nding in the fuU i section inity is : of the exercise B Spirit,' slling in 1. of the of the roiir to cannot persons in the -et him to the 5 them n each, '-reach- necting in His or our )bserve )it the ted, in rarely THE EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. I33 equaUed and perhaps not surpassed, even in thp pages of inspiration. Thus thl fi I pTnr?.o • 1. ... *^^ ^^^^ section con- cludes, in ch. ni. 21-31, by exhibiting the FatherTn H. ^ce in providing the propitiation and bei:! mg Hssalvauon upon Jew and Gentile in a ras age winch has always formed one of the most soHd tTnu rr ?"" '' ^^^^^^^^^-' -^ -iU con tinue to be such till the end of time. Probab^v tion of the Sons work for man as at the close of he second section in ch. v. ; while the third secTion cuhninates m ch. viii. by describing the work f the Spmt on the heart till its consummation n g 0! n a passage which, in grandeur of thought powTr' argument, and loftiness of expression, I pe'Z not surpassed even in the writings of ;his a^I Ihus the doctnne of the Trinity-three divine per sons severaUy perfonning their parts in the work mans salvation, in distinctly defined order^ri^te ment in this epistle, justly pronounced by a modem wnter ' he most profound work in existence. But besides this, the Three are brought together Observed that these are what may be regarded as turning points in the course of his reasoning. Thu" 134 TUE SEVKLATION OF THE SPIRIT. at the beginning of the fifth chapter, when he passes to the consideration of our becoming possessors of the blessings of Christ's purchase, he bases our restored relations to God on the work of the Sou. and con- nects the actual enjoyment of present and the hope of future blessings with the working of the Spirit vers. 1-5): 'Therefore, being justified by faithf we have peace with God, through our Lobd Jesus ,'' '■ ^'"^ l^ope maketh not ashamed ; because the love of God is shed abroad in ou-- hearts by the Holy Ghost, which is given unto us.' ' Agam, in the third section, at the conclusion of his argument, tA show that our deliverance from the penalty of sin in our justification is necessary in order to our deliverance from the bondage of cor- ruption, and that our enjoyment of the first neces- sanly secures the latter, when he passes on to describe our condition in consequence, as partakers of the Spirit and under His influence, he again bnngs the Three together, exhibiting their mutual relations m oar salvation (ch. viii. 2-4)- 'The law of the SmiT of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death. For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh God sending His own Son in the Ukeness of sinful flesh, and for sin condemned sin in the flesh • that the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled \ e passes •s of the restored nd con- be hope » Spirit lith, we Jesus lamed ; in our us.' sion of )m the aiy in of cor- neces- on to takers again mtual 3 law ie me it the 1 the 3SS of iesh ; filled THE EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. 135 in us, who walk not after the flesh b«f nft .x. Spirit/ The law or method IfZl'' *^' f- i. Of the Spirit, z^^:,!^:'^- IS effected through the satisfaction which the st has rendered to the law, havin. • f J I .^''^ «ri.g, ^ condemned 'sin in VrhXli^: -as impossible for the law to do-' but aU th originated in the will of the Father who sent ^' plishment of the work ^ *' "'='=•""■ votdto th p:';™ - °^, '•>« <='>^Pt- ia de- pleted Tn r ' ''''™"°" ^i" '''i com- pleted. In the verses immediately foUowiix. th„= just considered ("vera 5 in i, / '°"»wing those e ^1- ^ ^ ^^ '■'■ ""^ shows the certaint-i, of this from the indwelling of the sLT^T carnal mind is death • tmf ti. ^ ' ^^^ •nind is We and « ''"^ ''""'PP"^'*^' «'« spWtual a. lile, and the possession of it necessarilv ^hat « a bod, suited to the completely ren;::^ 136 THii AEVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. soul. But in describing this consummation of the work, he again brings the Three together (ver. 11) : ' If the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead dweU in you, He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by His Spirit that dweUeth in you ;' or, on account of His Spirit that dwelleth in you. The expression, ' He that raised up Jesus from the dead,' is a periphrasis for God. The reason for using such a form of expression is, that the force of his arguments, at least in some measure, depends on the fact staled. In this case the raising of Christ from the dead is the ground and pledge of the resurrection of beUevers. But this is fuHher assured by the working of the Spirit. Because our souls are sanctified by the Spirit, they shall live in happiness and glory; and because our bodies are temples of the Holy Ghost, they shaU also be raised. Thus the completion of the work of salvation in the beHever, by the resurrection of the body, is ascribed to the three persons of the Trinity. It is from the Father, as its origin ; meritoriously secured by the Son ; but further pledged by the working of the Spirit in them, as the completed result of His work, and, if the present reading be retained, actuaUy effected by His agency. In the next paragraph the apostle further argues THE EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. 137 ft the certainty of believers' ultimate salvation from their adoption, as evidenced by the working of the fc»pirit m rendering them holy (ver. 13) : 'If ye live after the flesh, ye shaU die: but if ye thi-ough the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shaU hve. And wliy ? Because this working of the bpirit proved their sonship (vers. 14, 15): Tor as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God. For ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear; but ye have received the Spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father.' But If they are sons, their title to the inheritance 18 secure (vers. 16, 17): 'The Spikit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the chUdren of God: and if children, then heirs; heirs of God and joint-heirs with Christ; if so be that we suffer with Him, hat we may be also glorified together.' ^uch is the course of argument. But it is important to observe that it is here taught that this security IS enjoyed in feUowship with each of the three persons in the Godhead. It is to the Father that we are sons, and from whom we receive the privi- leges of tha. relation; it is by the Spirit that we are formed to the character of sons, and have the evidence in us of sonship; and it is in union with the Son, as 'joint-heirs with Him,' tiiat our inherit- ance is obtained, our ultimate glory being of t.^«. same / 1 ii I 138 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. kind with His, and our title to it secured, as was His, by His mediatorial suiferings, in consequence of which He was constituted ' the heir of aU things ' (Heb. i. 2). ^ It is proper to observe regarding the magnificent doxology in ch. xi. 33-36, with which the apostle concludes his doctrinal discussion, that the last sen- tence is by many exceUent interpreters regarded as referring to the three persons of the Godhead dis- tmctively: 'Of Him,' that is, by the agency of the Holy Ghost,— 'through Him,' by the mediation of the Son;—' and tp Him,' for the glory of the Father, 'are aU things.' We cannot say, however, that this' view approves itself to our mind. The words seem to us to refer rather to the undivided Godhead as the great source, the efficient agent, and the last end of all things. In the practical part of the epistle we notice some passages in which the apostle brings together the three persons of the Godhead, in a manner which shows how the doctrine permeated his spiri- tual experience, and coloured the expression of it. In the fourteenth chapter the apostle urges the duty of forbearance regarding such matters as the distinction of meats and the observance of days, prescribed by the Mosaic law; and in the 17th and 18th verses he argues for it on the ground , as was equence things ' jniiicent apostle ast sen- rded as 5ad dis- ' of the tion of Father, lat this [s seem lead as le last notice )gether aanner spiri- of it. js the as the daj^s, 17th round : THE EPISTLE TO THE RO.U-ANS. 139 that these things were not among the essentials of religion, and that Christianity does not consist m anything external: 'For the kingdom of Gfod is not meat and drink, but righteousness, and peace and joy m the Holy Ghost; for he that in these thmgs serveth Christ is acceptable to God, and approved of men.' The righteousness here men- tioned seems to refer to o,u- justification; and the . vei^e seems based on ch. y. 1-5, where the bless- ■ "f, T^f. ^^ *« "^li''^^'. »d their connection with the Spint, are more fuUy described. But the pom which we are called on to notice is, that the apostle describes our condition of privUege bv its relation to the three persons in the Trinity It i, as AMord remarks, 'in connection with, and under' the indwelling and influence of,' the Holy Spirit our hfe IS a service to Christ, who is thus repre- sented as I^rd of the conscience, and receives the approval of God, to whom aU must give account, and therefore should commend itself to our feUow- men. In the next chapter ig a passage (vera. 5-13) in which a reference to the Trinity is not at first sight apparent, but which, when carefully examined al a whole will, we think, be found to imply the work- ing of a Triune God. At veraes 5-6 the apostle prays for the union and harmony of those whom I iUi l* m 140 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. he addressed, as foUows : ' Tlie God of patience and consolation grant you to be like-minded one toward another, according to Christ Jesus, that ye may with one mind and one mouth glorify God, even THE Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.' In these verses the Father is spoken of as the source of the good sought, and their union is sought as the means of advancing His glory. The Son is also referred to as the medium through whom we receive bless- ings and offer our services. But in the foUowing verses he pleads for this unity in their practice"! speciaUy on the pound of His work in receiving both Jews and Gentiles into feUowship with Him- self (ver. 7) : ' Wherefore receive ye one another, as Christ hath received us, to the glory of God.' In iUustration of this, he shows that Christ had been the agent of the Father in bringing both to Him- self, by fulfilling the promises made to Israel, and liius opening the way for the exercise of His mercy to the Gentiles (vers. 8, 9). Having confirmed this by several quotations from the prophecies (vers. 9-12), he prays that the blessings desired may be fully reaUzed to them by the working of the Holy Spirit (ver. 13) : 'Now the God of hope fill you with aU joy and peace in believing, that ye may abound in hope, through the power of the Holy Ghost.' Thus the union and harmony of the Church is here !nce and i toward ye may )d, even 'n these 3 of the 3 means referred e bless- )Ilowing jractice, Jceiving hHim- ther, as d.' In d been 3 Him- lel, and mercy this by 9-12), 3 fully Spirit 'ith all ibound Jhost.' is here ; ™= EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS. I41 sought, first, as the great means of glorifying the Father; secondly, as a duty to the Son from lati- tude for Hb redeeming love to all classes ^ke- and th.rd^y, as the work of the Holy Spirit,' who' alone produces peace with God, peace in the con- science, and concord among men, and thus fills their hearts with joy and hope. Again at the 1 6th verse of the same chapter it is to the Gentiles, ministering the gospel of God, that the offering up of the Gentiles might be acceptable being sanctified by the Holv G„ost.> In preLiing the gospel to the Gentiles, he was the ministrant of Christ presenting as a priest, not holocausts of ani- ma s b„t ,ations_not as a propitiation for sin, but the Old Testament sacrifices were by water, but rendered holy by the energy of the third person of the Trinity on their hearts. If we understand the passage as referring to Christ in His priestly office It wiU present Him as the medium of access to the' r n '.." 7^ P'''""' '^' ^^'^'' ^ representing tbe Godhead, to whom the Gentiles were an offer ing, and the Holy Ghost a. the agent by whom they were purified, and rendered meet to be pre- sented before the heart-searching God If the allu- sion be to Christ in His kingly office, referring to I I li 142 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. I His superhuman power, and describing Paul as His deputy or agent, the meaning of the verse will be slightly different, but the reference to the divine Three will be no less distinct. The original language of the verse ^ inclines us to the first view. The following verses, however, in which the apostle speaks of the successful manner in which he had fulfilled his ministry, and in which he attributes all his success to the power of Christ, certainly refer to Him in His exaltation to the throne of mediatorial power. And it will be ob- served how again in this passage he describes his work by a reference to the three persons in the Trinity (ver. 17): 'I have therefore whereof I may glory through Jesus Christ in those things which pertain to God.' His ministry had reference to God the Father, having for its object the restoration of the real worship, and service of God in the hearts of men. But all was ' through Jesus Christ,' by the exercise of His power, so that in Him alone he had confidence and ground of boasting as to the accom- plishment of his work (ver. 18):' For I wiU not dare to speak of any of those things which Christ hath not wrought by me.' He was only an instru- ment; the real power was in the Eedeemer. But His working was by the agency of the Holy Spirit ^ }i.$iTeupyot 'inffou Xpifrov tig rx (hfj, hpeupyotivTet, etc. M THE EPISTLE TO THE EOJL^NS. 143 (vers. 18, 19): 'To make the Gentiles obedient, by word and deed, through mighty signs and wonders, by the power of the Spirit of God.' It was in this way that Christ rendered the apostle's labours suc- cessful, partly through the instrumentality of miracles, but chiefly by the production of a new spiritual life in them, both, however, by the operation of the Holy Ghost. The exercise of such power by Christ, both in the external world and the hearts of men, clearly proves Him divine; and the whole passage repre- sents the three persons of the Trinity in their respective offices, in bringing men to the enjoj^ment of salvation. Taking these verses with those imme- diately preceding, wliich we have just considered, the passage exhibits God the Father, in reference to whose glory the apostle laboured, and to whom con- verted souls were presented as an offering ; God the Son, tlirough whom, as King and Head of universal power, his labours were successful, and the Priest, in virtue of whose merits they were acceptable in the sight of the Most High ; and God the Holy Ghost, the great agent in producing a change of heart, anu thus rendering even polluted Gentiles a sacrifice well- pleasing unto God. Again, at ver. 30 of the same chapter, the apostle says: 'Now I beseech you, brethren, for the Lord Jesus Christ's sake, and for the love of 144 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. the Spirit, that ye strive together with me in your prayers to God for me.' Here the three persons are as distinctly recognised as in the apostolic benedic- tion, in both passages the name of God being used to designate the Father, while the divinity of the Son and Spirit is implied in their sacred association with God, and in the use of an expression having the solemnity of an adjuration. ! .^jM." CHAPTER III. THE LATER EPISTLES OF PAUL. THE EPISTLE TO THE PHILIPPIANS. TN now proceeding to consider the writings of the -■- apostle during his first imprisonment, we may remark that the Epistle to the PhiKppians contains no systematic exhibition of doctrine, and no orderly exposition of duty. It bears the character of a famUiar and friendly letter to a church with which the apostle's relations had always been of a gratify, ing nature ; whose freedom from doctrinal error and from practical irregularity called for no censure ; and whose faithfulness to the Saviour, and whose kind- ness to himself, drew forth his warmest commenda- tions. Hence, while the epistle, both as to matter and style, is deeply interesting and instructive, it presents little that bears upon our present object. The only passage we notice which may be con- sidered as presenting the divine Three in their re- spective relations to our salvation, is ch. iii. 3 : K 146 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. * We are the circumcision, who worship God in * (or by) * the Spirit, and rejoice in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh/ This verse, if the reading of the received text be maintained, presents lis with God the Father as the object of worship, the Spirit as the agent under whose influence we offer our services, and the Son in whom, and not in anything outward, we have confidence in our ap- I)roaches. The reading, however, is disputed ; some critics rejecting the word ' God ' altogether ; others reading it, * of God,' in the genitive, connected with the Spirit, and rendering the passage, ' In the Spirit of God serve,' etc. But as the word translated serve, in the New Testament at least, always denotes re- ligious service, the meaning is substantially the same, whatever reading we adopt. the epistle to the colossians. The Epistles to the Ephesians and the Colossians are intimately connected. To a large extent they discuss the same great truths, and often show a remarkable correspondence in words and expressions. They differ, however, in method, and in some re- spects in their object. That to the Colossians is polemic, and deals with certain Oriental forms of D in * (or 3US, and B, if the presents worship, .ence we d not in our ap- d; some •; others bed with he Spirit ed serve, lotes re- ally the olossians ent they show a )ressions. 5ome re- 3sians is forms of THE EPISTLE TO THE COLOSSIANS. J 47 theosophy, which degraded the Son of God to the rank of an archangel, or other superhuman creature. That to the Ephesians is devotional and exposi- tory, and, without reference to particular heretical opinions, it treats in the loftiest strains of the grandest themes of the Christian faith. The Epistle to the Colossians heing speciaUy directed against serious errors regarding the person of the Son, brings Him prominently before us in the divinity of His person. In this way it contributes largely to support the doctrine of the Trinity; but, for the same reason, it does not so fuUy exhibit the other persons in the Godhead. StiU we do find all three brought together and recognised in their essential and ecohomical relations. Thus, in the first chapter (vers. 3-8), we find them combined in the thanksgiving with which the apostle introduces his epistle ; and it is worthy of note that here the three graces— faith, hope, and love— are, as in other passages, associated with the three persons in the Godhead. < We give thanks to God and ' (or even) ' THE Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, praying always, since we heard oijom faith in Christ Jesus, and of the love which ye have to aU the saints for the hope which is laid up for you, whereof ye heard before in the word of the truth of the gospel. As ye also learned of Epaphras, who also declared 148 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. your love in the Spirit.' Here, while the a-jostle prays to the Fatlier, and in thanksgiving acknow- ledges Him as the great source of spiritual blessings, he recognises these as enjoyed through faith in His Son, as He is exhibited in the gospel; and then describes their new character as produced by, or rather in, the Spirit, — the words expressing a new state under His influence, in contrast with the un- spiritual condition of those (eV (rapKu) in the flosh. Immediately following this recognition of their state, as under the power of the Spirit, he bursts forth into fervent prayer for their confirmation and progress in the Chkstian life (vers. 9-1 1) : ' For this cause we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you, and to desire that ye might be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding,' etc. All the best interpreters agree that the word translated ' spiritual ' ^ in the New Testament, generally bears the sense of being produced by the Spirit. Indeed Alford goes the length of saying, that ' in the New Testament it always implies the working of the Holy Spirit, never bearing the modern inaccurate sense of spiritual as opposed to bodily;' while Eadie and Ellicott merely speak of this as ' the pre- vailing usage.' Undoubtedly here it expresses the THE EPISTLE TO THE COLOSSUNS. 149 agency of the Holy Ghost, so that in this passage He 13 represented as the author of the present and prospective Christian attainments of those addressed. The purpose and design of His working is expressed in the foUowing verses: 'That ye might walk worthy of the Lord ' (viz. Christ) ' unto all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work, and increasing in the knowledge of God' (the mention of Father and Son here successively is worthy of note) ; ' strength- ened with all might, according to His glorious power' (in Eph. iii. 16 the equivalent expression is, ' strengthened with might hy tlie Spirit '), ' unto all patience and long-suffering with joyfulness.' We have abeady seen that the terms power, and power of God, are used to express the work of tlie Spirit, and undoubtedly His agency is referred to here. But this leads to the acknowledging of the Father as the great original source of these blessings (vers. 12, 13): 'Giving thanks unto the Father' (the words express the exercise of the Colossians), ' which hath made us meet for the inheritance of the saints in light : who hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of His dear Son.' And then he passes on to what is here his special theme— the person and work of the Son (vers. 14-22): 'In whom we have redemption through W 160 THE KEVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. 1 1 J His blood, the forgiveness of sins : who is the image of the invisible God, the first-bom of every creature : for by Him were all things created that are in heaven, and that are in earth, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers; all things were created by Him, and for Him ; and He is before all things, and, by Him all things consist For it pleased the Father, that in Him should all fulness dwell: and, having made peace through the blood of the cross, by Him to reconcile all things to Himself; by Him, I say, whether they be things in earth, or things in heaven. And you, that were sometime alienated, and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath He reconciled in the body of His flesh through death, to present you holy, and unblameable, and unre- proveable in His sight.' This passage contains one of the most exhaustive assertions of our Lord's divinity to be found in all Paul's writings. Indeed, in this respect, only two or three passages in the New Testament can com- pare with it. But we only notice it in the connec- tion in which it stands in its bearing upon our subject. The last clause brought in as the end and result — ' To present you holy, and unblameable, and unreproveable in His sight ' — expresses, as we know from other passages, properly the work of the Spirit, THE EPISTLE TO THE EPIIESIANS. 151 which is the consequence of our reconciliation to God through the death of the Son. But, independ- ent of this, looking at the whole connection, it will be seen that the apostle here recognises the three divine persons in their distinctive yet concurrent working in tlie salvation of men; that while the person and work of the Son are specially prominent, — while, indeed. His divinity and redemption are the main theme of the paragiaph, — yet, looking to the immediately preceding context (vers. 9-11), they are exhibited in connection with the other two — the Spirit as the agent working in, and the Father as the great source of, all spiritual good. THE EPISTLE TO THE EPHESIANS. The Epistle to the Ephesians exhibits, perhaps, more remarkably than any of the apostle's other writings, this doctrine as underlying its whole struc- ture. We can do little more than notice the prin- cipal passages in which this is the case, and we are mistaken if they will not be found more numerous than has been generally observed. After the usual salutation at the commencement, he breaks out into an animated expression of praise to God for the blessings of salvation enjoyed by 152 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. himself and his fellow-Christians (ch. i. 3-14). This whole passage forn/ s one long sentence, and, keeping in view what has been already said regarding the length to which the apostle sometimes draws out his sentences, we have only to separate it into its component parts, to see that the whole of its preg- nant utterances cluster round the adorable Three. The third verse is general : ' Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all SPIRITUAL blessings in heavenly places in Christ.' Keeping in view the remarks recently made regarding the word translated 'spiritual' in the New Testament, as' implying the working of the Spirit of God, ' spiritual blessings,' here mentioned, will mean blessings of the Spirit, or blessings pro- duced by Him. And then we have the Three in- cluded in the apostle's ascriptions of praise,— God the Father bestowing the Spirit, God the Son as the medium tlirough which He is bestowed, and God the Spirit as the actual author of these blessings. But in the following verses, as Alford beauti- fuUy remarks, ' the threefold cord, so to speak, is unwrapped, and the part of each divine person separately described.' First, the Father is repre- sented as having chosen us to holiness, predesti- nated us to sonship, and accepted or bestowed grace upon us (vers. 4, 5) : ^According as He hath chosen THE EPISTLE TO THE EPHESIANS. 153 US in Him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before Him in love : having predestinated us unto the adoption of chUdren by Jesus Christ to Himself, according to the good pleasure of His wiU.' It is added, as the final end or purpose of the whole, ' to the praise of the glory of Eis grace, wherein He hath made us accepted in the Beloved ' (ver. 6). In thus describing the work of the Father, he notices that it is effected through the Son (vers. 5, 6); but he now proceeds, in the -econd place, more' particularly to describe the work of the latter. Accordingly, in vers. 7-11, he represents Him as redeeming us by His blood, reveaHng God's will, gathering aU God's holy creatures under one head,' and providing for His redeemed an inheritance of glory : ' In whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace. . . . Having made known unto us the mystery of His wiU, according to His good pleasure, which He purposed in Himself: that, in the dis- pensation of the fulness of times, He might gather together in one aU things in Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are on earth, even in Him : in whom also we have obtained an inherit- ance,' etc. And then, as before, the ultimate result and final end is described (ver. 12): 'That we should 154 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. be to the prawe of Hw glory, who first trusted in Christ.' And, thirdly, comes the crown of this grace, in the working of the Spirit, through the word, upon our hearts, purifying our souls, and thus assuring us of the fulfilment of our hopes (vers. 13, 14) : 'In whom ye also trusted, after that ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation : in whom also, after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise' (literally the Spirit of pro- mise, the Holy One), ' which is the earnest of our inheritance, until the redemption of the purchased possession.' But afe in its origin and progress, so in this the final issue of the glorious scheme, as in all present blessings, so in all future good, even to this its final consummation, — the last and highest end is described as before, ' unto the praise of His GLORY.' We have only thus to analyze the passage, and arrange its pai.^s in order, to observe that in this, perhaps the most sublime of the apostle's thanks- givings {tchilUm, or praise songs, as David would call them), he not only devoutly recognises God as the great primal source of our salvation, but finds in the specific work of each of the three persons of the Trinity matter of special acknowledgment and heartfelt thanksgiving, showing how the operation THE EPISTLE TO THE EPHESIAN8. 155 of the members of the Godhead respectively in our salvation enters into the devotion of God's children, laying its foundation, and forming its very marrow. It is beautiful and important to observe, further, how the apostle, at the close of his account of, the work of each, brings in, as the refrain of some celestial melody, 'to the praise of His glory/ expressive of the grand end and glorious issue of the whole ; that the gracious working of the blessed Three, in their separate functions in the work of our salvation, might exhibit the glory of the undivided Godhead' and thus afford, through eternity to all God's intelli- gent creatures, matter of highest wonder and most exalted praise. After praise, as Eadie remarks, comes prayer. Immediately following the apostle's thanksgiving for the blessings enjoyed by all believers, he gives his prayer for the Ephesians, that they might enjoy the Spirit in increasing measure and advancing forms of manifestation (vers. 15-17): 'Wherefore I also, after I heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, cease not to give thanks for you, making mention of you in my prayers; that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give unto you the Spirit of wisdom and reve- lation in the knowledge of Him.' In this prayer the three divine persons are again recognised. We '': II lii 156 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. have, first, God the Father, as the object to whom it is addressed. Secondly, we have described His relation to the Son, not only personally, but officially, sending Him as the Saviour, revealing Himself in Him, and bestowing His blessings through Him: ' The God of our Lord Jesu3 Christ, the Father of glory.' And then, thirdly, we have the matter of prayer expressed generaUy: 'That He would give unto you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation.' We take the word ' Spirit ' here, with all the most evan- gelical interpreters, to denote the Holy Spirit. They had already enjoyed Him as an earnest and seal. But much yet remained to be known of God and of the Saviour, and much to be felt of the Spirit's gracious power; and the apostle therefore prays that He might be given to them in other forms and in fuller measure, making known to them the things of God — revealing their excellence and glory — that thus they might appreciate the blessedness and grandeur of their hopes, and the wondrous dis- play of omnipotence in their regeneration, of which we have a glorious prototype in the resurrection and exaltation of the Son, the head and representa- tive of His Church (vers. 18-23). Having thus looked at the subject, if we may so speak, from the Godward side, the apostle pro- ceeds, in the second chapter, to consider it from the THE EPISTLE TO THE EPHESIANS. 157 human. Having described the blessings of salva- tion as originating with the all-glorious Three in eternity, he next proceeds to trace the same bless- ings as they are enjoyed by men, both Jews and Gentiles, in time. Accordingly, in this chapter, he describes the former condition of both classes as dead in trespasses and sins, and the present state of Christians of both classes as now made alive, and united to form one glorious spiritual temple. But in tracing this change, he, in the same exact order, brings out the operation of the three persons in the Godhead successively. First, all is traced to the love of the Father, as its original source (vers. 4- 10) : ' God, who is rich in mercy, for His great love wherewith He loved us, . . . hath quickened us together with Christ ; (by grace ye are saved ;) and hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus ; that in the ages to come He might show the exceeding riches of His grace, in His kindness toward us through Christ Jesus. For by grace are ye saved through faith ; and that not of yourselves : it is the gift of God. ... For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them.' In this paragraph he had referred incidentally to the Son, as the medium through whom the Father 158 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. M. bestows His blessings ; but he now proceeds, in the second place, to show more fully and particularly, how the change in the condition of those addressed was effected, viz. by the atonement of the Lord Jesus Christ, described as * His blood,' * His flesh,' ' His cross,' by which the ceremonial law of Moses had been abolished, and the middle wall of partition broken down (vers. 13-17) : 'Now, in Christ Jesus, ye who sometimes were far off are made nigh by the blood of Christ. For He is our peace . . . ; having abolished in His flesh the enmity . . . ; for to make in Himself of twain one new man, so making peace ; and that He might reconcile both unto God in one body by the cross,' etc. And then, in the concluding part of the chapter, from ver. 18 to the end, he shows, in the third place, that while the change is to be traced to God the Father in its origin, and to God the Son as the medium through whose vicarious sacrifice it has been secured, yet it is effected by the actual working of the Spirit. This passage, however, calls for more particular consideration, as it not only brings out prominently the agency of the Holy Spirit, but describes the new relation of the regenerate both to God and to one another, and in each case by a reference to each of the three persons of the Trinity. As to God, the THE EPISTLE TO THE EPHESIANS. 169 apostle says (ver. 18): 'Through Him' (:ie. Christ) 'we both have access by one Spirit unto the Father/ Here the triune relation is again brought out. We have, or properly we are having, free approach or introduction before God, whom we worship as the Father without servile terror, through the Son, who, as stated in the verses immediately preceding, has reconcUed us to God by His vicarious sufferings, and by the Spirit, who fills our hearts, and lifts them up to God. Then, in relation to one another, he describes Gentiles as with the Jews, by the Spirit dweUing in them, formed into one spiritual temple (vers. 19-22): 'Kow therefore ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but feUow-citizens with the saints, and of the household of God' (plainly the Father) ; ' and are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ being the chief corner stone' (this temple, though stiU imperfect, is rising to com- pletion) ; ' in whom all the buHding, fitly framed to- gether, groweth' (describing a process stiU going on) ' unto an holy t-3mple in the Lord : in whom ye also are builded' (or are being builded) ' together for an habitation of God through the Spirit.' As Alford exceUently gives the sense of this passage, 'It is even now, in the state of imperfection, by the Spirit dweUing in the hearts of believers, that God has 160 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. His habitation in the Church ; and then, when the growth and increase of that Church shall be com- pleted, it will be still in and by the Holy Spirit, fuUy penetrating and possessing the whole glorified Church, that the Father will dwell in it for ever. Thus we have the true temple of the Father, built in the Son, inhabited in the Spirit, the offices of the three blessed persons being distinctly pointed out: God the Father, in all His fulness, dwells in, fills the Church; that Church is constituted an Holy Temple to Him, in the Son; is inhabited by Him in the ever-present indwelling of the Holy Spirit.' In accordance with this view of the relation of believers to one another, and unitedly to the three persons in the Godhead, the apostle, at the 6 th verse of the following chapter, describes the Gentiles as ' fellow-heirs, and of the same body, and fellow-par- takers of the promise.'^ In this description of our privileges, the allusion to the three persons of the Trinity is unmistakeable. We are fellow-heirs of the Father, of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named (vers. 14, 15) ; of the same body with the Son (ch. ii. 14, 15 ; 1 Cor. xii. 12); and fellow-partakers of the -ifts of the Spirit, the great promise of the New Testament (Joel ii. 28 ; Acts i. 4; Gal. iii. 2-14). .:f^" ^0^' THE EPJSTLE TO THE EPHE8IANS. 161 This bringing in of the GentUes to the possession of the same privileges with the Jews, was a mystery — something hitherto concealed ; but it was now to be publicly proclaimed, and the apostle was selected by God as an instrument for that purpose. And it is worthy of notice, that in describing his office, as receiving the revelation of this truth to communicate it to others, he refers to the three persons of the Godhead, as if, while writing this epistle, his mind was so occupied with the glories of the Trinity, that whatever subject he touched, he must look at it in its relation to each of the blessed three (ch. iii. 2-6) : ' The dispensation of the grace of God which is given to me to you-ward : how that by revelation He made known unto me the mystery ; as I wrote afore in few words ; whereby, when ye read, ye may understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ, which in other ages was not made known unto the sons of men, as it is now revealed unto His holy apostles and prophets by the Spirit.' His apostle- ship was a stewardship, graciously committed to him by God, to make known the truth of the union of Jews and Gentiles, in the enjoyment of equal privi- leges,— a mystery or secret of Christ ; either of Him as the subject, or Himself the great mystery (Col. i. 27), — and revealed by the Spirit. The chapter, and the doctrinal part of the epistle. 162 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. conclude with a prayer and a doxology, each of which is based upon the doctrine we are now con- sideriitg (yam. 14-21): 'For this cause I bow my ^6 untci the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ' (a title expressive of the Father, covenant relation to beHevers), 'of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named' fin ^vhom the true relation of Father exists essentially, so that as He is the true Father of the eternal Son, He is also the true Father of all who are caUed cMldren— ch. iv. 5, 6), ' that He would grant you, according to the riches of His glory, to be strengthened with might by His Spirit' (the great agent (in all spiritual changes) ' in the inner man ; that' (or, so that, expressive of results) ' Christ may dweU in your hearts by faith' (as the source of our strength, and in whom we have our spiritual life) ; 'that ye, being rooted and grounded in love, may be able to comprehend with aU saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height.' The sentence is incomplete. The apostle seems to have had in view the great mystery of salvation in general ; but, as he contemplates it, his mind becomes fiUed with the idea of the love of Christ, to whicli it is owing that he does not finish the sentence he had begun, but exclaims, ' And to know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that ye might hejilled with all the fulness of God;' or, as THE EPISTLE TO THE EPHESIAUa 163 it is in the original, ' wnio aU the fulness of God ' marking the standard or ultimate point to be reached This IS perhaps the sublimest of the apostle's recorded prayers ; but its grandeur arises, in good part at least, from the recognition of Trinity in umty. The working of each of the blessed three is sought ; and in thus partaking of each in his special manifestation to the children of God, we readi to the onjoyment of the plenitude of the divine per- fections, and realize in our experience the whole communicable fulness of the Godhead. 'Paul's prayer,' says Dr. Hodge, 'had apparently reached a height, beyond which neither faith nor hope nor even imagination could go, and yet he is not satisfied. Al^ immensity still lay beyond. God was able to do not only what he had asked, but infinitely more than he knew either to ask or think Having exhausted aU the forms of prayer, he cast himself on the infinitude of God, in fuU confidence that He can and wiU do aU that omnipotence itself can effect. This idea he weaves into a doxology, which has in it more of heaven than of earth.' But this, again, is based upon the working of the three divine persons in our salvation, though the third 3 not expressly named (vers. 20, 21) : 'Now unto Him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think' (plainly the Father), 164 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. 'according to the power that worketh in us' (viz. the Spirit, as he had just said in ver. 16), 'unto Him be glory in the Church by Christ Jesus' (that is, in union and fellowship with Him), * throughout all ages, world without end. Amen ;' — an accumula- tion of expressions in accordance with the unutter- able aspirations to which his mind had now risen. * The Trinity,' says Eadie, * is here again brought out to view. The power within us is that of the Spirit, and glory in Christ is presented to the Father, who answers prayer through the Son and by the Spirit ; and therefore to the Father, in the Son and by the Spirit, is offered this glorious minstrelsy, as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.' ' To Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, The God whom heaven's triumphant host, And saints on earth adore, Be glory as in ages past. As now it is, and so shall last. When time shall be no more.' Such is a review of the doctrinal part of this epistle; and it must be evident to every candid inquirer, that the doctrine of the Trinity is inter- woven with its whole structure. The fourth chapter commences the practical part ; and though in this we would scarcely expect to meet with the doctrine of the Trinity, yet, on close examination, we will, if THE EPISTLE TO THE EPHESIANS. 165 18* (viz. ), * unto is' (that oughout cumula- iinutter- iw risen, brought i of the I Father, by the Son and Isy, as it hall be, ; of this ' candid is inter- L chapter in this doctrine e will, if we mistake not, find the allusions to the Trinity as distinct as in the doctrinal and devotional portions. Following up the idea of the unity of believers, the apostle, in the beginning of the chapter, exhorts those whom he addressed to corresponding conduct to maintain and to cultivate unity by the manifesta- tion of those Christian virtues which are productive of peace : ' Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.' And then he states its nature and grounds in the following terms (vers. 4-6) : ' There is one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your calling ; one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, ^ who is above all, and through all, and in you all.' Here are seven points in which the unity of the Church consists ; but it will be found, on close ex- amination, that they cluster round the three adorable names ; and that, commencing with the work of the Spirit upon believers, the apostle rises upward to describe their relation to the Son, and finally to the Father as supreme. There is one Spikit which animates the one body (1 Cor. xii. 13), by whom we are called, and through whom we thus become partakers of the hope of the inheritance ; one Lord, the one divine object, on whom our faith rests, and to the profession of whose name we were baptized (Gal. iii. 27) ; and one God and Father of all. 166 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. Dr. Hodge on this passage well remarks : * There are many passages to which the doctrine of the Trinity gives a sacred rhythm, though the doctrine itself is not directly asserted. It is so here. There is one Spirit, one Lord, one God, one Father. The unity of the Church is founded on this doctrine. It is one, because there is to us one God the Father, one Lord, one Spirit. It is a truly mystical union, not a mere union of opinion, of interest, or of feel- ing, but something supernatural arising from a com- mon principle of life. This life is not the national life, which belongs to us as creatures, nor intellec- tual which belong^ to us as rational beings, but it is spiritual, called elsewhere the life of God in the soul. And as this life is common, on the one hand, to Christ and all His members, and, on the other, to Christ and God, this union of the Church is not only with Christ, but with the Triune God.' Alford, EUicott, Olshausen, and other modern interpreters, following some of the fathers, regard the last clause of ver. 6 as referring to the three persons of the Trinity successively. They regard the words * over all' as describing the Father in His sovereignty; 'through all,' as Alford expresses it, * in the co-extensiveness of redemption by Him, with the whole nature of man,' as in ver. 1 ; and ' in all,' referring to the Spirit, as indwelling in all THE EPISTLE TO THE EPHESIANS. 167 beUevers (ch. ii. 21). But, as Eadie weU remarks, while 'in various parts of the epistle triune relation has been distinctly brought out, here the represen- tation is different; for unity is the idea dwelt on, and it is the one God and Father Himself, who works through all, and dwells in all.' These two views we do not deem irreconcilable, but rather think that both must be combined in order to get the full meaning of the apostle. God the Father is supreme, and the primal source of all divine working, so that, while He is over all, that is, all believers. He is through them all, but by the working of the Son, ' by whom aU things consist,' and in all, viz. by the indwelling of the Spirit (see ch. ii. 21, 22). As the apostle goes on to press upon those whom he addressed, the avoidance of those vices to which they had been addicted in their heathen state, and the cultivation of the opposite Christian virtues, it is interesting to observe how he draws his motr.^es from the part assigned to each of the blessed three in our salvation (ver. 30): 'And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption.' These words primarily refer to the warnings of the previous verses, and present a strong appeal against the practices there condemned. But as, according to the apostle's mode of writing, the conclusion of one paragraph forms 168 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIEIT. the Starting-point of the next, the appeal here against grieving the Spirit is by most interpreters referred forward to the exhortation of the follow- ing verse. Grief arises from a loving heart being wounded, and the ascription of this feeling to the Spirit strongly expresses the love manifested in His operations upon our hearts ; but this naturally leads the apostle to warn his readers against aU malevolent feelings and dispositions, as opposed to the loving Spirit of holiness (ver. 31) : 'Let all bitterness, and ':'Tath, and anger, and clamour, and evil-speaking, be put away from you, with all malice.' But he goes on to urge upon them the opposite virtues, and he does so on the consideration of the grace of God the Father, in freely forgiving all our sins through Christ (ch. iv. 32; v. 1): 'And be ye kind one to another, tender-hearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you. Be ye therefore followers of God' (or imitators of God, viz. by forgiving one another), ' as dear children.' And t^en, to the same effect, he mges them to a life of love, by the example of the love of the Son, who ' gave His life a ransom for many' (ver. 2) : ' And walk in ]ove, as Christ also hath loved us, and hath given Himself for us an offering and ^ sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour.' Here, then, the exhortation to avoid all malevolent THE EPISTLE TO THE EPHESUNS. 169 dispositions and to cultivate the opposite virtues, both in heart and Hfe, is urged upon us by a refer- ence to each of the three persons in the Godhead, but a reference founded on the love of each, mani- fested in His special part in the work of our salva- tion. The 'good Spirit' wiU be giieved by every- thing opposed to His own benevolent nature; the Father has shown the riches of His grace in for- giving our trespasses ; and the Son has manifested love greater than that of any man, in that He laid down His Hfe for the salvation, not of His friends, but of His foes.^ In the verses immediately foUowing, he solemnly warns his readers against two vices, especiaUy cha- racteristic of heathenism, uncleanness in its various forms, and covetousness ; and if the reading of the re- ceived text be correct, he draws his motive from the three persons in the Godhead successively (vers. 6-8): 'Let no man deceive you with mn words' (finding pkusible pretexts for these vices): 'for because of these things com^fh the wrath of God upon the children of disobedience. Be not ye therefore par- takers with them. For ye were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord : walk as children of the light.' And having thus spoken of the Father iThis is one of those passages in which an unfortunate division of chapters tends to obscure the meaning. 1:1 I' 1^ I; ^ If '' 170 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. and the Son, the apostle adds parenthetically, as if he would not omit at the same time some reference to the third person of the Godhead (ver. 9) : ' For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness, and right- eousness, and truth ;' and concludes the paragraph by adding, ' proving what is acceptable to the Lord.' If the reading of the received text be approved, this passage will present an appeal against the vices just mentioned, on three grounds : first, that it is for such sins that the wrath of God the Father is poured out upon the ungodly ; secondly, that they are incon- sistent with the believer's relation to the Son as in fellowship with Him, and should be avoided from a desire to meet His approval ; and, thirdly, that they are contrary to the very nature of the work of the Spirit. In this view, we would have the three persons of the Godhead again recognised. It is proper to observe, however, that the majority of edi- tors substitute &)to9 (light) for rov irvevfiaro'i (the Spirit), and read, ' the fruit of light,' on the authority of the Vulgate, and what are considered the best MSS. We do not consider the grounds sufncient, as the Syriac, the majority of mss., and two of the best Greek commentators, Chrysostom and Theodoret, adopt the reading of the text ; but as the majority of critics take a difierent view, we do not press this passage. Again, at vers. 18-20 of the same chapter, in THE EPISTLE TO THE EPHESIANS. 171 exhibiting the great duty of praising God for His mercies, the apostle says: 'Be filled with the Spirit • speaking to yourselves in psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord' (in the paraLel passage in Colos- sians it is 'to God'); 'giving thanks always unto God and tho Father' (or even the Father) 'in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.' The duty is here said to be performed under the influence of the Spirit, to God as the great object, and through the mediation of the Son, through whom we have the right to come, and through whom we are accepted. We have aheady noticed that we sometimes find the three persons of the Godhead mentioned in suc- cession in passages' which may not be considered as exhibiting them in relation to one another, either personally, or in the work of man's salvation, but which are worthy of notice as having some bearing on the subject. A passage of this kind will be found in the sixth chapter. In exhorting his readers in reference to the Christian conflicf^^ he says (vers. 10, 11) : 'Be strong in the Lord, and in the power of His might. Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wHes of the devil.' And then, after describing their enemies, and enumerating the various parts of the Christian armour, I ^dds (ver. 18): 'Praying always with 172 THE EEVELATION OF THE SPIBIT. all prayer and supplication in the Spirit.' Thus, in order to their maintaining successfully the Christian conflict, the apostle directs them to the assistance of each of the three persons of the Trinity in suc- cession. Even if the last passage be omitted, said we not rightly that this epistle is remarkable for the manner in which this doctrine is interwoven with its whole structure ? CHAPTEE IV. LATEST EPISTLES OF PAUL. THE PASTORAL EPISTLES. rpHE pastoral epistles are generaUy occupied with A the consideration of matters connected with the order and discipHne of the Church, and it is only incidentaUy that they treat of Christian doctrine. But one passage in the Epistle to Titus is worthy of special attention, as bearing on our present oubject. At ch. iii. 4-6 we have a comprehensive exhi- bition of the whole plan of salvation, and that m relation to the three persons in the Godhead; 'After that the kindness and love of God our Saviour toward man (iXapOpay7ria) appeared, not by works of righteousness wliich we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and the renewing of th€ Holy Ghost; which He shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour.' Here we have the same view . as in other passages of salvation, as originating in 174 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIEIT. the Leniftnity and love towards men of the Father, who pours out His Spirit, the actual agent in re- newing the heart, and whoso influences have been secured through the merits of God's Son. ' All the spiritual blessings of tlie new birth and of the new life are therein represented as flowing down to us from and out of the one fountain and well-spring of the love of God the Father ; and are all derived to us through God the Son, God and man, who is the sole channel of all grace to men; and are applied to us personally by the agency of God the Holy Ghost.' I THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS. There only remains to be considered of the writ- ings ascribed to Paul, the Epistle to the Hebrews. This, however, need not detain us long. The great object of the writer is to confirm the Jewish converts to Christianity in the faith of the gospel, by show- ing the superiority of the New Testament dispensa- tion to the Old — the one being the shadow, and the other the substance. Through a large portion of the book, liis argument on this point turns on the dignity of Christ's person, so that in no part of the word of God have we clearer or more sublime exhi- bitions of the divinity of our Saviour ; and thus it [I THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS. 176 contributes largely to estabUsh the doctrine of the Trinity. But the work of the Spirit does not pro- minently come into view But still some passages m which the three are referred to in conjunction are worthy of notice. Thus in ch. ix. 14 it is said, ' How much more shall the blood of Christ, who' through the eternal Spirit oifered Himself with- out spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works, to serve the living God ?' There has been considerable difference of opinion regarding the meaning of the phrase 'eternal Spirit' m this verse. Many excellent interpreters under- stand It as denoting the third person of the Trinity This view gives to the whole passage a sense which IS m entire accordance with the teachings of the word of God on the subject. Undoubtedly it was by the agency of the Spirit upon Christ's humanity, both in actually forming it and in sanctifying it at Its original conception, that He became the spotless victim; and it was by the same Spirit maintaining His holy character and inspiring that compassion for man, that zeal for God's glory, and that submis- sion to His Father's wiU, which animated Him through all His course of doing and suffering, that His offering was not only without blemish, but so meritorious and so acceptable in the sight of God. If this view be correct, the passage will present the 176 TKi: REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. three persons in the Trinity co-operating in Christ's sacrifice for the redemption of men. But many, and perhaps the majority of modern interpreters, understand the phrase 'eternal Spirit' as denoting Christ's divine nature; and as we do not wish to ground a conclusion on a passage the meaning of which is unsettled, though we think strong arguments may be adduced in favour of the first interpretation, we do not urge it further. > The practical exhortations interspersed through the apostle's doctrinal discussions, are pressed upon the attention of his readers in several passages by a reference to the thrtee persons in the Trinity. Thus, having in the first chapter shown the superiority of Christ 10 angels, by whose agency the Sinaitic cove- nant was introduced, he, at the beginning of the second chapter, earnestly presses home upon his hearers the superior claims of the New Testament revelation, and the danger of neglecting it (vers. 3,4): ' How shall we escape, if we neglect so great salva- tion ; which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord, and was confirmed unto us by them that heard Him; God also bearing witness, both with signs, and wonders, and gifts of the Holy Ghost, according to His own will V It will be seen here that the ground on which the apostle rests our obligation to receive the gospel is, that it comes to THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS. 1 77 with persons 5 authority of each of the thi in the Godhead. What madness, then, .. ..j,e. a revelation so confirmed ! The warnings of this epistle are particularly directed against apostasy; and we may notice two , passages in which his appeal is based on the work of < three persons of the Godhead. In ch. vi 4-6 It is said: 'It is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come, if they shall fall away, to renew them again to repentance ; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh and put Him to an open shame.' This passage describes the aggravated guilt and fearful danger of Che apostate, and this is represented by its being an affront to the three persons of the Godhead He despises the influences of the Spirit, of which he has been partaker; he crucifies the Son afresh, and thus he dishonours the Father, whose Son he puts to shame, and whose good word in the gospel he tramples under foot. How awful his guilt ! how tremendous his condemnation ! Again, in ch. x. 28, 29, he says: 'He that despised Moses' law died under two or three wit- nesses : of how much sorer punishment shaU he be M IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-S) 1.0 I.I 11.25 Hi iii ^ 1^ 12.0 }A. Ill 1.6 '^ c^ Hiotographic Sdences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, N.V. 14580 (716) 872-4503 #^^# ^\ *% .V o \ 4,., ^ 178 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. thought worthy, who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy- thing, and hath done despite unto the Spirit of grace V Here, again, to show the fearful doom of the apostate, he exhibits his crime in relation to the three persons in the Godhead. There are three witnesses against him, — the Father, who has given to him His Son ; the Son, whose blood he tramples under foot ; and the Holy Ghost, the Spirit of grace, to whom, in His gracious drawing, he does despite. We have thus reviewed the writings of the great Apostle of the Gentiles, which form so large and so important a portion of the New Testament revelation; and we venture to affirm that the examination, even as thus imperfectly conducted, has been sufficient to show that, if he does not present the doctrine to his readers in the shape of a dogmatic formula,, it both formed the basis of his doctrinal system, and inspired his whole religious hfe. !l CHAPTEE V. THE CATHOLIC EPISTLES. EPISTLES OF PETER. TN now proceeding to consider the catholic epistles A It must be admitted that that of James, with Its earnest practical exhortations, though assuming throughout the divinity of our Saviour, does not pre- sent any passage directly bearing upon our present purpose. But on turning to those of the other apostles, whose object was more dogmatic, we shall iind that, m their discussion of the Christian salva- tion, the doctrine of the Trinity holds the same place as it does in those portions of the word of God already considered. Thus, in regard to the writings of Peter, we have only to glance at the first chapter of his first epistle to see that his teaching is as deeply imbued with this truth, as that of his beloved brother Paul His opening salutation assumes a Trinity, and exhibits the concunent action of the thi-ee persons in the 180 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. salvation of men, just as represented in the evan- gelical scheme (ver. 2): 'Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through sancti- fication of the Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling of the blocd of Jesus Christ.' Here we have the Father electing, the Spirit sanctifying, and the Son's blood applied or sprinkled. The order is somewhat different from that observed in other passages. Here the apostle begins with the electing love of the Father, then refers to the work of the Spirit upon the soul, and finally describes the enjoyment of the efficacy of the a|;oning blood of the Son. This, though not the actual order as to time of the opera- tion of the three persons of the Trinity, in the purchase and application of redemption, is the order of actual enjoyment of its blessings by the indi- vidual sinner : first, elbCtion ; secondly, sanctification by the Spirit, including under that term all His gracious operations, from His first gentle knockings at the door of the heart; and ui^en, thirdly, the application or sprinkling of the blood of Christ. * The apostle,' says an old divine, * to endear the heart of all saints he wrote to, unto these three persons, singly shuts up their distinct agencies in our great and common salvation, in as few words as possible to utter them in. Salvation was the subject he was to write them about ; he in the front placeth THE EPISTLES OF PETEE. 181 and sets up the coat of arms of these three Blessed Ones, as the joint founders of our salvation, embla- zoning what each did contribute thereunto.'^ Then foUows a doxology, in which the apostle recognises the first and second persons of the God- head by name, and the third by impUcation : ' Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, which, according to His abundant mercy, hath begot- ten us again unto a lively hope, by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance in- corruptible, and undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved in heaven for you, who are kept bv the power of God through faith unto salvo ..on.' From the manner in which, as we have already seen, the terms 'power' and 'power of God' are employed to denote the working of the Spirit, and from the fact that this keeping is His special work, we have reason to believe that His agency is referred to in the words in the 5th verse : ' Kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation.' If this be the case, we shaU have in tliis passage the operation of the' whole three in our salvation, distinctly acknow- ledged. The opening of the second epistle contains words so similar, that we shall notice them hero (ch. i. 2, 3) : ' Grace and peace be multiplied unto you 1 Goodwin vii. 536, Nichol's Edition. 182 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. through the knowledge of God, and of Jesus our Lord, according as His divine power hath given unto us all things that pertain unto life and god- liness.' The recognition of the first and second persons here is apparent; but that the personifica- tion of the divine power in the third verse denotea the working of the Holy Spirit, is scarcely less obvious. While, however, we do not doubt in the least that the Holy Spirit is referred to in the two pas- sages just quoted, and in others of the same kind, it must at once be admitted, that they have not the same argumentative value as those in which He is mentioned by name. The words themselves might denote simply the exercise of the divine attribute of power ; and it is only by evidence drawn from other sources, that we learn to recognise in such expres- sions, the working of the third person in the Trinity. But the devout disciple, comparing scripture with scripture, will find in such passages additional con- firmation of his faith in the doctrine of the Trinity, and rich nutriment for his devotion, not only as going forth to the absolute God, but as embracing the working of the adorable Three in our salvation. Eeverting to the first chapter of the first epistle, we have at the conclusion (vers. 17-23) an exhorta- tion to holiness, based on the appropriate part which THE EPISTLES OF PETER. 183 each of the three persons in the Trinity bears in our salvation ; and a very superficial examination of it win show, that the beauty and force of the apostle's argument rest upon this doctrine. In vers. 15, 16, he urges holiness upon them, by a consideration of the character of God absolutely, and their relation to Him: *As He which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation ; because it is written. Be ye holy; for I am holy.' But as in former cases, the threefold cord is there unwrapped, and the apostle proceeds to make a particular appeal on the ground of the relation of each of the three persons of the Godhead to believers, and His special work for their benefit. To show this, it wiU be only necessary to separate the passage into its com- ponent parts, arranging them under their respective heads. 1. The Father. — ' And if ye call on the Father, who without respect of persons judgeth according to every man's work, pass the time of your sojourning here in fear ' (ver, 1 7). 2. The Son. — 'Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition from your fathers ; but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot : who verily was fore-ordained before mmmmm 184 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT, the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last times for you, who by Him do believe in God, who raised Him up from the dead, and gave Him glory ; that your faith and hope might be in God' (vers. 18-21). 3. The Spirit. — 'Seeing ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren, see that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently: being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the word of God, which liveth and abideth for ever' (vers. 22, 23). To us it appears surprising that commentators have generally, if not universally, missed this simple view of the passage. We submit whether it does not afford a key which unlocks all the intricacies of the connection, and so present the arguments of the apostle in the clearest and most forcible light. The other passages in the writings of this apostle, in which there are references to a Triune Godhead, are neither so distinct, nor so important, but they may be briefly noticed. In the second chapter (vers. 4-6), we have a representation of the Church as a temple, very simi- lar to that of his beloved brother Paul (2 Cor. iii. 16; Eph. ii. 21): *To whom coming, as unto a living stone, disallowed indeed of men, but chosen THE EPISTLES OF PETER 185 of God, and precious, ye also, as Uvely stones, are built up a spiritual house, an holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ. Wherefore also it is contained in the Scripture, Behold, I lay in Sion a chief corner-stone,' etc. Taking the word irvevfiariKo^ (spiritual) in its proper New Testament sense, abeady pointed out, —as denoting not merely a contrast with what is ex- ternal, or material, but as expressing the operation of the Spirit of God,— we have here not only the same representation of the Church as a spiritual building, but we have the Blessed Three exhibited in the same' relation to it as in the writings of the Apostle Paul : God the Father, as the great object of worship, whose is the temple, and to whom its religious services are offered ; God the Son, who is both the foundation and the corner-stone, through whom our sacrifices are presented and accepted; and God the Spirit, who by His work on the heart makes each believer a Hving stone, through whose power we are enabled to render such sacrifices, and who thus dwells in th§ body as a spiritual temple. In ch. iii. 18, according to the words of our translation, the Three are brought together in the work of Christ : ' Christ also hath once suffered for sins, the just for the unjust, that He might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh, but quickened \\ 186 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. by the Spirit.' But the meaning of the last clause is so much disputed, that we do not dwell, upon the passage. In speaking of the sufferings of believers, the apostle, in ch. iv. 13, 14, connects them with the three persons of the Godhead : ' Rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings; that, when His glory shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy. If ye be reproached for the name of Christ, happy are ye ; for the Spirit of glory and of God resteth on you.' Such sufferings are here represented as in the name of Christ, that is, for the profession of Him as the Saviour; they were also of the same kind with His; those who endured them were under the influence of the Spirit, here called the Spirit of glory, but this proceeding from God, ' the Spirit of glory and of God,' that is, the Spirit of glory, which is also the Spirit of God. In the first cha^jter of the second epistle there is a passage of deep interest, in which the apostle describes the grounds of his assurance of the second coming of Christ, which we may notice here from the manner in which the three persons in the God- head are introduced (vers. 17-21): *We have not followed cunningly-devised fables, when we made known to you the power and coming of the Lord Jesus Christ' And how did he know this ? By THE FIRST EPISTLE OF JOHN. 187 the exhibition of His glory on the Mount of Trans- figuration : ♦ But were eye-witnesses of His majesty.' And the Father, at the same time, gave testimony to Him as His own Son: 'For He received from God the Father honour and glory, when there came such a voice from the most excellent glory, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am weU pleased.' But in addition to this, we have the testimony of the Holy Ghost : ' We have a more sure word of pro- phecy. ... For prophecy came not in old time by the wiU of man; but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.' if the long-disputed passage in the first epistle of John (ch. V. 7) be not genuine, we have here at all events 'the three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost.' the first epistle of JOHN. The first epistle of John is a delightful exhibition of the spirit of the beloved disciple, and of Him on whose bosom he leaned. But there has been much discussion regarding its design and general scope, and by some it has been regarded as without method, or any connected train of thought. The difficulty in discovering the plan of the epistle, we are per- 188 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. suaded, however, arises from disregarding the apostle's own account of his object, as stated at ch. i 3, 4 : 'That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you, that ye also may have fellowship with us : and truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ. And these things write we unto you, that our joy may be full.' Leaving out of view other subjects that are introduced, rather incidentally, in the course of the apostle's reasoning, and what we regard as a sort of side-strokes, dealt out to opponents as he advances, we regard this fellow- ship as the key-not^ of the epistle, — the word fellow- ship, or communion, being understood in its proper scriptural sense of joint participation. Adopting this idea, Bengel sought to find in the epistle a regular and systematic arrangement as foUows: (1) The exordium (ch. i. 1-4); (2) The tractatio (ch. i. 5-v. 12); and (3) The conclusion (ch. V. 13-21). The tractatio, or main body of the epistle, he divided into a special and general part. The special part he considered ay treating — (1) Of communion with God in light (ch. i. 5-1 0) ; (2) Of communion with the Son (ch. ii. 1-iii. 24) ; and (3) Of the confirmation and fruit of His indwelling by the Spirit (ch. iv. 1-21). The second part he re- garded as corresponding with the first, and treating ' of the testimony cf the Father, and Son, and Spirit.* THE FIRST EPISTLE OF JOHN. 189 And lastly, he regarded the conclusion as correspond- ing with the exordium, recapitulating and reasserting the fellowship of the redeemed Church with the Three-one God. According to this view, the funda- mental principle of the epistle is to assert and estab- lish the communion of believers with the Three-one God, through the mediation of Jesus Christ. If this view were correct, we would have here a formal exhibition of the Trinity in relation to believers. And yet we presume to think that this arrange- ment is not natural, -nd that it is difficult, if not impossible, to find in the epistle such a systematic discussion of the Trinity. The following arrangement we think more natural, and exhibiting more clearly the scope of the apostle's reasoning; and we believe it will be found equally to illustrate the doctrine we are considering. Ee- garding the first four verses as the exordium, show- ing the design of the apostle in writing, the main body of the epistle will be found to exhibit the feUowship which believers have with God, and the assurance they possess of its reality. It may be arranged as follows : (1) From ch. i. 5-ii. 28, start- ing with the principle that ' God is light,' he shows that we have fellowship with Him by walking in the Hght— holding and exemplifying the truth as it is in Jesus. (2) From ch. ii. 29-v. 6, starting with 190 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. the fundamental thought that ' God is righteous/ he treats in a similar manner of our fellovrshir> with Him in righteousness. From His nature as right- eous, he argues that ' he that doeth righteousness is horn of God' (cb. ii. 29), and shows the necessity of a new birth, and a life of holiness in order to this fellowship. Not, however, that in these two sections he always keeps th?se .two views separate and dis- tinct; on the contrary, he brings them together at several points in both, shewing in the first that the knowledge of God and of the Son necessarily involves the keepipg of His commandments ; and in the second, that the righteousness of life described is dependent upon the faith of the truth. But we are satisfied that a close examination will show that the leading thought of the fiist section is fellowship in l^ght, and of the second, fellowship in righteous- ness. This second section may be divided into two subordinate portions, the first describing our fellow- ship with God in righteousness, in its purity, and thus in its contrariety to a world i^'ii^g in wicked- ness; and the second describing; its basis as love. As God is love, so we have fellowship with .Him in love, and believing Him in His love, we keep His commandments and overcome the world. And then (3) in ch. v. 6—2 1, the writer shows the assurance we have that we are of the truth, that Jesus Christ THE FIKST EPISTLE OF JOHN. 191 is the Son of God, and that we have eternal life through Him^ We cannot fuUy illustrate this view of the scope of the epistle, but we believe that the more closely we examine it, the more clearly it will appear, that the above outline gives a correct view of its general design. We have said this much in consequence of its bearings on our present subject. As we look at each section in order, we shaU find that in each the three persons in the Trinity are introduced in their appropriate relations to the work of our salvation. Thus in the first section (ch. i. 5-ii. 27), in which our feUowship with God in light is described, besides the references to the Father as light (ch. i. 5), the object of intercession (ch. ii. 1), the great object of spiritual knowledge (ch. ii. 13), and the Son as the source of cleansing from sin (ch. i. 7), as our advo- cate (ch. ii. 1), and our propitiation (ch. ii. 2), the writer, toward the conclusion, warning his readers against the errors of false teachers, points out that ^ Some would prefer stating the arrangement of this part of the -pistle in a slightly different manner. Instead of the fir^t two sec- tions, the latter divided into two sub-sections, they wouiu make three sections, exhibiting respectively fellowship with God in light, fellowship with Him in righteousness, and fellowship with Him in love. For some time the writer hesitated which to adopt, but the difference amounts to little more than a difference in the mode of utating the matter. The fundamental thoughts and general scope are the same both ways. II •— ^M1 192 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIMT. their knowledge was by the teaching of the Holy Ghost (ch. ii. 20) : 'Ye have an unction,' or anoint- ing, descriptive, as we have already seen, of the Spirit's influence, 'from the Holy One, and know all things.' The discussion in this part of the subject he closes by connecting their spiritual en- lightenment with each of the three persons of the Godhead. It has God the Father as its great and ultimate object; but all revelation of Him is through the Son, and our enjojmient of the knowledge of the former depends on the attitude of the soul to the latter. So that, as, he says (vers. 22, 23) : 'Who is a liar, but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ ? He is Antichrist that denieth the Father and the Son. Whosoever denieth the Son, the same hath not the Father ; but he that acknowledgeth the Son hath the Father also.' But this knowledge is prac- tically enjoyed only through the teaching of the Spirit. Accordingly he adds (ver. 27): 'But the anointing which ye have received of Him abideth in you ; and ye need not that any man teach you : but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things, and is truth, and is no lie, and even as it hath taught you, ye shall abide in Him.' Thus the fellowship we have with God as light, is in connection with the manifestation of Him through the Son, and by the power of the Holy Spirit. THE FIRST EPISTLE OF JOHN. 193 In the second section, starting with the principle that 'God is righteous' (ch. ii. 29), the apostle, in the first half, insists on the necessity of our being bom to a new IL'e of righteousness, in order to feUowship with Him. Thus we form a contrast with, and actuaUy come into colHsion with, the world lying in wickedness, whose influence' we overcome. But his argument cuhninates again in presenting the subject in its relation to the three persons in the Trinity. Born of God, thus doing righteousness, and thus showing that we are of the truth, our consciences testify to our uprightness, and we have a rejoicing freedom of access to God (ch. iii 19-22): 'Hereby we know that we are of the truth, and shaU assure our hearts before Him. • . . . Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence toward God,' etc. That the Father IS speciaUy referred to here is evident from the next verse, where it is asserted that only by faith in Him have we fellowship in righteousness with God (ver. 23): 'This is His commandment, That we believe on the name of His Son Jesus Christ,' etc. But the actual enjoyment of such feHowship is through the practical working of the Spirit upon our hearts (ver. 24): 'He that keepeth His com- mandments dweUeth in Him, and He in him : and hereby we know that He abideth in us, by the Spirit N 1 ( 194 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. which He hath given us' {eBtoKev), — ^words similar to the promise, ' whom the Father will give' (John xiv. 16). We must ohserve the form of expression used here. It is not 'because of the Spirit, but 'froih' the Spirit. The expression points out not merely that our knowledge of Christ abiding in us is from the possession of the Spirit as an evidence, but from His action in producing in us such a change of cha- racter. Thus our fellowship with God in righteous- ness is with. the Father, through the Son, and by the Spirit. The next paragraph (ch. iv. 1-6) is generally re- garded as parenthetical, but it simply guards those addressed against mistake as to the work of the Spirit; and points out tests by which His opera- tions may be distinguished from the spirit of error, such as confessing Christ another Spirit than that of the world, and listening to God's truth. In the second part of this section (ch. iv. 7-v. 5) the apostle points out, as the ground of our fellow- ship with Him in righteousness, our fellowship with Him in love. Here again, starting with the idea that 'God is love,' he insists upon the idea that we have communion with Him only by manifesting love, and that thus we wiU keep His commandments and overcome the world. But here again we have the three persons of the Godhead united in the THE ITRST EPISTLE OP JOHN. 195 work of bringing us into this condition. God, out of love, gave His Son to be the propitiation for our sins (vers. 9, 10) : 'In this was manifested the love of God toward us, because that God sent His only begotten Son into the world, that we might live through Him. Herein is love ; not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins.' God is unseen, but if we manifest love, we have fellowship with Him (ver. 12): 'No man hath seen God at any time. If we love one another, God dwelleth in us, and His love is perfected in us.' But the pledge and sign of this is the Holy Spirit, who is the source of aU holy principles, whose first fruit is love, and who is known by His fruits (ver. 13) : ' Hereby know we that we dweU in Him, and He in us, because He hath given us of His Spirit.' But this is only through our recognising the Father's love in sending His Son, and by our confessing the Son as thus sent of the Father (vers. 14, 16): 'And we have seen, and do testify, that the Father sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world. Whosoever shall confess that Jesus is the Son of God, God dwelleth in him, and he in God.' Thus our feUowship with God in love originates with God the Father, is mediated by the Son, and effected and evidenced by the gracious operations of the Holy Spirit. 196 THE 2EVELATI0N OF THE SnRIT. There remains the conclusion (ch. v. 12-21), which treats especially of the testimony, by which we are assuret^ of the truth as it is in Jesus, and of our salvation by Him. This is ascribed to God (ver. 9) : 'If we receive the testimony of men, the testimony of God is greater ; for this is the witness' (or testimony, the original word being the same) * of God which He hath testified of His Son.' Then we have the Son, as the great subject and substance of the testimony (ver. 11): ' This is the record' (or testimony), ' that God hath given us eternal Hfe; and this life is in His Son.' But at the same time we have presented to us the Spirit as the great agent in testifying (ver. 6) : ' It is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is the truth.' In this view, the passage teaches important truth regarding the connection of the tln^ee with our assurance of the trutL / But we do not think that this exhausts the meaning of the apostle. The genuineness of ver. 7, according to aU modern critics, must be given up ; but yet a close examination of the whole passage will show the three divine persons united in testi- mony, so that in an important sense * there are three that bear record in heaven.' He commences with the Son (ver. 6) : ' This is He that came by water and blood; not by water only, but by water and THE FIBST EPISTLE OF JOHN. 197 blood.* He is not only the subject of testimony, as in vers. 9 and 11, but by these He actually testifies. Tor it is added (ver. 8) : ' And there are three that bear witness, the Spirit, the water, and the blood.' Whatever be the allusion in these last words, they certainly refer to some portions of Christ's work, which form a testimony to the truth of His being the Son of God. There can be little doubt that the reference is to His baptism and death, the beginning and the end of His Messianic work on earth, — the one His initiation into His public ministry, when, though sinless Himself, He placed Himself in union with fallen man, to fulfil all righteousness on then* behalf, and when He was attested as the Son of God by the Father's voice, and the descent of the Spirit ; — the other, the com- pletion of the whole. It is worthy of note, that this same writer, in his Gospel, speaks of both these as establishing the Sonship of Christ. At ch. i. 34 he represents the Baptist as saying from the scene at His baptism : ' I saw, and bare record that this is the Son of God.' And again at the crucifixion, when from Christ's side, pierced by the spear, there flowed blood and water, he says (ch. xix. 35) : 'He that saw it bare record, and his record is true ; and he knoweth that he saith true, that ye might believe.' In the next place, the apostle refers to the Spirit 198 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. as the agent who actually testifies in ns (ver. 6) : ' And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth,' absolute truth ; hence caUed by our Lord the Spirit of truth. He is put forth pro- minently as the witness — the living and active agent in establishing the truth in the hearts of men. It is true that He is associated with the water and the blood, making the number required by the law to render testimony valid : ' There are three that bear witness, the Spirit, and the water, and the blood.' But they are not witnesses without Him. Hence, as our Saviour taught, the world receives not the Son, but t)y the Spirit testifying of Him : ' He shall testify of me' (John xv. 26) ; 'He shall glorify me ; for He shaU receive of mine, and shall show it unto you' (xvi. 14). But, in the last place, the apostle ascribes this testimony to God the I'ather as the director of all, — as the source from which all proceeds (ver. 9) : ' If we receive the testimony of men, the testimony of God is greater.' That God the Father is meant here, is evident from His being immediately con- trasted with the Son: Tor this is the witness' (or testimony) ' of God, that He hath testified of His Son.' Thus, ' he that beHeveth hath the witness in himself,' by his experience of the purifying and reconciling influence of Christ's work, and by the THE EPISTLE OF JUDE. 199 Spirit who works savingly in Him, and at the same time evidences His own work. And thus the whole result is, as stated in ver. 20 : 'And we know that the Son of God is come, and hath given us au understanding, that we may know Him that is true ; and we are in Him that is true, even in His Son Jesus Christ. This is the true God, and eternal life.' Thus our assurance is from God originally as the source of all ; it is by the Son objectively in His sanctifying and atoning power, indicated in His baptism and -^ath, and symbolized by the water and blood from ills side ; and it is subjectively by the Spirit. So that, in reality, we have here the three that bear record in heaven. THE EPISTLE OF JUDE. Of the catholic epistles, it only remains to notice that of Jude. In vers. 20, 21 we have the fol- lowing words : * But ye, beloved, building up your- selves on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Ghost, keep yourselves in the love of God, looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life.' As Bengel remarks on this passage, ' Jude mentions the Father, the Son, and the Holy 200 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIBIT. n Spirit ; he mentions faith, hope, and love.' What- ' ever be the relation of the clauses to each other, it will be seen that the passage contains an express reference to the three persons of the Godhead, and the duty of Christians, in working out their own sal- vation, to each of them. We prefer taking the words as they stand, and regard the first two clauses as dependent on each other : ' Building up yourselves on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Ghost ;' that is, by praying in the Holy Ghost, and by so doing, ' keep yourselves in the love of God ;' continue in the enjoyment of His complacential affection, ever sustained by the prospect of the eternal reward' ' looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life.' Some, however, understand ' the love of God' to mean our love to Him. In this view, perhaps, the passage contains a stiU more im- pressive exhibition of the doctrine of the Trinity. As Liddon says, ' Their life is fashioned in devotion to the blessed Trinity. It is a Hfe of prayer ; their souls Hve in the Holy Spirit as in an atmosphere. It is a Kfe of persevering love, whereof the almighty Father is the object. It is a life of expectation ; they look forward to the indulgent mercy which the Lord Jesus will show them at His coming, and the issue of His compassion is eternal life.' ^ * Lectures, p. 302. CHAPTER VI. THE APOCALYPSE. rpHEEE only remains to be considered the bear- -*- ing of the Apocalypse on our subject. The main body of the book is occupied with a series of magnificent visions, in which is represented in mysterious symbols the government of God over the world in relation to His Church, as exercised by the God-man Mediator, the Lamb slain, but now elevated to the throne of universal power. Perhaps in no part even of the word of God have we such splendid descriptions of the Redeemer in His ex- altation, exercising the delegated authority of the Father, in ruling among the troubled elements of human commotion for the good of His Church. It must be admitted, however, that while the glories of the Father and the Son are thus set forth in a manner not to be found elsewhere, even within the pages of inspiration, the Holy Ghost does not come so prominently into view. Still there wiU be enough to show that this wonderful book concurs 202 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. with the rest of the New Testament in ascribing due honour to each of the Blessed Three. At the outset, the authority of the book is ascribed to each of the persons in the Godhead. Tlius, whUe it is called ' the Revelation of Jesus Christ' (ch. i. 1), and He is represented as the witness who testifies (ver. 5), and whose testimony John delivers (ver. 2), it is yet ascribed to God the Father (ver. 1), ' which God gave unto him,' and is caUed ' the word of God ' (ver. 2) ; and yet John receives it under the influence of the Spirit (ver. 10 ; see also ch. iv. 2, xvii. 3, xxi. 10), and all the churches (the seveA as representing the various con- ditions of the universal Church) are caUed on to receive it as the words of the third person of the Trinity (ch. u. 7, etc.) : ' He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches.' Then the book opens with a benediction, in. which the Three are as plainly noted as in the apostolic benediction (ch. i. 4, 5) : ' Grace be to you, and peace, from Him which is, and which was, and which is to come' (or which comes. This title is equi- valent to the term Jehovah, and is expressive of 'pure, absolute, and unchangeable being,' and .fi here plainly descriptive of the Father— see al; .. ch. iv. 8); 'and from the seven Spirits before the throne.' The number seven was used among the THE APOCALYPSE. 208 Jew8 to express the perfection of any quality (Job V. 19; Ps. xii. 6; Prov. vi. 16; Matt. xii. 45; Prov. xxvi. 19, ix. 1), and here expresses the ful- ness and variety of the Spirit's influences, which, according to 1 Cor. xii. 4-7, are the manifestation of one und the same Spirit; so that th:s same M I Iter, who in this and some other passages (ch. iii. 1, iv. 5, V. 6) speaks of Him as seven, again describes Him as simply 'the Spirit' (ch. ii. 11, xiv. 13, xxii. 17). Their being before the throne,' describes Him as being ready to be employed in the service of the Church. ' And from Jesus Christ, who is the faithful Witness, and the first-begotten of the dead, and the Prince of the kings of the earth,' —the great revealer of God, by His resurrection the pledge of life to aU in Him, and the sovereign of the world, — in other words, the Prophet, Priest, and King of His Church. ' The threefold /ro< Hengstenberg remarks,— '/row Him who is so, and frum the seven Spirits, and from Jesus Christ, is deserving of notice in this respect, that it involves a portion of equahty. This impHes a certain inde- pendence of the Spirit beside the Father and the Son. The derivation of grace and peace from the Spirit, not less than from the Father and the Son, points to the adorable Trinity.' The prophetic visions of the rapt seer are inti-o- 204 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIKIT. duced bv one of the grandest of them aU, in the 4th and 5th chapters, in v/hich God's government of the Church, and Ox' the world in relation to her, is presented in pictures of celestial magnificence! J'irst, a door is opened in heaven, and he sees a thi-one, and One that sat upon it (ch. iv. 8-11). That che person thus presented to his vieA^ is divine, is evident from the fB,ct that immediately divine honours are given to Him. That the Father is specially denoted, is evident from the fact that He is distinguished from the Son (ch. vi. 16, vii. 10) and from the Spirit (yer. 5). Besides, He is expressly spoken of as 'God that sitteth upon the throne' (ch. xLx. 4) ; and the title is appropriate to Him, because the kingdom was originaUy the Father's,' and continues His, though administered by the Son.' John adds (ch. iv. 5) : 'And there were seven lamps of fire burning before the throne, which are the seven Spirits of God ;' as already explained, the Spirit of God in the completeness of His gifts, which are bestowed by the Father. In the second part of the vision, in ch. v., we have the Son presented to us, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Lamb as it" had been slain ; but now, in the midst of the throne, who is found competent to unfold the divine purposes regarding the future of His Chui'ch, which no other in heaven or earth could THE APOCALYPSE. 205 accompHsh. In this descripticn we have no difficulty in recognising Christ in His royal dignity, and again in His sacrificial character, as the High Priest of His Church. Accordingly, the saved from among men ascribe aH glory to Him as their Eedeemer (ver. 9) : ' Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by Thy blood out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation,' etc. But to Him as we'll as to the Father, and in conjunction with Him, are immediately ascribed aU divine honours from' the whole of God's intelligent creation (ver. 13) : 'Every creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and aU that are in them, heard I saying. Blessing' and honour, and glory, and power, be unto Him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb for ever and ever.' But He also is represented as having the Spirit to dispense unto the chOdren of men (ver. 6) : ' Ha-ing seven horns and seven eyes, which are the seven Spirits of God sent forth into' all the earth.' This representation of the Spirit in His relation to the Father and the Son, in the cariy- ing out of the scheme of redemption, is in beauti- ful accordance with what we have already seen to be the teacliing of the word of God in those por- tions already considered. We have not entered into a particular consideration of the vision itself; but 206 THE EEVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. it will be thus seen that in the gorgeous picture which it presents of the divine government of the world, it recognises the three divine persons in the Godhead, — the Father, as the supreme Governor of the universe; the Son, as once slain, but now exalted to the throne of medirtorial sovereignty; and the Spirit, as sent forth by the Father and the Sou to carry into effect upon mankind the gracious purposes of a three-one God. In the body of the work, as we have already mentioned, it is the Father and the Son who are specially brought before us, bat still the Spirit is presented to us in accordance with His position in the Trinity. How beautifully, for example, is He introduced in ch. xiv. 12, 13 ! Describing the happy condition of those who, having faithfully maintained God's truth, and patiently suffered for its sake, shall witness the Church's deliverance from antichristian bondage, the apostle says: 'Here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus. And I heard a voice fi-om heaven saying unto me. Write, Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth: Yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labours ; and their works do follow them.' The conclusion of the book (ch. xxi. 1-xxii. 5) presents, as it were, the winding up of the great , THE APOCALYPSE. 207 drama of time, in a picture of a new order of things, free from aU the commotions of our troubled earth (ch. xxi. 1) : 'I saw a new heaven and a new earth : for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away; and there was no more sea.' We cannot lay much stress on an argument founded on our interpretation of symbols, at least as against gainsayers ; but where the word of God has indi- cated their meaning, and we apply them under the guidance of such infallible interpretation, they will contribute largely to confirm, edify, and comfort beUevers. It is therefore interesting to note, in the apostle's description of the glories of the Ne4 Jeru- salem, that wlule the blessings and happiness of its inhabitants are referred particularly to the Father and the Son as their source and medium, in emblems borrowed from the Old Testament worship, we find the salvation, as actuaUy enjoyed by the redeemed, exhibited under the same figures, though cast in' loftier moulds, which are employed, both in the Old and New Testaments, to represent the beneficent working of the Holy Spirit. First, we have God the Father dweUing among men, the full realization of what was prefigured to Israel by God dweUing in the tabernacle in visible symbol (ch. xxi. 3) : 'I heard a gi-eat voice out of heaven, saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is Iff ill 208 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIRIT. with men, and He will dwell with them, and they shall be His people, and God Himself shall be with them, and be their God.' Then, after a further description of their happi- ness, and also of the redeemed Church, described as the Lamb's wife, we have, secondly, the Son associ- ated with the Father (ver. 22): 'I saw no temple therein : for the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of it.' But the position of the Son is more distinctly defined in the verse immediatoly following: 'The city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon, to shine in it; for the glory of God did lighten it, aiid the Lamb is the light thereof.' The glory of God which is here spoken of, and which is also mentioned in the 11th verse, where the city is said to have ' the glory of God,' refers to the Shekinah, so often called the glory of God, tlie cloud of mingled light and darkness, which in the tabernacle stood above the mercy-seat, between the chPTubims. This was the visible emblem of the divine presence, through which He manifested Him- ■ self to the children of Israel: ' There I will meet with thee, and I will commune with thee from above the mercy-seat, from between the two cherubims which are upon the ark of the testimony.' This pointed forward to God manifesting Himself, through Christ, in our nature, as is evident from John i. 14: 'The THE APOCALYPSE. 209 Word was made flesh, and dwelt' (or shekinahed) 'among us ; and we beheld His glory;' but its full reaUzation is in future glory, where, as is here taught, while the blessedness of the redeemed con- sists in the Father dwelHng among them, this is through the Son, who is the true Shekinah. He is the true temple, in whom the Father manifests Himself, and through whom the saved enjoy un- interrupted fellowship with Him. But it is added (ch. xxii. 1, 2) : ' He showed me a pure river of water of life, clear as crystal, pro- ceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb. In the midst of the street of it, and on either side of the river, was there the tree of life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and yielded her fruit every month : and the leaves of the tree were for the heal- ing of the nations.' Now the emblem of water, and a river of water, is one of those most frequently used, both in the Old and New Testaments, to de- scribe the Hfe-giving influence of the Spirit, as He goes forth with the gospel to bless the world. Isa. xHv. 3 : ' I wiU pour water upon him that is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground: I will pour my Spirit upon thy seed, and my blessing upon thine ofl'spring.' Zech. xiv. 8 : ' It shaU be that living waters shall go out from Jerusalem; half of them toward the former sea;'an(i half of them toward the 210 THE EE7ELATI0N OF THE SPIRIT. hinder sea: in summer and winter shall it be.' (See also Ps. xlvi. 4; Joel iii. 18.) Similar is the vision of Ezekiel (ch. xlvii.), where a stream of living water issues from under the threshold of the temple, carrying life in its onward course, its banks covered with unfading bloom, and blessed with trees yielding fruit according to their months, and their leaves for medicine. The representations of the New Testament are exactly equivalent (John vii. 38, 39) : ' He that believeth on me, as the scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water. But this spake He of the Spirit, which they that believe on Him sliould receive.' Now, when the same emblem, only sublimed to meet the higher glories it is intended to express, is here used, can we refuse to interpret it in the same way as describing the Spirit of God as the source of those streams of life which bless the eternal city ? When the first and second persons of the Trinity, as manifested to the redeemed Church, are represented by the same emblems by which their manifestation to the Church on earth is represented, and when, im- mediately after, we have an emblem which as in- variably represents the operation of the third, can we refuse it the same interpretation as elsewhere ? The representation, too, of the river, as flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb, is in beautiful THE APOCALYPSE. 211 accordance with those other passagea of Scripture which represent the influences of the Spirit as pro- ceeding from the Father and the Son. If this be correct we wiU then have the three persons in the Godhead presented to us as concerned in the life salvation, and blessedness of the Church triumphant' as they an, of the Church militant beIow,-the' Father dwelling with His people, but manifesting Himself, and communieating aU good, through the medium of the Son; and from them, by the agency of he Spmt, rivers of pleasures flowing into the souls of aU the saved. We may remark that we have a very simflar descnption of the happiness of the redeemed in oh VII. 16, 17: 'They shaU hunger no more, neither thirst any more ; neither shaU the sun light on them nor any heat. For the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them unto liymg fountains of waters; and God shaU wipe away aU tears from their eyes." The description given of this white-robed company as having palms in their hands, and the whole imagery of the vision, contain an fusion to the Feast of Tabernacles, which the chUdren of Israel observed in the land of Canaan in commemoration of their wandering in the wilder ness. The promises of freedom from hunger, thirst and the burning heat of the sun, and of corre- 212 THE REVELATION OF THE SriEIT. spending supplies, have reference to tlie inconveni- ences of their condition at that time. We liave these ascribed to God ai^d to the Lamb ; and as to the living waters, we need only compare them with the words of our Lord at the last Feast of Tabernacles which He attended on earth, to see the allusion to the Holy Spirit (John vii. 38, 39). As the apostle had at the beginning of the book declared its authority, as from the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, so, as he concludes (ch. xxii. 6-1 7), he repeats this truth in the most emphatic manner, and soleninly appeals to his readers, in the name of each of the three, to receive its contents and obey its voice (ver. 6) : * The Lord God of the holy prophets sent His angel to show unto His ser- vants the things which must shortly be done.' The latest critical editors, instead of * God of the holy prophets,' read ' God of the spirits of the prophets;' and according to 1 Cor. xiv. 32, the phrase, * spirits of the prophets,' expresses the special gifts of inspira- tion, in the prophets severally, according to the varied working of the Holy Ghost. If this reading be correct, the verse will recognise the Spirit as well as the Father as the author of the sayings of this book. At all events, he speaks of the Spirit almost immediately afterwards (ver. 17). But it is added, * I Jesus have sent mine angel to testify unto you THE ArooALYTSE. 213 those things in the churehes.' Thus the passage pre- sents the agency of the tl.ree divine persons in making. Wn tl.e wonderful revelations of this book, and it hus, at the eloso as at the beginning, claims our at- ton ,on as sanctioned by lather. Son, and Holy Ghost And a3 tlus book was intended to close the volume ot mspired trutli, the words may apply to the whole Scripture, and thus give additional emphasis to the warmug with which it is sealed up (vers 18 19) ■ ' If any man shaU add unto these things, God shaU add unto him the plagues that are written in this book, etc. The concluding appeal, however, not only repre- sents the book as from the authority of tlie three persons in the Godhead, but is worthy of further consideration, as presenting the adorable Three join- ing m a last warning and invitation to men ere the mspired volume is iinally closed. As the book commences witji a benediction in the name of each of the three persons in the Godhead, so it concludes with a message of salvation from the same glorious Three ; and it is worthy of remark, that this is done under titles exactly corresponding in the two cases. It has been a question with interpreters, whether the passage from the 7th to the 13th verse refers to the Father or the Son. But the title under which He speaks, ■ I am Alplia and Omega, the first >-™««m»Bw«w!W)!»»5SS 214 THE REVfeLATION OF THE SPIRIT. and the last/ is used in this book as a proper title of the Father (see ch. i. 8, xxi. 6), though it may be applied to the Son, as He is really and truly God. It corresponds with the distinctive appellation of the Father in the benediction (ch. i. 4, comp. ver. 8). At first sight the words in the 12th verse, ' Behold, I come quickly, and my reward is with me,' would rather seem to refer to Christ ; yet, after aU, we must regard the judgment as the Father's, though exer- cised by the God-man Mediator, as His vicegerent. Hence it is said (1 Peter i. 17) : * The Father, who without respect of persons judgeth every man accord- ing to his works.' ' As Hengstenberg observes, the coming is the coming of God, though in the person of His Son. For these reasons, we agree with those interpreters who regard the words as referring to the Father.! At all events, it is admitted that it is God the Father who is represented as speaking in the 6th verse ; ' The Lord God of the spirits of the pro- phets hath sent His angel to show unto His servants the things which must shortly come to pass.' Then hear His solemn warnings: 'Blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the prophecy of this book.' ' He that is unjust, let him be unjust still : and he that is filthy, let him be filthy still : and he that is > The reader will find this subject fully discussed in Hengsten- berg's Commientary on this and corresponding passages. THE APOCALYPSE, 215 righteous, let him be righteous stiU : and he that is holy, let him be holy still. And, behold, I come quickly ; and my reward is with me, to give every man according as his work shall be.' ' Blessed are they that do His commandments ' (or, as some read ' that wash their robes'), ' that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city. For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and murderers' and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie.' But what God the Father solemnly declares, God the Son, the faithful and true witness, as He is caUed in the opening benediction (ch. i. 5), testifies to men for their warning and salvation. He, as Mediator, is the agent through whom the Father makes known His wiU ; and yet He speaks to men from His own independent claims (ver. 16) : ' I Jesus have sent mine angel to testify unto you these things in the churches. I am the root and the off- spring of David, and the bright and morning star,' who usher in the glories of the eternal day. But, not to end God's revelation of mercy with such awful denunciations, the last person of the Trinity, the Spirit of grace, the last hope of humanity, is heard interposing, in His own name and through the Church inspired by Him, with the most tender entreaty to men to partake of the 216 THE REVELATION OF THE SPIIllT. blessings of salvation ere it be too late (vcr, 1 7) : 'And tlie Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And wliosoever will, let him take of the water of life freely.' And shall any of the children of men neglect a salvation on which the three persons of the Trinity have been employed, and that from eternity, and which they now separately and conjunctly press upon our acceptance ? Will we not hear His voice now? 'Do you think to do in a trice what they have been doing from eternity ? or do you think to do it when you will ? These three persons aU do and must concur in our salvation when it is effected. And thinkest thou to have these states to come together at thy beck and at thy caU ? Thou mayest sooner think to order the great conjunction of the stars and planets. Job xxxviii. 31-33 : " Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades ? Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in his season ? Knowest thou the ordinances of heaven ? or, canst thou set the dominion thereof in the earth ? " — that is, canst thou order their motion, so as that their con- junctions or meetings should fall out when thou pleasest ? which, when they meet, have special in- fluences upon this lower world. Canst thou set that clock? And thinkest thou (that canst not THE APOCALYTSE. 217 move a man's heart on earth) to call the Trinity together when thou pleasest, to despatch thy busi- ness for thee ? Be sure, therefore, that thou take their time, when thou feelest the Spirit moving thee ; then all tliose wheels are a-moving, and then take thy season.' ^ If He be thwarted and grieved away, the sinner's last hope is gone. ' As God has not another Son to offer anothex sacrifice for sin,— so that he by whom His sacrifice is despised can have none remaining for him,— no more hath He another Spirit to make that sacrifice effectual unto us, if tlie Holy Ghost, in His work, be despised and rejected.' =* If He depart, ' tliere remaineth only a fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shaU de- vour the adversaries.' To Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, The God whom we adore, Be glory as it was, and is, And shall be evermore. ' Goodwin, vii. 540, Nichol's edition. » Owen, iii. 28, Goold's edition. CONCLUSION. TT^E have thus reviewed that revelation in ▼* which, by progressive steps, 'at sundry times and in divers manners,' God has unfolded His great plan of mercy to fallen men ; and if we are not entirely mistaken, the result of our inquiries has been to show' the working of a three-one God, in the whole teachings of Scripture on the subject.' We have confined our investigation to those pas- sages which distinctly recognise the three persons of the Godhead. We have thus omitted a large portion of the word of God strongly bearing in the same direction. We have passed over not only those passages which speak of one of the three in terms implying divinity, or which show His working in redemption, but also aU those, in which two are spoken of, in their relation to one another or their co-operation for man's salvation, as Father and Son, Fathei" und Spirit, or Son and Spirit. These (and they are numerous) are scarcely less important in their bearings upon this subject than those we have CONCLUSION. 219 been considering. Thus, for example, the constant association of the Father and the Lord Jesns Christ in prayer and benediction, as in the salutations of the epistles, affords convincing evidence that both are divine; and if two are admitted to U^ the admission of a Trinity readily foUows, for scarcely any have held to a mere duaUty in the Godhead But there is another class of passages worthy of more distinct notice. We aUude to those in which the two persons are named, and their respective parts m man's redemption described, whUe the work of the third is referred to, though He is not named. Ihis may be observed particularly regarding the work of the Spirit, which is not unfrequently ascribed to the Father as the primal source of aU divme operations. These passages may not be as strong as arguments against opponents as those adduced; but to the humble believer they wHl be nearly as forcible, not only because a mere duality IS scarcely pled for by any, but because, by compar- mg scripture with scripture, he sees that the three are implied if not expressed. We shaU notice two merely as samples. The first is Matt. xi. 25-27: 'At that time Jesus answered and said, I thank Thee' Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes. Even so. Father • for 220 CONCLUSION. SO it seemed good in Thy sight. AU things are de- livered unto me of my Father : and no man knoweth the Son, but the Father ; neither knoweth any man the Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son w^ reveal Him.' Here it is plain that the lather and the Son are spoken of in terms implying supreme divinity. But when the Father is spoken of as revealing spiritual things to babes, we know from the teaching of our Lord and His apostles, that this is done by the agency of the Holy Ghost John xvi. 13 : 'When He, the Spirit of truth, is come, He will lead you into all truth.' 1 Cor.' ii. 10:' God hath ^revealed them unto us by His Spirit.' The other passage is Heb. xiii. 20, 21 : 'Now the God of peace, that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant' make you perfect in every good work to do His will, working in you that which is well-pleasing in His sight, through Jesus Christ.' Here, as in the last case, the Father and Jesus Christ, under the title of Lord, are spoken of in terms implying that they are both divine. But we know that the work ascribed to the Father, 'making us perfect in every good work to do His wiU,' etc., is effected by the agency of the Spirit. So that, in these two passages, there CONCLUSION. 221 is an actual reference to the three persons of the Godhead, though only two are named. We may also notice that there are passages which do not name the persons in the Godhead, but which refer to their respective offices in a manner which accords with the evangeUcal scheme, and thus affords corroboratory evidence of its truth. As an example, we may simply refer to the Lord's Prayer. This consists of six petitions, three of which refer to God's honour, and three to man's wants; but it wiU be seen, on examination, that each of these two divisions has reference to the three persons of the Trinity in the order of their subsistence, and in the order and relation of their offices in redemption. Thus : Hallowed be Thy Name, . Thy kingdom come, .... Thy will be done on earth as it is done in heaven, By the Spirit. Give us this day our daily bread, . To the Fathek. Forgive us our debts, as we forgive • our debtors, Through the Son. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evU, . . . By the Spirit. Thus, as Tholuck remarks, ' the attentive reader, who has otherwise learned the doctrine of the Tri- nity, will find a distinct reference to it in the arrangement of this prayer. The first petition, in each of the first and second portions of the prayer, To the Father. Through the Son. 222 CONCLUSION. refers to God as the Creator and Preserver; the second, to God as the Redeemer ; and the thiid to God the Holy Spirit.' We have thought that, in like manner, the angels' song (Luke ii. 14), ou which there has been con- siderable discussion, and which, from the contrast of the earth and the heaven, so many critics have been anxious to read in two parallel clauses, might be explained in the same way. May not the clauses read as three, and refer to the three persons in the Godhead, as follows ? Glory to God in the highest, On earth peace, Good-will to men, . To the Father, Through the Son. By the Spirit. WhUe the first undoubtedly expresses the posi- tion of the Father, the two latter, we think, do express the respective works of the Son and' the Spirit, peace being expressive of the reconcUiation between heaven and earth effected by the second person of the Trinity, and the good-will to men describing the manifestation of God's kindness in bringing men to the enjoyment of salvation by the Spirit. In our examination of the passages brought under review, we have endeavoured to ascertain exactly the mind of the Spirit of God. We have availed ourselves of aU helps witliin our reach, to ascertain CONCLUSION. 223 the precise meaning of the words, and the connec- tion m which they stand; but we cannot expect that our conclusions in regard to aU the passages considered wiU be accepted by other minds. But here the same remark is applicable that is made by Paley in his IIorcB Paulmce, regarding the unde- signed coincidences, between Paul's epistles and the Acts of the Apostles, on which he grounds an argu- ment for the authenticity of these writings that each instance stands on its own merits, and is entirely mdependent of the others, so that if it should be set aside as invalid, it would not affect the value and force of any of the others. If any reader thinks that any passage wiU not bear what we have laid upon it, let him dismiss it We would indeed ask that such a conclusion be not adopted till after careful inquiry, as closer examina- tion of the words of God often reveals beneath the surface aspects of truth which are hidden from the eye of the ordinary obseirer. StiU, if the view we have given of any passage be not admitted, or even If a number sho.M be set aside, the conclusions drawn from the others will remain unassailable, and the abandonment of indefensible points will only strengthen our main positions. It must be admitted, too, that the truth is re- flected, in these passages, with various degrees of 224 CONCLUSION, briUiancy. In some it is presented so dimly as only to be observed by careful study, while in others it is obvious to the most unobserving eye. But our argument is not a chain of reas^oning which is destroyed if a single link be broken, and which is no stronger than the -•- . -^■' ap^, pa^. It is eminently cumulative ; and eacL .age, according to its own weight, adds to the value and force of the whole. Each, according to its own light, rays forth some aspect of the perfection and working of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost ; and the whole forms a cluster of jewels in the crown of Emmanuel, which exhibits in fu]I radiance the glory of the Three-one God. In proceeding now to notice the value of our argument, we must remark at the outset that the truth of the doctrine is not dependent on the view we have presented. Independent of aU our argu- ments, the doctrine stands unshaken upon other grounds. We have a sufficient amount of more direct evidence of the divinity, and yet the unity of the Blessed Three, to possess our souls in con- fidence upon its certainty. If our argument be good, there wHl be a large amount of confirmatory testi- mony. But we must stiU remember that, inde- pendent of this, the doctrine rests as immoveably as ever on the foundation on which it has stood for CONCLUSION. 225 S;?^ ^^^ " ^'•™'^''''- and the hearts of vaifeTr::irr: -^^-f ^^^-^'^"^ '^^ to^ of what has been'ei llfrr ' " " '"''''""'- <^-et proof i, elear Td' T "'"^ ''' testimony would have doubr7 """ ^'''''' ^ere not confirmed L 1 "^ "P"" "' ^^ i' ';>« point to rirhiTcLotT-: '' alone. It Tnn«f i, ^, it cannot have stood ineidentslrirlet TndTr ^'' ''''- dental evidence of thl t . *''"^" "^ ^^^i' for doubt is sweor: '' *'"*''^^ "^ ground doubty J: TlTr'h """°" ""^^^«" The doctrine of th. T \ P'''''"' '"*"oe. pendent and Imv^Kr il: "V"° ^•"'- clarations of the word of GoT 'w T '^''''°'' ''^- find the doctrire n ^ ' "' ^^^ ^^ct that we revelation mlrr? ''^ "'°'^ "^ «°'^'^ evidence of its S ^1 ''T' ^°'"'™^'-^ -dcomfortofthe'lSbZr^''"*''^^-"^ 226 CONCLUSION. But we do not admit that the evidence afforded in this way is ordy confirmatory. We believe that it has all the value of positive testimony. We be- lieve that what has been adduced, taken all together, affords sufficient evidence of itself to establish the doctrine, and affords so much additional testimony in favour of a truth otherwise clearly revealed. Eeferring again to evidence in a human court of judicature, the circumstantial evidence may be so clear and so complete as to enforce conviction as decidedly as any direct testimony could do. Indeed, when complete, iti is held to be the best kind of evidence; and in the present instance, we believe that the manner in which incidentally, and as it were undesignedly, the truth of the doctrine is assumed, wiU to many minds be the most con- vincing form of testimony. Dr. Candlish, in his remarks on the first chapter of Genesis, says : * This truth, indeed, is not so much directly stated in the Scriptures as it is all along assumed ; and we might reasonably expect it to be so. God is not in the written word introduced for the first time to men. He speaks, and is spoken of, as one previously known, because previously revealed. And if the doctrine of the Trinity be true. He must have been known, more or less explicitly, as Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. An express and formal declaration. I CONCLUSION. 227 convincing proof of > lu "^''^ ^^'^^^"^ «^^ l^nown previous to « 1 '^"''' ""^^ ^^^^^ above J„.«„;:::,-:-J-Jion; but the state of the case th»f fv ' '"'""""'^'y Presents the snchisias;cMnivrvr*r *" "^"• presents the matter Th ""^ ^''^^ '*'^«- generally «« divtroTr h'"''"^'^ "^^ "°' three person, in the GodSad b^r ' °' ''^ ■ the three in combination ^ a 12'^^':^'^-^ never associate any crel^ T\"" "'^'^ '^'^ Ti.« ., -^ creature with the Mosf tt,„i They ascribe to each works shpT. ^ ^ ' only to God, or which ZIZ', '' '^'^ ''''^'^ exhihif fi. • ^^ *^^^^^e power. Thev exhibit them in relations to each otbl. i.- i^ ^ never confounded, and to wh ch no oTh "' admitted. They exhihif f l ^''' ^^^ ^^ tinctive worldng e«^^ ""^ ^^' ''' ^- -nner irreconlr:,? ^ :f ^^^^^^^ ^^ ^ than that of thrPP rl,".. "^ '^' supposition 228 CONCLUSION. stant assuming it without proving it, will, to those who examine the matter carefully, ever appear the most convincing evidence of its truth, just as, in never proving and scarcely stopping to assert the existence of God, the Bible is the book of purest Theism ever given to men. As to the amount of evidence adduced, it must be kept in view that it is only a portion even of the kind of testimony we have been considering that has been adduced. All those passages which speak of one, or even two, of the persons of the Godhead, in a manner which implies the same con- clusion, have been omitted ; and we have only con- sidered those in which the whole three are either named or referred to. But we submit whether the amount is not all that was to be expected under the circumstances, and gi^eater than is generally sujiposed. It must be remembered, too, that the Old Testament was especially designed to establish monotheism ; and that large portions of botli Testaments are necessarily occupied with, much that does not directly touch upon this doctrine, in teaching the practical duties of life, or in exhibiting the outward vicissitudes and internal order of the Church. But we cannot but observe how generally, as the great central truths of salvation are described, they are grouped round the three persons in the God- 229 CONCLUSION. W As the groat redemption was at fir,. T dmly revealed, the doctrine of the T. I *'^ - if written with s^pa^rt ^ /^'^r™ ^ou.d.^ohehrou,htouth,theIi«L7aft re! ,"' "^ '' "^O'o. m iUuminated canital, A 7 reveMtion progressed, like 'the shiZIl l"". '^ ™ore and ™„. ^,, .^e perf T' ' tV ^7 eS:ttrr^?^-^--^^^^^ and tie lil V " " "^'^''"P"''" -■« "^^eved doctrL of tl are! r ■'""'''"^ '"^P'"'-"' '"« our salvation *''""' P^'^""' ""-^"^^g in Thus, ^>rihe BM isT"""""" *° -"• book in existence, ye f om th^ fi T '"""'"'"^'''' to the last nf V r: "■■" '"'go »'■ Genesis , , r' °^ Revelation, its monotheism is not f.,» one iiifinite nature. ""^P"''"^^^ » .ideL*" af r;r 1 ''^ ^^^^es we have eon- ti>e Christian salvation. In'Crse 1^^^ 230 CONCLUSION. in which the scheme was determined and arranged ; in the creation of. the world, as the theatre on which redemption was to be achieved ; in all its garniture, and in the varied natural life, by which it was fitted to be the abode of those who were to be the subjects of saving mercy; in the preparing and furnishing of the Mediator for His work ; in the execution in the fulness of time of the glorious plan, and in its application to the hearts of sinners ; in revealing God's will to men, and convincing them of the truth of His word ; in each blessing of the covenant, in our justification, adoption, regeneration, and sanctifi- cation; in our establishment in the faith; in the motives and means of practical holiness, and of each duty of a religious life; in the exercise of devotion; in the comforts and privileges of the children of God; in our support under trial, our assurance of present and hope of future salvation ; in our final perseverance; in the gifts of all the members of the Church, in the administration and success of all its ordinances, and in her building up as a holy temple to the Lord; in the government of the world ; in the resurrection and final glory of the redeemed, — in a word, in the great salvation as a whole, and in each particular part thereof, and in the arrangement of the universe in subserviency to its accomplishment, we find everywhere, according CONCLUSION. 231 Or we may test the matter otherwise. Take tlio wntmgs of the most decided Trinitarian, of eith ancent or modem times, not when, he is expresslv 2tmgofthisdoetrine,h„twhereheisexr5 he Chns lan system at lai^e, and would we find he Saered Three so frequently referred to as tl.; are m the same space in the writings of the inspired penmen of the New Testament? or would we find U.e.r agency and relations so constanUy introduced n connecUon with eveiy subject on which they treat whether doctrine or devotion, privUege or pract.ce? If „„t, then the sacred writL „ Trimtanan than Evangelical Trinitarians, not in- deed m dogmatic aasertiou of the truth, but in the manner m which it enters into their ;hole spw! docw!p'! '' "*"'' ^^^ ^ "•" ^'^ P'^^'^^d the doctoe to us in exact and systematic formulas ? and 3 It argued that this would have compelled the assent of men? We answer, that it by no mean follows that if the doctrine were stated thus fo^X m ttie word of God, men would receive it impl^/ Faith .s the gift of God. and the same spirit which refuses to see the divinity of Christ in the beginning 232 CONCLUSION* of John's Gospel, would find grounds for rejecting any statement of the truth that might be given. But, further, it may be observed that the mode adopted is in accordance with God's procedure in other portions of His works, especially in nature around us. Why, we might ask, has God not arranged the rocks of the earth so as at once to exhibit to men the principles of geology ? Why has He not distributed the plants of the earth in a defined order, in accordance with a sound system of botany ? Why is it that He has left men to arrive at the knowledge of scientific principles on these and other subjects, only by the careful comparison of facts collected from distant quarters and with toilsome labour ? But we may see wise reasons for the mode adopted. Upon this we may quote the words of a recent judicious writer : — 'There is another reason against the providing in Scripture of a regular systematic statement of Christian doctrine. Suppose such a summary of gospel truths had been drawn up, and could have been contrived with such exquisite skill as to be suflficient and well adapted for all of every age and country, what would have been the probable result ? It would have commanded the unhesitating assent of all Christians, who would, with deep veneration, CONCLTOION. 233 have stored up the very words of it in their „e>„o,y without any need of laboriously searehin„ fh. T ^ ^e Scriptures to aaeertaiu its 'a^ifi::!:^ which what we do (at least, are evidently caW on to do) with a human exposition of the faith 11 he absence of this labour, together with the L^ Becurity as to the correctness of their belief w£ would have been thus geneiuted. would have' e^S n a ^ less and confuted apathy. There wouM i^l r • • • "» ""^ f™ vigilant attention in the investigation of truth; none of that effort of Jnd no b ™w -.uisite m comparing one passage wift another, and collecting instruction from the scattered oblique, and incidental references to various doctriles a heexistmg Scriptures; and. in consequence Ze of that excitement of the best feelings, Id th tT PH.vement of the hear, which are the natural ar^ doubtless, the designed i^ult of a humble, dililt' and sincere study of the Christian Scriptures In fact. aU study, properly so called, of the rest of Scnpture— all lively interest in ul , would ha. nearly bl s'^lredV^t ^nspired compendium of doctrine; to wMch 1: as by far the most convenient for that purpose habi ual Inference would have been madeTn^nl' question that might ri.e. Both would hav ^^ regarded, indeed, as of divine authority; b t^ : 234 CONCLUSION. compendium as the fused and purified metal, tlie other as the mine containing the crude ore. And the compendium itself being not, like the existing Scriptures, that from which the faith is to be learned, but the very thing to he learned, would have come to be regarded by most with an indolent, unthinking veneration, which would have exercised little or no influence on the character. Their orthodoxy would have been, as it were, petrified, like the bodies of those animals we read of enclosed in the ice of the Polar regions — firm, fixed indeed, and preserved un- changeable, but cold, motionless, lifeless. It is only when our energies are roused, and our faculties exer- cised, and our attention kept awake by an ardent pursuit of truth, and anxious watchfulness against error, — when, in short, we feel ourselves to be doing something towards acquiring or retaining or improv- ing our knowledge, — it is then only that that know- ledge makes the requisite practical impression on the heart and on the conduct.' ^ In regard to the doctrine which we have been considering, compared with any human scheme of teacliing it, how much more delightful and profit- able to trace it, as it is unfolded in the word of God, by writers of every variety of temperament, mental power and training, in every form of com- ' Cautions for the Times. CONCLtTSIOK. 235 position in the simple incidents of the great bio- g-phy^ the ever fresh stor, of redeeXJlo^ exhortation and the heart experience of God's chil- dren, in piuyer and doxology, in benediction and ^ac^menul consecration, in the songs of angeU, and L? of f "'^ "''"^' "^-8'^ '^^ ™Wd gates of the celestial city ! Surely the foolishness of God IS wiser than men; and to eveiy objector who would prefer God's giving „s the truth ftle exact formulas of systematic theology, we may re^ n he wo, s of Em. : ' Behold, in this thou art not 21' J^r""' "''"' ''''" ««<» '« S'^oto than man Why dost thon strive against Him? for He giveth not account of any of His matters ' What a caU to admiring wonder, devout gratitude and heartfelt pmise does the Christian salvation pre!' sent as we contemplate it in its illation to the glort ous Tmnty - In the redemption of eveiy lost sll «^ere IS not only displayed the gi.ce, t^e wisdom and the power of the Most High, but there is the W worlang of each of the three persons of the tin, t .T ""^^^^ P-P-«-, and in His rela- tions to the others. They were joined in counsel when man was created (Gen. i. 26), foreseeing his faU, and providing for his recoveiy. They are each concemed, as we have seen, in eveiy step of S 236 CONCLUSION. recovery, and they combine to crown Him with everlasting glory.- But more remains. To use the words of another : ' It is not merely that the three persons of the Godhead are concerned and concur- rent in the great salvation; it is not merely that the first person of the Godhead gives the second to redeem us, and that the third is given to quicken us, and put us in possession of the redemption wrought out; it is not merely that three persons, each of them divine, together one in the substance, power, and eternity of the undivided Godhead, unite to effect our restoration to the favour and image and glory of God ; — not the three persons merely, but the most profound and peculiar and mysterious relations in which they stand toward each other, and all that is contained in these relations : this is what is brought forward into action, and made, in amazing love and wisdom, to yield various and multiplied elements of gracious and glorious arrange- ment and operation, combinedly uniting to achieve a result most worthy of the marvellous purpose, means, and causes that go to achieve it.'^ How exalted the honours of the children of God ! To quote the same writer : ' There is one tran- scendent dignity that belongs to them, not merely in their peculiarly near relation to God, but in the * For. and Evan. Review. CONOltrsiON. 237 style, if we may so say, or tone of that spiritual :'t "'" f * '^^^ ■'''- "-" f--d or iul s head s n-unity, such as unfaUen, unredeemed beings cannot hoar. " Who are these that are arrayed L white robes ?" These nrp (■!,„„ , i, , are and who are what they are, only because there IS tn-um ty jn Godhead, and only because the Son r eternally begotten of the Father, and the SpMt etonaUy proceedeth from the Father and from the the Lord It .IS given on the behalf of Christ, to shine with the pecuhar reflected glory of tri-unit; of God he Godhead involve of the deepest glories, ^nd love and joy of their Lord. Yon bright seraph may be a proo that God is good, and wise, and JghJ and faithful, and holy, and fuU of love • but von n ";'iLV:Zd!!!:Lttir^^^^ theHolyUhost; that the Father is :fne::ire begotten nor proceeding; that the Son is teZT begotten of the Father; and the Spirit eS proceeding from the Father and the Son.'"' ^ ' For. and Evan. Het^ieto. 238 CONCLUSION. And then with what a grandeur does this invest the scheme of man's salvation, as thus the great means hy which God presents to His creatures the profound and mysterious glories of the eternal Trinity in unity! All God's works praise Him. The heavens declare His glory, and the earth is full of His riches. They proclaim His perfections, espe- cially His wisdom, power, and goodness. But even these attributes are more illustriously displayed in the scheme of redemption than in the natural world, so that most strikingly does God's glory shine in the face of Jesus Christ. ' But from the review we have taken, it will be seen that there is one feature in which that scheme transcends all His other works, at least as known to us ; and that is, that it exhibits the original inherent relations of the three persons in the Godhead. We may not say that creation, or ordinary providence, presents no reflection of God as Triune, for Son and Spirit are both represented as concerned in the production even of the material universe ; but we may say that it is extremely little we could learn from them of tri-personality in Jehovah ; and certainly all we know of the original internal relations of the members of the Godhead is b}- means of their operations externally in the work of our redemption. All the arrangements of the covenant exhibit in luminous array the being COKCLUSION. 239 and operation of three divine persons ; nay more are :S T Tl :'' ^'^"'^ -'ati'ons' Jl^ between them, doubtless with the special design of father, Son, and Holy Ghost. Hence, when the oftet he^hts of thought and devotion, so con- stantly and m such elevated sti^s, exhibits the vekt.on of the Triune Jehovah to our salvat^ „ L proclaims, as the design of all, ' To the intent tha now. unto the principaHties and powers in heaviv places, n.ig,t be known by the Church ■ (as S — 1 wim:; Tor d"^ f r^^^ •''^^ wibaom ot Crod, as displayed in the com b:ned operation of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost The redeemed Church wUl thus be 'a crown of God. In her shaU be fulfilled the words • The glory of the Lord shaU endure for ever tL Lorf JaU rejoice in His works.' Not the Son' a^^L s ' of he labour of His soul and is satisfied. The Father rejoxces over the son, once lost but now ound, yea, as the shepherd rejoices over Ms onl not astray, and procW to His intelligent creation 240 CONCLUSION. * Behold, I create new heavens, and a new earth. But be ye glad and rejoice in that which I create : for, behold, I create Jerusalem a rejoicing, and her people a joy. And I will rejoice in Jerusalem, and joy in my people.' And * the good Spirit,' so long and "so often ' grieved ' with the impurity and oppo- sition even of the regenerate, shall find fulness of joy in their completed holiness, exalted service, and overflowing happiness, of which He is the author. Having gathered in the great harvest of souls, the fruit of the blood and tears of the Son, both sower and reaper shall rejoice together. And thus, in the distinctive and peculiar, yet united, joys of each of the all-glorious Three, arising from the contem- plation of the happiness and holiness of the re- deemed Church, — from the manifestation of the divine glory through it to the intelligent creation, especially of the profound mysteries of the internal relations of the three members of the Godhead, — and from the blessed intercommunion of which sal- vation shall form the subject, the eternal undivided Godhead will find the eternal repose of infinite and ineffable satisfaction : ' He will rejoice over thee with j'oy ; He will rest in His love ; He will joy over thee with singing.' ' What shall we say to these things V Here truly we have reached a region ' dark with excessive 241 CONCLUSION. height to which we have climbed ; reason vainly verge of which we stand, hears, as it were, a voice from heaven, saying, ' Hitherto shalt thou c me an^ no farther;' and both recoU to grasp the ha d J P.ety, and jom their voices in the strains in which her emotions struggle for expression : ' the dl hs Jje riches both of the wisdom and WledJ wi' aln * "" His judgments, and^His mLd ^J' '"t°';"' ' "■" ^""^ h""^ '-"-^ the seUor ? Or who hath fi,«t given to Him, and it 3haU be recompensed unto him again ? For of Hi,^ and through Him. and to Him'are all tM gs f whom be glory for ever. Amen.' ' Praise God, from whom all blessing, fl„„ Pra« H,m, all creatures here beloi " Praise Him above, ye heavenly host. Praise Father, Son, and Hol/ohost Q INDEX. PASSAGES OP SCKIPTtIM SPECIALLY ILLUSTRATED. Gen. i. 1, . i. 2, . i. 26, . iii. 22. xi. 7, . xvi. 7-13, xviii. 1-18, xxxi. 11-13, xlviii. 16, 16, Ex. iii. 1-16, Num. vi. 23-27, 2 Sam. xxiii. 2, 3 Ps. ii. 1-12, xxxiii. 6, xlv. 6, 7, Ixxii., , Isa. vi. 1-8, xi. 1-9, xlii. 1-5, xlviii, 16, lix. 19-21, Ixi. 1-3, Ixiii. 7-10, Ixiii. 11-14, Zech. ii. I-13, iii. 1-9, iv. 1-7, xii.. 10-14, Hag. ii. 4-6, PAOS 19 28 20 20 20 27 26 27 21 27, 28 24 35 30 21 32 33 37 40 38 45 47 39 49 51 52 53 55 67 58 Matt. iii. 18, 17, vi. 10-15, xi. 25-27, xxviii. 19, Luke i. 31-35, ii. 14, . xxiv. 49, John i. 1-13, i. 14-18, i. 32-34, iii. 3-16, iii. 31-36, xiv. 16, 17 xiv. 26, XV. 26, xvi. 7-15, XX. 21, 22, Acts i. 4, 5, 8, ii. 16-33, X. 38, . xi. 15-17, Rom. V. 1-5, viii. 2-4, viii. 5-11, viii. 13-17 xi. 33-36, xiv. 17, 18 XV. 5-13, XV. 16, 16, PAGE 71 221 219 87 68 222 85 66 66, 67 71, 72 76, etc. 72, etc. 82 82 83 83 85 92 93 96 96 128 134 136 136 138 138 139 141 244 INDEX OF PASSAGES ILLU8TEATED. Rom. XV. 17-19, XV. 30, 1 Cor. ii. 1-6, ii. 7-10, ii. 12-16, iii. 9-28, vi. 11, vi. 12-20, xii. 4-6, xii. 7-28, 2 Cor. i. 21, 22, iii. 3, iii. 4-6, V. 6-8, xiii. 14, Gal. iii. 6-14, iv. 4-6, Eph. i. 3-14, i. 16-17, ii. 4-18, ii. 18, ii. 19-22, iii. 2-6, iii. 14-19, iii. 20, 21, iv. 4-6, iv. 30-32, v V. 6-8, V. 18-20, vi. 10-18, Phil. iii. 3, . Col. i. 3-8, . i. 9-22, 1,2 PAOI 142 143 111 lis 114 115 116 117 119 121 122 124 124, 125 126 127 107 108 152 155 157 159 159 161 162 163 165 167 169 170 171 145 147 148-151 I 1 Thess. i. 2, 3, . i. 6-9, . iv. 6-8, . V. 16-19, 2 Thesfi. ii. 13, 14, Titus iii. 4-6, Heb. u. 3, 4, vi. 4-6, ix. 14, x. 28, 29, xiii. 20, 21, 1 Pet. i. 2, . i. 3-5, i. 17-23, ii. 4-6, iii. 18, iv. 13, 14, 2 Pet. i. 2, 3, 1 John ii. 20-27, iii. 19-24, iv. 9-15, V. 5-12, Jiide 20, 21, Rev. i. 4, 5, iv. 8-11, V. 5-14, vii. 16, 17, xiv. 12, 13, xxi. 1-4, xxi. 11-24, xxii. i. 2, xxii. 6-17, VAWI 100 101 lOS 104 101 178 176 177 175 177 220 180. 181 182 184 186 186 181 192 193 195 196 199 202 204 204 211 206 207 208 209 212 MURRAY AND OIBB, EDmBURGH, PRINTERS TO HER MAJESTY'S STATIONERY OITICH!. , J^*^